THE CONFESSIONS OF SAINT AUGUSTINE (401 A.D.).--ANOTHER TRANSLATION (BOOKS X &
XI)
Book X
CHAPTER I-IN GOD ALONE IS THE HOPE AND JOY OF MAN.
Let me know Thee, O Lord, who knowest me: let me know Thee, as I am known.
Power of my soul, enter into it, and fit it for Thee, that Thou mayest have and
hold it without spot or wrinkle. This is my hope, therefore do I speak; and in
this hope do I rejoice, when I rejoice healthfully. Other things of this life are
the less to be sorrowed for, the more they are sorrowed for; and the more to
be sorrowed for, the less men sorrow for them. For behold, Thou lovest the
truth, and he that doth it, cometh to the light. This would I do in my heart before
Thee in confession: and in my writing, before many witnesses.
CHAPTER II-THAT ALL THINGS ARE MANIFEST TO GOD. THAT CONFESSION UNTO HIM IS
NOT MADE BY THE WORDS OF THE FLESH, BUT OF THE SOUL, AND THE CRY OF REFLECTION.
And from Thee, O Lord, unto whose eyes the abyss of man's conscience is naked,
what could be hidden in me though I would not confess it? For I should hide
Thee from me, not me from Thee. But now, for that my groaning is witness, that I
am displeased with myself, Thou shinest out, and art pleasing, and beloved, and
longed for; that I may be ashamed of myself, and renounce myself, and choose
Thee, and neither please Thee nor myself, but in Thee. To Thee therefore, O
Lord, am I open, whatever I am; and with what fruit I confess unto Thee, I have
said. Nor do I it with words and sounds of the flesh, but with the words of my
soul, and the cry of the thought which Thy ear knoweth. For when I am evil, then
to confess to Thee is nothing else than to be displeased with myself; but when
holy, nothing else than not to ascribe it to myself: because Thou, O Lord,
blessest the godly, but first Thou justifieth him when ungodly. My confession then,
O my God, in Thy sight, is made silently, and not silently. For in sound, it is
silent; in affection, it cries aloud. For neither do I utter any thing right
unto men, which Thou hast not before heard from me; nor dost Thou hear any such
thing from me, which Thou hast not first said unto me.
CHAPTER III-HE WHO CONFESSETH RIGHTLY UNTO GOD BEST KNOWETH HIMSELF.
What then have I to do with men, that they should hear my confessions- as if
they could heal all my infirmities- a race, curious to know the lives of others,
slothful to amend their own? Why seek they to hear from me what I am; who will
not hear from Thee what themselves are? And how know they, when from myself
they hear of myself, whether I say true; seeing no man knows what is in man, but
the spirit of man which is in him? But if they hear from Thee of themselves,
they cannot say, "The Lord lieth." For what is it to hear from Thee of
themselves, but to know themselves? and who knoweth and saith, "It is false," unless
himself lieth? But because charity believeth all things (that is, among those whom
knitting unto itself it maketh one), I also, O Lord, will in such wise confess
unto Thee, that men may hear, to whom I cannot demonstrate whether I confess
truly; yet they believe me, whose ears charity openeth unto me.
But do Thou, my inmost Physician, make plain unto me what fruit I may reap by
doing it. For the confessions of my past sins, which Thou hast forgiven and
covered, that Thou mightest bless me in Thee, changing my soul by Faith and Thy
Sacrament, when read and heard, stir up the heart, that it sleep not in despair
and say "I cannot," but awake in the love of Thy mercy and the sweetness of Thy
grace, whereby whoso is weak, is strong, when by it he became conscious of his
own weakness. And the good delight to hear of the past evils of such as are now
freed from them, not because they are evils, but because they have been and
are not. With what fruit then, O Lord my God, to Whom my conscience daily
confesseth, trusting more in the hope of Thy mercy than in her own innocency, with
what fruit, I pray, do I by this book confess to men also in Thy presence what I
now am, not what I have been? For that other fruit I have seen and spoken of.
But what I now am, at the very time of making these confessions, divers desire to
know, who have or have not known me, who have heard from me or of me; but
their ear is not at my heart where I am, whatever I am. They wish then to hear me
confess what I am within; whither neither their eye, nor ear, nor understanding
can reach; they wish it, as ready to believe- but will they know? For charity,
whereby they are good, telleth them that in my confessions I lie not; and she
in them, believeth me.
CHAPTER IV-THAT IN HIS CONFESSIONS HE MAY DO GOOD, HE CONSIDERS OTHERS.
But for what fruit would they hear this? Do they desire to joy with me, when
they hear how near, by Thy gift, I approach unto Thee? and to pray for me, when
they shall hear how much I am held back by my own weight? To such will I
discover myself For it is no mean fruit, O Lord my God, that by many thanks should be
given to Thee on our behalf, and Thou be by many entreated for us. Let the
brotherly mind love in me what Thou teachest is to be loved, and lament in me what
Thou teachest is to be lamented. Let a brotherly, not a stranger, mind, not
that of the strange children, whose mouth talketh of vanity, and their right hand
is a right hand of iniquity, but that brotherly mind which when it approveth,
rejoiceth for me, and when it disapproveth me, is sorry for me; because whether
it approveth or disapproveth, it loveth me. To such will I discover myself:
they will breathe freely at my good deeds, sigh for my ill. My good deeds are
Thine appointments, and Thy gifts; my evil ones are my offences, and Thy
judgments. Let them breathe freely at the one, sigh at the other; and let hymns and
weeping go up into Thy sight, out of the hearts of my brethren, Thy censers. And do
Thou, O Lord, he pleased with the incense of Thy holy temple, have mercy upon
me according to Thy great mercy for Thine own name's sake; and no ways
forsaking what Thou hast begun, perfect my imperfections.
This is the fruit of my confessions of what I am, not of what I have been, to
confess this, not before Thee only, in a secret exultation with trembling, and
a secret sorrow with hope; but in the ears also of the believing sons of men,
sharers of my joy, and partners in my mortality, my fellow-citizens, and
fellow-pilgrims, who are gone before, or are to follow on, companions of my way. These
are Thy servants, my brethren, whom Thou willest to be Thy sons; my masters,
whom Thou commandest me to serve, if I would live with Thee, of Thee. But this
Thy Word were little did it only command by speaking, and not go before in
performing. This then I do in deed and word, this I do under Thy wings; in over
great peril, were not my soul subdued unto Thee under Thy wings, and my infirmity
known unto Thee. I am a little one, but my Father ever liveth, and my Guardian
is sufficient for me. For He is the same who begat me, and defends me: and Thou
Thyself art all my good; Thou, Almighty, Who are with me, yea, before I am with
Thee. To such then whom Thou commandest me to serve will I discover, not what
I have been, but what I now am and what I yet am. But neither do I judge
myself. Thus therefore I would be heard.
CHAPTER V-THAT MAN KNOWETH NOT HIMSELF WHOLLY.
For Thou, Lord, dost judge me: because, although no man knoweth the things of
a man, but the spirit of a man which is in him, yet is there something of man,
which neither the spirit of man that is in him, itself knoweth. But Thou, Lord,
knowest all of him, Who hast made him. Yet I, though in Thy sight I despise
myself, and account myself dust and ashes; yet know I something of Thee, which I
know not of myself. And truly, now we see through a glass darkly, not face to
face as yet. So long therefore as I be absent from Thee, I am more present with
myself than with Thee; and yet know I Thee that Thou art in no ways passible;
but I, what temptations I can resist, what I cannot, I know not. And there is
hope, because Thou art faithful, Who wilt not suffer us to be tempted above that
we are able; but wilt with the temptation also make a way to escape, that we
may be able to bear it. I will confess then what I know of myself, I will confess
also what I know not of myself. And that because what I do know of myself, I
know by Thy shining upon me; and what I know not of myself, so long know I not
it, until my darkness be made as the noon-day in Thy countenance.
CHAPTER VI-THE LOVE OF GOD, IN HIS NATURE SUPERIOR TO ALL CREATURES, IS
ACQUIRED BY THE KNOWLEDGE OF THE SENSES AND THE EXERCISE OF REASON.
Not with doubting, but with assured consciousness, do I love Thee, Lord. Thou
hast stricken my heart with Thy word, and I loved Thee. Yea also heaven, and
earth, and all that therein is, behold, on every side they bid me love Thee; nor
cease to say so unto all, that they may be without excuse. But more deeply wilt
Thou have mercy on whom Thou wilt have mercy, and wilt have compassion on whom
Thou hast had compassion: else in deaf ears do the heaven and the earth speak
Thy praises. But what do I love, when I love Thee? not beauty of bodies, nor
the fair harmony of time, nor the brightness of the light, so gladsome to our
eyes, nor sweet melodies of varied songs, nor the fragrant smell of flowers, and
ointments, and spices, not manna and honey, not limbs acceptable to embracements
of flesh. None of these I love, when I love my God; and yet I love a kind of
light, and melody, and fragrance, and meat, and embracement when I love my God,
the light, melody, fragrance, meat, embracement of my inner man: where there
shineth unto my soul what space cannot contain, and there soundeth what time
beareth not away, and there smelleth what breathing disperseth not, and there
tasteth what eating diminisheth not, and there clingeth what satiety divorceth not.
This is it which I love when I love my God.
And what is this? I asked the earth, and it answered me, "I am not He"; and
whatsoever are in it confessed the same. I asked the sea and the deeps, and the
living creeping things, and they answered, "We are not thy God, seek above us."
I asked the moving air; and the whole air with his inhabitants answered,
"Anaximenes was deceived, I am not God. " I asked the heavens, sun, moon, stars, "Nor
(say they) are we the God whom thou seekest." And I replied unto all the
things which encompass the door of my flesh: "Ye have told me of my God, that ye are
not He; tell me something of Him." And they cried out with a loud voice, "He
made us. " My questioning them, was my thoughts on them: and their form of
beauty gave the answer. And I turned myself unto myself, and said to myself, "Who
art thou?" And I answered, "A man." And behold, in me there present themselves to
me soul, and body, one without, the other within. By which of these ought I to
seek my God? I had sought Him in the body from earth to heaven, so far as I
could send messengers, the beams of mine eyes. But the better is the inner, for
to it as presiding and judging, all the bodily messengers reported the answers
of heaven and earth, and all things therein, who said, "We are not God, but He
made us." These things did my inner man know by the ministry of the outer: I the
inner knew them; I, the mind, through the senses of my body. I asked the whole
frame of the world about my God; and it answered me, "I am not He, but He made
me.
Is not this corporeal figure apparent to all whose senses are perfect? why
then speaks it not the same to all? Animals small and great see it, but they
cannot ask it: because no reason is set over their senses to judge on what they
report. But men can ask, so that the invisible things of God are clearly seen,
being understood by the things that are made; but by love of them, they are made
subject unto them: and subjects cannot judge. Nor yet do the creatures answer
such as ask, unless they can judge; nor yet do they change their voice (i.e.,
their appearance), if one man only sees, another seeing asks, so as to appear one
way to this man, another way to that, but appearing the same way to both, it is
dumb to this, speaks to that; yea rather it speaks to all; but they only
understand, who compare its voice received from without, with the truth within. For
truth saith unto me, "Neither heaven, nor earth, nor any other body is thy God."
This, their very nature saith to him that seeth them: "They are a mass; a mass
is less in a part thereof than in the whole." Now to thee I speak, O my soul,
thou art my better part: for thou quickenest the mass of my body, giving it
life, which no body can give to a body: but thy God is even unto thee the Life of
thy life.
CHAPTER VII-THAT GOD IS TO BE FOUND NEITHER FROM THE POWERS OF THE BODY NOR OF
THE SOUL.
What then do I love, when I love my God? who is He above the head of my soul?
By my very soul will I ascend to Him. I will pass beyond that power whereby I
am united to my body, and fill its whole frame with life. Nor can I by that
power find my God; for so horse and mule that have no understanding might find Him;
seeing it is the same power, whereby even their bodies live. But another power
there is, not that only whereby I animate, but that too whereby I imbue with
sense my flesh, which the Lord hath framed for me: commanding the eye not to
hear, and the ear not to see; but the eye, that through it I should see, and the
ear, that through it I should hear; and to the other senses severally, what is
to each their own peculiar seats and offices; which, being divers, I the one
mind, do through them enact. I will pass beyond this power of mine also; for this
also have the horse, and mule, for they also perceive through the body.
CHAPTER VIII-OF THE NATURE AND THE AMAZING POWER OF MEMORY.
I will pass then beyond this power of my nature also, rising by degrees unto
Him Who made me. And I come to the fields and spacious palaces of my memory,
where are the treasures of innumerable images, brought into it from things of all
sorts perceived by the senses. There is stored up, whatsoever besides we think,
either by enlarging or diminishing, or any other way varying those things
which the sense hath come to; and whatever else hath been committed and laid up,
which forgetfulness hath not yet swallowed up and buried. When I enter there, I
require what I will to be brought forth, and something instantly comes; others
must be longer sought after, which are fetched, as it were, out of some inner
receptacle; others rush out in troops, and while one thing is desired and
required, they start forth, as who should say, "Is it perchance I?" These I drive away
with the hand of my heart, from the face of my remembrance; until what I wish
for be unveiled, and appear in sight, out of its secret place. Other things
come up readily, in unbroken order, as they are called for; those in front making
way for the following; and as they make way, they are hidden from sight, ready
to come when I will. All which takes place when I repeat a thing by heart.
There are all things preserved distinctly and under general heads, each having
entered by its own avenue: as light, and all colours and forms of bodies by
the eyes; by the ears all sorts of sounds; all smells by the avenue of the
nostrils; all tastes by the mouth; and by the sensation of the whole body, what is
hard or soft; hot or cold; or rugged; heavy or light; either outwardly or
inwardly to the body. All these doth that great harbour of the memory receive in her
numberless secret and inexpressible windings, to be forthcoming, and brought out
at need; each entering in by his own gate, and there laid up. Nor yet do the
things themselves enter in; only the images of the things perceived are there in
readiness, for thought to recall. Which images, how they are formed, who can
tell, though it doth plainly appear by which sense each hath been brought in and
stored up? For even while I dwell in darkness and silence, in my memory I can
produce colours, if I will, and discern betwixt black and white, and what
others I will: nor yet do sounds break in and disturb the image drawn in by my eyes,
which I am reviewing, though they also are there, lying dormant, and laid up,
as it were, apart. For these too I call for, and forthwith they appear. And
though my tongue be still, and my throat mute, so can I sing as much as I will;
nor do those images of colours, which notwithstanding be there, intrude
themselves and interrupt, when another store is called for, which flowed in by the ears.
So the other things, piled in and up by the other senses, I recall at my
pleasure. Yea, I discern the breath of lilies from violets, though smelling nothing;
and I prefer honey to sweet wine, smooth before rugged, at the time neither
tasting nor handling, but remembering only.
