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THE THIRTEEN BOOKS
OF THE CONFESSIONS
OF ST. AUGUSTIN
BISHOP OF HIPPO
BOOK
II
THE ADVANCES TO PUBERTY, AND INDEED TO THE EARLY PART OF THE SIXTEENTH YEAR
OF HIS AGE, IN WHICH, HAVING ABANDONED HIS STUDIES, HE INDULGED IN LUSTFUL
PLEASURES, AND, WITH HIS COMPANIONS, COMMITTED THEFT.
CHAP. I.--HE DEPLORES THE WICKEDNESS OF HIS YOUTH.
1. I WILL now call to mind my past foulness, and the carnal corruptions of
my soul, not because I love them, but that I may love Thee, O my God. For love
of Thy love do I it, recalling, in the very bitterness of my remembrance, my
most vicious ways, that Thou mayest grow sweet to me,--Thou sweetness without
deception! Thou sweetness happy and assured !and re-collecting myself out of
that my dissipation, in which I was torn to pieces, while, turned away from
Thee the One, I lost myself among many vanities. For I even longed in my youth
formerly to be satisfied with worldly things, and I dared to grow wild again
with various and shadowy loves; my form consumed away,x and I became corrupt
in Thine eyes, pleasing myself, and eager to please in the eyes of men.
CHAP. II.--STRICKEN WITH EXCEEDING GRIEF, HE REMEMBERS THE DISSOLUTE PASSIONS
IN WHICH, IN HIS SIXTEENTH YEAR, HE USED TO INDULGE.
7. But
what was it that I delighted in save to love and to be beloved ? But I held
it not in moderation,
mind
to mind, the bright path of friendship, but
out of the dark concupiscence of the flesh and the effervescence of youth exhalations
came forth which obscured and overcast my heart, so that I was unable to discern
pure affection from unholy desire. Both boiled confusedly within me, and dragged
away my unstable youth into the rough places of unchaste desires, and plunged
me into a gulf of infamy. Thy anger had overshadowed me, and I knew it not.
I was become deaf by the rattling of the chins of my mortality, the punishment
for my soul's pride; and I wandered farther from Thee, and Thou didst "suffer"'
me; and I was tossed to and fro, and wasted, and poured out, and boiled over
in my fornications, and Thou didst hold Thy peace, O Thou my tardy joy! Thou
then didst hold Thy peace, and I wandered still farther from Thee, into more
and more barren seed-plots of sorrows, with proud dejection and restless lassitude.
3. Oh
for one to have regulated my disorder, and turned to my profit the fleeting
beauties of the
things
around me, and fixed a bound to their sweetness, so
that the tides of my youth might have spent themselves upon the conjugal shore,
if so be they could not be tranquillized and satisfied within the object of
a family, as Thy law appoints, 0 Lord,--who thus formest the offspring of our
death, being able also with a tender hand to blunt the thorns which were excluded
from Thy paradise! For Thy omnipotency is not far from us even when we are
far from Thee, else in truth ought I more vigilantly to have given heed to
the voice from the clouds: "Nevertheless, such shall have trouble in the
flesh, but I spare you;" and, "It is good for a man not to touch
a woman; "' and, "He that is unmarried careth for the things that
belong to the Lord, how he may please the Lord; but he that is married careth
for the things that are of the world, how he may please his wife."5 I
should, therefore, have listened more attentively to these words, and, being
severed "for the kingdom of heaven's sake," ' I would with greater
happiness have expected Thy embraces.
4. But I, poor fool, seethed as does the sea, and, forsaking Thee, followed
the violent course of my own stream, and exceeded all Thy limitations; nor
did I escape Thy scourges.' For what mortal can do so ? But Thou weft always
by me, mercifully angry, and dashing with the bitterest vexations all my illicit
pleasures, in order that I might seek pleasures free from vexation. But where
I could meet with such except in Thee, 0 Lord, I could not find,except in Thee,
who teachest by sorrow,8 and woundest us to heal us, and killest us that we
may not die from Thee.t Where was I, and how far was I exiled from the delights
of Thy house, in that sixteenth year of the age of my flesh, when the madness
of lust--to the which human shamelessness granteth full freedom, although forbidden
by Thy laws--held complete away over me, and I resigned myself entirely to
it? Those about me meanwhile took no care to save me from ruin by marriage,
their sole care being that I should learn to make a powerful speech, and become
a persuasive orator.
