The Confessions of St. Augustine
Bishop of Hippo
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BOOK I.
COMMENCING WITH THE INVOCATION OF GOD, AUGUSTINE RELATES IN
DETAIL THE BEGINNING OF HIS LIFE, HIS INFANCY AND BOYHOOD, UP TO
HIS FIFTEENTH YEAR; AT WHICH AGE HE ACKNOWLEDGES THAT HE WAS MORE
INCLINED TO ALL YOUTHFUL PLEASURES AND VICES THAN TO THE STUDY OF
LETTERS.
CHAP. I.--HE PROCLAIMS THE
GREATNESS OF GOD, WHOM HE DESIRES TO SEEK AND INVOKE, BEING
AWAKENED BY HIM.
1. GREAT art Thou, O Lord, and greatly to be praised; great is
Thy power, and of Thy wisdom there is no end. And man, being a
part of Thy creation, desires to praise Thee,man, who bears about
with him his mortality, the witness of his sin, even the witness
that Thou "resistest the proud,"(2) -- yet man, this part of Thy
creation, desires to praise Thee. Thou movest us to delight in
praising Thee; for Thou hast formed us for Thyself, and our
hearts are restless till they find rest in Thee? Lord, teach me
to know and understand which of these should be first, to call on
Thee, or to praise Thee; and likewise to know Thee, or to call
upon Thee. But who is there that calls upon Thee without knowing
Thee? For he that knows Thee not may call upon Thee as other
than Thou art. Or perhaps we call on Thee that we may know Thee.
"But how shall they call on Him in whom they have not believed ?
or how shall they believe without a preacher?"(5) And those who
seek the Lord shall praise Him. For those who seek shall find
Him,(7) and those who find Him shall praise Him. Let me seek
Thee, Lord, in calling on Thee, and call on Thee in believing in
Thee; for Thou hast been preached unto us. O Lord, my faith
calls on Thee,--that faith which Thou hast imparted to me, which
Thou hast breathed into me through the incarnation of Thy Son,
through the ministry of Thy preacher.'
CHAP. II.--THAT THE GOD WHOM
WE INVOKE IS IN US, AND WE IN HIM. 2. And how shall
I call upon my God--my God and my Lord ? For when I call on Him I
ask Him to come into me. And what place is there in me into
which my God can come--into which God can come, even He who made
heaven and earth ? Is there anything in me, O Lord my God, that
can contain Thee ? Do indeed the very heaven and the earth, which
Thou hast made, and in which Thou hast made me, contain Thee ?
Or, as nothing could exist without Thee, doth whatever exists
contain Thee ? Why, then, do I ask Thee to come into me, since I
indeed exist, and could not exist if Thou wert not in me?
Because I am not yet in hell, though Thou art even there; for "if
I go down into hell Thou art there.' t I could not therefore
exist, could not exist at all, O my God, unless Thou wert in me.
Or should I not rather say, that I could not exist unless I were
in Thee from whom are all things, by whom are all things, in whom
are all things? Even so, Lord; even so. Where do I call Thee
to, since Thou art in me, or whence canst Thou come into me ? For
where outside heaven and earth can I go that from thence my God
may come into me who has said, I fill heaven and earth"?(3)
CHAP. III.--EVERYWHERE GOD
WHOLLY FILLETH ALL THINGS, BUT NEITHER HEAVEN NOR EARTH
CONTAINETH HIM.
3. Since, then, Thou fillest heaven and earth, do they
contain Thee? Or, as they contain Thee not, dost Thou fill them,
and yet there remains something over ? And where dost Thou pour
forth that which remaineth of Thee when the heaven and earth are
filled ? Or, indeed, is there no need that Thou who containest
all things shouldest be contained of any, since those things
which Thou fillest Thou fillest by containing them ? For the
vessels which Thou fillest do not sustain Thee, since should they
even be broken Thou wilt not be poured forth. And when Thou art
poured forth on us, (4) Thou art not cast down, but we are
uplifted; nor art Thou dissipated, but we are drawn together.
But, as Thou fillest all things, dost Thou fill them with Thy
whole self, or, as even all things cannot altogether contain
Thee, do they contain a part, and do all at once contain the same
part ? Or has each its own proper part--the greater more, the
smaller less ? Is, then, one part of Thee greater, another less?