These things do I within, in that vast court of my memory. For there are
present with me, heaven, earth, sea, and whatever I could think on therein, besides
what I have forgotten. There also meet I with myself, and recall myself, and
when, where, and what I have done, and under what feelings. There be all which I
remember, either on my own experience, or other's credit. Out of the same store
do I myself with the past continually combine fresh and fresh likenesses of
things which I have experienced, or, from what I have experienced, have believed:
and thence again infer future actions, events and hopes, and all these again I
reflect on, as present. "I will do this or that," say I to myself, in that
great receptacle of my mind, stored with the images of things so many and so
great, "and this or that will follow." "O that this or that might be!" "God avert
this or that!" So speak I to myself: and when I speak, the images of all I speak
of are present, out of the same treasury of memory; nor would I speak of any
thereof, were the images wanting.
Great is this force of memory, excessive great, O my God; a large and
boundless chamber! who ever sounded the bottom thereof? yet is this a power of mine,
and belongs unto my nature; nor do I myself comprehend all that I am. Therefore
is the mind too strait to contain itself. And where should that be, which it
containeth not of itself? Is it without it, and not within? how then doth it not
comprehend itself? A wonderful admiration surprises me, amazement seizes me upon
this. And men go abroad to admire the heights of mountains, the mighty billows
of the sea, the broad tides of rivers, the compass of the ocean, and the
circuits of the stars, and pass themselves by; nor wonder that when I spake of all
these things, I did not see them with mine eyes, yet could not have spoken of
them, unless I then actually saw the mountains, billows, rivers, stars which I
had seen, and that ocean which I believe to be, inwardly in my memory, and that,
with the same vast spaces between, as if I saw them abroad. Yet did not I by
seeing draw them into myself, when with mine eyes I beheld them; nor are they
themselves with me, but their images only. And I know by what sense of the body
each was impressed upon me.
CHAPTER IX-NOT ONLY THINGS, BUT ALSO LITERATURE AND IMAGES, ARE TAKEN FROM THE
MEMORY, AND ARE BROUGHT FORTH BY THE ACT OF REMEMBERING.
Yet not these alone does the unmeasurable capacity of my memory retain. Here
also is all, learnt of the liberal sciences and as yet unforgotten; removed as
it were to some inner place, which is yet no place: nor are they the images
thereof, but the things themselves. For, what is literature, what the art of
disputing, how many kinds of questions there be, whatsoever of these I know, in such
manner exists in my memory, as that I have not taken in the image, and left out
the thing, or that it should have sounded and passed away like a voice fixed
on the ear by that impress, whereby it might be recalled, as if it sounded, when
it no longer sounded; or as a smell while it passes and evaporates into air
affects the sense of smell, whence it conveys into the memory an image of itself,
which remembering, we renew, or as meat, which verily in the belly hath now no
taste, and yet in the memory still in a manner tasteth; or as any thing which
the body by touch perceiveth, and which when removed from us, the memory still
conceives. For those things are not transmitted into the memory, but their
images only are with an admirable swiftness caught up, and stored as it were in
wondrous cabinets, and thence wonderfully by the act of remembering, brought forth.
CHAPTER X-LITERATURE IS NOT INTRODUCED TO THE MEMORY THROUGH THE SENSES, BUT
IS BROUGHT FORTH FROM ITS MORE SECRET PLACES.
But now when I hear that there be three kinds of questions, "Whether the thing
be? what it is? of what kind it is? I do indeed hold the images of the sounds
of which those words be composed, and that those sounds, with a noise passed
through the air, and now are not. But the things themselves which are signified
by those sounds, I never reached with any sense of my body, nor ever discerned
them otherwise than in my mind; yet in my memory have I laid up not their
images, but themselves. Which how they entered into me, let them say if they can; for
I have gone over all the avenues of my flesh, but cannot find by which they
entered. For the eyes say, "If those images were coloured, we reported of them."
The ears say, "If they sound, we gave knowledge of them." The nostrils say, "If
they smell, they passed by us." The taste says, "Unless they have a savour,
ask me not." The touch says, "If it have not size, I handled it not; if I handled
it not, I gave no notice of it." Whence and how entered these things into my
memory? I know not how. For when I learned them, I gave not credit to another
man's mind, but recognised them in mine; and approving them for true, I commended
them to it, laying them up as it were, whence I might bring them forth when I
willed. In my heart then they were, even before I learned them, but in my
memory they were not. Where then? or wherefore, when they were spoken, did I
acknowledge them, and said, "So is it, it is true," unless that they were already in
the memory, but so thrown back and buried as it were in deeper recesses, that
had not the suggestion of another drawn them forth I had perchance been unable to
conceive of them?
CHAPTER XI-WHAT IT IS TO LEARN AND TO THINK.
Wherefore we find, that to learn these things whereof we imbibe nor the images
by our senses, but perceive within by themselves, without images, as they are,
is nothing else, but by conception, to receive, and by marking to take heed
that those things which the memory did before contain at random and unarranged,
be laid up at hand as it were in that same memory where before they lay unknown,
scattered and neglected, and so readily occur to the mind familiarised to
them. And how many things of this kind does my memory bear which have been already
found out, and as I said, placed as it were at hand, which we are said to have
learned and come to know which were I for some short space of time to cease to
call to mind, they are again so buried, and glide back, as it were, into the
deeper recesses, that they must again, as if new, he thought out thence, for
other abode they have none: but they must be drawn together again, that they may be
known; that is to say, they must as it were be collected together from their
dispersion: whence the word "cogitation" is derived. For cogo (collect) and
cogito (re-collect) have the same relation to each other as ago and agito, facio
and factito. But the mind hath appropriated to itself this word (cogitation), so
that, not what is "collected" any how, but what is "recollected," i.e., brought
together, in the mind, is properly said to be cogitated, or thought upon.
CHAPTER XII-ON THE RECOLLECTION OF THINGS MATHEMATICAL.
The memory containeth also reasons and laws innumerable of numbers and
dimensions, none of which hath any bodily sense impressed; seeing they have neither
colour, nor sound, nor taste, nor smell, nor touch. I have heard the sound of the
words whereby when discussed they are denoted: but the sounds are other than
the things. For the sounds are other in Greek than in Latin; but the things are
neither Greek, nor Latin, nor any other language. I have seen the lines of
architects, the very finest, like a spider's thread; but those are still different,
they are not the images of those lines which the eye of flesh showed me: he
knoweth them, whosoever without any conception whatsoever of a body, recognises
them within himself. I have perceived also the numbers of the things with which
we number all the senses of my body; but those numbers wherewith we number are
different, nor are they the images of these, and therefore they indeed are. Let
him who seeth them not, deride me for saying these things, and I will pity
him, while he derides me.
CHAPTER XIII-MEMORY RETAINS ALL THINGS.
All these things I remember, and how I learnt them I remember. Many things
also most falsely objected against them have I heard, and remember; which though
they be false, yet is it not false that I remember them; and I remember also
that I have discerned betwixt those truths and these falsehoods objected to them.
And I perceive that the present discerning of these things is different from
remembering that I oftentimes discerned them, when I often thought upon them. I
both remember then to have often understood these things; and what I now discern
and understand, I lay up in my memory, that hereafter I may remember that I
understand it now. So then I remember also to have remembered; as if hereafter I
shall call to remembrance, that I have now been able to remember these things,
by the force of memory shall I call it to remembrance.
CHAPTER XIV-CONCERNING THE MANNER IN WHICH JOY AND SADNESS MAY BE BROUGHT BACK
TO THE MIND AND MEMORY.
The same memory contains also the affections of my mind, not in the same
manner that my mind itself contains them, when it feels them; but far otherwise,
according to a power of its own. For without rejoicing I remember myself to have
joyed; and without sorrow do I recollect my past sorrow. And that I once feared,
I review without fear; and without desire call to mind a past desire.
Sometimes, on the contrary, with joy do I remember my fore-past sorrow, and with
sorrow, joy. Which is not wonderful, as to the body; for mind is one thing, body
another. If I therefore with joy remember some past pain of body, it is not so
wonderful. But now seeing this very memory itself is mind (for when we give a thing
in charge, to be kept in memory, we say, "See that you keep it in mind"; and
when we forget, we say, "It did not come to my mind," and, "It slipped out of my
mind," calling the memory itself the mind); this being so, how is it that when
with joy I remember my past sorrow, the mind hath joy, the memory hath sorrow;
the mind upon the joyfulness which is in it, is joyful, yet the memory upon
the sadness which is in it, is not sad? Does the memory perchance not belong to
the mind? Who will say so? The memory then is, as it were, the belly of the
mind, and joy and sadness, like sweet and bitter food; which, when committed to the
memory, are as it were passed into the belly, where they may be stowed, but
cannot taste. Ridiculous it is to imagine these to be alike; and yet are they not
utterly unlike.
But, behold, out of my memory I bring it, when I say there be four
perturbations of the mind, desire, joy, fear, sorrow; and whatsoever I can dispute
thereon, by dividing each into its subordinate species, and by defining it, in my
memory find I what to say, and thence do I bring it: yet am I not disturbed by any
of these perturbations, when by calling them to mind, I remember them; yea, and
before I recalled and brought them back, they were there; and therefore could
they, by recollection, thence be brought. Perchance, then, as meat is by
chewing the cud brought up out of the belly, so by recollection these out of the
memory. Why then does not the disputer, thus recollecting, taste in the mouth of
his musing the sweetness of joy, or the bitterness of sorrow? Is the comparison
unlike in this, because not in all respects like? For who would willingly speak
thereof, if so oft as we name grief or fear, we should be compelled to be sad
or fearful? And yet could we not speak of them, did we not find in our memory,
not only the sounds of the names according to the images impressed by the senses
of the body, but notions of the very things themselves which we never received
by any avenue of the body, but which the mind itself perceiving by the
experience of its own passions, committed to the memory, or the memory of itself
retained, without being committed unto it.
CHAPTER XV-IN MEMORY THERE ARE ALSO IMAGES OF THINGS WHICH ARE ABSENT.
But whether by images or no, who can readily say? Thus, I name a stone, I name
the sun, the things themselves not being present to my senses, but their
images to my memory. I name a bodily pain, yet it is not present with me, when
nothing aches: yet unless its image were present to my memory, I should not know
what to say thereof, nor in discoursing discern pain from pleasure. I name bodily
health; being sound in body, the thing itself is present with me; yet, unless
its image also were present in my memory, I could by no means recall what the
sound of this name should signify. Nor would the sick, when health were named,
recognise what were spoken, unless the same image were by the force of memory
retained, although the thing itself were absent from the body. I name numbers
whereby we number; and not their images, but themselves are present in my memory. I
name the image of the sun, and that image is present in my memory. For I
recall not the image of its image, but the image itself is present to me, calling it
to mind. I name memory, and I recognise what I name. And where do I recognise
it, but in the memory itself? Is it also present to itself by its image, and
not by itself?
CHAPTER XVI-THE PRIVATION OF MEMORY IS FORGETFULNESS.
What, when I name forgetfulness, and withal recognise what I name? whence
should I recognise it, did I not remember it? I speak not of the sound of the name,
but of the thing which it signifies: which if I had forgotten, I could not
recognise what that sound signifies. When then I remember memory, memory itself
is, through itself, present with itself: but when I remember forgetfulness, there
are present both memory and forgetfulness; memory whereby I remember,
forgetfulness which I remember. But what is forgetfulness, but the privation of memory?
How then is it present that I remember it, since when present I cannot
remember? But if what we remember we hold it in memory, yet, unless we did remember
forgetfulness, we could never at the hearing of the name recognise the thing
thereby signified, then forgetfulness is retained by memory. Present then it is,
that we forget not, and being so, we forget. It is to be understood from this
that forgetfulness when we remember it, is not present to the memory by itself but
by its image: because if it were present by itself, it would not cause us to
remember, but to forget. Who now shall search out this? who shall comprehend how
it is?
Lord, I, truly, toil therein, yea and toil in myself; I am become a heavy soil
requiring over much sweat of the brow. For we are not now searching out the
regions of heaven, or measuring the distances of the stars, or enquiring the
balancings of the earth. It is I myself who remember, I the mind. It is not so
wonderful, if what I myself am not, be far from me. But what is nearer to me than
myself? And to, the force of mine own memory is not understood by me; though I
cannot so much as name myself without it. For what shall I say, when it is clear
to me that I remember forgetfulness? Shall I say that that is not in my
memory, which I remember? or shall I say that forgetfulness is for this purpose in my
memory, that I might not forget? Both were most absurd. What third way is
there? How can I say that the image of forgetfulness is retained by my memory, not
forgetfulness itself, when I remember it? How could I say this either, seeing
that when the image of any thing is impressed on the memory, the thing itself
must needs be first present, whence that image may be impressed? For thus do I
remember Carthage, thus all places where I have been, thus men's faces whom I
have seen, and things reported by the other senses; thus the health or sickness of
the body. For when these things were present, my memory received from them
images, which being present with me, I might look on and bring back in my mind,
when I remembered them in their absence. If then this forgetfulness is retained
in the memory through its image, not through itself, then plainly itself was
once present, that its image might be taken. But when it was present, how did it
write its image in the memory, seeing that forgetfulness by its presence effaces
even what it finds already noted? And yet, in whatever way, although that way
be past conceiving and explaining, yet certain am I that I remember
forgetfulness itself also, whereby what we remember is effaced.
CHAPTER XVII-GOD CANNOT BE ATTAINED UNTO BY THE POWER OF MEMORY, WHICH BEASTS
AND BIRDS POSSESS.
Great is the power of memory, a fearful thing, O my God, a deep and boundless
manifoldness; and this thing is the mind, and this am I myself. What am I then,
O my God? What nature am I? A life various and manifold, and exceeding
immense. Behold in the plains, and caves, and caverns of my memory, innumerable and
innumerably full of innumerable kinds of things, either through images, as all
bodies; or by actual presence, as the arts; or by certain notions or impressions,
as the affections of the mind, which, even when the mind doth not feel, the
memory retaineth, while yet whatsoever is in the memory is also in the mind- over
all these do I run, I fly; I dive on this side and on that, as far as I can,
and there is no end. So great is the force of memory, so great the force of
life, even in the mortal life of man. What shall I do then, O Thou my true life, my
God? I will pass even beyond this power of mine which is called memory: yea, I
will pass beyond it, that I may approach unto Thee, O sweet Light. What sayest
Thou to me? See, I am mounting up through my mind towards Thee who abidest
above me. Yea, I now will pass beyond this power of mine which is called memory,
desirous to arrive at Thee, whence Thou mayest be arrived at; and to cleave unto
Thee, whence one may cleave unto Thee. For even beasts and birds have memory;
else could they not return to their dens and nests, nor many other things they
are used unto: nor indeed could they be used to any thing, but by memory. I
will pass then beyond memory also, that I may arrive at Him who hath separated me
from the four-footed beasts and made me wiser than the fowls of the air, I will
pass beyond memory also, and where shall I find Thee, Thou truly good and
certain sweetness? And where shall I find Thee? If I find Thee without my memory,
then do I not retain Thee in my memory. And how shall I find Thee, if I remember
Thee not?
CHAPTER XVIII-A THING WHEN LOST COULD NOT BE FOUND UNLESS IT WERE RETAINED IN
THE MEMORY.
