SAINT AUGUSTINE
CONFESSIONS: BOOK THREE
TABLE OF CONTENTS
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HIS RESIDENCE AT CARTHAGE FROM HIS
SEVENTEENTH TO HIS NINETEENTH YEAR. SOURCE OF HIS DISORDERS. LOVE OF SHOWS.
ADVANCE IN STUDIES, AND LOVE OF WISDOM. DISTASTE FOR SCRIPTURE. LED ASTRAY TO
THE MANICHEANS. REFUTATION OF SOME OF THEIR TENETS. GRIEF OF HIS MOTHER MONICA
AT HIS HERESY, AND PRAYERS FOR HIS CONVERSION. HER VISION FROM GOD,
AND ANSWER THROUGH A BISHOP
TO Carthage I came, where there sang
all around me in my ears a cauldron of unholy loves. I loved not yet, yet I
loved to love, and out of a deep-seated want, I hated myself for wanting not.
I sought what I might love, in love with loving, and safety I hated, and a way
without snares. For within me was a famine of that inward food, Thyself, my
God; yet, through that famine I was not hungered; but was without all longing
for incorruptible sustenance, not because filled therewith, but the more
empty, the more I loathed it. For this cause my soul was sickly and full of
sores, it miserably cast itself forth, desiring to be scraped by the touch of
objects of sense. Yet if these had not a soul, they would not be objects of
love. To love then, and to be beloved, was sweet to me; but more, when I
obtained to enjoy the person I loved. I defiled, therefore, the spring of
friendship with the filth of concupiscence, and I beclouded its brightness
with the hell of lustfulness; and thus foul and unseemly, I would fain,
through exceeding vanity, be fine and courtly. I fell headlong then into the
love wherein I longed to be ensnared. My God, my Mercy, with how much gall
didst Thou out of Thy great goodness besprinkle for me that sweetness? For I
was both beloved, and secretly arrived at the bond of enjoying; and was with
joy fettered with sorrow-bringing bonds, that I might be scourged with the
iron burning rods of jealousy, and suspicions, and fears, and angers, and
quarrels.
Stage-plays also carried me away, full of images of my miseries, and of fuel
to my fire. Why is it, that man desires to be made sad, beholding doleful and
tragical things, which yet himself would by no means suffer? yet he desires as
a spectator to feel sorrow at them, and this very sorrow is his pleasure. What
is this but a miserable madness? for a man is the more affected with these
actions, the less free he is from such affections. Howsoever, when he suffers
in his own person, it uses to be styled misery: when he compassionates others,
then it is mercy. But what sort of compassion is this for feigned and scenical
passions? for the auditor is not called on to relieve, but only to grieve: and
he applauds the actor of these fictions the more, the more he grieves. And if
the calamities of those persons (whether of old times, or mere fiction) be so
acted, that the spectator is not moved to tears, he goes away disgusted and
criticising; but if he be moved to passion, he stays intent, and weeps for
joy.
2 Are griefs then too loved? Verily all desire joy. Or whereas no man likes to
be miserable, is he yet pleased to be merciful? which because it cannot be
without passion, for this reason alone are passions loved? This also springs
from that vein of friendship. But whither goes that vein? whither flows it?
wherefore runs it into that torrent of pitch bubbling forth those monstrous
tides of foul lustfulness, into which it is wilfully changed and transformed,
being of its own will precipitated and corrupted from its heavenly clearness?
Shall compassion then be put away? by no means. Be griefs then sometimes
loved. But beware of uncleanness, O my soul, under the guardianship of my God,
the God of our fathers, who is to be praised and exalted above all for ever,
beware of uncleanness. For I have not now ceased to pity; but then in the
theatres I rejoiced with lovers when they wickedly enjoyed one another,
although this was imaginary only in the play. And when they lost one another,
as if very compassionate, I sorrowed with them, yet had my delight in both.
But now I much more pity him that rejoiceth in his wickedness, than him who is
thought to suffer hardship, by missing some pernicious pleasure, and the loss
of some miserable felicity. This certainly is the truer mercy, but in it grief
delights not. For though he that grieves for the miserable, be commended for
his office of charity; yet had he, who is genuinely compassionate, rather
there were nothing for him to grieve for. For if good will be ill willed
(which can never be), then may he, who truly and sincerely commiserates, wish
there might be some miserable, that he might commiserate. Some sorrow may then
be allowed, none loved. For thus dost Thou, O Lord God, who lovest souls far
more purely than we, and hast more incorruptibly pity on them, yet are wounded
with no sorrowfulness. And who is sufficient for these things?
