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AUGUSTINE: CONFESSIONS
BOOK FOUR
This is the story of his years among the Manicheans. It includes
the account of his teaching at Tagaste, his taking a mistress, the attractions
of astrology, the poignant loss of a friend which leads to a searching analysis
of grief and transience. He reports on his first book, "De pulchro et
apto", and his introduction to Aristotle's "Categories" and other books
of philosophy and theology, which he mastered with great ease and little
profit.
CHAPTER I
1. During this period of nine years, from my nineteenth year to my
twenty-eighth, I went astray and led others astray. I was deceived and deceived
others, in varied lustful projects--sometimes publicly, by the teaching of what
men style "the liberal arts"; sometimes secretly, under the false guise of
religion. In the one, I was proud of myself; in the other, superstitious; in
all, vain! In my public life I was striving after the emptiness of popular
fame, going so far as to seek theatrical applause, entering poetic contests,
striving for the straw garlands and the vanity of theatricals and intemperate
desires. In my private life I was seeking to be purged from these corruptions
of ours by carrying food to those who were called "elect" and "holy," which, in
the laboratory of their stomachs, they should make into angels and gods for us,
and by them we might be set free. These projects I followed out and practiced
with my friends, who were both deceived with me and by me. Let the proud laugh
at me, and those who have not yet been savingly cast down and stricken by thee,
O my God. Nevertheless, I would confess to thee my shame to thy glory. Bear
with me, I beseech thee, and give me the grace to retrace in my present memory
the devious ways of my past errors and thus be able to "offer to thee the
sacrifice of thanksgiving."[82]
For what am I to myself
without thee but a guide to my own downfall? Or what am I, even at the best,
but one suckled on thy milk and feeding on thee, O Food that never perishes?[83]
What indeed is any man, seeing that he is but a man?
Therefore, let the strong and the mighty laugh at us, but let us who are "poor
and needy"[84]
confess to thee.
CHAPTER II
2. During those years I taught the art of rhetoric. Conquered by the desire for
gain, I offered for sale speaking skills with which to conquer others. And yet,
O Lord, thou knowest that I really preferred to have honest scholars (or what
were esteemed as such) and, without tricks of speech, I taught these scholars
the tricks of speech--not to be used against the life of the innocent, but
sometimes to save the life of a guilty man. And thou, O God, didst see me from
afar, stumbling on that slippery path and sending out some flashes of fidelity
amid much smoke--guiding those who loved vanity and sought after lying,[85]
being myself their companion.
In those years I had a mistress, to whom I was not joined in lawful marriage.
She was a woman I had discovered in my wayward passion, void as it was of
understanding, yet she was the only one; and I remained faithful to her and
with her I discovered, by my own experience, what a great difference there is
between the restraint of the marriage bond contracted with a view to having
children and the compact of a lustful love, where children are born against the
parents' will--although once they are born they compel our love.
3. I remember too that, when I decided to compete for a theatrical prize, some
magician--I do not remember him now--asked me what I would give him to be
certain to win. But I detested and abominated such filthy mysteries,[86]
and answered "that, even if the garland was of
imperishable gold, I would still not permit a fly to be killed to win it for
me." For he would have slain certain living creatures in his sacrifices, and by
those honors would have invited the devils to help me. This evil thing I
refused, but not out of a pure love of thee, O God of my heart, for I knew not
how to love thee because I knew not how to conceive of anything beyond
corporeal splendors. And does not a soul, sighing after such idle fictions,
commit fornication against thee, trust in false things, and "feed on the
winds"[87]
? But still I would not have sacrifices offered
to devils on my behalf, though I was myself still offering them sacrifices of a
sort by my own [Manichean] superstition. For what else is it "to feed on the
winds" but to feed on the devils, that is, in our wanderings to become their
sport and mockery?
CHAPTER III
4. And yet, without scruple, I consulted those other impostors, whom they call
"astrologers" [
mathematicos
], because they used no sacrifices and
invoked the aid of no spirit for their divinations. Still, true Christian piety
must necessarily reject and condemn their art.