Or is it that Thou art wholly everywhere whilst nothing
altogether contains Thee?(5)
CHAP. IV.--THE MAJESTY OF GOD
IS SUPREME, AND HIS VIRTUES INEXPLICABLE. 4. What,
then, art Thou, O my God--what, I ask, but the Lord God ? For who
is Lord but the Lord? or who is God save our God (76) Most high,
most excellent, most potent, most omnipotent; most piteous and
most just; most hidden and most near; most beauteous and most
strong, stable, yet contained of none; unchangeable, yet changing
all things; never new, never old; making all things new, yet
bringing old age upon the proud and they know it not; always
working, yet ever at rest; gathering, yet needing nothing;
sustaining, pervading, and protecting; creating, nourishing, and
developing; seeking, and yet possessing all things. Thou lovest,
and burnest not; art jealous, yet free from care; repentest, and
hast no sorrow; art angry, yet serene; changest Thy ways, leaving
unchanged Thy plans; recoverest what Thou findest, having yet
never lost; art never in want, whilst Thou rejoicest in gain;
never covetous, though requiring usury? That Thou mayest owe,
more than enough is given to Thee ;s yet who hath anything that
is not Thine ? Thou payest debts while owing nothing; and when
Thou forgivest debts, losest nothing. Yet, O my God, my life, my
holy joy, what is this that I have said ? And what saith any man
when He speaks of Thee ? Yet woe to them that keep silence,
seeing that even they who say most are as the dumb?
CHAP. V.--HE SEEKS REST IN GOD,
AND PARDON OF HIS SINS. 5. Oh ! how shall I find
rest in Thee ? Who will send Thee into my heart to inebriate it,
that I may forget my woes, and embrace Thee my only good ? What
art Thou to me ? Have compassion on me, that I may speak. What
am I to Thee that Thou demandest my love, and unless I give it
Thee art angry, and threatenest me with great sorrows ? Is it,
then, a light sorrow not to love Thee ? Alas ! alas ! tell me of
Thy compassion, O Lord my God, what Thou art to me. "Say unto my
soul, I am thy salvation."(10) So speak that I may hear. Behold,
LOrd, the ears of my heart are before Thee; open Thou them, and
"say unto my soul, I am thy salvation." When I hear, may I run
and lay hold on Thee. Hide not Thy face from me. Let me die,
lest I die, if only I may see Thy face. 6. Cramped is the
dwelling of my soul; do Thou expand it, that Thou mayest enter
in. It is in ruins, restore Thou it. There is that about it
which must offend Thine eyes; I confess and know it, but who will
cleanse it ? or to whom shall I cry but to Thee ? Cleanse me from
my secret sins, O Lord, and keep Thy servant from those of other
men. I believe, and therefore do I speak; (2) Lord, Thou
knowest. Have I not confessed my transgressions unto Thee, O my
God; and Thou hast put away the iniquity of my heart ? a I do not
contend in judgment with Thee, (4) who art the Truth; and I would
not deceive myself, lest my iniquity lie against itself. I do
not, therefore, contend in judgment with Thee, for "if Thou,
Lord, shouldest mark iniquities, O Lord, who shall stand ?" 6
CHAP. VI.--HE DESCRIBES HIS
INFANCY, AND LAUDS THE PROTECTION AND ETERNAL PROVIDENCE OF
GOD. 7. Still suffer me to speak before Thy mercy--
me, "dust and ashes." (7) Suffer me to speak, for, behold, it is
Thy mercy I address, and not derisive man. Yet perhaps even Thou
deridest me; but when Thou art turned to me Thou wilt have
compassion on me. (8) For what do I wish to say, O Lord my God,
but that I know not whence I came hither into this--shall I call
it dying life or living death ? Yet, as I have heard from my
parents, from whose substance Thou didst form me,--for I myself
cannot remember it,--Thy merciful comforts sustained me. Thus it
was that the comforts of a woman's milk entertained me; for
neither my mother nor my nurses filled their own breasts, but
Thou by them didst give me the nourishment of infancy according
to Thy ordinance and that bounty of Thine which underlieth all
things. For Thou didst cause me not to want more than Thou
gavest, and those who nourished me willingly to give me what Thou
gavest them. For they, by an instinctive affection, were anxious
to give me what Thou hadst abundantly supplied. It was, in
truth, good for them that my good should come from them, though,
indeed, it was not from them, but by them; for from Thee, O God,
are all good things, and from my God is all my safety? This is
what I have since discovered, as Thou hast declared Thyself to me
by the blessings both within me and without me which Thou hast
bestowed upon me. For at that time I knew how to suck, to be
satisfied when comfortable, and to cry when in pain--nothing
beyond. 8. Afterwards I began to laugh,--at first in sleep,
then when waking. For this I have heard mentioned of myself, and
I believe it (though I cannot remember it), for we see the same
in other infants. And now little by little I realized where I
was, and wished to tell my wishes to those who might satisfy
them, but I could not; for my wants were within me, while they
were without, and could not by any faculty of theirs enter into
my soul. So I cast about limbs and voice, making the few and
feeble signs I could, like, though indeed not much like, unto
what I wished; and when I was not satisfied--either not being
understood, or because it would have been injurious to me--I grew
indignant that my eiders were not subject unto me, and that those
on whom I had no claim did not wait on me, and avenged myself on
them by tears. That infants are such I have been able to learn
by watching them; and they, though unknowing, have better shown
me that I was such an one than my nurses who knew it. 9.