3 But I, miserable, then loved to grieve, and sought out what to grieve at, when
in another's and that feigned and personated misery, that acting best pleased
me, and attracted me the most vehemently, which drew tears from me. What
marvel that an unhappy sheep, straying from Thy flock, and impatient of Thy
keeping, I became infected with a foul disease? And hence the love of griefs;
not such as should sink deep into me; for I loved not to suffer, what I loved
to look on; but such as upon hearing their fictions should lightly scratch the
surface; upon which, as on envenomed nails, followed inflamed swelling,
impostumes, and a putrified sore. My life being such, was it life, O my God?
4 And Thy faithful mercy hovered over me afar. Upon how grievous iniquities
consumed I myself, pursuing a sacrilegious curiosity, that having forsaken
Thee, it might bring me to the treacherous abyss, and the beguiling service of
devils, to whom I sacrificed my evil actions, and in all these things Thou
didst scourge me! I dared even, while Thy solemnities were celebrated within
the walls of Thy church, to desire, and to compass a business deserving death
for its fruits, for which Thou scourgedst me with grievous punishments, though
nothing to my fault, O Thou my exceeding mercy, my God, my refuge from those
terrible destroyers, among whom I wandered with a stiff neck, withdrawing
further from Thee, loving mine own ways, and not Thine; loving a vagrant
liberty.
5 Those studies also, which were accounted commendable, had a view to excelling
in the courts of litigation; the more bepraised, the craftier. Such is men's
blindness, glorying even in their blindness. And now I was chief in the
rhetoric school, whereat I joyed proudly, and I swelled with arrogancy, though
(Lord, Thou knowest) far quieter and altogether removed from the subvertings
of those "Subverters" (for this ill-omened and devilish name was the
very badge of gallantry) among whom I lived, with a shameless shame that I was
not even as they. With them I lived, and was sometimes delighted with their
friendship, whose doings I ever did abhor--i.e., their "subvertings,"
wherewith they wantonly persecuted the modesty of strangers, which they
disturbed by a gratuitous jeering, feeding thereon their malicious mirth.
Nothing can be liker the very actions of devils than these. What then could
they be more truly called than "Subverters"? themselves subverted
and altogether perverted first, the deceiving spirits secretly deriding and
seducing them, wherein themselves delight to jeer at, and deceive others.
6 Among such as these, in that unsettled age of mine, learned I books of
eloquence, wherein I desired to be eminent, out of a damnable and vainglorious
end, a joy in human vanity. In the ordinary course of study, I fell upon a
certain book of Cicero, whose speech almost all admire, not so his heart. This
book of his contains an exhortation to philosophy, and is called "Hortensius."
But this book altered my affections, and turned my prayers to Thyself O Lord;
and made me have other purposes and desires. Every vain hope at once became
worthless to me; and I longed with an incredibly burning desire for an
immortality of wisdom, and began now to arise, that I might return to Thee.
For not to sharpen my tongue (which thing I seemed to be purchasing with my
mother's allowances, in that my nineteenth year, my father being dead two
years before), not to sharpen my tongue did I employ that book; nor did it
infuse into me its style, but its matter.
How did I burn then, my God, how did I burn to re-mount from earthly things to
Thee, nor knew I what Thou wouldest do with me? For with Thee is wisdom. But
the love of wisdom is in Greek called "philosophy," with which that
book inflamed me. Some there be that seduce through philosophy, under a great,
and smooth, and honourable name colouring and disguising their own errors: and
almost all who in that and former ages were such, are in that book censured
and set forth: there also is made plain that wholesome advice of Thy Spirit,
by Thy good and devout servant: Beware lest any man spoil you through
philosophy and vain deceit, after the tradition of men, after the rudiments of
the world, and not after Christ. For in Him dwelleth all the fulness of the
Godhead bodily. And since at that time (Thou, O light of my heart, knowest)
Apostolic Scripture was not known to me, I was delighted with that
exhortation, so far only, that I was thereby strongly roused, and kindled, and
inflamed to love, and seek, and obtain, and hold, and embrace not this or that
sect, but wisdom itself whatever it were; and this alone checked me thus
enkindled, that the name of Christ was not in it. For this name, according to
Thy mercy, O Lord, this name of my Saviour Thy Son, had my tender heart, even
with my mother's milk, devoutly drunk in, and deeply treasured; and whatsoever
was without that name, though never so learned, polished, or true, took not
entire hold of me.