For the woman that had lost her groat, and sought it with a light; unless she
had remembered it, she had never found it. For when it was found, whence should
she know whether it were the same, unless she remembered it? I remember to
have sought and found many a thing; and this I thereby know, that when I was
seeking any of them, and was asked, "Is this it?" "Is that it?" so long said I "No,"
until that were offered me which I sought. Which had I not remembered
(whatever it were) though it were offered me, yet should I not find it, because I could
not recognise it. And so it ever is, when we seek and find any lost thing.
Notwithstanding, when any thing is by chance lost from the sight, not from the
memory (as any visible body), yet its image is still retained within, and it is
sought until it be restored to sight; and when it is found, it is recognised by
the image which is within: nor do we say that we have found what was lost,
unless we recognise it; nor can we recognise it, unless we remember it. But this was
lost to the eyes, but retained in the memory.
CHAPTER XIX-WHAT IT IS TO REMEMBER.
But what when the memory itself loses any thing, as falls out when we forget
and seek that we may recollect? Where in the end do we search, but in the memory
itself? and there, if one thing be perchance offered instead of another, we
reject it, until what we seek meets us; and when it doth, we say, "This is it";
which we should not unless we recognised it, nor recognise it unless we
remembered it. Certainly then we had forgotten it. Or, had not the whole escaped us,
but by the part whereof we had hold, was the lost part sought for; in that the
memory felt that it did not carry on together all which it was wont, and maimed,
as it were, by the curtailment of its ancient habit, demanded the restoration
of what it missed? For instance, if we see or think of some one known to us, and
having forgotten his name, try to recover it; whatever else occurs, connects
itself not therewith; because it was not wont to be thought upon together with
him, and therefore is rejected, until that present itself, whereon the knowledge
reposes equably as its wonted object. And whence does that present itself, but
out of the memory itself? for even when we recognise it, on being reminded by
another, it is thence it comes. For we do not believe it as something new, but,
upon recollection, allow what was named to be right. But were it utterly
blotted out of the mind, we should not remember it, even when reminded. For we have
not as yet utterly forgotten that, which we remember ourselves to have
forgotten. What then we have utterly forgotten, though lost, we cannot even seek after.
CHAPTER XX-WE SHOULD NOT SEEK FOR GOD AND THE HAPPY LIFE UNLESS WE HAD KNOWN
IT.
How then do I seek Thee, O Lord? For when I seek Thee, my God, I seek a happy
life. I will seek Thee, that my soul may live. For my body liveth by my soul;
and my soul by Thee. How then do I seek a happy life, seeing I have it not,
until I can say, where I ought to say it, "It is enough"? How seek I it? By
remembrance, as though I had forgotten it, remembering that I had forgotten it? Or,
desiring to learn it as a thing unknown, either never having known, or so
forgotten it, as not even to remember that I had forgotten it? is not a happy life
what all will, and no one altogether wills it not? where have they known it, that
they so will it? where seen it, that they so love it? Truly we have it, how, I
know not. Yea, there is another way, wherein when one hath it, then is he
happy; and there are, who are blessed, in hope. These have it in a lower kind, than
they who have it in very deed; yet are they better off than such as are happy
neither in deed nor in hope. Yet even these, had they it not in some sort, would
not so will to be happy, which that they do will, is most certain. They have
known it then, I know not how, and so have it by some sort of knowledge, what, I
know not, and am perplexed whether it be in the memory, which if it be, then
we have been happy once; whether all severally, or in that man who first sinned,
in whom also we all died, and from whom we are all born with misery, I now
enquire not; but only, whether the happy life be in the memory? For neither should
we love it, did we not know it. We hear the name, and we all confess that we
desire the thing; for we are not delighted with the mere sound. For when a Greek
hears it in Latin, he is not delighted, not knowing what is spoken; but we
Latins are delighted, as would he too, if he heard it in Greek; because the thing
itself is neither Greek nor Latin, which Greeks and Latins, and men of all
other tongues, long for so earnestly. Known therefore it is to all, for they with
one voice be asked, "would they be happy?" they would answer without doubt,
"they would." And this could not be, unless the thing itself whereof it is the name
were retained in their memory.
CHAPTER XXI-HOW A HAPPY LIFE MAY BE RETAINED IN THE MEMORY.
But is it so, as one remembers Carthage who hath seen it? No. For a happy life
is not seen with the eye, because it is not a body. As we remember numbers
then? No. For these, he that hath in his knowledge, seeks not further to attain
unto; but a happy life we have in our knowledge, and therefore love it, and yet
still desire to attain it, that we may be happy. As we remember eloquence then?
No. For although upon hearing this name also, some call to mind the thing, who
still are not yet eloquent, and many who desire to be so, whence it appears
that it is in their knowledge; yet these have by their bodily senses observed
others to be eloquent, and been delighted, and desire to be the like (though indeed
they would not be delighted but for some inward knowledge thereof, nor wish to
be the like, unless they were thus delighted); whereas a happy life, we do by
no bodily sense experience in others. As then we remember joy? Perchance; for
my joy I remember, even when sad, as a happy life, when unhappy; nor did I ever
with bodily sense see, hear, smell, taste, or touch my joy; but I experienced
it in my mind, when I rejoiced; and the knowledge of it clave to my memory, so
that I can recall it with disgust sometimes, at others with longing, according
to the nature of the things, wherein I remember myself to have joyed. For even
from foul things have I been immersed in a sort of joy; which now recalling, I
detest and execrate; otherwhiles in good and honest things, which I recall with
longing, although perchance no longer present; and therefore with sadness I
recall former joy.
Where then and when did I experience my happy life, that I should remember,
and love, and long for it? Nor is it I alone, or some few besides, but we all
would fain be happy; which, unless by some certain knowledge we knew, we should
not with so certain a will desire. But how is this, that if two men be asked
whether they would go to the wars, one, perchance, would answer that he would, the
other, that he would not; but if they were asked whether they would be happy,
both would instantly without any doubting say they would; and for no other
reason would the one go to the wars, and the other not, but to be happy. Is it
perchance that as one looks for his joy in this thing, another in that, all agree in
their desire of being happy, as they would (if they were asked) that they
wished to have joy, and this joy they call a happy life? Although then one obtains
this joy by one means, another by another, all have one end, which they strive
to attain, namely, joy. Which being a thing which all must say they have
experienced, it is therefore found in the memory, and recognised whenever the name of
a happy life is mentioned.
CHAPTER XXII-A HAPPY LIFE IS TO REJOICE IN GOD, AND FOR GOD.
Far be it, Lord, far be it from the heart of Thy servant who here confesseth
unto Thee, far be it, that, be the joy what it may, I should therefore think
myself happy. For there is a joy which is not given to the ungodly, but to those
who love Thee for Thine own sake, whose joy Thou Thyself art. And this is the
happy life, to rejoice to Thee, of Thee, for Thee; this is it, and there is no
other. For they who think there is another, pursue some other and not the true
joy. Yet is not their will turned away from some semblance of joy.
CHAPTER XXIII-ALL WISH TO REJOICE IN THE TRUTH.
It is not certain then that all wish to be happy, inasmuch as they who wish
not to joy in Thee, which is the only happy life, do not truly desire the happy
life. Or do all men desire this, but because the flesh lusteth against the
Spirit, and the Spirit against the flesh, that they cannot do what they would, they
fall upon that which they can, and are content therewith; because, what they
are not able to do, they do not will so strongly as would suffice to make them
able? For I ask any one, had he rather joy in truth, or in falsehood? They will
as little hesitate to say "in the truth," as to say "that they desire to be
happy," for a happy life is joy in the truth: for this is a joying in Thee, Who art
the Truth, O God my light, health of my countenance, my God. This is the happy
life which all desire; this life which alone is happy, all desire; to joy in
the truth all desire. I have met with many that would deceive; who would be
deceived, no one. Where then did they know this happy life, save where they know
the truth also? For they love it also, since they would not be deceived. And when
they love a happy life, which is no other than joying in the truth, then also
do they love the truth; which yet they would not love, were there not some
notice of it in their memory. Why then joy they not in it? why are they not happy?
because they are more strongly taken up with other things which have more power
to make them miserable, than that which they so faintly remember to make them
happy. For there is yet a little light in men; let them walk, let them walk,
that the darkness overtake them not.
But why doth "truth generate hatred," and the man of Thine, preaching the
truth, become an enemy to them? whereas a happy life is loved, which is nothing
else but joying in the truth; unless that truth is in that kind loved, that they
who love anything else would gladly have that which they love to be the truth:
and because they would not be deceived, would not be convinced that they are so?
Therefore do they hate the truth for that thing's sake which they loved
instead of the truth. They love truth when she enlightens, they hate her when she
reproves. For since they would not be deceived, and would deceive, they love her
when she discovers herself unto them, and hate her when she discovers them.
Whence she shall so repay them, that they who would not be made manifest by her,
she both against their will makes manifest, and herself becometh not manifest
unto them. Thus, thus, yea thus doth the mind of man, thus blind and sick, foul
and ill-favoured, wish to be hidden, but that aught should be hidden from it, it
wills not. But the contrary is requited it, that itself should not be hidden
from the Truth; but the Truth is hid from it. Yet even thus miserable, it had
rather joy in truths than in falsehoods. Happy then will it be, when, no
distraction interposing, it shall joy in that only Truth, by Whom all things are true.
CHAPTER XXIV-HE WHO FINDS TRUTH, FINDS GOD.
See what a space I have gone over in my memory seeking Thee, O Lord; and I
have not found Thee, without it. Nor have I found any thing concerning Thee, but
what I have kept in memory, ever since I learnt Thee. For since I learnt Thee, I
have not forgotten Thee. For where I found Truth, there found I my God, the
Truth itself; which since I learnt, I have not forgotten. Since then I learnt
Thee, Thou residest in my memory; and there do I find Thee, when I call Thee to
remembrance, and delight in Thee. These be my holy delights, which Thou hast
given me in Thy mercy, having regard to my poverty.
CHAPTER XXV-HE IS GLAD THAT GOD DWELLS IN HIS MEMORY.
But where in my memory residest Thou, O Lord, where residest Thou there? what
manner of lodging hast Thou framed for Thee? what manner of sanctuary hast Thou
builded for Thee? Thou hast given this honour to my memory, to reside in it;
but in what quarter of it Thou residest, that am I considering. For in thinking
on Thee, I passed beyond such parts of it as the beasts also have, for I found
Thee not there among the images of corporeal things: and I came to those parts
to which I committed the affections of my mind, nor found Thee there. And I
entered into the very seat of my mind (which it hath in my memory, inasmuch as the
mind remembers itself also), neither wert Thou there: for as Thou art not a
corporeal image, nor the affection of a living being (as when we rejoice,
condole, desire, fear, remember, forget, or the like); so neither art Thou the mind
itself; because Thou art the Lord God of the mind; and all these are changed, but
Thou remainest unchangeable over all, and yet hast vouchsafed to dwell in my
memory, since I learnt Thee. And why seek I now in what place thereof Thou
dwellest, as if there were places therein? Sure I am, that in it Thou dwellest,
since I have remembered Thee ever since I learnt Thee, and there I find Thee, when
I call Thee to remembrance.
CHAPTER XXVI-GOD EVERYWHERE ANSWERS THOSE WHO TAKE COUNSEL OF HIM.
Where then did I find Thee, that I might learn Thee? For in my memory Thou
wert not, before I learned Thee. Where then did I find Thee, that I might learn
Thee, but in Thee above me? Place there is none; we go backward and forward, and
there is no place. Every where, O Truth, dost Thou give audience to all who ask
counsel of Thee, and at once answerest all, though on manifold matters they
ask Thy counsel. Clearly dost Thou answer, though all do not clearly hear. All
consult Thee on what they will, though they hear not always what they will. He is
Thy best servant who looks not so much to hear that from Thee which himself
willeth, as rather to will that, which from Thee he heareth.
CHAPTER XXVII-HE GRIEVES THAT HE WAS SO LONG WITHOUT GOD.
Too late loved I Thee, O Thou Beauty of ancient days, yet ever new! too late I
loved Thee! And behold, Thou wert within, and I abroad, and there I searched
for Thee; deformed I, plunging amid those fair forms which Thou hadst made. Thou
wert with me, but I was not with Thee. Things held me far from Thee, which,
unless they were in Thee, were not at all. Thou calledst, and shoutedst, and
burstest my deafness. Thou flashedst, shonest, and scatteredst my blindness. Thou
breathedst odours, and I drew in breath and panted for Thee. I tasted, and
hunger and thirst. Thou touchedst me, and I burned for Thy peace.
CHAPTER XXVIII-ON THE MISERY OF HUMAN LIFE.
When I shall with my whole self cleave to Thee, I shall no where have sorrow
or labour; and my life shall wholly live, as wholly full of Thee. But now since
whom Thou fillest, Thou liftest up, because I am not full of Thee I am a burden
to myself. Lamentable joys strive with joyous sorrows: and on which side is
the victory, I know not. Woe is me! Lord, have pity on me. My evil sorrows strive
with my good joys; and on which side is the victory, I know not. Woe is me!
Lord, have pity on me. Woe is me! lo! I hide not my wounds; Thou art the
Physician, I the sick; Thou merciful, I miserable. Is not the life of man upon earth
all trial? Who wishes for troubles and difficulties? Thou commandest them to be
endured, not to be loved. No man loves what he endures, though he love to
endure. For though he rejoices that he endures, he had rather there were nothing for
him to endure. In adversity I long for prosperity, in prosperity I fear
adversity. What middle place is there betwixt these two, where the life of man is not
all trial? Woe to the prosperities of the world, once and again, through fear
of adversity, and corruption of joy! Woe to the adversities of the world, once
and again, and the third time, from the longing for prosperity, and because
adversity itself is a hard thing, and lest it shatter endurance. Is not the life of
man upon earth all trial: without any interval?
CHAPTER XXIX-ALL HOPE IS IN THE MERCY OF GOD.
And all my hope is no where but in Thy exceeding great mercy. Give what Thou
enjoinest, and enjoin what Thou wilt. Thou enjoinest us continency; and when I
knew, saith one, that no man can be continent, unless God give it, this also was
a part of wisdom to know whose gift she is. By continency verily are we bound
up and brought back into One, whence we were dissipated into many. For too
little doth he love Thee, who loves any thing with Thee, which he loveth not for
Thee. O love, who ever burnest and never consumest! O charity, my God, kindle me.
Thou enjoinest continency: give me what Thou enjoinest, and enjoin what Thou
wilt.
CHAPTER XXX-OF THE PERVERSE IMAGES OF DREAMS, WHICH HE WISHES TO HAVE TAKEN
AWAY.
Verily Thou enjoinest me continency from the lust of the flesh, the lust of
the eyes, and the ambition of the world. Thou enjoinest continency from
concubinage; and for wedlock itself, Thou hast counselled something better than what
Thou hast permitted. And since Thou gavest it, it was done, even before I became a
dispenser of Thy Sacrament. But there yet live in my memory (whereof I have
much spoken) the images of such things as my ill custom there fixed; which haunt
me, strengthless when I am awake: but in sleep, not only so as to give
pleasure, but even to obtain assent, and what is very like reality. Yea, so far
prevails the illusion of the image, in my soul and in my flesh, that, when asleep,
false visions persuade to that which when waking, the true cannot. Am I not then
myself, O Lord my God? And yet there is so much difference betwixt myself and
myself, within that moment wherein I pass from waking to sleeping, or return from
sleeping to waking! Where is reason then, which, awake, resisteth such
suggestions? And should the things themselves be urged on it, it remaineth unshaken.