It is good to confess to thee and to say, "Have mercy on me; heal my soul; for
I have sinned against thee"[88]
--not to abuse thy goodness
as a license to sin, but to remember the words of the Lord, "Behold, you are
made whole: sin no more, lest a worse thing befall you."[89]
All this wholesome advice [the astrologers] labor to
destroy when they say, "The cause of your sin is inevitably fixed in the
heavens," and, "This is the doing of Venus, or of Saturn, or of Mars"--all this
in order that a man, who is only flesh and blood and proud corruption, may
regard himself as blameless, while the Creator and Ordainer of heaven and the
stars must bear the blame of our ills and misfortunes. But who is this Creator
but thou, our God, the sweetness and wellspring of righteousness, who renderest
to every man according to his works and despisest not "a broken and a contrite
heart"[90]
?
5. There was at that time a wise man, very skillful and quite famous in
medicine.[91]
He was proconsul then, and with his own hand
he placed on my distempered head the crown I had won in a rhetorical contest.
He did not do this as a physician, however; and for this distemper "only thou
canst heal who resisteth the proud and giveth grace to the humble."[92]
But didst thou fail me in that old man, or forbear from
healing my soul? Actually when I became better acquainted with him, I used to
listen, rapt and eager, to his words; for, though he spoke in simple language,
his conversation was replete with vivacity, life, and earnestness. He
recognized from my own talk that I was given to books of the horoscope-casters,
but he, in a kind and fatherly way, advised me to throw them away and not to
spend idly on these vanities care and labor that might otherwise go into useful
things. He said that he himself in his earlier years had studied the
astrologers' art with a view to gaining his living by it as a profession. Since
he had already understood Hippocrates, he was fully qualified to understand
this too. Yet, he had given it up and followed medicine for the simple reason
that he had discovered astrology to be utterly false and, as a man of honest
character, he was unwilling to gain his living by beguiling people. "But you,"
he said, "have the profession of rhetoric to support yourself by, so that you
are following this delusion in free will and not necessity. All the more,
therefore, you ought to believe me, since I worked at it to learn the art
perfectly because I wished to gain my living by it." When I asked him to
account for the fact that many true things are foretold by astrology, he
answered me, reasonably enough, that the force of chance, diffused through the
whole order of nature, brought these things about. For when a man, by accident,
opens the leaves of some poet (who sang and intended something far different) a
verse oftentimes turns out to be wondrously apposite to the reader's present
business. "It is not to be wondered at," he continued, "if out of the human
mind, by some higher instinct which does not know what goes on within itself,
an answer should be arrived at, by chance and not art, which would fit both the
business and the action of the inquirer."
6. And thus truly, either by him or through him, thou wast looking after me.
And thou didst fix all this in my memory so that afterward I might search it
out for myself.
But at that time, neither the proconsul nor my most dear Nebridius--a splendid
youth and most circumspect, who scoffed at the whole business of
divination--could persuade me to give it up, for the authority of the
astrological authors influenced me more than they did. And, thus far, I had
come upon no certain proof--such as I sought--by which it could be shown
without doubt that what had been truly foretold by those consulted came from
accident or chance, and not from the art of the stargazers.
CHAPTER IV
7. In those years, when I first began to teach rhetoric in my native town, I
had gained a very dear friend, about my own age, who was associated with me in
the same studies. Like myself, he was just rising up into the flower of youth.
He had grown up with me from childhood and we had been both school fellows and
playmates. But he was not then my friend, nor indeed ever became my friend, in
the true sense of the term; for there is no true friendship save between those
thou dost bind together and who cleave to thee by that love which is "shed
abroad in our hearts through the Holy Spirit who is given to us."[93]
Still, it was a sweet friendship, being ripened by the
zeal of common studies. Moreover, I had turned him away from the true
faith--which he had not soundly and thoroughly mastered as a youth--and turned
him toward those superstitious and harmful fables which my mother mourned in
me. With me this man went wandering off in error and my soul could not exist
without him. But behold thou wast close behind thy fugitives--at once a God of
vengeance and a Fountain of mercies, who dost turn us to thyself by ways that
make us marvel. Thus, thou didst take that man out of this life when he had
scarcely completed one whole year of friendship with me, sweeter to me than all
the sweetness of my life thus far.