7 I resolved then to bend my mind to the holy Scriptures, that I might see what
they were. But behold, I see a thing not understood by the proud, nor laid
open to children, lowly in access, in its recesses lofty, and veiled with
mysteries; and I was not such as could enter into it, or stoop my neck to
follow its steps. For not as I now speak, did I feel when I turned to those
Scriptures; but they seemed to me unworthy to be compared to the stateliness
of Tully: for my swelling pride shrunk from their lowliness, nor could my
sharp wit pierce the interior thereof. Yet were they such as would grow up in
a little one. But I disdained to be a little one; and, swollen with pride,
took myself to be a great one.
8 Therefore I fell among men proudly doting, exceeding carnal and prating, in
whose mouths were the snares of the Devil, limed with the mixture of the
syllables of Thy name, and of our Lord Jesus Christ, and of the Holy Ghost,
the Paraclete, our Comforter. These names departed not out of their mouth, but
so far forth as the sound only and the noise of the tongue, for the heart was
void of truth. Yet they cried out "Truth, Truth," and spake much
thereof to me, yet it was not in them: but they spake falsehood, not of Thee
only (who truly art Truth), but even of those elements of this world, Thy
creatures. And I indeed ought to have passed by even philosophers who spake
truth concerning them, for love of Thee, my Father, supremely good, Beauty of
all things beautiful. O Truth, Truth, how inwardly did even then the marrow of
my soul pant after Thee, when they often and diversly, and in many and huge
books, echoed of Thee to me, though it was but an echo? And these were the
dishes wherein to me, hungering after Thee, they, instead of Thee, served up
the Sun and Moon, beautiful works of Thine, but yet Thy works, not Thyself, no
nor Thy first works. For Thy spiritual works are before these corporeal works,
celestial though they be, and shining. But I hungered and thirsted not even
after those first works of Thine, but after Thee Thyself, the Truth, in whom
is no variableness, neither shadow of turning: yet they still set before me in
those dishes, glittering fantasies, than which better were it to love this
very sun (which is real to our sight at least), than those fantasies which by
our eyes deceive our mind. Yet because I thought them to be Thee, I fed
thereon; not eagerly, for Thou didst not in them taste to me as Thou art; for
Thou wast not these emptinesses, nor was I nourished by them, but exhausted
rather. Food in sleep shows very like our food awake; yet are not those asleep
nourished by it, for they are asleep. But those were not even any way like to
Thee, as Thou hast now spoken to me; for those were corporeal fantasies, false
bodies, than which these true bodies, celestial or terrestrial, which with our
fleshly sight we behold, are far more certain: these things the beasts and
birds discern as well as we, and they are more certain than when we fancy
them. And again, we do with more certainty fancy them, than by them conjecture
other vaster and infinite bodies which have no being. Such empty husks was I
then fed on; and was not fed. But Thou, my soul's Love, in looking for whom I
fail, that I may become strong, art neither those bodies which we see, though
in heaven; nor those which we see not there; for Thou hast created them, nor
dost Thou account them among the chiefest of Thy works. How far then art Thou
from those fantasies of mine, fantasies of bodies which altogether are not,
than which the images of those bodies, which are, are far more certain, and
more certain still the bodies themselves, which yet Thou art not; no, nor yet
the soul, which is the life of the bodies. So then, better and more certain is
the life of the bodies than the bodies. But Thou art the life of souls, the
life of lives, having life in Thyself; and changest not, life of my soul.
9 Where then wert Thou then to me, and how far from me? Far verily was I
straying from Thee, barred from the very husks of the swine, whom with husks I
fed. For how much better are the fables of poets and grammarians than these
snares? For verses, and poems, and "Medea flying," are more
profitable truly than these men's five elements, variously disguised,
answering to five dens of darkness, which have no being, yet slay the
believer. For verses and poems I can turn to true food, and "Medea
flying," though I did sing, I maintained not; though I heard it sung, I
believed not: but those things I did believe. Woe, woe, by what steps was I
brought down to the depths of hell! toiling and turmoiling through want of
Truth, since I sought after Thee, my God (to Thee I confess it, who hadst
mercy on me, not as yet confessing), not according to the understanding of the
mind, wherein Thou willedst that I should excel the beasts, but according to
the sense of the flesh. But Thou wert more inward to me, than my most inward
part; and higher than my highest. I lighted upon that bold woman, simple and
knowing nothing, shadowed out in Solomon, sitting at the door, and saying, Eat
ye bread of secrecies willingly, and drink ye stolen waters which are sweet:
she seduced me, because she found my soul dwelling abroad in the eye of my
flesh, and ruminating on such food as through it I had devoured.