And, behold, my infancy died long ago, and I live. But Thou, O
Lord, who ever livest, and in whom nothing dies (since before the
world was, and indeed before all that can be called "before,"
Thou existest, and art the God and Lord of all Thy creatures; and
with Thee fixedly abide the causes of all unstable things, the
unchanging sources of all things changeable, and the eternal
reasons of all things unreasoning and temporal), tell me, Thy
suppliant, O God; tell,O merciful One,Thy miserable servant (10)
-- tell me whether my infancy succeeded another age of mine which
had at that time perished..Was it that which I passed in my
mother's womb ? For of that something has been made known to me,
and I have myself seen women with child. And what, O God, my
joy, preceded that life ? Was I, indeed, anywhere, or anybody?
For no one can tell me these things, neither father nor mother,
nor the experience of others, nor my own memory. Dost Thou laugh
at me for asking such things, and command me to praise and
confess Thee for what I know ? 10. I give thanks to Thee,
Lord of heaven and earth, giving praise to Thee for that my first
being and infancy, of which I have no memory; for Thou hast
granted to man that from others he should come to conclusions as
to himself, and that he should believe many things concerning
himself on the authority of feeble women. Even then I had life
and being; and as my infancy closed I was already seeking for
signs by which my feelings might be made known to others. Whence
could such a creature come but from Thee, O Lord ? Or shall any
man be skilful enough to fashion himself)Or is there any other
vein by which being and life runs into us save this, that "Thou,
O Lord, hast made us,"(1) with whom being and life are one,
because Thou Thyself art being and life in the highest? Thou art
the highest, "Thou changest not,"(2) neither in Thee doth this
present day come to an end, though it doth] end in Thee, since in
Thee all such things are; for they would have no way of passing
away unless Thou sustainedst them. And since "Thy years shall
have no end,"(3) Thy years are an ever present day. And how many
of ours and our fathers' days have passed through this Thy day,
and received from it their measure and fashion of being, and
others yet to come shall so receive and pass away I "But Thou art
the same;"(4) and all the things of to-morrow and the days yet to
come, and all of yesterday and the days that are past, Thou wilt
do to-day, Thou hast done to-day. What is it to me if any
understand not ? Let him still rejoice and say, "What is
this?"(5) Let him rejoice even so, and rather love to discover in
failing to discover, than in discovering not to discover Thee.
CHAP. VII.--HE SHOWS BY
EXAMPLE THAT EVEN INFANCY IS PRONE TO SIN. 11.
Hearken, O God ! Alas for the sins of men ! Man saith this, and
Thou dst compassionate him; for Thou didst create him, but didst
not create the sin that is in him. Who bringeth to my
remembrance the sin of my infancy ? For before Thee none is free
from sin, not even the infant which has lived but a day upon the
earth. Who bringeth this to my remembrance? Doth not each
little one, in whom I behold that which I do not remember of
myself? In what, then, did I sin ? Is it that I cried for the
breast ? If I should now so cry,--not indeed for the breast, but
for the food suitable to my years,--I should be most justly
laughed at and rebuked. What I then did deserved rebuke; but as
I could not understand those who rebuked me, neither custom nor
reason suffered me to be rebuked. For as we grow we root out and
cast from us such habits. I have not seen any one who is wise,
when "purging" anything cast away the good. Or was it good, even
for a time, to strive to get by crying that which, if given,
would be hurtful--to be bitterly indignant that those who were
free and its elders, and those to whom it owed its being, besides
many others wiser than it, who would not give way to the nod of
its good pleasure, were not subject unto it--to endeavour to
harm, by struggling as much as it could, because those commands
were not obeyed which only could have been obeyed to its hurt ?
Then, in the weakness of the infant's limbs, and not in its will,
lies its innocency. I myself have seen and known an infant to be
jealous though it could not speak. It became pale, and cast
bitter looks on its foster-brother. Who is ignorant of this?
Mothers and nurses tell us that they appease these things by I
know not what remedies; and may this be taken for innocence, that
when the fountain of milk is flowing fresh and abundant, one who
has need should not be allowed to share it, though needing that
nourishment to sustain life ? Yet we look leniently on these
things, not because they are not faults, nor because the faults
are small, but because they will vanish as age increases. For
although you may allow these things now, you could not bear them
with equanimity if found in an older person. 12. Thou,
therefore, O Lord my God, who avest life to the infant, and a
frame which, as we see, Thou hast endowed with senses, compacted
with limbs, beautified with form, and, for its general good and
safety, hast introduced all vital energies---Thou commandest me
to [praise Thee for these things, "to give thanks [unto the Lord,
and to sing praise unto Thy name, O Most High;"(7) for Thou art a
God omnipotent and good, though Thou hadst done nought but these
things, which none other can do but Thou, who alone madest all
things, O Thou most fair, who madest all things fair, and
orderest all according to Thy law. This period, then, of my
life, O Lord, of which I have no remembrance, which I believe on
the word of others, and which I guess from other infants, it
chagrins me--true though the guess be--to reckon in this life of
mine which I lead in this world; inasmuch as, in the darkness of
my forgetfulness, it is like to that which I passed in my
mother's womb. But if "I was shapen in iniquity, and in sin did
my mother conceive me," where, I pray thee, O my God, where,
Lord, or when was I, Thy servant, innocent ? But behold, I pass
by that time, for what have I to do with that, the memories of
which I cannot recall ?