8. Who can show forth all thy praise[94]
for that which he
has experienced in himself alone? What was it that thou didst do at that time,
O my God; how unsearchable are the depths of thy judgments! For when, sore sick
of a fever, he long lay unconscious in a death sweat and everyone despaired of
his recovery, he was baptized without his knowledge. And I myself cared little,
at the time, presuming that his soul would retain what it had taken from me
rather than what was done to his unconscious body. It turned out, however, far
differently, for he was revived and restored. Immediately, as soon as I could
talk to him--and I did this as soon as he was able, for I never left him and we
hung on each other overmuch--I tried to jest with him, supposing that he also
would jest in return about that baptism which he had received when his mind and
senses were inactive, but which he had since learned that he had received. But
he recoiled from me, as if I were his enemy, and, with a remarkable and
unexpected freedom, he admonished me that, if I desired to continue as his
friend, I must cease to say such things. Confounded and confused, I concealed
my feelings till he should get well and his health recover enough to allow me
to deal with him as I wished. But he was snatched away from my madness, that
with thee he might be preserved for my consolation. A few days after, during my
absence, the fever returned and he died.
9. My heart was utterly darkened by this sorrow and everywhere I looked I saw
death. My native place was a torture room to me and my father's house a strange
unhappiness. And all the things I had done with him--now that he was
gone--became a frightful torment. My eyes sought him everywhere, but they did
not see him; and I hated all places because he was not in them, because they
could not say to me, "Look, he is coming," as they did when he was alive and
absent. I became a hard riddle to myself, and I asked my soul why she was so
downcast and why this disquieted me so sorely.[95]
But she
did not know how to answer me. And if I said, "Hope thou in God,"[96]
she very properly disobeyed me, because that dearest
friend she had lost was as an actual man, both truer and better than the
imagined deity she was ordered to put her hope in. Nothing but tears were sweet
to me and they took my friend's place in my heart's desire.
CHAPTER V
10. But now, O Lord, these things are past and time has healed my wound. Let me
learn from thee, who art Truth, and put the ear of my heart to thy mouth, that
thou mayest tell me why weeping should be so sweet to the unhappy. Hast
thou--though omnipresent--dismissed our miseries from thy concern? Thou abidest
in thyself while we are disquieted with trial after trial. Yet unless we wept
in thy ears, there would be no hope for us remaining. How does it happen that
such sweet fruit is plucked from the bitterness of life, from groans, tears,
sighs, and lamentations? Is it the hope that thou wilt hear us that sweetens
it? This is true in the case of prayer, for in a prayer there is a desire to
approach thee. But is it also the case in grief for a lost love, and in the
kind of sorrow that had then overwhelmed me? For I had neither a hope of his
coming back to life, nor in all my tears did I seek this. I simply grieved and
wept, for I was miserable and had lost my joy. Or is weeping a bitter thing
that gives us pleasure because of our aversion to the things we once enjoyed
and this only as long as we loathe them?
CHAPTER VI
11. But why do I speak of these things? Now is not the time to ask such
questions, but rather to confess to thee. I was wretched; and every soul is
wretched that is fettered in the friendship of mortal things--it is torn to
pieces when it loses them, and then realizes the misery which it had even
before it lost them. Thus it was at that time with me. I wept most bitterly,
and found a rest in bitterness. I was wretched, and yet that wretched life I
still held dearer than my friend. For though I would willingly have changed it,
I was still more unwilling to lose it than to have lost him. Indeed, I doubt
whether I was willing to lose it, even for him--as they tell (unless it be
fiction) of the friendship of Orestes and Pylades[97]
; they
would have gladly died for one another, or both together, because not to love
together was worse than death to them. But a strange kind of feeling had come
over me, quite different from this, for now it was wearisome to live and a
fearful thing to die. I suppose that the more I loved him the more I hated and
feared, as the most cruel enemy, that death which had robbed me of him. I even
imagined that it would suddenly annihilate all men, since it had had such a
power over him. This is the way I remember it was with me.
Look into my heart, O God! Behold and look deep within me, for I remember it
well, O my Hope who cleansest me from the uncleanness of such affections,
directing my eyes toward thee and plucking my feet out of the snare. And I
marveled that other mortals went on living since he whom I had loved as if he
would never die was now dead. And I marveled all the more that I, who had been
a second self to him, could go on living when he was dead. Someone spoke
rightly of his friend as being "his soul's other half"[98]
--for I felt that my soul and his soul were but one soul
in two bodies. Consequently, my life was now a horror to me because I did not
want to live as a half self. But it may have been that I was afraid to die,
lest he should then die wholly whom I had so greatly loved.