Is it clasped up with the eyes? is it lulled asleep with the senses of the body?
And whence is it that often even in sleep we resist, and mindful of our
purpose, and abiding most chastely in it, yield no assent to such enticements? And
yet so much difference there is, that when it happeneth otherwise, upon waking we
return to peace of conscience: and by this very difference discover that we
did not, what yet we be sorry that in some way it was done in us.
Art Thou not mighty, God Almighty, so as to heal all the diseases of my soul,
and by Thy more abundant grace to quench even the impure motions of my sleep!
Thou wilt increase, Lord, Thy gifts more and more in me, that my soul may follow
me to Thee, disentangled from the birdlime of concupiscence; that it rebel not
against itself, and even in dreams not only not, through images of sense,
commit those debasing corruptions, even to pollution of the flesh, but not even to
consent unto them. For that nothing of this sort should have, over the pure
affections even of a sleeper, the very least influence, not even such as a thought
would restrain, -to work this, not only during life, but even at my present
age, is not hard for the Almighty, Who art able to do above all that we ask or
think. But what I yet am in this kind of my evil, have I confessed unto my good
Lord; rejoicing with trembling, in that which Thou hast given me, and bemoaning
that wherein I am still imperfect; hoping that Thou wilt perfect Thy mercies in
me, even to perfect peace, which my outward and inward man shall have with
Thee, when death shall be swallowed up in victory.
CHAPTER XXXI-ABOUT TO SPEAK OF THE TEMPTATIONS OF THE LUST OF THE FLESH, HE
FIRST COMPLAINS OF THE LUST OF EATING AND DRINKING.
There is another evil of the day, which I would were sufficient for it. For by
eating and drinking we repair the daily decays of our body, until Thou destroy
both belly and meat, when Thou shalt slay my emptiness with a wonderful
fulness, and clothe this incorruptible with an eternal incorruption. But now the
necessity is sweet unto me, against which sweetness I fight, that I be not taken
captive; and carry on a daily war by fastings; often bringing my body into
subjection; and my pains are removed by pleasure. For hunger and thirst are in a
manner pains; they burn and kill like a fever, unless the medicine of nourishments
come to our aid. Which since it is at hand through the consolations of Thy
gifts, with which land, and water, and air serve our weakness, our calamity is
termed gratification.
This hast Thou taught me, that I should set myself to take food as physic. But
while I am passing from the discomfort of emptiness to the content of
replenishing, in the very passage the snare of concupiscence besets me. For that
passing, is pleasure, nor is there any other way to pass thither, whither we needs
must pass. And health being the cause of eating and drinking, there joineth
itself as an attendant a dangerous pleasure, which mostly endeavours to go before
it, so that I may for her sake do what I say I do, or wish to do, for health's
sake. Nor have each the same measure; for what is enough for health, is too
little for pleasure. And oft it is uncertain, whether it be the necessary care of
the body which is yet asking for sustenance, or whether a voluptuous
deceivableness of greediness is proffering its services. In this uncertainty the unhappy
soul rejoiceth, and therein prepares an excuse to shield itself, glad that it
appeareth not what sufficeth for the moderation of health, that under the cloak of
health, it may disguise the matter of gratification. These temptations I daily
endeavour to resist, and I call on Thy right hand, and to Thee do I refer my
perplexities; because I have as yet no settled counsel herein.
I hear the voice of my God commanding, Let not your hearts be overcharged with
surfeiting and drunkenness. Drunkenness is far from me; Thou wilt have mercy,
that it come not near me. But full feeding sometimes creepeth upon Thy servant;
Thou wilt have mercy, that it may be far from me. For no one can be continent
unless Thou give it. Many things Thou givest us, praying for them; and what
good soever we have received before we prayed, from Thee we received it; yea to
the end we might afterwards know this, did we before receive it. Drunkard was I
never, but drunkards have I known made sober by Thee. From Thee then it was,
that they who never were such, should not so be, as from Thee it was, that they
who have been, should not ever so be; and from Thee it was, that both might know
from Whom it was. I heard another voice of Thine, Go not after thy lusts, and
from thy pleasure turn away. Yea by Thy favour have I heard that which I have
much loved; neither if we eat, shall we abound; neither if we eat not, shall we
lack; which is to say, neither shall the one make me plenteous, nor the other
miserable. I heard also another, for I have learned in whatsoever state I am,
therewith to be content; I know how to abound, and how to suffer need. I can do
all things through Christ that strengtheneth me. Behold a soldier of the heavenly
camp, not the dust which we are. But remember, Lord, that we are dust, and
that of dust Thou hast made man; and he was lost and is found. Nor could he of
himself do this, because he whom I so loved, saying this through the in-breathing
of Thy inspiration, was of the same dust. I can do all things (saith he)
through Him that strengtheneth me. Strengthen me, that I can. Give what Thou
enjoinest, and enjoin what Thou wilt. He confesses to have received, and when he
glorieth, in the Lord he glorieth. Another have I heard begging that he might
receive. Take from me (saith he) the desires of the belly; whence it appeareth, O my
holy God, that Thou givest, when that is done which Thou commandest to be done.
Thou hast taught me, good Father, that to the pure, all things are pure; but
that it is evil unto the man that eateth with offence; and, that every creature
of Thine is good, and nothing to be refused, which is received with
thanksgiving; and that meat commendeth us not to God; and, that no man should judge us in
meat or drink; and, that he which eateth, let him not despise him that eateth
not; and let not him that eateth not, judge him that eateth. These things have I
learned, thanks be to Thee, praise to Thee, my God, my Master, knocking at my
ears, enlightening my heart; deliver me out of all temptation. I fear not
uncleanness of meat, but the uncleanness of lusting. I know; that Noah was permitted
to eat all kind of flesh that was good for food; that Elijah was fed with
flesh; that endued with an admirable abstinence, was not polluted by feeding on
living creatures, locusts. I know also that Esau was deceived by lusting for
lentiles; and that David blamed himself for desiring a draught of water; and that
our King was tempted, not concerning flesh, but bread. And therefore the people
in the wilderness also deserved to be reproved, not for desiring flesh, but
because, in the desire of food, they murmured against the Lord.
Placed then amid these temptations, I strive daily against concupiscence in
eating and drinking. For it is not of such nature that I can settle on cutting it
off once for all, and never touching it afterward, as I could of concubinage.
The bridle of the throat then is to be held attempered between slackness and
stiffness. And who is he, O Lord, who is not some whit transported beyond the
limits of necessity? whoever he is, he is a great one; let him make Thy Name
great. But I am not such, for I am a sinful man. Yet do I too magnify Thy name; and
He maketh intercession to Thee for my sins who hath overcome the world;
numbering me among the weak members of His body; because Thine eyes have seen that of
Him which is imperfect, and in Thy book shall all be written.
CHAPTER XXXII-OF THE CHARMS OF PERFUMES WHICH ARE MORE EASILY OVERCOME.
With the allurements of smells, I am not much concerned. When absent, I do not
miss them; when present, I do not refuse them; yet ever ready to be without
them. So I seem to myself; perchance I am deceived. For that also is a mournful
darkness whereby my abilities within me are hidden from me; so that my mind
making enquiry into herself of her own powers, ventures not readily to believe
herself; because even what is in it is mostly hidden, unless experience reveal it.
And no one ought to be secure in that life, the whole whereof is called a
trial, that he who hath been capable of worse to be made better, may not likewise of
better be made worse. Our only hope, only confidence, only assured promise is
Thy mercy.
CHAPTER XXXIII-HE OVERCAME THE PLEASURES OF THE EAR, ALTHOUGH IN THE CHURCH HE
FREQUENTLY DELIGHTED IN THE SONG, NOT IN THE THING SUNG.
The delights of the ear had more firmly entangled and subdued me; but Thou
didst loosen and free me. Now, in those melodies which Thy words breathe soul
into, when sung with a sweet and attuned voice, I do a little repose; yet not so as
to be held thereby, but that I can disengage myself when I will. But with the
words which are their life and whereby they find admission into me, themselves
seek in my affections a place of some estimation, and I can scarcely assign
them one suitable. For at one time I seem to myself to give them more honour than
is seemly, feeling our minds to be more holily and fervently raised unto a
flame of devotion, by the holy words themselves when thus sung, than when not; and
that the several affections of our spirit, by a sweet variety, have their own
proper measures in the voice and singing, by some hidden correspondence
wherewith they are stirred up. But this contentment of the flesh, to which the soul
must not be given over to be enervated, doth oft beguile me, the sense not so
waiting upon reason as patiently to follow her; but having been admitted merely for
her sake, it strives even to run before her, and lead her. Thus in these
things I unawares sin, but afterwards am aware of it.
At other times, shunning over-anxiously this very deception, I err in too
great strictness; and sometimes to that degree, as to wish the whole melody of
sweet music which is used to David's Psalter, banished from my ears, and the
Church's too; and that mode seems to me safer, which I remember to have been often
told me of Athanasius, Bishop of Alexandria, who made the reader of the psalm
utter it with so slight inflection of voice, that it was nearer speaking than
singing. Yet again, when I remember the tears I shed at the Psalmody of Thy Church,
in the beginning of my recovered faith; and how at this time I am moved, not
with the singing, but with the things sung, when they are sung with a clear
voice and modulation most suitable, I acknowledge the great use of this
institution. Thus I fluctuate between peril of pleasure and approved wholesomeness;
inclined the rather (though not as pronouncing an irrevocable opinion) to approve of
the usage of singing in the church; that so by the delight of the ears the
weaker minds may rise to the feeling of devotion. Yet when it befalls me to be more
moved with the voice than the words sung, I confess to have sinned penally,
and then had rather not hear music. See now my state; weep with me, and weep for
me, ye, whoso regulate your feelings within, as that good action ensues. For
you who do not act, these things touch not you. But Thou, O Lord my God, hearken;
behold, and see, and have mercy and heal me, Thou, in whose presence I have
become a problem to myself; and that is my infirmity.
CHAPTER XXXIV-OF THE VERY DANGEROUS ALLUREMENTS OF THE EYES; ON ACCOUNT OF
BEAUTY OF FORM, GOD, THE CREATOR, IS TO BE PRAISED.
There remains the pleasure of these eyes of my flesh, on which to make my
confessions in the hearing of the ears of Thy temple, those brotherly and devout
ears; and so to conclude the temptations of the lust of the flesh, which yet
assail me, groaning earnestly, and desiring to be clothed upon with my house from
heaven. The eyes love fair and varied forms, and bright and soft colours. Let
not these occupy my soul; let God rather occupy it, who made these things, very
good indeed, yet is He my good, not they. And these affect me, waking, the whole
day, nor is any rest given me from them, as there is from musical, sometimes
in silence, from all voices. For this queen of colours, the light, bathing all
which we behold, wherever I am through the day, gliding by me in varied forms,
soothes me when engaged on other things, and not observing it. And so strongly
doth it entwine itself, that if it be suddenly withdrawn, it is with longing
sought for, and if absent long, saddeneth the mind.
O Thou Light, which Tobias saw, when, these eyes closed, he taught his son the
way of life; and himself went before with the feet of charity, never swerving.
Or which Isaac saw, when his fleshly eyes being heavy and closed by old age,
it was vouchsafed him, not knowingly, to bless his sons, but by blessing to know
them. Or which Jacob saw, when he also, blind through great age, with
illumined heart, in the persons of his sons shed light on the different races of the
future people, in them foresignified; and laid his hands, mystically crossed,
upon his grandchildren by Joseph, not as their father by his outward eye corrected
them, but as himself inwardly discerned. This is the light, it is one, and all
are one, who see and love it. But that corporeal light whereof I spake, it
seasoneth the life of this world for her blind lovers, with an enticing and
dangerous sweetness. But they who know how to praise Thee for it, "O all-creating
Lord," take it up in Thy hymns, and are not taken up with it in their sleep. Such
would I be. These seductions of the eyes I resist, lest my feet wherewith I
walk upon Thy way be ensnared; and I lift up mine invisible eyes to Thee, that
Thou wouldest pluck my feet out of the snare. Thou dost ever and anon pluck them
out, for they are ensnared. Thou ceasest not to pluck them out, while I often
entangle myself in the snares on all sides laid; because Thou that keepest Israel
shalt neither slumber nor sleep.
What innumerable toys, made by divers arts and manufactures, in our apparel,
shoes, utensils and all sorts of works, in pictures also and divers images, and
these far exceeding all necessary and moderate use and all pious meaning, have
men added to tempt their own eyes withal; outwardly following what themselves
make, inwardly forsaking Him by whom themselves were made, and destroying that
which themselves have been made! But I, my God and my Glory, do hence also sing
a hymn to Thee, and do consecrate praise to Him who consecrateth me, because
those beautiful patterns which through men's souls are conveyed into their
cunning hands, come from that Beauty, which is above our souls, which my soul day and
night sigheth after. But the framers and followers of the outward beauties
derive thence the rule of judging of them, but not of using them. And He is there,
though they perceive Him not, that so they might not wander, but keep their
strength for Thee, and not scatter it abroad upon pleasurable weariness. And I,
though I speak and see this, entangle my steps with these outward beauties; but
Thou pluckest me out, O Lord, Thou pluckest me out; because Thy loving-kindness
is before my eyes. For I am taken miserably, and Thou pluckest me out
mercifully; sometimes not perceiving it, when I had but lightly lighted upon them;
otherwhiles with pain, because I had stuck fast in them.
CHAPTER XXXV-ANOTHER KIND OF TEMPTATION IS CURIOSITY, WHICH IS STIMULATED BY
THE LUST OF THE EYES.
To this is added another form of temptation more manifoldly dangerous. For
besides that concupiscence of the flesh which consisteth in the delight of all
senses and pleasures, wherein its slaves, who go far from Thee, waste and perish,
the soul hath, through the same senses of the body, a certain vain and curious
desire, veiled under the title of knowledge and learning, not of delighting in
the flesh, but of making experiments through the flesh. The seat whereof being
in the appetite of knowledge, and sight being the sense chiefly used for
attaining knowledge, it is in Divine language called The lust of the eyes. For, to
see, belongeth properly to the eyes; yet we use this word of the other senses
also, when we employ them in seeking knowledge. For we do not say, hark how it
flashes, or smell how it glows, or taste how it shines, or feel how it gleams; for
all these are said to be seen. And yet we say not only, see how it shineth,
which the eyes alone can perceive; but also, see how it soundeth, see how it
smelleth, see how it tasteth, see how hard it is. And so the general experience of
the senses, as was said, is called The lust of the eyes, because the office of
seeing, wherein the eyes hold the prerogative, the other senses by way of
similitude take to themselves, when they make search after any knowledge.