10 For other than this, that which really is I knew not; and was, as it were
through sharpness of wit, persuaded to assent to foolish deceivers, when they
asked me, "whence is evil?" "is God bounded by a bodily shape,
and has hairs and nails?" "are they to be esteemed righteous who had
many wives at once, and did kill men, and sacrificed living creatures?"
At which I, in my ignorance, was much troubled, and departing from the truth,
seemed to myself to be making towards it; because as yet I knew not that evil
was nothing but a privation of good, until at last a thing ceases altogether
to be; which how should I see, the sight of whose eyes reached only to bodies,
and of my mind to a phantasm? And I knew not God to be a Spirit, not one who
hath parts extended in length and breadth, or whose being was bulk; for every
bulk is less in a part than in the whole: and if it be infinite, it must be
less in such part as is defined by a certain space, than in its infinitude;
and so is not wholly every where, as Spirit, as God. And what that should be
in us, by which we were like to God, and might in Scripture be rightly said to
be after the image of God, I was altogether ignorant.
Nor knew I that true inward righteousness which judgeth not according to
custom, but out of the most rightful law of God Almighty, whereby the ways of
places and times were disposed according to those times and places; itself
meantime being the same always and every where, not one thing in one place,
and another in another; according to which Abraham, and Isaac, and Jacob, and
Moses, and David, were righteous, and all those commended by the mouth of God;
but were judged unrighteous by silly men, judging out of man's judgment, and
measuring by their own petty habits, the moral habits of the whole human race.
As if in an armory, one ignorant what were adapted to each part should cover
his head with greaves, or seek to be shod with a helmet, and complain that
they fitted not: or as if on a day when business is publicly stopped in the
afternoon, one were angered at not being allowed to keep open shop, because he
had been in the forenoon; or when in one house he observeth some servant take
a thing in his hand, which the butler is not suffered to meddle with; or
something permitted out of doors, which is forbidden in the dining-room; and
should be angry, that in one house, and one family, the same thing is not
allotted every where, and to all. Even such are they who are fretted to hear
something to have been lawful for righteous men formerly, which now is not; or
that God, for certain temporal respects, commanded them one thing, and these
another, obeying both the same righteousness: whereas they see, in one man,
and one day, and one house, different things to be fit for different members,
and a thing formerly lawful, after a certain time not so; in one corner
permitted or commanded, but in another rightly forbidden and punished. Is
justice therefore various or mutable? No, but the times, over which it
presides, flow not evenly, because they are times. But men whose days are few
upon the earth, for that by their senses they cannot harmonise the causes of
things in former ages and other nations, which they had not experience of,
with these which they have experience of, whereas in one and the same body,
day, or family, they easily see what is fitting for each member, and season,
part, and person; to the one they take exceptions, to the other they submit.
11 These things I then knew not, nor observed; they struck my sight on all sides,
and I saw them not. I indited verses, in which I might not place every foot
every where, but differently in different metres; nor even in any one metre
the self-same foot in all places. Yet the art itself, by which I indited, had
not different principles for these different cases, but comprised all in one.
Still I saw not how that righteousness, which good and holy men obeyed, did
far more excellently and sublimely contain in one all those things which God
commanded, and in no part varied; although in varying times it prescribed not
every thing at once, but apportioned and enjoined what was fit for each. And
I, in my blindness, censured the holy Fathers, not only wherein they made use
of things present as God commanded and inspired them, but also wherein they
were foretelling things to come, as God was revealing in them.