CHAP. III.---CONCERNING HIS FATHER, A FREEMAN OF THAGASTE, THE ASSISTER OF
HIS SON'S STUDIES, AND ON THE ADMONITIONS OF HIS MOTHER ON THE PRESERVATION
OF CHASTITY.
5. And for that year my studies were intermitted, while after my return from
Madaura2 (a neighbouring city, whither I had begun to go in order to learn
grammar and rhetoric), the expenses for a further residence at Carthage were
provided for me; and that was rather by the determination than the means of
my father, who was but a poor freeman of Thagaste. To whom do I narrate this
? Not unto Thee, my God; but before Thee unto my own kind, even to that small
part of the human race who may: chance to light upon these my writings. And
to what end ? That I and all who read the same may reflect out of what depths
we are' to cry unto Thee.s For what cometh nearer to Thine ears than a confessing
heart and a life of faith ? For who did not extol and praise my father, in
that he went even beyond his means to supply his son with all the necessaries
for a far journey for the sake of his studies ? For many far richer citizens
did not the like for their children. But yet this same father did not trouble
himself how I grew towards Thee, nor how chaste I was, so long as I was skilful
in speaking--however barren I was to Thy tilling, O God, who art the sole true
and good Lord of my heart, which is Thy field.
6. But while, in that sixteenth year of my age, I resided with my parents,
having holiday from school for a time (this idleness being imposed upon me
by my parents' necessitous circumstances), the thorns of lust grew rank over
my head, and there was no hand to pluck them out. Moreover when my father,
seeing me at the baths, perceived that I was becoming a man, and was stirred
with a restless youthfulness, he, as if from this anticipating future descendants,
joyfully told it to my mother; rejoicing in that intoxication wherein the world
so often forgets Thee, its Creator, and fails in love with Thy creature instead
of Thee, from the invisible wine of its own perversity turning and bowing down
to the 'most infamous things. But in my mother's breast Thou hadst even now
begun Thy temple, and the commencement of Thy holy habitation, whereas my father
was only a catechumen as yet, and that but recently. She then started up with
a pious fear and trembling; and, although I had not yet been baptized,4 she
feared those crooked ways in which they walk who turn their back to Thee, and
not their face?
7. Woe
is me! and dare I affirm that Thou heldest Thy peace, O my God, while I strayed
farther from
Thee
? Didst Thou then hold Thy peace to me? And whose
words were they but Thine which by my mother, Thy faithful handmaid, Thou pouredst
into my ears, none of which sank into my heart to make me do it ? For she desired,
and I remember privately warned me, with great solicitude, "not to commit
fornication; but above all things never to defile another man's wife." These
appeared to me but womanish counsels, which I should blush to obey. But they
were Thine, and I knew it not, and I thought that Thou heldest Thy peace, and
that it was she who spoke, through whom Thou heldest not Thy peace to me, and
in her person wast despised by me, her son, "the son of Thy handmaid,
Thy servant." 6 But this I knew not; and rushed on headlong with such
blindness, that amongst my equals I was ashamed to be less shameless, when
I heard them pluming themselves upon their disgraceful acts, yea, and glorying
all the more in proportion to the greatness of their baseness; and I took pleasure
in doing it, not for the pleasure's sake only, but for the praise. What is
worthy of dispraise but vice ? But I made myself out worse than I was, in order
that I might not be dispraised; and when in anything I had not sinned as the
abandoned ones, I would affirm that I had done what I had not, that I might
not appear abject for being more innocent, or of less esteem for being more
chaste.