CHAPTER VII
12. O madness that knows not how to love men as they should be loved! O foolish
man that I was then, enduring with so much rebellion the lot of every man! Thus
I fretted, sighed, wept, tormented myself, and took neither rest nor counsel,
for I was dragging around my torn and bloody soul. It was impatient of my
dragging it around, and yet I could not find a place to lay it down. Not in
pleasant groves, nor in sport or song, nor in fragrant bowers, nor in
magnificent banquetings, nor in the pleasures of the bed or the couch; not even
in books or poetry did it find rest. All things looked gloomy, even the very
light itself. Whatsoever was not what he was, was now repulsive and hateful,
except my groans and tears, for in those alone I found a little rest. But when
my soul left off weeping, a heavy burden of misery weighed me down. It should
have been raised up to thee, O Lord, for thee to lighten and to lift. This I
knew, but I was neither willing nor able to do; especially since, in my
thoughts of thee, thou wast not thyself but only an empty fantasm. Thus my
error was my god. If I tried to cast off my burden on this fantasm, that it
might find rest there, it sank through the vacuum and came rushing down again
upon me. Thus I remained to myself an unhappy lodging where I could neither
stay nor leave. For where could my heart fly from my heart? Where could I fly
from my own self? Where would I not follow myself? And yet I did flee from my
native place so that my eyes would look for him less in a place where they were
not accustomed to see him. Thus I left the town of Tagaste and returned to
Carthage.
CHAPTER VIII
13. Time never lapses, nor does it glide at leisure through our sense
perceptions. It does strange things in the mind. Lo, time came and went from
day to day, and by coming and going it brought to my mind other ideas and
remembrances, and little by little they patched me up again with earlier kinds
of pleasure and my sorrow yielded a bit to them. But yet there followed after
this sorrow, not other sorrows just like it, but the causes of other sorrows.
For why had that first sorrow so easily penetrated to the quick except that I
had poured out my soul onto the dust, by loving a man as if he would never die
who nevertheless had to die? What revived and refreshed me, more than anything
else, was the consolation of other friends, with whom I went on loving the
things I loved instead of thee. This was a monstrous fable and a tedious lie
which was corrupting my soul with its "itching ears"[99]
by
its adulterous rubbing. And that fable would not die to me as often as one of
my friends died. And there were other things in our companionship that took
strong hold of my mind: to discourse and jest with him; to indulge in courteous
exchanges; to read pleasant books together; to trifle together; to be earnest
together; to differ at times without ill-humor, as a man might do with himself,
and even through these infrequent dissensions to find zest in our more frequent
agreements; sometimes teaching, sometimes being taught; longing for someone
absent with impatience and welcoming the homecomer with joy. These and similar
tokens of friendship, which spring spontaneously from the hearts of those who
love and are loved in return--in countenance, tongue, eyes, and a thousand
ingratiating gestures--were all so much fuel to melt our souls together, and
out of the many made us one.
CHAPTER IX
14. This is what we love in our friends, and we love it so much that a man's
conscience accuses itself if he does not love one who loves him, or respond in
love to love, seeking nothing from the other but the evidences of his love.
This is the source of our moaning when one dies--the gloom of sorrow, the
steeping of the heart in tears, all sweetness turned to bitterness--and the
feeling of death in the living, because of the loss of the life of the dying.
Blessed is he who loves thee, and who loves his friend in thee, and his enemy
also, for thy sake; for he alone loses none dear to him, if all are dear in Him
who cannot be lost. And who is this but our God: the God that created heaven
and earth, and filled them because he created them by filling them up? None
loses thee but he who leaves thee; and he who leaves thee, where does he go, or
where can he flee but from thee well-pleased to thee offended? For where does
he not find thy law fulfilled in his own punishment? "Thy law is the truth"[100]
and thou art Truth.