But by this may more evidently be discerned, wherein pleasure and wherein
curiosity is the object of the senses; for pleasure seeketh objects beautiful,
melodious, fragrant, savoury, soft; but curiosity, for trial's sake, the contrary
as well, not for the sake of suffering annoyance, but out of the lust of making
trial and knowing them. For what pleasure hath it, to see in a mangled carcase
what will make you shudder? and yet if it be lying near, they flock thither, to
be made sad, and to turn pale. Even in sleep they are afraid to see it. As if
when awake, any one forced them to see it, or any report of its beauty drew
them thither! Thus also in the other senses, which it were long to go through.
From this disease of curiosity are all those strange sights exhibited in the
theatre. Hence men go on to search out the hidden powers of nature (which is besides
our end), which to know profits not, and wherein men desire nothing but to
know. Hence also, if with that same end of perverted knowledge magical arts be
enquired by. Hence also in religion itself, is God tempted, when signs and wonders
are demanded of Him, not desired for any good end, but merely to make trial of.
In this so vast wilderness, full of snares and dangers, behold many of them I
have cut off, and thrust out of my heart, as Thou hast given me, O God of my
salvation. And yet when dare I say, since so many things of this kind buzz on all
sides about our daily life- when dare I say that nothing of this sort engages
my attention, or causes in me an idle interest? True, the theatres do not now
carry me away, nor care I to know the courses of the stars, nor did my soul ever
consult ghosts departed; all sacrilegious mysteries I detest. From Thee, O
Lord my God, to whom I owe humble and single-hearted service, by what artifices
and suggestions doth the enemy deal with me to desire some sign! But I beseech
Thee by our King, and by our pure and holy country, Jerusalem, that as any
consenting thereto is far from me, so may it ever be further and further. But when I
pray Thee for the salvation of any, my end and intention is far different. Thou
givest and wilt give me to follow Thee willingly, doing what Thou wilt.
Notwithstanding, in how many most petty and contemptible things is our
curiosity daily tempted, and how often we give way, who can recount? How often do we
begin as if we were tolerating people telling vain stories, lest we offend the
weak; then by degrees we take interest therein! I go not now to the circus to
see a dog coursing a hare; but in the field, if passing, that coursing
peradventure will distract me even from some weighty thought, and draw me after it: not
that I turn aside the body of my beast, yet still incline my mind thither. And
unless Thou, having made me see my infirmity didst speedily admonish me either
through the sight itself by some contemplation to rise towards Thee, or
altogether to despise and pass it by, I dully stand fixed therein. What, when sitting
at home, a lizard catching flies, or a spider entangling them rushing into her
nets, oft-times takes my attention? Is the thing different, because they are but
small creatures? I go on from them to praise Thee the wonderful Creator and
Orderer of all, but this does not first draw my attention. It is one thing to
rise quickly, another not to fall. And of such things is my life full; and my one
hope is Thy wonderful great mercy. For when our heart becomes the receptacle of
such things, and is overcharged with throngs of this abundant vanity, then are
our prayers also thereby often interrupted and distracted, and whilst in Thy
presence we direct the voice of our heart to Thine ears, this so great concern
is broken off by the rushing in of I know not what idle thoughts. Shall we then
account this also among things of slight concernment, or shall aught bring us
back to hope, save Thy complete mercy, since Thou hast begun to change us?
CHAPTER XXXVI-A THIRD KIND IS "PRIDE," WHICH IS PLEASING TO MAN, NOT TO GOD.
And Thou knowest how far Thou hast already changed me, who first healedst me
of the lust of vindicating myself, that so Thou mightest forgive all the rest of
my iniquities, and heal all my infirmities, and redeem life from corruption,
and crown me with mercy and pity, and satisfy my desire with good things: who
didst curb my pride with Thy fear, and tame my neck to Thy yoke. And now I bear
it and it is light unto me, because so hast Thou promised, and hast made it; and
verily so it was, and I knew it not, when I feared to take it.
But, O Lord, Thou alone Lord without pride, because Thou art the only true
Lord, who hast no lord; hath this third kind of temptation also ceased from me, or
can it cease through this whole life? To wish, namely, to be feared and loved
of men, for no other end, but that we may have a joy therein which is no joy? A
miserable life this and a foul boastfulness! Hence especially it comes that
men do neither purely love nor fear Thee. And therefore dost Thou resist the
proud, and givest grace to the humble: yea, Thou thunderest down upon the ambitions
of the world, and the foundations of the mountains tremble. Because now
certain offices of human society make it necessary to be loved and feared of men, the
adversary of our true blessedness layeth hard at us, every where spreading his
snares of "well-done, well-done"; that greedily catching at them, we may be
taken unawares, and sever our joy from Thy truth, and set it in the deceivingness
of men; and be pleased at being loved and feared, not for Thy sake, but in Thy
stead: and thus having been made like him, he may have them for his own, not
in the bands of charity, but in the bonds of punishment: who purposed to set his
throne in the north, that dark and chilled they might serve him, pervertedly
and crookedly imitating Thee. But we, O Lord, behold we are Thy little flock;
possess us as Thine, stretch Thy wings over us, and let us fly under them. Be
Thou our glory; let us be loved for Thee, and Thy word feared in us. Who would be
praised of men when Thou blamest, will not be defended of men when Thou
judgest; nor delivered when Thou condemnest. But when- not the sinner is praised in
the desires of his soul, nor he blessed who doth ungodlily, but- a man is praised
for some gift which Thou hast given him, and he rejoices more at the praise
for himself than that he hath the gift for which he is praised, he also is
praised, while Thou dispraisest; better is he who praised than he who is praised. For
the one took pleasure in the gift of God in man; the other was better pleased
with the gift of man, than of God.
CHAPTER XXXVII-HE IS FORCIBLY GOADED ON BY THE LOVE OF PRAISE.
By these temptations we are assailed daily, O Lord; without ceasing are we
assailed. Our daily furnace is the tongue of men. And in this way also Thou
commandest us continence. Give what Thou enjoinest, and enjoin what Thou wilt. Thou
knowest on this matter the groans of my heart, and the floods of mine eyes. For
I cannot learn how far I am more cleansed from this plague, and I much fear my
secret sins, which Thine eyes know, mine do not. For in other kinds of
temptations I have some sort of means of examining myself; in this, scarce any. For, in
refraining my mind from the pleasures of the flesh and idle curiosity, I see
how much I have attained to, when I do without them; foregoing, or not having
them. For then I ask myself how much more or less troublesome it is to me not to
have them? Then, riches, which are desired, that they may serve to some one or
two or all of the three concupiscences, if the soul cannot discern whether,
when it hath them, it despiseth them, they may be cast aside, that so it may prove
itself. But to be without praise, and therein essay our powers, must we live
ill, yea so abandonedly and atrociously, that no one should know without
detesting us? What greater madness can be said or thought of? But if praise useth and
ought to accompany a good life and good works, we ought as little to forego its
company, as good life itself. Yet I know not whether I can well or ill be
without anything, unless it be absent.
What then do I confess unto Thee in this kind of temptation, O Lord? What, but
that I am delighted with praise, but with truth itself, more than with praise?
For were it proposed to me, whether I would, being frenzied in error on all
things, be praised by all men, or being consistent and most settled in the truth
be blamed by all, I see which I should choose. Yet fain would I that the
approbation of another should not even increase my joy for any good in me. Yet I own,
it doth increase it, and not so only, but dispraise doth diminish it. And when
I am troubled at this my misery, an excuse occurs to me, which of what value
it is, Thou God knowest, for it leaves me uncertain. For since Thou hast
commanded us not continency alone, that is, from what things to refrain our love, but
righteousness also, that is, whereon to bestow it, and hast willed us to love
not Thee only, but our neighbour also; often, when pleased with intelligent
praise, I seem to myself to be pleased with the proficiency or towardliness of my
neighbour, or to be grieved for evil in him, when I hear him dispraise either
what he understands not, or is good. For sometimes I am grieved at my own praise,
either when those things be praised in me, in which I mislike myself, or even
lesser and slight goods are more esteemed than they ought. But again how know I
whether I am therefore thus affected, because I would not have him who
praiseth me differ from me about myself; not as being influenced by concern for him,
but because those same good things which please me in myself, please me more
when they please another also? For some how I am not praised when my judgment of
myself is not praised; forasmuch as either those things are praised, which
displease me; or those more, which please me less. Am I then doubtful of myself in
this matter?
Behold, in Thee, O Truth, I see that I ought not to be moved at my own
praises, for my own sake, but for the good of my neighbour. And whether it be so with
me, I know not. For herein I know less of myself than of Thee. I beseech now, O
my God, discover to me myself also, that I may confess unto my brethren, who
are to pray for me, wherein I find myself maimed. Let me examine myself again
more diligently. If in my praise I am moved with the good of my neighbour, why am
I less moved if another be unjustly dispraised than if it be myself? Why am I
more stung by reproach cast upon myself, than at that cast upon another, with
the same injustice, before me? Know I not this also? or is it at last that I
deceive myself, and do not the truth before Thee in my heart and tongue? This
madness put far from me, O Lord, lest mine own mouth be to me the sinner's oil to
make fat my head. I am poor and needy; yet best, while in hidden groanings I
displease myself, and seek Thy mercy, until what is lacking in my defective state
be renewed and perfected, on to that peace which the eye of the proud knoweth
not.
CHAPTER XXXVIII-VAIN-GLORY IS THE HIGHEST DANGER.
Yet the word which cometh out of the mouth, and deeds known to men, bring with
them a most dangerous temptation through the love of praise: which, to
establish a certain excellency of our own, solicits and collects men's suffrages. It
tempts, even when it is reproved by myself in myself, on the very ground that it
is reproved; and often glories more vainly of the very contempt of vain-glory;
and so it is no longer contempt of vain-glory, whereof it glories; for it doth
not contemn when it glorieth.
CHAPTER XXXIX-OF THE VICE OF THOSE WHO, WHILE PLEASING THEMSELVES, DISPLEASE
GOD.
Within also, within is another evil, arising out of a like temptation; whereby
men become vain, pleasing themselves in themselves, though they please not, or
displease or care not to please others. But pleasing themselves, they much
displease Thee, not only taking pleasure in things not good, as if good, but in
Thy good things, as though their own; or even if as Thine, yet as though for
their own merits; or even if as though from Thy grace, yet not with brotherly
rejoicing, but envying that grace to others. In all these and the like perils and
travails, Thou seest the trembling of my heart; and I rather feel my wounds to be
cured by Thee, than not inflicted by me.
CHAPTER XL-THE ONLY SAFE RESTING-PLACE FOR THE SOUL IS TO BE FOUND IN GOD.
Where hast Thou not walked with me, O Truth, teaching me what to beware, and
what to desire; when I referred to Thee what I could discover here below, and
consulted Thee? With my outward senses, as I might, I surveyed the world, and
observed the life, which my body hath from me, and these my senses. Thence entered
I the recesses of my memory, those manifold and spacious chambers, wonderfully
furnished with innumerable stores; and I considered, and stood aghast; being
able to discern nothing of these things without Thee, and finding none of them
to be Thee. Nor was I myself, who found out these things, who went over them
all, and laboured to distinguish and to value every thing according to its
dignity, taking some things upon the report of my senses, questioning about others
which I felt to be mingled with myself, numbering and distinguishing the reporters
themselves, and in the large treasure-house of my memory revolving some
things, storing up others, drawing out others. Nor yet was I myself when I did this,
i.e., that my power whereby I did it, neither was it Thou, for Thou art the
abiding light, which I consulted concerning all these, whether they were, what
they were, and how to be valued; and I heard Thee directing and commanding me; and
this I often do, this delights me, and as far as I may be freed from necessary
duties, unto this pleasure have I recourse. Nor in all these which I run over
consulting Thee can I find any safe place for my soul, but in Thee; whither my
scattered members may be gathered, and nothing of me depart from Thee. And
sometimes Thou admittest me to an affection, very unusual, in my inmost soul;
rising to a strange sweetness, which if it were perfected in me, I know not what in
it would not belong to the life to come. But through my miserable encumbrances
I sink down again into these lower things, and am swept back by former custom,
and am held, and greatly weep, but am greatly held. So much doth the burden of
a bad custom weigh us down. Here I can stay, but would not; there I would, but
cannot; both ways, miserable.
CHAPTER XLI-HAVING CONQUERED HIS TRIPLE DESIRE, HE ARRIVES AT SALVATION.
Thus then have I considered the sicknesses of my sins in that threefold
concupiscence, and have called Thy right hand to my help. For with a wounded heart
have I beheld Thy brightness, and stricken back I said, "Who can attain thither?
I am cast away from the sight of Thine eyes." Thou art the Truth who presidest
over all, but I through my covetousness would not indeed forego Thee, but would
with Thee possess a lie; as no man would in such wise speak falsely, as
himself to be ignorant of the truth. So then I lost Thee, because Thou vouchsafest
not to be possessed with a lie.
CHAPTER XLII-IN WHAT MANNER MANY SOUGHT THE MEDIATOR.
Whom could I find to reconcile me to Thee? was I to have recourse to Angels?
by what prayers? by what sacraments? Many endeavouring to return unto Thee, and
of themselves unable, have, as I hear, tried this, and fallen into the desire
of curious visions, and been accounted worthy to be deluded. For they, being
high minded, sought Thee by the pride of learning, swelling out rather than
smiting upon their breasts, and so by the agreement of their heart, drew unto
themselves the princes of the air, the fellow-conspirators of their pride, by whom,
through magical influences, they were deceived, seeking a mediator, by whom they
might be purged, and there was none. For the devil it was, transforming himself
into an Angel of light. And it much enticed proud flesh, that he had no body
of flesh. For they were mortal, and sinners; but thou, Lord, to whom they
proudly sought to be reconciled, art immortal, and without sin. But a mediator
between God and man must have something like to God, something like to men; lest
being in both like to man, he should he far from God: or if in both like God, too
unlike man: and so not be a mediator. That deceitful mediator then, by whom in
Thy secret judgments pride deserved to be deluded, hath one thing in common with
man, that is sin; another he would seem to have in common with God; and not
being clothed with the mortality of flesh, would vaunt himself to be immortal.
But since the wages of sin is death, this hath he in common with men, that with
them he should be condemned to death.
CHAPTER XLIII-THAT JESUS CHRIST, AT THE SAME TIME GOD AND MAN, IS THE TRUE AND
MOST EFFICACIOUS MEDIATOR.
But the true Mediator, Whom in Thy secret mercy Thou hast showed to the
humble, and sentest, that by His example also they might learn that same humility,
that Mediator between God and man, the Man Christ Jesus, appeared betwixt mortal
sinners and the immortal just One; mortal with men, just with God: that because
the wages of righteousness is life and peace, He might by a righteousness
conjoined with God make void that death of sinners, now made righteous, which He
willed to have in common with them. Hence He was showed forth to holy men of old;
that so they, through faith in His Passion to come, as we through faith of it
passed, might be saved. For as Man, He was a Mediator; but as the Word, not in
the middle between God and man, because equal to God, and God with God, and
together one God.