8. Behold
with what companions I walked the streets of Babylon, in whose filth I was
rolled, as if in cinnamon
and precious ointments. And that I might cleave
the more tens57 ciously to its very centre, my invisible enemy trod me down,
and seduced me, I being easily seduced. Nor did the mother of my flesh, although
she herself had ere this fled "out of the midst of Babylon,"1 --
progressing, however, but slowly in the skirts of it,--in counselling me to
chastity, so bear in mind what she had been told about me by her husband as
to restrain in the limits of conjugal affection (if it could not be cut away
to the quick) what she knew to be destructive in the present and dangerous
in the future. But she took no heed of this, for she was afraid lest a wife
should prove a hindrance and a clog to my hopes. Not those hopes of the future
world, which my mother had in Thee; but the hope of learning, which both my
parents were too anxious that I should acquire,-he, because he had little or
no thought of Thee, and but vain thoughts for me--she, because she calculated
that those usual courses of learning would not only be no drawback, but rather
a. furtherance towards my attaining Thee. For thus I conjecture, recalling
as well as I can the dispositions of my parents. The reins, meantime, were
slackened towards me beyond the restraint of due severity, that I might play,
yea, even to dissoluteness, in whatsoever I fancied. And in all there was a
mist, shutting out from my sight the brightness of Thy truth, O my God; and
my iniquity displayed itself as from very "fatness." '
CHAP. IV.--HE COMMITS THEFT WITH HIS COMPANIONS, NOT URGED ON BY POVERTY,
BUT FROM A CERTAIN DISTASTE OF WELL-DOING.
9. Theft is punished by Thy law, O Lord, and by the law written in men's hearts,
which iniquity itself cannot blot out. For what thief will suffer a thief?
Even a rich thief will not suffer him who is driven to it by want. Yet had
L a desire to commit robbery, and did so, compelled neither by hunger, nor
poverty through a distaste for well-doing, and a lustiness of iniquity. For
I pilfered that of which I had already sufficient, and much better. Nor did
I desire to enjoy what I pilfered, but the theft and sin itself. There was
a pear-tree close to our vineyard, heavily laden with fruit, which was tempting
neither for its colour nor its flavour. To shake and rob this some of us wanton
young fellows went, late one night (having, according to our disgraceful habit,
prolonged our games in the streets until then), and carried away great loads,
not to eat ourselves, but to fling to the very swine, having only eaten some
of them; and to do this pleased us all the more because it was not permitted.
Behold my heart, O my God; behold my heart, which Thou hadst pity upon when
in the bottomless pit. Behold, now, let my heart tell Thee what it was seeking
there, that I should be gratuitously wanton, having no inducement to evil but
the evil itself. It was foul, and I loved it. I loved to perish. I loved my
own error--not that for which I erred, but the error itself. Base soul, falling
from Thy firmament to utter destruction--not seeking aught through the shame
but the shame itself 1
CHAP. V.---CONCERNING THE MOTIVES TO SIN, WHICH ARE NOT IN THE LOVE OF EVIL,
BUT IN THE DESIRE OF OBTAINING THE PROPERTY OF OTHERS.
10. There is a desirableness in all beautiful bodies, and in gold, and silver,
and all things; and in bodily contact sympathy is powerful, and each other
sense hath his proper adaptation of body. Worldly honour hath also its glory,
and the power of command, and of overcoming; whence proceeds also the desire
for revenge. And yet to acquire all these, we must not depart from Thee, O
Lord, nor deviate from Thy law. The life which we live here hath also its peculiar
attractiveness, through a certain measure of comeliness of its own, and harmony
with all things here below. The friendships of men also are endeared by a sweet
bond, in the oneness of many souls. On account of all these, and such as these,
is sin committed; while through an inordinate preference for these goods of
a lower kind, the better and higher are neglected,---even Thou, our Lord God,
Thy truth, and Thy law. For these meaner things have their delights, but not
like unto my God, who hath created all things; for in Him doth the righteous
delight, and He is the sweetness of the upright in heart.3
11. When,
therefore, we inquire why a crime was committed, we do not believe it, unless
it appear
that there
might have been the wish to obtain some of
those which we designated meaner things, or else a fear of losing them. For
truly they are beautiful and comely, although in comparison with those higher
and celestial goods they be abject and contemptible. A man hath murdered another;
what was his motive ? He desired his wife or his estate; or would steal to
support himself; or he was afraid of losing something of the kind by him; or,
being injured, he was burning to be revenged. Would he commit murder without
a motive, taking delight simply in the act of murder? Who would credit it ?
For as for that savage and brutal man, of whom it is declared that he was gratuitously
wicked and cruel, there is yet a motive assigned. "Lest through idleness," he
says, "hand or heart should grow inactive." x And to what purpose
? Why, even that, having once got possession of the city through that practice
of wickedness, he might attain unto honours, empire, and wealth, and be exempt
from the fear of the laws, and his difficult circumstances from the needs of
his family, and the consciousness of his own wickedness. So it seems that even
Catiline himself loved not his own villanies, but something else, which gave
him the motive for committing them.