CHAPTER X
15. "Turn us again, O Lord God of Hosts, cause thy face to shine; and we shall
be saved."[101]
For wherever the soul of man turns itself,
unless toward thee, it is enmeshed in sorrows, even though it is surrounded by
beautiful things outside thee and outside itself. For lovely things would
simply not be unless they were from thee. They come to be and they pass away,
and by coming they begin to be, and they grow toward perfection. Then, when
perfect, they begin to wax old and perish, and, if all do not wax old, still
all perish. Therefore, when they rise and grow toward being, the more rapidly
they grow to maturity, so also the more rapidly they hasten back toward
nonbeing. This is the way of things. This is the lot thou hast given them,
because they are part of things which do not all exist at the same time, but by
passing away and succeeding each other they all make up the universe, of which
they are all parts. For example, our speech is accomplished by sounds which
signify meanings, but a meaning is not complete unless one word passes away,
when it has sounded its part, so that the next may follow after it. Let my soul
praise thee, in all these things, O God, the Creator of all; but let not my
soul be stuck to these things by the glue of love, through the senses of the
body. For they go where they were meant to go, that they may exist no longer.
And they rend the soul with pestilent desires because she longs to be and yet
loves to rest secure in the created things she loves. But in these things there
is no resting place to be found. They do not abide. They flee away; and who is
he who can follow them with his physical senses? Or who can grasp them, even
when they are present? For our physical sense is slow because it is a physical
sense and bears its own limitations in itself. The physical sense is quite
sufficient for what it was made to do; but it is not sufficient to stay things
from running their courses from the beginning appointed to the end appointed.
For in thy word, by which they were created, they hear their appointed bound:
"From there--to here!"
CHAPTER XI
16. Be not foolish, O my soul, and do not let the tumult of your vanity deafen
the ear of your heart. Be attentive. The Word itself calls you to return, and
with him is a place of unperturbed rest, where love is not forsaken unless it
first forsakes. Behold, these things pass away that others may come to be in
their place. Thus even this lowest level of unity[102]
may
be made complete in all its parts. "But do I ever pass away?" asks the Word of
God. Fix your habitation in him. O my soul, commit whatsoever you have to him.
For at long last you are now becoming tired of deceit. Commit to truth whatever
you have received from the truth, and you will lose nothing. What is decayed
will flourish again; your diseases will be healed; your perishable parts shall
be reshaped and renovated, and made whole again in you. And these perishable
things will not carry you with them down to where they go when they perish, but
shall stand and abide, and you with them, before God, who abides and continues
forever.
17. Why then, my perverse soul, do you go on following your flesh? Instead, let
it be converted so as to follow you. Whatever you feel through it is but
partial. You do not know the whole, of which sensations are but parts; and yet
the parts delight you. But if my physical senses had been able to comprehend
the whole--and had not as a part of their punishment received only a portion of
the whole as their own province--you would then desire that whatever exists in
the present time should also pass away so that the whole might please you more.
For what we speak, you also hear through physical sensation, and yet you would
not wish that the syllables should remain. Instead, you wish them to fly past
so that others may follow them, and the whole be heard. Thus it is always that
when any single thing is composed of many parts which do not coexist
simultaneously, the whole gives more delight than the parts could ever do
perceived separately. But far better than all this is He who made it all. He is
our God and he does not pass away, for there is nothing to take his place.
CHAPTER XII
18. If physical objects please you, praise God for them, but turn back your
love to their Creator, lest, in those things which please you, you displease
him. If souls please you, let them be loved in God; for in themselves they are
mutable, but in him firmly established--without him they would simply cease to
exist. In him, then, let them be loved; and bring along to him with yourself as
many souls as you can, and say to them: "Let us love him, for he himself
created all these, and he is not far away from them. For he did not create
them, and then go away. They are of him and in him. Behold, there he is,
wherever truth is known. He is within the inmost heart, yet the heart has
wandered away from him. Return to your heart, O you transgressors, and hold
fast to him who made you. Stand with him and you shall stand fast. Rest in him
and you shall be at rest. Where do you go along these rugged paths? Where are
you going? The good that you love is from him, and insofar as it is also for
him, it is both good and pleasant. But it will rightly be turned to bitterness
if whatever comes from him is not rightly loved and if he is deserted for the
love of the creature. Why then will you wander farther and farther in these
difficult and toilsome ways? There is no rest where you seek it. Seek what you
seek; but remember that it is not where you seek it. You seek for a blessed
life in the land of death. It is not there. For how can there be a blessed life
where life itself is not?"