12 Can it at any time or place be unjust to love God with all his heart, with all
his soul, and with all his mind; and his neighbour as himself? Therefore are
those foul offences which be against nature, to be every where and at all
times detested and punished; such as were those of the men of Sodom: which
should all nations commit, they should all stand guilty of the same crime, by
the law of God, which hath not so made men that they should so abuse one
another. For even that intercourse which should be between God and us is
violated, when that same nature, of which He is Author, is polluted by
perversity of lust. But those actions which are offences against the customs
of men, are to be avoided according to the customs severally prevailing; so
that a thing agreed upon, and confirmed, by custom or law of any city or
nation, may not be violated at the lawless pleasure of any, whether native or
foreigner. For any part which harmoniseth not with its whole, is offensive.
But when God commands a thing to be done, against the customs or compact of
any people, though it were never by them done heretofore, it is to be done;
and if intermitted, it is to be restored; and if never ordained, is now to be
ordained. For lawful if it be for a king, in the state which he reigns over,
to command that which no one before him, nor he himself heretofore, had
commanded, and to obey him cannot be against the common weal of the state
(nay, it were against it if he were not obeyed, for to obey princes is a
general compact of human society); how much more unhesitatingly ought we to
obey God, in all which He commands, the Ruler of all His creatures! For as
among the powers in man's society, the greater authority is obeyed in
preference to the lesser, so must God above all.
13 So in acts of violence, where there is a wish to hurt, whether by reproach or
injury; and these either for revenge, as one enemy against another; or for
some profit belonging to another, as the robber to the traveller; or to avoid
some evil, as towards one who is feared; or through envy, as one less
fortunate to one more so, or one well thriven in any thing, to him whose being
on a par with himself he fears, or grieves at, or for the mere pleasure at
another's pain, as spectators of gladiators, or deriders and mockers of
others. These be the heads of iniquity which spring from the lust of the
flesh, of the eye, or of rule, either singly, or two combined, or all
together; and so do men live ill against the three, and seven, that psaltery
of ten strings, Thy Ten Commandments, O God, most high, and most sweet. But
what foul offences can there be against Thee, who canst not be defiled? or
what acts of violence against Thee, who canst not be harmed? But Thou avengest
what men commit against themselves, seeing also when they sin against Thee,
they do wickedly against their own souls, and iniquity gives itself the lie,
by corrupting and perverting their nature, which Thou hast created and
ordained, or by an immoderate use of things allowed, or in burning in things
unallowed, to that use which is against nature; or are found guilty, raging
with heart and tongue against Thee, kicking against the pricks; or when,
bursting the pale of human society, they boldly joy in self-willed
combinations or divisions, according as they have any object to gain or
subject of offence. And these things are done when Thou art forsaken, O
Fountain of Life, who art the only and true Creator and Governor of the
Universe, and by a self-willed pride, any one false thing is selected
therefrom and loved. So then by a humble devoutness we return to Thee; and
Thou cleansest us from our evil habits, and art merciful to their sins who
confess, and hearest the groaning of the prisoner, and loosest us from the
chains which we made for ourselves, if we lift not up against Thee the horns
of an unreal liberty, suffering the loss of all, through covetousness of more,
by loving more our own private good than Thee, the Good of all.
14 Amidst these offences of foulness and violence, and so many iniquities, are
sins of men, who are on the whole making proficiency; which by those that
judge rightly, are, after the rule of perfection, discommended, yet the
persons commended, upon hope of future fruit, as in the green blade of growing
corn. And there are some, resembling offences of foulness or violence, which
yet are no sins; because they offend neither Thee, our Lord God, nor human
society; when, namely, things fitting for a given period are obtained for the
service of life, and we know not whether out of a lust of having; or when
things are, for the sake of correction, by constituted authority punished, and
we know not whether out of a lust of hurting. Many an action then which in
men's sight is disapproved, is by Thy testimony approved; and many, by men
praised, are (Thou being witness) condemned: because the show of the action,
and the mind of the doer, and the unknown exigency of the period, severally
vary. But when Thou on a sudden commandest an unwonted and unthought of thing,
yea, although Thou hast sometime forbidden it, and still for the time hidest
the reason of Thy command, and it be against the ordinance of some society of
men, who doubts but it is to be done, seeing that society of men is just which
serves Thee? But blessed are they who know Thy commands! For all things were
done by Thy servants; either to show forth something needful for the present,
or to foreshow things to come.