CHAP. VI.--WHY HE DELIGHTED IN THAT THEFT, WHEN ALL THINGS WHICH UNDER THE
APPEARANCE OF GOOD INVITE TO VICE ARE TRUE AND PERFECT IN GOD ALONE.
12. What was it, then, that I, miserable one, so doted on in thee, thou theft
of mine, thou deed of darkness, in that sixteenth year of my age ? Beautiful
thou weft not, since thou weft theft. ]But art thou anything, that so I may
argue the case with thee ? Those pears that we stole were fair to the sight,
because they were Thy creation, Thou fairests of all, Creator of all, Thou
good God--God, the highest good, and my true good. Those pears truly were pleasant
to the sight; but it was not for them that my miserable soul lusted, for I
had abundance of better, but those I plucked simply that I might steal. For,
having plucked them, I threw them away, my sole gratification in them being
my own sin, which I was pleased to enjoy. For if any of these pears entered
my mouth, the sweetener of it was my sin in eating it. And now, O Lord my God,
I ask what it was in that theft of mine that caused me such delight; and behold
it hath no beauty in it--not such, I mean, as exists in justice and wisdom;
nor such as is in the mind, memory, Senses, and animal life of man; nor yet
such as iS the glory and beauty of the stars in their courses; or the earth,
or the sea, teeming with incipient life, to replace, as it is born, that which
decayeth; nor, indeed, that false and shadowy beauty which pertaineth to deceptive
vices.
13. For thus cloth pride imitate high estate, I whereas Thou alone art God,
high above all. [ And what does ambition seek but honours and l renown, whereas
Thou alone art to be honoured i above all, and renowned for evermore? The cruelty
of the powerful wishes to be feared ;i but who is to be feared but God only,s
out of whose power what can be forced away or with-drawn--when, or where, or
whither, or by whom ? The enticements of the wanton would fain be deemed love;
and yet is naught more enticing than Thy charity, nor is aught loved more healthfully
than that, Thy truth, bright and beautiful above all. Curiosity affects a desire
for knowledge, whereas it is Thou who supremely knowest all things. Yea, ignorance
and foolishness themselves are concealed under the names of ingenuousness and
harmlessness, because nothing can be found more ingenuous than Thou; and what
is more harmless, since it is a sinner's own works by which he is harmed?4
And sloth seems to long for rest; but what sure rest is there besides the Lord
? Luxury would fain be called plenty and abundance; but Thou art the fellness
and unfailing plenteousness of unfading joys. Prodigality presents a shadow
of liberality; but Thou art the most lavish giver of all good. Covetousness
desires to possess much; and Thou art the Possessor of all things. Envy contends
for excellence; but what so excellent as Thou ? Anger seeks revenge; who avenges
more justly than Thou ? Fear starts at unwonted and sudden chances which threaten
things beloved, and is wary for their security; but what can happen that is
unwonted or sudden to Thee ? or who can deprive Thee of what Thou lovest? or
where is there unshaken security save with Thee ? Grief languishes for things
lost in which desire had delighted itself, even because it would have nothing
taken from it, as nothing can be from Thee.
14. Thus doth the soul commit fornication when she turns away from Thee, and
seeks without Thee what she cannot find pure and untainted until she returns
to Thee. Thus all pervertedly imitate Thee who separate themselves far from
Thee4 and raise themselves up against Thee. But even by thus imitating Thee
they acknowledge Thee to be the Creator of all nature, and so that there is
no place whither they can altogether retire from Thee.s What, then, was it
that I loved in that theft ? And wherein did I, even corruptedly and pervertedly,
imitate my Lord ? Did I wish, if only by artifice, to act contrary to Thy law,
because by power I could not, so that, being a captive, I might imitate an
imperfect liberty by doing with impunity things which I was not allowed to
do, in obscured likeness of Thy omnipotency?6 Behold this servant of Thine,
fleeing from his Lord, and following a shadow!7 O rottenness 1 O monstrosity
of life and profundity of death I Could I like that which was unlawful only
because it was unlawful ?
CHAP. VII.--HE GIVES THANKS TO GOD FOR THE REMISSION OF HIS SINS, AND REMINDS
EVERY ONE THAT THE SUPREME GOD MAY HAVE PRESERVED US FROM GREATER SINS.