19. But our very Life came down to earth and bore our death, and slew it with
the very abundance of his own life. And, thundering, he called us to return to
him into that secret place from which he came forth to us--coming first into
the virginal womb, where the human creature, our mortal flesh, was joined to
him that it might not be forever mortal--and came "as a bridegroom coming out
his chamber, rejoicing as a strong man to run a race."[103]
For he did not delay, but ran through the world, crying
out by words, deeds, death, life, descent, ascension--crying aloud to us to
return to him. And he departed from our sight that we might return to our
hearts and find him there. For he left us, and behold, he is here. He could not
be with us long, yet he did not leave us. He went back to the place that he had
never left, for "the world was made by him."[104]
In this
world he was, and into this world he came, to save sinners. To him my soul
confesses, and he heals it, because it had sinned against him. O sons of men,
how long will you be so slow of heart? Even now after Life itself has come down
to you, will you not ascend and live? But where will you climb if you are
already on a pinnacle and have set your mouth against the heavens? First come
down that you may climb up, climb up to God. For you have fallen by trying to
climb against him. Tell this to the souls you love that they may weep in the
valley of tears, and so bring them along with you to God, because it is by his
spirit that you speak thus to them, if, as you speak, you burn with the fire of
love.
CHAPTER XIII
20. These things I did not understand at that time, and I loved those inferior
beauties, and I was sinking down to the very depths. And I said to my friends:
"Do we love anything but the beautiful? What then is the beautiful? And what is
beauty? What is it that allures and unites us to the things we love; for unless
there were a grace and beauty in them, they could not possibly attract us to
them?" And I reflected on this and saw that in the objects themselves there is
a kind of beauty which comes from their forming a whole and another kind of
beauty that comes from mutual fitness--as the harmony of one part of the body
with its whole, or a shoe with a foot, and so on. And this idea sprang up in my
mind out of my inmost heart, and I wrote some books--two or three, I
think--
On the Beautiful and the Fitting
.[105]
Thou
knowest them, O Lord; they have escaped my memory. I no longer have them;
somehow they have been mislaid.
CHAPTER XIV
21. What was it, O Lord my God, that prompted me to dedicate these books to
Hierius, an orator of Rome, a man I did not know by sight but whom I loved for
his reputation of learning, in which he was famous--and also for some words of
his that I had heard which had pleased me? But he pleased me more because he
pleased others, who gave him high praise and expressed amazement that a Syrian,
who had first studied Greek eloquence, should thereafter become so wonderful a
Latin orator and also so well versed in philosophy. Thus a man we have never
seen is commended and loved. Does a love like this come into the heart of the
hearer from the mouth of him who sings the other's praise? Not so. Instead, one
catches the spark of love from one who loves. This is why we love one who is
praised when the eulogist is believed to give his praise from an unfeigned
heart; that is, when he who loves him praises him.
22. Thus it was that I loved men on the basis of other men's judgment, and not
thine, O my God, in whom no man is deceived. But why is it that the feeling I
had for such men was not like my feeling toward the renowned charioteer, or the
great gladiatorial hunter, famed far and wide and popular with the mob?
Actually, I admired the orator in a different and more serious fashion, as I
would myself desire to be admired. For I did not want them to praise and love
me as actors were praised and loved--although I myself praise and love them
too. I would prefer being unknown than known in that way, or even being hated
than loved that way. How are these various influences and divers sorts of loves
distributed within one soul? What is it that I am in love with in another
which, if I did not hate, I should neither detest nor repel from myself, seeing
that we are equally men? For it does not follow that because the good horse is
admired by a man who would not be that horse--even if he could--the same kind
of admiration should be given to an actor, who shares our nature. Do I then
love that in a man, which I also, a man, would hate to be? Man is himself a
great deep. Thou dost number his very hairs, O Lord, and they do not fall to
the ground without thee, and yet the hairs of his head are more readily
numbered than are his affections and the movements of his heart.
23. But that orator whom I admired so much was the kind of man I wished myself
to be. Thus I erred through a swelling pride and "was carried about with every
wind,"[106]
but through it all I was being piloted by
thee, though most secretly. And how is it that I know--whence comes my
confident confession to thee--that I loved him more because of the love of
those who praised him than for the things they praised in him? Because if he
had gone unpraised, and these same people had criticized him and had spoken the
same things of him in a tone of scorn and disapproval, I should never have been
kindled and provoked to love him. And yet his qualities would not have been
different, nor would he have been different himself; only the appraisals of the
spectators. See where the helpless soul lies prostrate that is not yet
sustained by the stability of truth! Just as the breezes of speech blow from
the breast of the opinionated, so also the soul is tossed this way and that,
driven forward and backward, and the light is obscured to it and the truth not
seen. And yet, there it is in front of us. And to me it was a great matter that
both my literary work and my zest for learning should be known by that man. For
if he approved them, I would be even more fond of him; but if he disapproved,
this vain heart of mine, devoid of thy steadfastness, would have been offended.