CHAP. VIII.--THAT WHEN A BOY
HE LEARNED TO SPEAK, NOT BY ANY SET METHOD, BUT FROM THE ACTS AND
WORDS OF HIS PARENTS.
13. Did I not, then, growing out of the state of infancy,
come to boyhood, or rather did it not come to me, and succeed to
infancy ? Nor did my infancy depart (for whither went it ?); and
yet it did no longer abide, for I was no longer an infant that
could not speak, but a chattering boy. I remember this, and I
afterwards observed how I first learned to speak, for my elders
did not teach me words in any set method, as they did letters
afterwards; but myself, when I was unable to say all I wished
and to whomsoever I desired, by means of the whimperings and
broken utterances and various motions of my limbs, which I used
to enforce my wishes, repeated the sounds in my memory by the
mind, O my God, which Thou gavest me. When they called anything
by name, and moved the body towards it while they spoke, I saw
and gathered that the thing they wished to point out was called
by the name they then uttered; and that they did mean this was
made plain by the motion of the body, even by the natural
language Of all nations expressed by the countenance, glance of
the eye, movement of other members, and by the sound of the voice
indicating the affections of the mind, as it seeks, possesses,
rejects, or avoids. So it was that by frequently hearing words,
in duly placed sentences, I gradually gathered what things they
were the signs of; and having formed my mouth to the utterance of
these signs, I thereby expressed my will? Thus I exchanged with
those about me the signs by which we express our wishes, and
advanced deeper into the stormy fellowship of human life,
depending the while on the authority of parents, and the beck of
elders.
CHAP. IX.---CONCERNING THE
HATRED OF LEARNING, THE LOVE OF PLAY, AND THE FEAR OF BEING
WHIPPED NOTICEABLE IN BOYS: AND OF THE FOLLY OF OUR ELDERS AND
MASTERS.
14. O my God ! what miseries and mockeries did I then
experience, when obedience to my teachers was set before me as
proper to my boyhood, that I might flourish in this world, and
distinguish myself in the science of speech, which should get me
honour amongst men, and deceitful riches ! After that I was put
to school to get learning, of which I (worthless as I was) knew
not what use there was; and yet, if slow to learn, I was flogged!
For this was deemed praiseworthy by our forefathers; and many
before us, passing the same course, had appointed beforehand for
us these troublesome ways by which we were compelled to pass,
multiplying labour and sorrow upon the sons of Adam. But we
found, O Lord, men praying to Thee, and we learned from them to
conceive of Thee, according to our ability, to be some Great One,
who was able (though not visible to our senses) to hear and help
us. For as a boy I began to pray to Thee, my "help" and my
"refuge,"(3) and in invoking Thee broke the bands of my tongue,
and entreated Thee though little, with no little earnestness,
that I might not be beaten at school. And when Thou heardedst me
not, giving me not over to folly thereby, (4) my elders, yea, and
my own parents too, who wished me no ill, laughed at my stripes,
my then great and grievous ill. 15. Is there any one, Lord,
with so high a spirit, cleaving to Thee with so strong an
affection for even a kind of obtuseness may do that much--but is
there, I say, any one who, by cleaving devoutly to Thee, is
endowed with so great a courage that he can esteem lightly those
racks and hooks, and varied tortures of the same sort, against
which, throughout the whole world, men supplicate Thee with great
fear, deriding those who most bitterly fear them, just as our
parents derided the torments with which our masters punished-us
when we were boys ? For we were no less afraid of our pains, nor
did we pray less to Thee to avoid them; and yet we sinned, in
writing, or reading, or reflecting upon our lessons less than was
required of us. For we wanted not, O Lord, memory or capacity,of
which, by Thy will, we possessed enough for our age,--but we
delighted only in play; and we were punished for this by those
who were doing the same things themselves. But the idleness of
our elders they call business, whilst boys who do the like are
punished by those same elders, and yet neither boys nor men find
any pity. For will any one of good sense approve of my being
whipped because, as a boy, I played ball, and so was hindered
from learning quickly those lessons by means of which, as a man,
I should play more unbecomingly? And did he by whom I was beaten
do other than this, who, when he was overcome in any little
controversy with a co-tutor, was more tormented by anger and envy
than I when beaten by a playfellow in a match at ball ?
CHAP. X.--THROUGH A LOVE OF BALL-
PLAYING AND SHOWS, HE NEGLECTS HIS STUDIES AND THE INJUNCTIONS OF
HIS PARENTS.
