O Thou, my hope from my youth, where
wert Thou to me, and whither wert Thou gone?
Hadst not Thou created me, and separated me from the
beasts of the field, and fowls of the air? Thou
hadst made me wiser, yet did I walk in darkness, and
in slippery places, and sought Thee abroad out of
myself, and found not the God of my heart; and had
come into the depths of the sea, and distrusted and
despaired of ever finding truth. My mother had
now come to me, resolute through piety, following
me over sea and land, in all perils confiding in Thee.
For in perils of the sea, she comforted the very mariners
(by whom passengers unacquainted with the deep, use
rather to be comforted when troubled), assuring them
of a safe arrival, because Thou hadst by a vision
assured her thereof. She found me in grievous
peril, through despair of ever finding truth.
But when I had discovered to her that I was now no
longer a Manichee, though not yet a Catholic Christian,
she was not overjoyed, as at something unexpected;
although she was now assured concerning that part
of my misery, for which she bewailed me as one dead,
though to be reawakened by Thee, carrying me forth
upon the bier of her thoughts, that Thou mightest say
to the son of the widow, Young man, I say unto thee,
Arise; and he should revive, and begin to speak, and
Thou shouldest deliver him to his mother. Her
heart then was shaken with no tumultuous exultation,
when she heard that what she daily with tears desired
of Thee was already in so great part realised; in
that, though I had not yet attained the truth, I was
rescued from falsehood; but, as being assured, that
Thou, Who hadst promised the whole, wouldest one day
give the rest, most calmly, and with a heart full of
confidence, she replied to me, “She believed
in Christ, that before she departed this life, she
should see me a Catholic believer.” Thus
much to me. But to Thee, Fountain of mercies,
poured she forth more copious prayers and tears, that
Thou wouldest hasten Thy help, and enlighten my darkness;
and she hastened the more eagerly to the Church, and
hung upon the lips of Ambrose, praying for the fountain
of that water, which springeth up unto life everlasting.
But that man she loved as an angel of God, because
she knew that by him I had been brought for the present
to that doubtful state of faith I now was in, through
which she anticipated most confidently that I should
pass from sickness unto health, after the access,
as it were, of a sharper fit, which physicians call
“the crisis.”
When then my mother had once, as she
was wont in Afric, brought to the Churches built in
memory of the Saints, certain cakes, and bread and
wine, and was forbidden by the door-keeper; so soon
as she knew that the Bishop had forbidden this, she
so piously and obediently embraced his wishes, that
I myself wondered how readily she censured her own
practice, rather than discuss his prohibition.
For wine-bibbing did not lay siege to her spirit,
nor did love of wine provoke her to hatred of the
truth, as it doth too many (both men and women), who
revolt at a lesson of sobriety, as men well-drunk at
a draught mingled with water. But she, when
she had brought her basket with the accustomed festival-food,
to be but tasted by herself, and then given away,
never joined therewith more than one small cup of
wine, diluted according to her own abstemious habits,
which for courtesy she would taste. And if there
were many churches of the departed saints that were
to be honoured in that manner, she still carried round
that same one cup, to be used every where; and this,
though not only made very watery, but unpleasantly
heated with carrying about, she would distribute to
those about her by small sips; for she sought there
devotion, not pleasure. So soon, then, as she
found this custom to be forbidden by that famous preacher
and most pious prelate, even to those that would use
it soberly, lest so an occasion of excess might be
given to the drunken; and for these, as it were, anniversary
funeral solemnities did much resemble the superstition
of the Gentiles, she most willingly forbare it:
and for a basket filled with fruits of the earth,
she had learned to bring to the Churches of the martyrs
a breast filled with more purified petitions, and
to give what she could to the poor; that so the communication
of the Lord’s Body might be there rightly celebrated,
where, after the example of His Passion, the martyrs
had been sacrificed and crowned. But yet it
seems to me, O Lord my God, and thus thinks my heart
of it in Thy sight, that perhaps she would not so
readily have yielded to the cutting off of this custom,
had it been forbidden by another, whom she loved not
as Ambrose, whom, for my salvation, she loved most
entirely; and he her again, for her most religious
conversation, whereby in good works, so fervent in
spirit, she was constant at church; so that, when
he saw me, he often burst forth into her praises;
congratulating me that I had such a mother; not knowing
what a son she had in me, who doubted of all these
things, and imagined the way to life could not be
found out.
Nor did I yet groan in my prayers,
that Thou wouldest help me; but my spirit was wholly
intent on learning, and restless to dispute.
And Ambrose himself, as the world counts happy, I esteemed
a happy man, whom personages so great held in such
honour; only his celibacy seemed to me a painful course.
But what hope he bore within him, what struggles
he had against the temptations which beset his very
excellencies, or what comfort in adversities, and what
sweet joys Thy Bread had for the hidden mouth of his
spirit, when chewing the cud thereof, I neither could
conjecture, nor had experienced. Nor did he
know the tides of my feelings, or the abyss of my danger.