How hast Thou loved us, good Father, who sparedst not Thine only Son, but
deliveredst Him up for us ungodly! How hast Thou loved us, for whom He that thought
it no robbery to be equal with Thee, was made subject even to the death of the
cross, He alone, free among the dead, having power to lay down His life, and
power to take it again: for us to Thee both Victor and Victim, and therefore
Victor, because the Victim; for us to Thee Priest and Sacrifice, and therefore
Priest because the Sacrifice; making us to Thee, of servants, sons by being born
of Thee, and serving us. Well then is my hope strong in Him, that Thou wilt heal
all my infirmities, by Him Who sitteth at Thy right hand and maketh
intercession for us; else should I despair. For many and great are my infirmities, many
they are, and great; but Thy medicine is mightier. We might imagine that Thy
Word was far from any union with man, and despair of ourselves, unless He had been
made flesh and dwelt among us.
Affrighted with my sins and the burden of my misery, I had cast in my heart,
and had purposed to flee to the wilderness: but Thou forbadest me, and
strengthenedst me, saying, Therefore Christ died for all, that they which live may now
no longer live unto themselves, but unto Him that died for them. See, Lord, I
cast my care upon Thee, that I may live, and consider wondrous things out of Thy
law. Thou knowest my unskilfulness, and my infirmities; teach me, and heal me.
He, Thine only Son, in Whom are hid all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge,
hath redeemed me with His blood. Let not the proud speak evil of me; because I
meditate on my ransom, and eat and drink, and communicate it; and poor, desired
to be satisfied from Him, amongst those that eat and are satisfied, and they
shall praise the Lord who seek Him.
Book XI
CHAPTER I-BY CONFESSION HE DESIRES TO STIMULATE TOWARDS GOD HIS OWN LOVE AND
THAT OF HIS READERS.
Lord, since eternity is Thine, art Thou ignorant of what I say to Thee? or
dost Thou see in time, what passeth in time? Why then do I lay in order before
Thee so many relations? Not, of a truth, that Thou mightest learn them through me,
but to stir up mine own and my readers' devotions towards Thee, that we may
all say, Great is the Lord, and greatly to be praised. I have said already; and
again will say, for love of Thy love do I this. For we pray also, and yet Truth
hath said, Your Father knoweth what you have need of, before you ask. It is
then our affections which we lay open unto Thee, confessing our own miseries, and
Thy mercies upon us, that Thou mayest free us wholly, since Thou hast begun,
that we may cease to be wretched in ourselves, and be blessed in Thee; seeing
Thou hast called us, to become poor in spirit, and meek, and mourners, and
hungering and athirst after righteousness, and merciful, and pure in heart, and
peace-makers. See, I have told Thee many things, as I could and as I would, because
Thou first wouldest that I should confess unto Thee, my Lord God. For Thou art
good, for Thy mercy endureth for ever.
CHAPTER II-HE BEGS OF GOD THAT THROUGH THE HOLY SCRIPTURES HE MAY BE LED TO
TRUTH.
But how shall I suffice with the tongue of my pen to utter all Thy
exhortations, and all Thy terrors, and comforts, and guidances, whereby Thou broughtest me
to preach Thy Word, and dispense Thy Sacrament to Thy people? And if I suffice
to utter them in order, the drops of time are precious with me; and long have
I burned to meditate in Thy law, and therein to confess to Thee my skill and
unskilfulness, the daybreak of Thy enlightening, and the remnants of my darkness,
until infirmity be swallowed up by strength. And I would not have aught
besides steal away those hours which I find free from the necessities of refreshing
my body and the powers of my mind, and of the service which we owe to men, or
which though we owe not, we yet pay.
O Lord my god, give ear unto my prayer, and let Thy mercy hearken unto my
desire: because it is anxious not for myself alone, but would serve brotherly
charity; and Thou seest my heart, that so it is. I would sacrifice to Thee the
service of my thought and tongue; do Thou give me, what I may offer Thee. For I am
poor and needy, Thou rich to all that call upon Thee; Who, inaccessible to care,
carest for us. Circumcise from all rashness and all lying both my inward and
outward lips: let Thy Scriptures be my pure delights: let me not be deceived in
them, nor deceive out of them. Lord, hearken and pity, O Lord my God, Light of
the blind, and Strength of the weak; yea also Light of those that see, and
Strength of the strong; hearken unto my soul, and hear it crying out of the depths.
For if Thine ears be not with us in the depths also, whither shall we go?
whither cry? The day is Thine, and the night is Thine; at Thy beck the moments flee
by. Grant thereof a space for our meditations in the hidden things of Thy law,
and close it not against us who knock. For not in vain wouldest Thou have the
darksome secrets of so many pages written; nor are those forests without their
harts which retire therein and range and walk; feed, lie down, and ruminate.
Perfect me, O Lord, and reveal them unto me. Behold, Thy voice is my joy; Thy
voice exceedeth the abundance of pleasures. Give what I love: for I do love; and
this hast Thou given: forsake not Thy own gifts, nor despise Thy green herb that
thirsteth. Let me confess unto Thee whatsoever I shall find in Thy books, and
hear the voice of praise, and drink in Thee, and meditate on the wonderful
things out of Thy law; even from the beginning, wherein Thou madest the heaven and
the earth, unto the everlasting reigning of Thy holy city with Thee.
Lord, have mercy on me, and hear my desire. For it is not, I deem, of the
earth, not of gold and silver, and precious stones, or gorgeous apparel, or honours
and offices, or the pleasures of the flesh, or necessaries for the body and
for this life of our pilgrimage: all which shall be added unto those that seek
Thy kingdom and Thy righteousness. Behold, O Lord my God, wherein is my desire.
The wicked have told me of delights, but not such as Thy law, O Lord. Behold,
wherein is my desire. Behold, Father, behold, and see and approve; and be it
pleasing in the sight of Thy mercy, that I may find grace before Thee, that the
inward parts of Thy words be opened to me knocking. I beseech by our Lord Jesus
Christ Thy Son, the Man of Thy right hand, the Son of man, whom Thou hast
established for Thyself, as Thy Mediator and ours, through Whom Thou soughtest us, not
seeking Thee, but soughtest us, that we might seek Thee,- Thy Word, through
Whom Thou madest all things, and among them, me also;- Thy Only-Begotten, through
Whom Thou calledst to adoption the believing people, and therein me also;- I
beseech Thee by Him, who sitteth at Thy right hand, and intercedeth with Thee
for us, in Whom are hidden all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge. These do I
seek in Thy books. Of Him did Moses write; this saith Himself; this saith the
Truth.
CHAPTER III-HE BEGINS FROM THE CREATION OF THE WORLD-NOT UNDERSTANDING THE
HEBREW TEXT.
I would hear and understand, how "In the Beginning Thou madest the heaven and
earth." Moses wrote this, wrote and departed, passed hence from Thee to Thee;
nor is he now before me. For if he were, I would hold him and ask him, and
beseech him by Thee to open these things unto me, and would lay the ears of my body
to the sounds bursting out of his mouth. And should he speak Hebrew, in vain
will it strike on my senses, nor would aught of it touch my mind; but if Latin, I
should know what he said. But whence should I know, whether he spake truth?
Yea, and if I knew this also, should I know it from him? Truly within me, within,
in the chamber of my thoughts, Truth, neither Hebrew, nor Greek, nor Latin,
nor barbarian, without organs of voice or tongue, or sound of syllables, would
say, "It is truth," and I forthwith should say confidently to that man of Thine,
"thou sayest truly." Whereas then I cannot enquire of him, Thee, Thee I
beseech, O Truth, full of Whom he spake truth, Thee, my God, I beseech, forgive my
sins; and Thou, who gavest him Thy servant to speak these things, give to me also
to understand them.
CHAPTER IV-HEAVEN AND EARTH CRY OUT THAT THEY HAVE BEEN CREATED BY GOD.
Behold, the heavens and the earth are; they proclaim that they were created;
for they change and vary. Whereas whatsoever hath not been made, and yet is,
hath nothing in it, which before it had not; and this it is, to change and vary.
They proclaim also, that they made not themselves; "therefore we are, because we
have been made; we were not therefore, before we were, so as to make
ourselves." Now the evidence of the thing, is the voice of the speakers. Thou therefore,
Lord, madest them; who art beautiful, for they are beautiful; who art good,
for they are good; who art, for they are; yet are they not beautiful nor good,
nor are they, as Thou their Creator art; compared with Whom, they are neither
beautiful, nor good, nor are. This we know, thanks be to Thee. And our knowledge,
compared with Thy knowledge, is ignorance.
CHAPTER V-GOD CREATED THE WORLD NOT FROM ANY CERTAIN MATTER, BUT IN HIS OWN
WORD.
But how didst Thou make the heaven and the earth? and what the engine of Thy
so mighty fabric? For it was not as a human artificer, forming one body from
another, according to the discretion of his mind, which can in some way invest
with such a form, as it seeth in itself by its inward eye. And whence should he be
able to do this, unless Thou hadst made that mind? and he invests with a form
what already existeth, and hath a being, as clay, or stone, or wood, or gold,
or the like. And whence should they be, hadst not Thou appointed them? Thou
madest the artificer his body, Thou the mind commanding the limbs, Thou the matter
whereof he makes any thing; Thou the apprehension whereby to take in his art,
and see within what he doth without; Thou the sense of his body, whereby, as by
an interpreter, he may from mind to matter, convey that which he doth, and
report to his mind what is done; that it within may consult the truth, which
presideth over itself, whether it be well done or no. All these praise Thee, the
Creator of all. But how dost Thou make them? how, O God, didst Thou make heaven and
earth? Verily, neither in the heaven, nor in the earth, didst Thou make heaven
and earth; nor in the air, or waters, seeing these also belong to the heaven
and the earth; nor in the whole world didst Thou make the whole world; because
there was no place where to make it, before it was made, that it might be. Nor
didst Thou hold any thing in Thy hand, whereof to make heaven and earth. For
whence shouldest Thou have this, which Thou hadst not made, thereof to make any
thing? For what is, but because Thou art? Therefore Thou spokest, and they were
made, and in Thy Word Thou madest them.
CHAPTER VI-HE DID NOT, HOWEVER, CREATE IT BY SOUNDING AND PASSING WORD.
But how didst Thou speak? In the way that the voice came out of the cloud,
saying, This is my beloved Son? For that voice passed by and passed away, began
and ended; the syllables sounded and passed away, the second after the first, the
third after the second, and so forth in order, until the last after the rest,
and silence after the last. Whence it is abundantly clear and plain that the
motion of a creature expressed it, itself temporal, serving Thy eternal will. And
these Thy words, created for a time, the outward ear reported to the
intelligent soul, whose inward ear lay listening to Thy Eternal Word. But she compared
these words sounding in time, with that Thy Eternal Word in silence, and said
"It is different, far different. These words are far beneath me, nor are they,
because they flee and pass away; but the Word of my Lord abideth above me for
ever." If then in sounding and passing words Thou saidst that heaven and earth
should be made, and so madest heaven and earth, there was a corporeal creature
before heaven and earth, by whose motions in time that voice might take his course
in time. But there was nought corporeal before heaven and earth; or if there
were, surely Thou hadst, without such a passing voice, created that, whereof to
make this passing voice, by which to say, Let the heaven and the earth be made.
For whatsoever that were, whereof such a voice were made, unless by Thee it
were made, it could not be at all. By what Word then didst Thou speak, that a
body might be made, whereby these words again might be made?
CHAPTER VII-BY HIS CO-ETERNAL WORD HE SPEAKS, AND ALL THINGS ARE DONE.
Thou callest us then to understand the Word, God, with Thee God, Which is
spoken eternally, and by It are all things spoken eternally. For what was spoken
was not spoken successively, one thing concluded that the next might be spoken,
but all things together and eternally. Else have we time and change; and not a
true eternity nor true immortality. This I know, O my God, and give thanks. I
know, I confess to Thee, O Lord, and with me there knows and blesses Thee, whoso
is not unthankful to assure Truth. We know, Lord, we know; since inasmuch as
anything is not which was, and is, which was not, so far forth it dieth and
ariseth. Nothing then of Thy Word doth give place or replace, because It is truly
immortal and eternal. And therefore unto the Word coeternal with Thee Thou dost
at once and eternally say all that Thou dost say; and whatever Thou sayest shall
be made is made; nor dost Thou make, otherwise than by saying; and yet are not
all things made together, or everlasting, which Thou makest by saying.
CHAPTER VIII-THAT WORD ITSELF IS THE BEGINNING OF ALL THINGS, IN THE WHICH WE
ARE INSTRUCTED AS TO EVANGEELICAL TRUTH.
Why, I beseech Thee, O Lord my God? I see it in a way; but how to express it,
I know not, unless it be, that whatsoever begins to be, and leaves off to be,
begins then, and leaves off then, when in Thy eternal Reason it is known, that
it ought to begin or leave off; in which Reason nothing beginneth or leaveth
off. This is Thy Word, which is also "the Beginning, because also It speaketh unto
us." Thus in the Gospel He speaketh through the flesh; and this sounded
outwardly in the ears of men; that it might be believed and sought inwardly, and
found in the eternal Verity; where the good and only Master teacheth all His
disciples. There, Lord, hear I Thy voice speaking unto me; because He speaketh us,
who teacheth us; but He that teacheth us not, though He speaketh, to us He
speaketh not. Who now teacheth us, but the unchangeable Truth? for even when we are
admonished through a changeable creature; we are but led to the unchangeable
Truth; where we learn truly, while we stand and hear Him, and rejoice greatly
because of the Bridegroom's voice, restoring us to Him, from Whom we are. And
therefore the Beginning, because unless It abided, there should not, when we went
astray, be whither to return. But when we return from error, it is through
knowing; and that we may know, He teacheth us, because He is the Beginning, and
speaking unto us.
CHAPTER IX-WISDOM AND THE BEGINNING.
In this Beginning, O God, hast Thou made heaven and earth, in Thy Word, in Thy
Son, in Thy Power, in Thy Wisdom, in Thy Truth; wondrously speaking, and
wondrously making. Who shall comprehend? Who declare it? What is that which gleams
through me, and strikes my heart without hurting it; and I shudder and kindle? I
shudder, inasmuch as I unlike it; I kindle, inasmuch as I am like it. It is
Wisdom, Wisdom's self which gleameth through me; severing my cloudiness which yet
again mantles over me, fainting from it, through the darkness which for my
punishment gathers upon me. For my strength is brought down in need, so that I
cannot support my blessings, till Thou, Lord, Who hast been gracious to all mine
iniquities, shalt heal all my infirmities. For Thou shalt also redeem my life
from corruption, and crown me with loving kindness and tender mercies, and shalt
satisfy my desire with good things, because my youth shall be renewed like an
eagle's. For in hope we are saved, wherefore we through patience wait for Thy
promises. Let him that is able, hear Thee inwardly discoursing out of Thy oracle:
I will boldly cry out, How wonderful are Thy works, O Lord, in Wisdom hast
Thou made them all; and this Wisdom is the Beginning, and in that Beginning didst
Thou make heaven and earth.
CHAPTER X-THE RASHNESS OF THOSE WHO INQUIRE WHAT GOD DID BEFORE HE CREATED
HEAVEN AND EARTH.
Lo, are they not full of their old leaven, who say to us, "What was God doing
before He made heaven and earth? For if (say they) He were unemployed and
wrought not, why does He not also henceforth, and for ever, as He did heretofore?