16. And yet I erred, O Lord God, the Creator and Disposer of
all things in Nature,--but of sin the Disposer only,--I erred, O
Lord m.y God, in doing contrary to the wishes of my parents and
of those masters; for this learning which they (no matter for
what motive) wished me to acquire, I might have put to good
account afterwards. For I disobeyed them not because I had
chosen a better way, but from a fondness for play, loving the
honour of victory in the matches, and to have my ears tickled
with lying fables, in order that they might itch the more
furiously--the same curiosity beaming more and more in my eyes
for the shows and sports of my elders. Yet those who give these
entertainments are held in such high repute, that almost all
desire the same for their children, whom they are still willing
should be beaten, if so be these same games keep them from the
studies by which they desire them to arrive at being the givers
of them. Look down upon these things, O Lord, I with compassion,
and deliver us who now call! upon Thee; deliver those also who
do not call upon Thee, that they may call upon Thee, and that
Thou mayest deliver them.
CHAP. XI.---SEIZED BY DISEASE,
HIS MOTHER BEING TROUBLED, HE EARNESTLY DEMANDS BAPTISM, WHICH ON
RECOVERY IS POSTPONED --HIS FATHER NOT AS YET BELIEVING IN
CHRIST.
17. Even as a boy I had heard of eternal life promised to us
through the humility of the Lord our God condescending to our
pride, and I was signed with the sign of the cross, and was
seasoned with His salt even from the womb of my mother, who
greatly trusted in Thee. Thou sawest, O Lord, how at one time,
while yet a boy, being suddenly seized with pains in the stomach,
and being at the point of death--Thou sawest, O my God, for even
then Thou wast my keeper, with what emotion of mind and with what
faith I solicited from the piety of my mother, and of Thy Church,
the mother of us all, the baptism of Thy Christ, my Lord and my
God. On which, the mother of my flesh being much troubled,--
since she, with a heart pure in Thy faith, travailed in birth (2)
more lovingly for my eternal salvation,--would, had I not quickly
recovered, have without delay provided for my initiation and
washing by Thy life-giving sacraments, confessing Thee, O Lord
Jesus, for the remission of sins. So my cleansing was deferred,
as if I must needs, should I live, be further polluted; because,
indeed, the guilt contracted by sin would, after baptism, be
greater and more perilous. (8) Thus I at that time believed with
my mother and the whole house, except my father; yet he did not
overcome the influence of my mother's piety in me so as to
prevent my believing in Christ, as he had not yet believed in
Him. For she was desirous that Thou, O my God, shouldst be my
Father rather than he; and in this Thou didst aid her to overcome
her husband, to whom, though the better of the two, she yielded
obedience, because in this she yielded obedience to Thee, who
dost so command. 18. I beseech Thee, my God, I would gladly
know, if it be Thy will, to what end my baptism was then deferred
? Was it for my good that the reins were slackened, as it were,
upon me for me to sin? Or were they not slackened? If not,
whence comes it that it is still dinned into our ears on all
sides, "Let him alone, let him act as he likes, for he is not yet
baptized. But as regards bodily health, no one exclaims, "Let
him be more seriously wounded, for he is not yet cured !" How
much better, then, had it been for me to have been cured at once;
and then, by my own and my friends' diligence, my soul's restored
health had been kept safe in Thy keeping, who gavest it ! Better,
in truth. But how numerous and great waves of temptation i
appeared to hang over me after my childhood: These were foreseen
by my mother; and she preferred that the unformed clay should be
exposed to them rather than the image itself.
CHAP. XII--BEING COMPELLED,
HE GAVE HIS ATTENTION TO LEARNING; BUT FULLY ACKNOWLEDGES THAT
THIS WAS THE WORK OF GOD. 19. But in this my childhood
(which was far less dreaded for me than youth) I had no love of
learning, and hated to be forced to it, yet i was I forced to it
notwithstanding; and this was well done towards me, but I did not
well, if or I would not have learned had I not been compelled.