For I could not ask of him, what I would as I would,
being shut out both from his ear and speech by multitudes
of busy people, whose weaknesses he served.
With whom when he was not taken up (which was but a
little time), he was either refreshing his body with
the sustenance absolutely necessary, or his mind with
reading. But when he was reading, his eye glided
over the pages, and his heart searched out the sense,
but his voice and tongue were at rest. Ofttimes
when we had come (for no man was forbidden to enter,
nor was it his wont that any who came should be announced
to him), we saw him thus reading to himself, and never
otherwise; and having long sat silent (for who durst
intrude on one so intent?) we were fain to depart,
conjecturing that in the small interval which he obtained,
free from the din of others’ business, for the
recruiting of his mind, he was loth to be taken off;
and perchance he dreaded lest if the author he read
should deliver any thing obscurely, some attentive
or perplexed hearer should desire him to expound it,
or to discuss some of the harder questions; so that
his time being thus spent, he could not turn over
so many volumes as he desired; although the preserving
of his voice (which a very little speaking would weaken)
might be the truer reason for his reading to himself.
But with what intent soever he did it, certainly
in such a man it was good.
I however certainly had no opportunity
of enquiring what I wished of that so holy oracle
of Thine, his breast, unless the thing might be answered
briefly. But those tides in me, to be poured
out to him, required his full leisure, and never found
it. I heard him indeed every Lord’s day,
rightly expounding the Word of truth among the people;
and I was more and more convinced that all the knots
of those crafty calumnies, which those our deceivers
had knit against the Divine Books, could be unravelled.
But when I understood withal, that “man created
by Thee, after Thine own image,” was not so
understood by Thy spiritual sons, whom of the Catholic
Mother Thou hast born again through grace, as though
they believed and conceived of Thee as bounded by
human shape (although what a spiritual substance should
be I had not even a faint or shadowy notion); yet,
with joy I blushed at having so many years barked
not against the Catholic faith, but against the fictions
of carnal imaginations. For so rash and impious
had I been, that what I ought by enquiring to have
learned, I had pronounced on, condemning. For
Thou, Most High, and most near; most secret, and most
present; Who hast not limbs some larger, some smaller,
but art wholly every where, and no where in space,
art not of such corporeal shape, yet hast Thou made
man after Thine own image; and behold, from head to
foot is he contained in space.
Ignorant then how this Thy image should
subsist, I should have knocked and proposed the doubt,
how it was to be believed, not insultingly opposed
it, as if believed. Doubt, then, what to hold
for certain, the more sharply gnawed my heart, the
more ashamed I was, that so long deluded and deceived
by the promise of certainties, I had with childish
error and vehemence, prated of so many uncertainties.
For that they were falsehoods became clear to me later.
However I was certain that they were uncertain, and
that I had formerly accounted them certain, when with
a blind contentiousness, I accused Thy Catholic Church,
whom I now discovered, not indeed as yet to teach
truly, but at least not to teach that for which I had
grievously censured her. So I was confounded,
and converted: and I joyed, O my God, that the
One Only Church, the body of Thine Only Son (wherein
the name of Christ had been put upon me as an infant),
had no taste for infantine conceits; nor in her sound
doctrine maintained any tenet which should confine
Thee, the Creator of all, in space, however great
and large, yet bounded every where by the limits of
a human form.
I joyed also that the old Scriptures
of the law and the Prophets were laid before me, not
now to be perused with that eye to which before they
seemed absurd, when I reviled Thy holy ones for so
thinking, whereas indeed they thought not so:
and with joy I heard Ambrose in his sermons to the
people, oftentimes most diligently recommend this
text for a rule, The letter killeth, but the Spirit
giveth life; whilst he drew aside the mystic veil,
laying open spiritually what, according to the letter,
seemed to teach something unsound; teaching herein
nothing that offended me, though he taught what I
knew not as yet, whether it were true. For I
kept my heart from assenting to any thing, fearing
to fall headlong; but by hanging in suspense I was
the worse killed. For I wished to be as assured
of the things I saw not, as I was that seven and three
are ten. For I was not so mad as to think that
even this could not be comprehended; but I desired
to have other things as clear as this, whether things
corporeal, which were not present to my senses, or
spiritual, whereof I knew not how to conceive, except
corporeally. And by believing might I have been
cured, that so the eyesight of my soul being cleared,
might in some way be directed to Thy truth, which
abideth always, and in no part faileth. But as
it happens that one who has tried a bad physician,
fears to trust himself with a good one, so was it
with the health of my soul, which could not be healed
but by believing, and lest it should believe falsehoods,
refused to be cured; resisting Thy hands, Who hast
prepared the medicines of faith, and hast applied
them to the diseases of the whole world, and given
unto them so great authority.