15 These things I being ignorant of, scoffed at those Thy holy servants and
prophets. And what gained I by scoffing at them, but to be scoffed at by Thee,
being insensibly and step by step drawn on to those follies, as to believe
that a fig-tree wept when it was plucked, and the tree, its mother, shed milky
tears? Which fig notwithstanding (plucked by some other's, not his own, guilt)
had some Manichean saint eaten, and mingled with his bowels, he should breathe
out of it angels, yea, there shall burst forth particles of divinity, at every
moan or groan in his prayer, which particles of the most high and true God had
remained bound in that fig, unless they had been set at liberty by the teeth
or belly of some "Elect" saint! And I, miserable, believed that more
mercy was to be shown to the fruits of the earth than men, for whom they were
created. For if any one an hungered, not a Manichean, should ask for any, that
morsel would seem as it were condemned to capital punishment, which should be
given him.
16 And Thou sentest Thine hand from above, and drewest my soul out of that
profound darkness, my mother, Thy faithful one, weeping to Thee for me, more
than mothers weep the bodily deaths of their children. For she, by that faith
and spirit which she had from Thee, discerned the death wherein I lay, and
Thou heardest her, O Lord; Thou heardest her, and despisedst not her tears,
when streaming down, they watered the ground under her eyes in every place
where she prayed; yea Thou heardest her. For whence was that dream whereby
Thou comfortedst her; so that she allowed me to live with her, and to eat at
the same table in the house, which she had begun to shrink from, abhorring and
detesting the blasphemies of my error? For she saw herself standing on a
certain wooden rule, and a shining youth coming towards her, cheerful and
smiling upon her, herself grieving, and overwhelmed with grief. But he having
(in order to instruct, as is their wont, not to be instructed) enquired of her
the causes of her grief and daily tears, and she answering that she was
bewailing my perdition, he bade her rest contented, and told her to look and
observe, "That where she was, there was I also." And when she
looked, she saw me standing by her in the same rule. Whence was this, but that
Thine ears were towards her heart? O Thou Good omnipotent, who so carest for
every one of us, as if Thou caredst for him only; and so for all, as if they
were but one!
17 Whence was this also, that when she had told me this vision, and I would fain
bend it to mean, "That she rather should not despair of being one day
what I was"; she presently, without any hesitation, replies: "No;
for it was not told me that, 'where he, there thou also'; but 'where thou,
there he also'?" I confess to Thee, O Lord, that to the best of my
remembrance (and I have oft spoken of this), that Thy answer, through my
waking mother,--that she was not perplexed by the plausibility of my false
interpretation, and so quickly saw what was to be seen, and which I certainly
had not perceived before she spake,--even then moved me more than the dream
itself, by which a joy to the holy woman, to be fulfilled so long after, was,
for the consolation of her present anguish, so long before foresignified. For
almost nine years passed, in which I wallowed in the mire of that deep pit,
and the darkness of falsehood, often assaying to rise, but dashed down the
more grievously. All which time that chaste, godly, and sober widow (such as
Thou lovest), now more cheered with hope, yet no whit relaxing in her weeping
and mourning, ceased not at all hours of her devotions to bewail my case unto
Thee. And her prayers entered into Thy presence; and yet Thou sufferedst me to
be yet involved and reinvolved in that darkness.
18 Thou gavest her meantime another answer, which I call to mind; for much I pass
by, hasting to those things which more press me to confess unto Thee, and much
I do not remember. Thou gavest her then another answer, by a Priest of Thine,
a certain Bishop brought up in Thy Church, and well studied in Thy books. Whom
when this woman had entreated to vouchsafe to converse with me, refute my
errors, unteach me ill things, and teach me good things (for this he was wont
to do, when he found persons fitted to receive it), he refused, wisely, as I
afterwards perceived. For he answered, that I was yet unteachable, being
puffed up with the novelty of that heresy, and had already perplexed divers
unskilful persons with captious questions, as she had told him: "but let
him alone a while" (saith he), "only pray God for him, he will of
himself by reading find what that error is, and how great its impiety."
At the same time he told her, how himself, when a little one, had by his
seduced mother been consigned over to the Manichees, and had not only read,
but frequently copied out almost all, their books, and had (without any
argument or proof from any one) seen how much that sect was to be avoided; and
had avoided it. Which when he had said, and she would not be satisfied, but
urged him more, with entreaties and many tears, that he would see me and
discourse with me; he, a little displeased at her importunity, saith, "Go
thy ways and God bless thee, for it is not possible that the son of these
tears should perish." Which answer she took (as she often mentioned in
her conversations with me) as if it had sounded from heaven.
BOOK four
TABLE OF CONTENTS
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