For no man doth well against his will, even if that which he doth
be well. Neither did they who forced me do well, but the good
that was done to me came from Thee, my God. For they considered
not in what way I should employ what they forced me to learn,
unless to satisfy the inordinate desires of a rich beggary and a
shameful glory. But Thou, by whom the very hairs of our heads
are numbered,t didst use for my good the error of all who pressed
me to learn; and my own error in willing not to learn, didst Thou
make use of for my punishment--of which I, being so small a boy
and so great a sinner, was not unworthy. Thus by the
instrumentality of those who did not well didst Thou well for me;
and by my own sin didst Thou justly punish me. For it is even as
Thou hast appointed, that every inordinate affection should bring
its own punishment2
CHAP. XIII--HE DELIGHTED IN
LATIN STUDIES AND THE EMPTY FABLES OF THE POETS, BUT HATED THE
ELEMENTS OF LITERATURE AND THE GREEK LANGUAGE. 20. But
what was the cause of my dislike of Greek literature, which I
studied from my boyhood, I cannot even now understand. For the
Latin I loved exceedingly--not what our first masters, but what
the grammarians teach; for those primary lessons of reading,
writing, and ciphering, I considered no less of a burden and a
punishment than Greek. Yet whence was this unless from the sin
and vanity of this life ? for I was "but flesh, a wind that
passeth away and cometh not again." For those primary lessons
were better, assuredly, because more certain; seeing that by
their agency I acquired, and still retain, the power of reading
what I find written, and writing myself what I will; whilst in
the others I was compelled to learn about the wanderings of a
certain AEneas, oblivious of my own, and to weep for Biab dead,
because she slew herself for love; while at the same time I
brooked with dry eyes my wretched self dying far from Thee, in
the midst of those things, O God, my life. 21. For what can
be more wretched than the wretch who pities not himself shedding
tears over the death of Dido for love of AEneas, but shedding no
tears over his own death in not loving Thee, O God, light of my
heart, and bread of the inner mouth of my soul, and the power
that weddest my mind with my innermost thoughts? I did not love
Thee, and committed fornication against Thee; and those around me
thus sinning cried, "Well done Well done !" For the friendship of
this world is fornication against Thee; and "Well done! Well
done !" is cried until one feels ashamed not to be such a man.
And for this I shed no tears, though I wept for Dido, who sought
death at the sword's point, (5) myself the while seeking the
lowest of Thy creatures--having forsaken Thee---earth tending to
the earth; and if forbidden to read these things, how grieved
would I feel that I was not permitted to read what grieved me.
This sort of madness is considered a more honourable and more
fruitful learning than that by which I learned to read and write.
22. But now, O my God, cry unto my soul; and let Thy Truth
say unto me, "It is not so; it is not so; better much was that
first teaching." For behold, I would rather forget the
wanderings of AEneas, and all such things, than how to write and
read. But it is true that over the entrance of the grammar
school there hangs a vail; e but this is not so much a sign of
the majesty of the mystery, as of a covering for error. Let not
them exclaim against me of whom I am no longer in fear, whilst I
confess to Thee, my God, that which my soul desires, and
acquiesce in reprehending my evil ways, that I may love Thy good
ways. Neither let those cry out against me who buy or sell
grammar-learning. For if I ask them whether it be true, as the
poet says, that. AEneas once came to Carthage, the unlearned
will reply that they do not know, the learned will deny it to be
true. But if I ask with what letters the name. AEneas is
written, all who have learnt this will answer truly, in
accordance with the conventional understanding men have arrived
at as to these signs. Again, if I should ask which, if
forgotten, would cause the greatest inconvenience in our life,
reading and writing, or these poetical fictions, who does not see
what every one would answer who had not entirely forgotten
himself? I erred, then, when as a boy I preferred those vain
studies to those more profitable ones, or rather loved the one
and hated the other. "One and one are two, two and two are
four," this was then in truth a hateful song to me; while the
wooden horse full of armed men, and the burning of Troy, and the
"spectral image" of Creusa (7) were a most pleasant spectacle of
vanity.
CHAP. XIV.--WHY HE DESPISED
GREEK LITERATURE, AND EASILY LEARNED LATIN. 23. But
why, then, did I dislike Greek learning which was full of like
tales ? For Homer also was skilled in inventing similar stories,
and is most sweetly vain, yet was he disagreeable to me as a boy.
I believe Virgil, indeed, would be the same to Grecian children,
if compelled to learn him, as I was Homer. The difficulty, in
truth, the difficulty of learning a foreign language mingled as
it were with gall all the sweetness of those fabulous Grecian
stories. For not a single word of it did I understand, and to
make me do so, they vehemently urged me with cruel threatenings
and punishments. There was a time also when (as an infant) I
knew no Latin; but this I acquired without any fear or
tormenting, by merely taking notice, amid the blandishments of my
nurses, the jests of those who smiled on me, and the sportiveness
of those who toyed with me. I learnt all this, indeed, without
being urged by any pressure of punishment, for my own heart urged
me to bring forth its own conceptions, which I could not do
unless by learning words, not of those who taught me, but of
those who talked to me; into whose ears, also, I brought forth
whatever I discerned. From this it is sufficiently clear that a
free curiosity hath more influence in our learning these things
than a necessity full of fear. But this last restrains the
overflowings of that freedom, through Thy laws, O God,--Thy laws,
from the ferule of the schoolmaster to the trials of the martyr,
being. effective to mingle for us a salutary bitter, calling us
back to Thyself from the pernicious delights which allure us from
Thee.
CHAP. XV. -- HE ENTREATS GOD,
THAT WHATEVER USEFUL THINGS HE LEARNED AS A BOY MAY BE DEDICATED
TO HIM. 24. Hear my prayer, O Lord; let not my soul
faint under Thy discipline, nor let me faint in confessing unto
Thee Thy mercies, whereby Thou hast saved me from all my most
mischievous ways, that Thou mightest become sweet to me beyond
all the seductions which I used to follow; and that I may love
Thee entirely, and grasp Thy hand with my whole heart, and that
Thou mayest deliver me from every temptation, even unto the end.