For did any new motion arise in God, and a new will to make a creature, which He
had never before made, how then would that be a true eternity, where there
ariseth a will, which was not? For the will of God is not a creature, but before
the creature; seeing nothing could be created, unless the will of the Creator had
preceded. The will of God then belongeth to His very Substance. And if aught
have arisen in God's Substance, which before was not, that Substance cannot be
truly called eternal. But if the will of God has been from eternity that the
creature should be, why was not the creature also from eternity?"
CHAPTER XI-THEY WHO ASK THIS HAVE NOT AS YET KNOWN THE ETERNITY OF GOD, WHICH
IS EXEMPT FROM THE RELATION OF TIME.
Who speak thus, do not yet understand Thee, O Wisdom of God, Light of souls,
understand not yet how the things be made, which by Thee, and in Thee are made:
yet they strive to comprehend things eternal, whilst their heart fluttereth
between the motions of things past and to come, and is still unstable. Who shall
hold it, and fix it, that it be settled awhile, and awhile catch the glory of
that everfixed Eternity, and compare it with the times which are never fixed, and
see that it cannot be compared; and that a long time cannot become long, but
out of many motions passing by, which cannot be prolonged altogether; but that
in the Eternal nothing passeth, but the whole is present; whereas no time is all
at once present: and that all time past, is driven on by time to come, and all
to come followeth upon the past; and all past and to come, is created, and
flows out of that which is ever present? Who shall hold the heart of man, that it
may stand still, and see how eternity ever still-standing, neither past nor to
come, uttereth the times past and to come? Can my hand do this, or the hand of
my mouth by speech bring about a thing so great?
CHAPTER XII-WHAT GOD DID BEFORE THE CREATION OF THE WORLD.
See, I answer him that asketh, "What did God before He made heaven and earth?"
I answer not as one is said to have done merrily (eluding the pressure of the
question), "He was preparing hell (saith he) for pryers into mysteries." It is
one thing to answer enquiries, another to make sport of enquirers. So I answer
not; for rather had I answer, "I know not," what I know not, than so as to
raise a laugh at him who asketh deep things and gain praise for one who answereth
false things. But I say that Thou, our God, art the Creator of every creature:
and if by the name "heaven and earth," every creature be understood; I boldly
say, "that before God made heaven and earth, He did not make any thing." For if
He made, what did He make but a creature? And would I knew whatsoever I desire
to know to my profit, as I know, that no creature was made, before there was
made any creature.
CHAPTER XIII-BEFORE THE TIMES CREATED BY GOD, TIMES WERE NOT.
But if any excursive brain rove over the images of forepassed times, and
wonder that Thou the God Almighty and All-creating and All-supporting, Maker of
heaven and earth, didst for innumerable ages forbear from so great a work, before
Thou wouldest make it; let him awake and consider, that he wonders at false
conceits. For whence could innumerable ages pass by, which Thou madest not, Thou
the Author and Creator of all ages? or what times should there be, which were not
made by Thee? or how should they pass by, if they never were? Seeing then Thou
art the Creator of all times, if any time was before Thou madest heaven and
earth, why say they that Thou didst forego working? For that very time didst Thou
make, nor could times pass by, before Thou madest those times. But if before
heaven and earth there was no time, why is it demanded, what Thou then didst?
For there was no "then," when there was no time.
Nor dost Thou by time, precede time: else shouldest Thou not precede all
times. But Thou precedest all things past, by the sublimity of an ever-present
eternity; and surpassest all future because they are future, and when they come,
they shall be past; but Thou art the Same, and Thy years fail not. Thy years
neither come nor go; whereas ours both come and go, that they all may come. Thy
years stand together, because they do stand; nor are departing thrust out by coming
years, for they pass not away; but ours shall all be, when they shall no more
be. Thy years are one day; and Thy day is not daily, but To-day, seeing Thy
To-day gives not place unto to-morrow, for neither doth it replace yesterday. Thy
To-day, is Eternity; therefore didst Thou beget The Coeternal, to whom Thou
saidst, This day have I begotten Thee. Thou hast made all things; and before all
times Thou art: neither in any time was time not.
CHAPTER XIV-NEITHER TIME PAST NOR FUTURE, BUT THE PRESENT ONLY, REALLY IS.
At no time then hadst Thou not made any thing, because time itself Thou
madest. And no times are coeternal with Thee, because Thou abidest; but if they
abode, they should not be times. For what is time? Who can readily and briefly
explain this? Who can even in thought comprehend it, so as to utter a word about it?
But what in discourse do we mention more familiarly and knowingly, than time?
And, we understand, when we speak of it; we understand also, when we hear it
spoken of by another. What then is time? If no one asks me, I know: if I wish to
explain it to one that asketh, I know not: yet I say boldly that I know, that
if nothing passed away, time past were not; and if nothing were coming, a time
to come were not; and if nothing were, time present were not. Those two times
then, past and to come, how are they, seeing the past now is not, and that to
come is not yet? But the present, should it always be present, and never pass into
time past, verily it should not be time, but eternity. If time present (if it
is to be time) only cometh into existence, because it passeth into time past,
how can we say that either this is, whose cause of being is, that it shall not
be; so, namely, that we cannot truly say that time is, but because it is tending
not to be?
CHAPTER XV-THERE IS ONLY A MOMENT OF PRESENT TIME.
And yet we say, "a long time" and "a short time"; still, only of time past or
to come. A long time past (for example) we call an hundred years since; and a
long time to come, an hundred years hence. But a short time past, we call
(suppose) often days since; and a short time to come, often days hence. But in what
sense is that long or short, which is not? For the past, is not now; and the
future, is not yet. Let us not then say, "it is long"; but of the past, "it hath
been long"; and of the future, "it will be long." O my Lord, my Light, shall not
here also Thy Truth mock at man? For that past time which was long, was it
long when it was now past, or when it was yet present? For then might it be long,
when there was, what could be long; but when past, it was no longer; wherefore
neither could that be long, which was not at all. Let us not then say, "time
past hath been long": for we shall not find, what hath been long, seeing that
since it was past, it is no more, but let us say, "that present time was long";
because, when it was present, it was long. For it had not yet passed away, so as
not to be; and therefore there was, what could be long; but after it was past,
that ceased also to be long, which ceased to be.
Let us see then, thou soul of man, whether present time can be long: for to
thee it is given to feel and to measure length of time. What wilt thou answer me?
Are an hundred years, when present, a long time? See first, whether an hundred
years can be present. For if the first of these years be now current, it is
present, but the other ninety and nine are to come, and therefore are not yet,
but if the second year be current, one is now past, another present, the rest to
come. And so if we assume any middle year of this hundred to be present, all
before it, are past; all after it, to come; wherefore an hundred years cannot be
present. But see at least whether that one which is now current, itself is
present; for if the current month be its first, the rest are to come; if the
second, the first is already past, and the rest are not yet. Therefore, neither is
the year now current present; and if not present as a whole, then is not the year
present. For twelve months are a year; of which whatever by the current month
is present; the rest past, or to come. Although neither is that current month
present; but one day only; the rest being to come, if it be the first; past, if
the last; if any of the middle, then amid past and to come.
See how the present time, which alone we found could be called long, is
abridged to the length scarce of one day. But let us examine that also; because
neither is one day present as a whole. For it is made up of four and twenty hours of
night and day: of which, the first hath the rest to come; the last hath them
past; and any of the middle hath those before it past, those behind it to come.
Yea, that one hour passeth away in flying particles. Whatsoever of it hath
flown away, is past; whatsoever remaineth, is to come. If an instant of time be
conceived, which cannot be divided into the smallest particles of moments, that
alone is it, which may be called present. Which yet flies with such speed from
future to past, as not to be lengthened out with the least stay. For if it be, it
is divided into past and future. The present hath no space. Where then is the
time, which we may call long? Is it to come? Of it we do not say, "it is long";
because it is not yet, so as to be long; but we say, "it will be long." When
therefore will it be? For if even then, when it is yet to come, it shall not be
long (because what can be long, as yet is not), and so it shall then be long,
when from future which as yet is not, it shall begin now to be, and have become
present, that so there should exist what may be long; then does time present
cry out in the words above, that it cannot be long.
CHAPTER XVI-TIME CAN ONLY BE PERCEIVED OR MEASURED WHILE IT IS PASSING.
And yet, Lord, we perceive intervals of times, and compare them, and say, some
are shorter, and others longer. We measure also, how much longer or shorter
this time is than that; and we answer, "This is double, or treble; and that, but
once, or only just so much as that." But we measure times as they are passing,
by perceiving them; but past, which now are not, or the future, which are not
yet, who can measure? unless a man shall presume to say, that can be measured,
which is not. When then time is passing, it may be perceived and measured; but
when it is past, it cannot, because it is not.
CHAPTER XVII-NEVERTHELESS THERE IS TIME PAST AND FUTURE.
I ask, Father, I affirm not: O my God, rule and guide me. "Who will tell me
that there are not three times (as we learned when boys, and taught boys), past,
present, and future; but present only, because those two are not? Or are they
also; and when from future it becometh present, doth it come out of some secret
place; and so, when retiring, from present it becometh past? For where did
they, who foretold things to come, see them, if as yet they be not? For that which
is not, cannot be seen. And they who relate things past, could not relate them,
if in mind they did not discern them, and if they were not, they could no way
be discerned. Things then past and to come, are."
CHAPTER XVIII-PAST AND FUTURE TIMES CANNOT BE THOUGHT OF BUT AS PRESENT.
Permit me, Lord, to seek further. O my hope, let not my purpose be confounded.
For if times past and to come be, I would know where they be. Which yet if I
cannot, yet I know, wherever they be, they are not there as future, or past, but
present. For if there also they be future, they are not yet there; if there
also they be past, they are no longer there. Wheresoever then is whatsoever is,
it is only as present. Although when past facts are related, there are drawn out
of the memory, not the things themselves which are past, but words which,
conceived by the images of the things, they, in passing, have through the senses
left as traces in the mind. Thus my childhood, which now is not, is in time past,
which now is not: but now when I recall its image, and tell of it, I behold it
in the present, because it is still in my memory. Whether there be a like
cause of foretelling things to come also; that of things which as yet are not, the
images may be perceived before, already existing, I confess, O my God, I know
not. This indeed I know, that we generally think before on our future actions,
and that that forethinking is present, but the action whereof we forethink is
not yet, because it is to come. Which, when we have set upon, and have begun to
do what we were forethinking, then shall that action be; because then it is no
longer future, but present.
Which way soever then this secret fore-perceiving of things to come be; that
only can be seen, which is. But what now is, is not future, but present. When
then things to come are said to be seen, it is not themselves which as yet are
not (that is, which are to be), but their causes perchance or signs are seen,
which already are. Therefore they are not future but present to those who now see
that, from which the future, being foreconceived in the mind, is foretold.
Which fore-conceptions again now are; and those who foretell those things, do
behold the conceptions present before them. Let now the numerous variety of things
furnish me some example. I behold the day-break, I foreshow, that the sun, is
about to rise. What I behold, is present; what I foresignify, to come; not the
sun, which already is; but the sun-rising, which is not yet. And yet did I not in
my mind imagine the sun-rising itself (as now while I speak of it), I could
not foretell it. But neither is that day-break which I discern in the sky, the
sun-rising, although it goes before it; nor that imagination of my mind; which
two are seen now present, that the other which is to be may be foretold. Future
things then are not yet: and if they be not yet, they are not: and if they are
not, they cannot be seen; yet foretold they may be from things present, which
are already, and are seen.
CHAPTER XIX-WE ARE IGNORANT IN WHAT MANNER GOD TEACHES FUTURE THINGS.
Thou then, Ruler of Thy creation, by what way dost Thou teach souls things to
come? For Thou didst teach Thy Prophets. By what way dost Thou, to whom nothing
is to come, teach things to come; or rather of the future, dost teach things
present? For, what is not, neither can it be taught. Too far is this way of my
ken: it is too mighty for me, I cannot attain unto it; but from Thee I can, when
Thou shalt vouchsafe it, O sweet light of my hidden eyes.
CHAPTER XX-IN WHAT MANNER TIME MAY PROPERLY BE DESIGNATED.
What now is clear and plain is, that neither things to come nor past are. Nor
is it properly said, "there be three times, past, present, and to come": yet
perchance it might be properly said, "there be three times; a present of things
past, a present of things present, and a present of things future." For these
three do exist in some sort, in the soul, but otherwhere do I not see them;
present of things past, memory; present of things present, sight; present of things
future, expectation. If thus we be permitted to speak, I see three times, and I
confess there are three. Let it be said too, "there be three times, past,
present, and to come": in our incorrect way. See, I object not, nor gainsay, nor
find fault, if what is so said be but understood, that neither what is to be, now
is, nor what is past. For but few things are there, which we speak properly,
most things improperly; still the things intended are understood.
CHAPTER XXI-HOW TIME MAY BE MEASURED.
I said then even now, we measure times as they pass, in order to be able to
say, this time is twice so much as that one; or, this is just so much as that;
and so of any other parts of time, which be measurable. Wherefore, as I said, we
measure times as they pass. And if any should ask me, "How knowest thou?" I
might answer, "I know, that we do measure, nor can we measure things that are not;
and things past and to come, are not." But time present how do we measure,
seeing it hath no space? It is measured while passing, but when it shall have
passed, it is not measured; for there will be nothing to be measured. But whence,
by what way, and whither passes it while it is a measuring? whence, but from the
future? Which way, but through the present? whither, but into the past? From
that therefore, which is not yet, through that, which hath no space, into that,
which now is not. Yet what do we measure, if not time in some space? For we do
not say, single, and double, and triple, and equal, or any other like way that
we speak of time, except of spaces of times. In what space then do we measure
time passing? In the future, whence it passeth through? But what is not yet, we
measure not. Or in the present, by which it passes? but no space, we do not
measure: or in the past, to which it passes? But neither do we measure that, which
now is not.
CHAPTER XXII-HE PRAYS GOD THAT HE WOULD EXPLAIN THIS MOST ENTANGLED ENIGMA.
My soul is on fire to know this most intricate enigma. Shut it not up, O Lord
my God, good Father; through Christ I beseech Thee, do not shut up these usual,
yet hidden things, from my desire, that it be hindered from piercing into
them; but let them dawn through Thy enlightening mercy, O Lord. Whom shall I
enquire of concerning these things? and to whom shall I more fruitfully confess my
ignorance, than to Thee, to Whom these my studies, so vehemently kindled toward
Thy Scriptures, are not troublesome? Give what I love; for I do love, and this
hast Thou given me. Give, Father, Who truly knowest to give good gifts unto Thy
children. Give, because I have taken upon me to know, and trouble is before me
until Thou openest it. By Christ I beseech Thee, in His Name, Holy of holies,
let no man disturb me. For I believed, and therefore do I speak. This is my
hope, for this do I live, that I may contemplate the delights of the Lord. Behold,
Thou hast made my days old, and they pass away, and how, I know not. And we
talk of time, and time, and times, and times, "How long time is it since he said
this"; "how long time since he did this"; and "how long time since I saw that";
and "this syllable hath double time to that single short syllable." These words
we speak, and these we hear, and are understood, and understand. Most manifest
and ordinary they are, and the self-same things again are but too deeply
hidden, and the discovery of them were new.