And so I meditated on the problem "of the beautiful and the fitting" and
dedicated my essay on it to him. I regarded it admiringly, though no one else
joined me in doing so.
CHAPTER XV
24. But I had not seen how the main point in these great issues [concerning the
nature of beauty] lay really in thy craftsmanship, O Omnipotent One, "who alone
doest great wonders."[107]
And so my mind ranged through
the corporeal forms, and I defined and distinguished as "beautiful" that which
is so in itself and as "fit" that which is beautiful in relation to some other
thing. This argument I supported by corporeal examples. And I turned my
attention to the nature of the mind, but the false opinions which I held
concerning spiritual things prevented me from seeing the truth. Still, the very
power of truth forced itself on my gaze, and I turned my throbbing soul away
from incorporeal substance to qualities of line and color and shape, and,
because I could not perceive these with my mind, I concluded that I could not
perceive my mind. And since I loved the peace which is in virtue, and hated the
discord which is in vice, I distinguished between the unity there is in virtue
and the discord there is in vice. I conceived that unity consisted of the
rational soul and the nature of truth and the highest good. But I imagined that
in the disunity there was some kind of substance of irrational life and some
kind of entity in the supreme evil. This evil I thought was not only a
substance but real life as well, and yet I believed that it did not come from
thee, O my God, from whom are all things. And the first I called a Monad, as if
it were a soul without sex. The other I called a Dyad, which showed itself in
anger in deeds of violence, in deeds of passion and lust--but I did not know
what I was talking about. For I had not understood nor had I been taught that
evil is not a substance at all and that our soul is not that supreme and
unchangeable good.
25. For just as in violent acts, if the emotion of the soul from whence the
violent impulse springs is depraved and asserts itself insolently and
mutinously--and just as in the acts of passion, if the affection of the soul
which gives rise to carnal desires is unrestrained--so also, in the same way,
errors and false opinions contaminate life if the rational soul itself is
depraved. Thus it was then with me, for I was ignorant that my soul had to be
enlightened by another light, if it was to be partaker of the truth, since it
is not itself the essence of truth. "For thou wilt light my lamp; the Lord my
God will lighten my darkness"[108]
; and "of his fullness
have we all received,"[109]
for "that was the true Light
that lighteth every man that cometh into the world"[110]
;
for "in thee there is no variableness, neither shadow of turning."[111]
26. But I pushed on toward thee, and was pressed back by thee that I might know
the taste of death, for "thou resistest the proud."[112]
And what greater pride could there be for me than, with a marvelous madness, to
assert myself to be that nature which thou art? I was mutable--this much was
clear enough to me because my very longing to become wise arose out of a wish
to change from worse to better--yet I chose rather to think thee mutable than
to think that I was not as thou art. For this reason I was thrust back; thou
didst resist my fickle pride. Thus I went on imagining corporeal forms, and,
since I was flesh I accused the flesh, and, since I was "a wind that passes
away,"[113]
I did not return to thee but went wandering
and wandering on toward those things that have no being--neither in thee nor in
me, nor in the body. These fancies were not created for me by thy truth but
conceived by my own vain conceit out of sensory notions. And I used to ask thy
faithful children--my own fellow citizens, from whom I stood unconsciously
exiled--I used flippantly and foolishly to ask them, "Why, then, does the soul,
which God created, err?" But I would not allow anyone to ask me, "Why, then,
does God err?" I preferred to contend that thy immutable substance was involved
in error through necessity rather than admit that my own mutable substance had
gone astray of its own free will and had fallen into error as its punishment.