15. "What shall I render unto the Lord," x
that whilst my memory recalls these things my soul is not appalled at them
? I will love Thee, 0
Lord, and thank Thee, and confess unto Thy name,s because Thou hast put away
from me these so wicked and nefarious acts of mine. To Thy grace I attribute
it, and to Thy mercy, that Thou hast melted away my sin as it were ice. To
Thy grace also I attribute whatsoever of evil I have hot committed; for what
might I not have committed, loving as I did the sin for the sin's sake? Yea,
all I confess to have been pardoned me, both those which I committed by my
own perverseness, and those which, by Thy guidance, I committed not. Where
is he who, reflecting upon his own infirmity, dares to ascribe his chastity
and innocency to his own strength, so that he should love Thee the less, as
if he had been in less need of Thy mercy, whereby Thou dost forgive the transgressions
of those that turn to Thee ? For whosoever, called by Thee, obeyed Thy voice,
and shunned those things which he reads me recalling and confessing of myself,
let him not despise me, who, being sick, was healed by that same Physician'
by whose aid it was that he was not sick, or rather was less sick. And for
this let him love Thee as much, yea, all the more, since by whom he sees me
to have been restored from so great a feebleness of sin, by Him he sees himself
from a like feebleness to have been preserved.
CHAP. VIII.--IN HIS THEFT HE LOVED THE COMPANY OF HIS FELLOW-SINNERS.
16. "What fruit had I then,"*
wretched one, in those things which, when I remember them, cause me shame--above
all in that theft, which I loved
only for the theft's sake ? And as the theft itself was nothing, all the more
wretched was I who loved it. Yet by myself alone I would not have done it--I
recall what my heart was---alone I could not have done it. I loved, then, in
it the companionship of my accomplices with whom I did it. I did not, therefore,
love the theft alone--yea, rather, it was that alone that I loved, for the
companionship was nothing. What is the fact? Who is it that can teach me, but
He who illuminateth mine heart and searcheth out the dark corners thereof?
What is it that hath come into my mind to inquire about, to discuss, and to
reflect upon ? For had I at that time loved the pears I stole, and wished to
enjoy them, I might have done so alone, if I could have been satisfied with
the mere commission of the theft by which my pleasure was secured; nor needed
I have provoked that itching of my own passions, by the encouragement of accomplices.
But as my enjoyment was not in those pears, it was in the crime itself, which
the company of my fellow-sinners produced.
CHAP. IX.--IT WAS A PLEASURE TO HIM ALSO TO LAUGH WHEN SERIOUSLY DECEIVING
OTHERS.
17. By
what feelings, then, was I animated ? For it was in truth too shameful; and
woe was me who
had it.
But still what was it ? "Who can understand
his errors?"5 We laughed, because our hearts were tickled at the thought
of deceiving those who little imagined what we were doing, and would have vehemently
disapproved of it. Yet, again, why did I so rejoice in this, that I did it
not alone ? Is it that no one readily laughs alone? No one does so readily;
but yet sometimes, when men are alone by themselves, nobody being by, a fit
of laughter overcomes them when anything very droll presents itself to their
senses or mind. Yet alone I would not have done it--alone I could not at all
have done it. Behold, my God, the lively recollection of my soul is laid bare
before Thee--alone I had not committed that theft, wherein what I stole pleased
me not, but rather the act of stealing; nor to have done it alone would I have
liked so well, neither would I have done it. 0 Friendship too unfriendly! thou
mysterious seducer of the soul, thou greediness to do mischief out of mirth
and wantonness, thou craving for others' loss, without desire for my own profit
or revenge; but when they say, "Let us go, let us do it," we are
ashamed not to be shameless.
CHAP. X.--WITH GOD THERE IS TRUE REST AND LIFE UNCHANGING.
18. Who can unravel that twisted and tang]ed knottiness ? It is foul. I hate
to reflect on it. I hate to look on it. But thee do I long for, O righteousness
and innocency, fair and comely to all virtuous eyes, and of a satisfaction
that never palls! With thee is perfect rest, and life unchanging. He who enters
into thee enters into the joy of his Lord, a and shall have no fear, and shall
do excellently in the most Excellent. I sank away from Thee, O my God, and
I wandered too far from Thee, my stay, in my youth, and became to myself an
unfruitful land.
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