CHAPTER XXIII-THAT TIME IS A CERTAIN EXTENSION.
I heard once from a learned man, that the motions of the sun, moon, and stars,
constituted time, and I assented not. For why should not the motions of all
bodies rather be times? Or, if the lights of heaven should cease, and a potter's
wheel run round, should there be no time by which we might measure those
whirlings, and say, that either it moved with equal pauses, or if it turned sometimes
slower, otherwhiles quicker, that some rounds were longer, other shorter? Or,
while we were saying this, should we not also be speaking in time? Or, should
there in our words be some syllables short, others long, but because those
sounded in a shorter time, these in a longer? God, grant to men to see in a small
thing notices common to things great and small. The stars and lights of heaven,
are also for signs, and for seasons, and for years, and for days; they are; yet
neither should I say, that the going round of that wooden wheel was a day, nor
yet he, that it was therefore no time.
I desire to know the force and nature of time, by which we measure the motions
of bodies, and say (for example) this motion is twice as long as that. For I
ask, Seeing "day" denotes not the stay only of the sun upon the earth (according
to which day is one thing, night another); but also its whole circuit from
east to east again; according to which we say, "there passed so many days," the
night being included when we say, "so many days," and the nights not reckoned
apart;- seeing then a day is completed by the motion of the sun and by his circuit
from east to east again, I ask, does the motion alone make the day, or the
stay in which that motion is completed, or both? For if the first be the day; then
should we have a day, although the sun should finish that course in so small a
space of time, as one hour comes to. If the second, then should not that make
a day, if between one sun-rise and another there were but so short a stay, as
one hour comes to; but the sun must go four and twenty times about, to complete
one day. If both, then neither could that be called a day; if the sun should
run his whole round in the space of one hour; nor that, if, while the sun stood
still, so much time should overpass, as the sun usually makes his whole course
in, from morning to morning. I will not therefore now ask, what that is which is
called day; but, what time is, whereby we, measuring the circuit of the sun,
should say that it was finished in half the time it was wont, if so be it was
finished in so small a space as twelve hours; and comparing both times, should
call this a single time, that a double time; even supposing the sun to run his
round from east to east, sometimes in that single, sometimes in that double time.
Let no man then tell me, that the motions of the heavenly bodies constitute
times, because, when at the prayer of one, the sun had stood still, till he could
achieve his victorious battle, the sun stood still, but time went on. For in
its own allotted space of time was that battle waged and ended. I perceive time
then to be a certain extension. But do I perceive it, or seem to perceive it?
Thou, Light and Truth, wilt show me.
CHAPTER XXIV-THAT TIME IS NOT A MOTION OF A BODY WHICH WE MEASURE BY TIME.
Dost Thou bid me assent, if any define time to be "motion of a body?" Thou
dost not bid me. For that no body is moved, but in time, I hear; this Thou sayest;
but that the motion of a body is time, I hear not; Thou sayest it not. For
when a body is moved, I by time measure, how long it moveth, from the time it
began to move until it left off? And if I did not see whence it began; and it
continue to move so that I see not when it ends, I cannot measure, save perchance
from the time I began, until I cease to see. And if I look long, I can only
pronounce it to be a long time, but not how long; because when we say "how long," we
do it by comparison; as, "this is as long as that," or "twice so long as
that," or the like. But when we can mark the distances of the places, whence and
whither goeth the body moved, or his parts, if it moved as in a lathe, then can we
say precisely, in how much time the motion of that body or his part, from this
place unto that, was finished. Seeing therefore the motion of a body is one
thing, that by which we measure how long it is, another; who sees not, which of
the two is rather to be called time? For and if a body be sometimes moved,
sometimes stands still, then we measure, not his motion only, but his standing still
too by time; and we say, "it stood still, as much as it moved"; or "it stood
still twice or thrice so long as it moved"; or any other space which our
measuring hath either ascertained, or guessed; more or less, as we use to say. Time
then is not the motion of a body.
CHAPTER XXV-HE CALLS ON GOD TO ENLIGHTEN HIS MIND.
And I confess to Thee, O Lord, that I yet know not what time is, and again I
confess unto Thee, O Lord, that I know that I speak this in time, and that
having long spoken of time, that very "long" is not long, but by the pause of time.
How then know I this, seeing I know not what time is? or is it perchance that I
know not how to express what I know? Woe is me, that do not even know, what I
know not. Behold, O my God, before Thee I lie not; but as I speak, so is my
heart. Thou shalt light my candle; Thou, O Lord my God, wilt enlighten my darkness.
CHAPTER XXVI-WE MEASURE LONGER EVENTS BY SHORTER IN TIME.
Does not my soul most truly confess unto Thee, that I do measure times? Do I
then measure, O my God, and know not what I measure? I measure the motion of a
body in time; and the time itself do I not measure? Or could I indeed measure
the motion of a body how long it were, and in how long space it could come from
this place to that, without measuring the time in which it is moved? This same
time then, how do I measure? do we by a shorter time measure a longer, as by the
space of a cubit, the space of a rood? for so indeed we seem by the space of a
short syllable, to measure the space of a long syllable, and to say that this
is double the other. Thus measure we the spaces of stanzas, by the spaces of
the verses, and the spaces of the verses, by the spaces of the feet, and the
spaces of the feet, by the spaces of the syllables, and the spaces of long, by the
space of short syllables; not measuring by pages (for then we measure spaces,
not times); but when we utter the words and they pass by, and we say "it is a
long stanza, because composed of so many verses; long verses, because consisting
of so many feet; long feet, because prolonged by so many syllables; a long
syllable because double to a short one. But neither do we this way obtain any
certain measure of time; because it may be, that a shorter verse, pronounced more
fully, may take up more time than a longer, pronounced hurriedly. And so for a
verse, a foot, a syllable. Whence it seemed to me, that time is nothing else than
protraction; but of what, I know not; and I marvel, if it be not of the mind
itself? For what, I beseech Thee, O my God, do I measure, when I say, either
indefinitely "this is a longer time than that," or definitely "this is double
that"? That I measure time, I know; and yet I measure not time to come, for it is
not yet; nor present, because it is not protracted by any space; nor past,
because it now is not. What then do I measure? Times passing, not past? for so I
said.
CHAPTER XXVII-TIMES ARE MEASURED IN PROPORTION AS THEY PASS BY.
Courage, my mind, and press on mightily. God is our helper, He made us, and
not we ourselves. Press on where truth begins to dawn. Suppose, now, the voice of
a body begins to sound, and does sound, and sounds on, and list, it ceases; it
is silence now, and that voice is past, and is no more a voice. Before it
sounded, it was to come, and could not be measured, because as yet it was not, and
now it cannot, because it is no longer. Then therefore while it sounded, it
might; because there then was what might be measured. But yet even then it was not
at a stay; for it was passing on, and passing away. Could it be measured the
rather, for that? For while passing, it was being extended into some space of
time, so that it might be measured, since the present hath no space. If therefore
then it might, then, to, suppose another voice hath begun to sound, and still
soundeth in one continued tenor without any interruption; let us measure it
while it sounds; seeing when it hath left sounding, it will then be past, and
nothing left to be measured; let us measure it verily, and tell how much it is. But
it sounds still, nor can it be measured but from the instant it began in, unto
the end it left in. For the very space between is the thing we measure,
namely, from some beginning unto some end. Wherefore, a voice that is not yet ended,
cannot be measured, so that it may be said how long, or short it is; nor can it
be called equal to another, or double to a single, or the like. But when
ended, it no longer is. How may it then be measured? And yet we measure times; but
yet neither those which are not yet, nor those which no longer are, nor those
which are not lengthened out by some pause, nor those which have no bounds. We
measure neither times to come, nor past, nor present, nor passing; and yet we do
measure times.
"Deus Creator omnium," this verse of eight syllables alternates between short
and long syllables. The four short then, the first, third, fifth, and seventh,
are but single, in respect of the four long, the second, fourth, sixth, and
eighth. Every one of these to every one of those, hath a double time: I pronounce
them, report on them, and find it so, as one's plain sense perceives. By plain
sense then, I measure a long syllable by a short, and I sensibly find it to
have twice so much; but when one sounds after the other, if the former be short,
the latter long, how shall I detain the short one, and how, measuring, shall I
apply it to the long, that I may find this to have twice so much; seeing the
long does not begin to sound, unless the short leaves sounding? And that very long
one do I measure as present, seeing I measure it not till it be ended? Now his
ending is his passing away. What then is it I measure? where is the short
syllable by which I measure? where the long which I measure? Both have sounded,
have flown, passed away, are no more; and yet I measure, and confidently answer
(so far as is presumed on a practised sense) that as to space of time this
syllable is but single, that double. And yet I could not do this, unless they were
already past and ended. It is not then themselves, which now are not, that I
measure, but something in my memory, which there remains fixed.
It is in thee, my mind, that I measure times. Interrupt me not, that is,
interrupt not thyself with the tumults of thy impressions. In thee I measure times;
the impression, which things as they pass by cause in thee, remains even when
they are gone; this it is which still present, I measure, not the things which
pass by to make this impression. This I measure, when I measure times. Either
then this is time, or I do not measure times. What when we measure silence, and
say that this silence hath held as long time as did that voice? do we not
stretch out our thought to the measure of a voice, as if it sounded, that so we may
be able to report of the intervals of silence in a given space of time? For
though both voice and tongue be still, yet in thought we go over poems, and verses,
and any other discourse, or dimensions of motions, and report as to the spaces
of times, how much this is in respect of that, no otherwise than if vocally we
did pronounce them. If a man would utter a lengthened sound, and had settled
in thought how long it should be, he hath in silence already gone through a
space of time, and committing it to memory, begins to utter that speech, which
sounds on, until it be brought unto the end proposed. Yea it hath sounded, and will
sound; for so much of it as is finished, hath sounded already, and the rest
will sound. And thus passeth it on, until the present intent conveys over the
future into the past; the past increasing by the diminution of the future, until
by the consumption of the future, all is past.
CHAPTER XXVIII-TIME IN THE HUMAN MIND, WHICH EXPECTS, CONSIDERS, AND REMEMBERS.
But how is that future diminished or consumed, which as yet is not? or how
that past increased, which is now no longer, save that in the mind which enacteth
this, there be three things done? For it expects, it considers, it remembers;
that so that which it expecteth, through that which it considereth, passeth into
that which it remembereth. Who therefore denieth, that things to come are not
as yet? and yet, there is in the mind an expectation of things to come. And who
denies past things to be now no longer? and yet is there still in the mind a
memory of things past. And who denieth the present time hath no space, because
it passeth away in a moment? and yet our consideration continueth, through which
that which shall be present proceedeth to become absent. It is not then future
time, that is long, for as yet it is not: but a long future, is "a long
expectation of the future," nor is it time past, which now is not, that is long; but
a long past, is "a long memory of the past."
I am about to repeat a Psalm that I know. Before I begin, my expectation is
extended over the whole; but when I have begun, how much soever of it I shall
separate off into the past, is extended along my memory; thus the life of this
action of mine is divided between my memory as to what I have repeated, and
expectation as to what I am about to repeat; but "consideration" is present with me,
that through it what was future, may be conveyed over, so as to become past.
Which the more it is done again and again, so much the more the expectation being
shortened, is the memory enlarged: till the whole expectation be at length
exhausted, when that whole action being ended, shall have passed into memory. And
this which takes place in the whole Psalm, the same takes place in each several
portion of it, and each several syllable; the same holds in that longer
action, whereof this Psalm may be part; the same holds in the whole life of man,
whereof all the actions of man are parts; the same holds through the whole age of
the sons of men, whereof all the lives of men are parts.
CHAPTER XXIX-THAT HUMAN LIFE IS A DISTRACTION, BUT THAT THROUGH THE MERCY OF
GOD HE WAS INTENT ON THE PRIZE OF HIS HEAVENLY CALLING.
But because Thy loving-kindness is better than all lives, behold, my life is
but a distraction, and Thy right hand upheld me, in my Lord the Son of man, the
Mediator betwixt Thee, The One, and us many, many also through our manifold
distractions amid many things, that by Him I may apprehend in Whom I have been
apprehended, and may be re-collected from my old conversation, to follow The One,
forgetting what is behind, and not distended but extended, not to things which
shall be and shall pass away, but to those things which are before, not
distractedly but intently, I follow on for the prize of my heavenly calling, where I
may hear the voice of Thy praise, and contemplate Thy delights, neither to come,
nor to pass away. But now are my years spent in mourning. And Thou, O Lord,
art my comfort, my Father everlasting, but I have been severed amid times, whose
order I know not; and my thoughts, even the inmost bowels of my soul, are rent
and mangled with tumultuous varieties, until I flow together into Thee,
purified and molten by the fire of Thy love.
CHAPTER XXX-AGAIN HE REFUTES THE EMPTY QUESTION, "WHAT DID GOD BEFORE THE
CREATION OF THE WORLD?"
And now will I stand, and become firm in Thee, in my mould, Thy truth; nor
will I endure the questions of men, who by a penal disease thirst for more than
they can contain, and say, "what did God before He made heaven and earth?" Or,
"How came it into His mind to make any thing, having never before made any
thing?" Give them, O Lord, well to bethink themselves what they say, and to find,
that "never" cannot be predicated, when "time" is not. This then that He is said
"never to have made"; what else is it to say, than "in 'no have made?" Let them
see therefore, that time cannot be without created being, and cease to speak
that vanity. May they also be extended towards those things which are before; and
understand Thee before all times, the eternal Creator of all times, and that
no times be coeternal with Thee, nor any creature, even if there be any creature
before all times.
CHAPTER XXXI-HOW THE KNOWLEDGE OF GOD DIFFERS FROM THAT OF MAN.
O Lord my God, what a depth is that recess of Thy mysteries, and how far from
it have the consequences of my transgressions cast me! Heal mine eyes, that I
may share the joy of Thy light. Certainly, if there be mind gifted with such
vast knowledge and foreknowledge, as to know all things past and to come, as I
know one well-known Psalm, truly that mind is passing wonderful, and fearfully
amazing; in that nothing past, nothing to come in after-ages, is any more hidden
from him, than when I sung that Psalm, was hidden from me what, and how much of
it had passed away from the beginning, what, and how much there remained unto
the end. But far be it that Thou the Creator of the Universe, the Creator of
souls and bodies, far be it, that Thou shouldest in such wise know all things past
and to come. Far, far more wonderfully, and far more mysteriously, dost Thou
know them. For not, as the feelings of one who singeth what he knoweth, or
heareth some well-known song, are through expectation of the words to come, and the
remembering of those that are past, varied, and his senses divided, -not so
doth any thing happen unto Thee, unchangeably eternal, that is, the eternal
Creator of minds. Like then as Thou in the Beginning knewest the heaven and the
earth, without any variety of Thy knowledge, so madest Thou in the Beginning heaven
and earth, without any distraction of Thy action. Whoso understandeth, let him
confess unto Thee; and whoso understandeth not, let him confess unto Thee. Oh
how high art Thou, and yet the humble in heart are Thy dwelling-place; for Thou
raisest up those that are bowed down, and they fall not, whose elevation Thou
art.