27. I was about twenty-six or twenty-seven when I wrote those books, analyzing
and reflecting upon those sensory images which clamored in the ears of my
heart. I was straining those ears to hear thy inward melody, O sweet Truth,
pondering on "the beautiful and the fitting" and longing to stay and hear thee,
and to rejoice greatly at "the Bridegroom's voice."[114]
Yet I could not, for by the clamor of my own errors I was hurried outside
myself, and by the weight of my own pride I was sinking ever lower. You did not
"make me to hear joy and gladness," nor did the bones rejoice which were not
yet humbled.[115]
28. And what did it profit me that, when I was scarcely twenty years old, a
book of Aristotle's entitled
The Ten Categories[116]
fell into my hands? On the very title of this I
hung as on something great and divine, since my rhetoric master at Carthage and
others who had reputations for learning were always referring to it with such
swelling pride. I read it by myself and understood it. And what did it mean
that when I discussed it with others they said that even with the assistance of
tutors--who not only explained it orally, but drew many diagrams in the
sand--they scarcely understood it and
could tell me no more about it than I had
acquired in the reading of it by myself alone? For the book appeared to me to
speak plainly enough about substances, such as a man; and of their qualities,
such as the shape of a man, his kind, his stature, how many feet high, and his
family relationship, his status, when born, whether he is sitting or standing,
is shod or armed, or is doing something or having something done to him--and
all the innumerable things that are classified under these nine categories (of
which I have given some examples) or under the chief category of substance.
29. What did all this profit me, since it actually hindered me when I imagined
that whatever existed was comprehended within those ten categories? I tried to
interpret them, O my God, so that even thy wonderful and unchangeable unity
could be understood as subjected to thy own magnitude or beauty, as if they
existed in thee as their Subject--as they do in corporeal bodies--whereas thou
art thyself thy own magnitude and beauty. A body is not great or fair because
it is a body, because, even if it were less great or less beautiful, it would
still be a body. But my conception of thee was falsity, not truth. It was a
figment of my own misery, not the stable ground of thy blessedness. For thou
hadst commanded, and it was carried out in me, that the earth should bring
forth briars and thorns for me, and that with heavy labor I should gain my
bread.[117]
30. And what did it profit me that I could read and understand for myself all
the books I could get in the so-called "liberal arts," when I was actually a
worthless slave of wicked lust? I took delight in them, not knowing the real
source of what it was in them that was true and certain. For I had my back
toward the light, and my face toward the things on which the light falls, so
that my face, which looked toward the illuminated things, was not itself
illuminated. Whatever was written in any of the fields of rhetoric or logic,
geometry, music, or arithmetic, I could understand without any great difficulty
and without the instruction of another man. All this thou knowest, O Lord my
God, because both quickness in understanding and acuteness in insight are thy
gifts. Yet for such gifts I made no thank offering to thee. Therefore, my
abilities served not my profit but rather my loss, since I went about trying to
bring so large a part of my substance into my own power. And I did not store up
my strength for thee, but went away from thee into the far country to
prostitute my gifts in disordered appetite.[118]
And what
did these abilities profit me, if I did not put them to good use? I did not
realize that those arts were understood with great difficulty, even by the
studious and the intelligent, until I tried to explain them to others and
discovered that even the most proficient in them followed my explanations all
too slowly.
31. And yet what did this profit me, since I still supposed that thou, O Lord
God, the Truth, wert a bright and vast body and that I was a particle of that
body? O perversity gone too far! But so it was with me. And I do not blush, O
my God, to confess thy mercies to me in thy presence, or to call upon thee--any
more than I did not blush when I openly avowed my blasphemies before men, and
bayed, houndlike, against thee. What good was it for me that my nimble wit
could run through those studies and disentangle all those knotty volumes,
without help from a human teacher, since all the while I was erring so
hatefully and with such sacrilege as far as the right substance of pious faith
was concerned? And what kind of burden was it for thy little ones to have a far
slower wit, since they did not use it to depart from thee, and since they
remained in the nest of thy Church to become safely fledged and to nourish the
wings of love by the food of a sound faith.
O Lord our God, under the shadow of thy wings let us hope--defend us and
support us.[119]
Thou wilt bear us up when we are little
and even down to our gray hairs thou wilt carry us. For our stability, when it
is in thee, is stability indeed; but when it is in ourselves, then it is all
unstable. Our good lives forever with thee, and when we turn from thee with
aversion, we fall into our own perversion. Let us now, O Lord, return that we
be not overturned, because with thee our good lives without blemish--for our
good is thee thyself. And we need not fear that we shall find no place to
return to because we fell away from it. For, in our absence, our home--which is
thy eternity--does not fall away.
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