For lo, O Lord, my King and my God, for Thy service be whatever
useful thing I learnt as a boy--for Thy service. what I speak,
and write, and count. For when I learned vain things, Thou didst
grant me Thy discipline; and my sin in taking delight in those
vanities, Thou hast forgiven me. I learned, indeed, in them many
useful words; but these may be learned in things not vain, and
that is the safe way for youths to walk in.
CHAP. XVI--HE DISAPPROVES OF
THE MODE OF EDUCATING YOUTH, AND HE POINTS OUT WHY WICKEDNESS IS
ATTRIBUTED TO THE GODS BY THE POETS.
25. But woe unto thee, thou stream of human custom! Who
shall stay thy course ? How long shall it be before thou art
dried up ? How long wilt thou carry down the sons of Eve into
that huge and formidable ocean, which even they who are embarked
on the cross (lignum) can scarce pass over?(2) Do I not read in
thee of Jove the thunderer and adulterer ? And the two verily he
could not be; but it was that, while the fictitious thunder
served as a cloak, he might have warrant to imitate real
adultery. Yet which of our gowned masters can lend a temperate
ear to a man of his school who cries out and says: "These were
Homer's fictions; he transfers things human to the gods. I could
have wished him to transfer divine things to us." But it would
have been more true had he said: "These are, indeed, his
fictions, but he attributed divine attributes to sinful men, that
crimes might not be accounted crimes, and that whosoever
committed any might appear to imitate the celestial gods and not
abandoned men."
26. And yet, thou stream of hell, into thee are cast the
sons of men, with rewards for learning these things; and much is
made of it when this is going on in the forum in the sight of
laws which grant a salary over and above the rewards. And thou
beatest against thy rocks and roarest, saying, "Hence words are
learnt hence eloquence is to be attained, most necessary to
persuade people to your way of thinking, and to unfold your
opinions." So, in truth, we should never have understood these
words, "golden shower," "bosom," "intrigue," "highest heavens,"
and other words written in the same place, unless Terence had
introduced a good-for-nothing youth upon the stage, setting up
Jove as his example of lewdness: -- "Viewing a picture, where the
tale was drawn, Of Jove's descending in a golden shower To
Danae's bosom ... with a woman to intrigue." And see how he
excites himself to lust, as if by celestial authority, when he
says: -- "Great Jove, Who shakes the highest heavens with his
thunder, And I, poor mortal man not do the same! I did it, and
with a I my heart I did it." Not one whir more easily are the
words learnt for this vileness, but by their means is the
vileness perpetrated with more confidence. I do not blame the
words, they being, as it were, choice and precious vessels, but
the wine of error which was drunk in them to us by inebriated
teachers; and unless we drank, we were! beaten, without liberty
of appeal to any sober judge. And yet, O my God,--in whose
presence I can now with security recall this,--did I, unhappy
one, learn these things willingly, and with delight, and for this
was I called a boy of good promise?
CHAP. XVII.--HE CONTINUES ON
THE UNHAPPY METHOD OF TRAINING YOUTH IN LITERARY SUBJECTS.
27. Bear with me, my God, while I speak a little of those
talents Thou hast bestowed upon me, and on what follies I wasted
them. For a lesson sufficiently disquieting to my soul was given
me, in hope of praise, and fear of shame or stripes, to speak the
words of Juno, as she raged and sorrowed that she could not
"Latium bar From all approaches of the Dardan king," which I had
heard Juno never uttered. Yet were we compelled to stray in the
footsteps of these poetic fictions, and to turn that into prose
which the poet had said in verse. And his speaking was most
applauded in whom, according to the reputation of the persons
delineated, the passions of anger and sorrow were most strikingly
reproduced, and clothed in the most suitable language. But what
is it to me, O my true Life, my God, that my declaiming was
applauded above that of many who were my con-temporaries and
fellow-students ? Behold, is not all this smoke and wind ? Was
there nothing else, too, on which I could exercise my wit and
tongue ? Thy praise, Lord, Thy praises might have supported the
tendrils of my heart by Thy Scriptures; so had it not been
dragged away by these empty trifles, a shameful prey of (4) the
fowls of the air. For there is more than one way in which men
sacrifice to the fallen angels.
CHAP. XVIII.--MEN DESIRE TO
OBSERVE THE RULES OF LEARNING, BUT NEGLECT THE ETERNAL RULES OF
EVERLASTING SAFETY.
28. But what matter of surprise is it that I was thus
carried towards vanity, and went forth from Thee, O my God, when
men were proposed to me to imitate, who, should they in relating
any acts of theirs---not in themselves evil --be guilty of a
barbarism or solecism, when censured for it became confounded;
but when they made a full and ornate oration, in well-chosen
words, concerning their own licentiousness, and were applauded
for it, they boasted ? Thou seest this, O Lord, and keepest
silence, "long-suffering, and plenteous in mercy and truth," as
Thou art. Wilt Thou keep silence for ever ? And even now Thou
drawest out of i this vast deep the soul that seeketh Thee and i
thirsteth after Thy delights, whose "heart said unto Thee," I
have sought Thy face, "Thy face, Lord, will I seek." (6) For I
was far from Thy face, through my darkened (7) affections. For
it is not by our feet, nor by change of place, that we either
turn from Thee or return to Thee. Or, indeed, did that younger
son look out for horses, or chariots, or ships, or fly away with
visible wings, or journey by the motion of his limbs, that he
might, in a tar country, prodigally waste all that Thou gavest
him when he set out ? A kind Father when Thou gavest, and kinder
still when he returned destitute!s So, then, in wanton, that is
to say, in darkened affections, lies distance from Thy face.
29. Behold, O Lord God, and behold patiently, as Thou art wont
to do, how diligently the sons of men observe the conventional
rules of letters and syllables, received from those who spoke
prior to them, and yet neglect the eternal rules of everlasting
salvation received from Thee, insomuch that he who practises or
teaches the hereditary rules of pronunciation, if, contrary to
grammatical usage, he should say, without aspirating the first
letter, a human being, will offend men more than if, in
opposition to Thy commandments, he, a human being, were to hate a
human being. As if, indeed, any man should feel that an enemy
could be more destructive to him than that hatred with which he
is excited against him, or that he could destroy more utterly him
whom he persecutes than he destroys his own soul by his enmity.
And of a truth, there is no science of letters more innate than
the writing of conscience--that he is doing unto another what he
himself would not suffer. How mysterious art Thou, who in
silence "dwellest on high,' Thou God, the only great, who by an
unwearied law dealest out the punishment of blindness to illicit
desires ! When a man seeking for the reputation of eloquence
stands before a human judge while a thronging multitude surrounds
him, inveighs against his enemy with the most fierce hatred, he
takes most vigilant heed that his tongue slips not into
grammatical error, but takes no heed lest through the fury of his
spirit he cut off a man from his fellow-men. 30. These were
the customs in the midst of which I, unhappy boy, was cast, and
on that arena it was that I was more fearful of perpetrating a
barbarism than, having done so, of envying those who had not.
These things I declare and confess unto Thee, my God, for which I
was applauded by them whom I then thought it my Whole duty to
please, for I did not perceive the gulf of infamy wherein I was
cast away from Thine eyes? For in Thine eyes what was more
infamous than I was already, displeasing even those like myself,
deceiving with innumerable lies both tutor, and masters, and
parents, from love of play, a desire to see frivolous spectacles,
and a stage-stuck restlessness, to imitate them? Pilferings I
committed from my parents' cellar and table, either enslaved by
gluttony, or that I might have something to give to boys who sold
me their play, who, though they sold it, liked it as well as I.
In this play, likewise, I often sought dishonest victories, I
myself being conquered by the vain desire of pre-eminence. And
what could I so little endure, or, if I detected it, censured I
so violently, as the very things I did to others, and, when
myself detected I was censured, preferred rather to quarrel than
to yield ? Is this the innocence of childhood ? Nay, Lord, nay,
Lord; I entreat Thy mercy, O my God. For these same sins, as we
grow older, are transferred from governors and masters, from
nuts, and balls, and sparrows, to magistrates and kings, to gold,
and lands, and slaves, just as the rod is succeeded by more
severe chastisements. It was, then, the stature of childhood
that Thou, O our King, didst approve of as an emblem of humility
when Thou saidst: "Of such is the kingdom of heaven." 8 31.
But yet, O Lord, to Thee, most excellent and most good, Thou
Architect and Governor of the universe, thanks had been due unto
Thee, our God, even hadst Thou willed that I should not survive
my boyhood. For I existed even then j I lived, and felt, and was
solicitous about my own well-being,ma trace of that most
mysterious unity (4) from whence I had my being; I kept watch by
my inner sense over the wholeness of my senses, and in these
insignificant pursuits, and also in my thoughts on things
insignificant, I learnt to take pleasure in truth. I was averse
to being deceived, I had a vigorous memory, was provided with the
power of speech, was softened by friendship, shunned sorrow,
meanness, ignorance. In such a being what was not wonderful and
praiseworthy ? But all these are gifts of my God; I did not give
them to myself; and they are good, and all these constitute
myself. Good, then, is He that made me, and He is my God; and
before Him will I rejoice exceedingly for every good gift which,
as a boy, I had. For in this lay my sin, that not in Him, but in
His creatures--my-self and the rest--I sought for pleasures, hon-
ours, and truths, falling thereby into sorrows, troubles, and
errors. Thanks be to Thee, my joy, my pride, my confidence, my
God--thanks be to Thee for Thy gifts; but preserve Thou them to
me. For thus wilt Thou preserve me; and those things which Thou
hast given me shall be developed and perfected, and I myself
shall be with Thee, for from Thee is my being.
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