Being led, however, from this to prefer
the Catholic doctrine, I felt that her proceeding
was more unassuming and honest, in that she required
to be believed things not demonstrated (whether it
was that they could in themselves be demonstrated
but not to certain persons, or could not at all be),
whereas among the Manichees our credulity was mocked
by a promise of certain knowledge, and then so many
most fabulous and absurd things were imposed to be
believed, because they could not be demonstrated.
Then Thou, O Lord, little by little with most tender
and most merciful hand, touching and composing my heart,
didst persuade me- considering what innumerable things
I believed, which I saw not, nor was present while
they were done, as so many things in secular history,
so many reports of places and of cities, which I had
not seen; so many of friends, so many of physicians,
so many continually of other men, which unless we
should believe, we should do nothing at all in this
life; lastly, with how unshaken an assurance I believed
of what parents I was born, which I could not know,
had I not believed upon hearsay -considering all this,
Thou didst persuade me, that not they who believed
Thy Books (which Thou hast established in so great
authority among almost all nations), but they who
believed them not, were to be blamed; and that they
were not to be heard, who should say to me, “How
knowest thou those Scriptures to have been imparted
unto mankind by the Spirit of the one true and most
true God?” For this very thing was of all most
to be believed, since no contentiousness of blasphemous
questionings, of all that multitude which I had read
in the self-contradicting philosophers, could wring
this belief from me, “That Thou art” whatsoever
Thou wert (what I knew not), and “That the government
of human things belongs to Thee.”
This I believed, sometimes more strongly,
more weakly otherwhiles; yet I ever believed both
that Thou wert, and hadst a care of us; though I was
ignorant, both what was to be thought of Thy substance,
and what way led or led back to Thee. Since then
we were too weak by abstract reasonings to find out
truth: and for this very cause needed the authority
of Holy Writ; I had now begun to believe that Thou
wouldest never have given such excellency of authority
to that Writ in all lands, hadst Thou not willed thereby
to be believed in, thereby sought. For now what
things, sounding strangely in the Scripture, were
wont to offend me, having heard divers of them expounded
satisfactorily, I referred to the depth of the mysteries,
and its authority appeared to me the more venerable,
and more worthy of religious credence, in that, while
it lay open to all to read, it reserved the majesty
of its mysteries within its profounder meaning, stooping
to all in the great plainness of its words and lowliness
of its style, yet calling forth the intensest application
of such as are not light of heart; that so it might
receive all in its open bosom, and through narrow
passages waft over towards Thee some few, yet many
more than if it stood not aloft on such a height of
authority, nor drew multitudes within its bosom by
its holy lowliness. These things I thought on,
and Thou wert with me; I sighed, and Thou heardest
me; I wavered, and Thou didst guide me; I wandered
through the broad way of the world, and Thou didst
not forsake me.
I panted after honours, gains, marriage;
and thou deridedst me. In these desires I underwent
most bitter crosses, Thou being the more gracious,
the less Thou sufferedst aught to grow sweet to me,
which was not Thou. Behold my heart, O Lord,
who wouldest I should remember all this, and confess
to Thee. Let my soul cleave unto Thee, now that
Thou hast freed it from that fast-holding birdlime
of death. How wretched was it! and Thou didst
irritate the feeling of its wound, that forsaking
all else, it might be converted unto Thee, who art
above all, and without whom all things would be nothing;
be converted, and be healed. How miserable was
I then, and how didst Thou deal with me, to make me
feel my misery on that day, when I was preparing to
recite a panegyric of the Emperor, wherein I was to
utter many a lie, and lying, was to be applauded by
those who knew I lied, and my heart was panting with
these anxieties, and boiling with the feverishness
of consuming thoughts. For, passing through one
of the streets of Milan, I observed a poor beggar,
then, I suppose, with a full belly, joking and joyous:
and I sighed, and spoke to the friends around me,
of the many sorrows of our frenzies; for that by all
such efforts of ours, as those wherein I then toiled
dragging along, under the goading of desire, the burthen
of my own wretchedness, and, by dragging, augmenting
it, we yet looked to arrive only at that very joyousness
whither that beggar-man had arrived before us, who
should never perchance attain it. For what he
had obtained by means of a few begged pence, the same
was I plotting for by many a toilsome turning and
winding; the joy of a temporary felicity. For
he verily had not the true joy; but yet I with those
my ambitious designs was seeking one much less true.
And certainly he was joyous, I anxious; he void of
care, I full of fears. But should any ask me,
had I rather be merry or fearful? I would answer
merry. Again, if he asked had I rather be such
as he was, or what I then was? I should choose
to be myself, though worn with cares and fears; but
out of wrong judgment; for, was it the truth?
For I ought not to prefer myself to him, because
more learned than he, seeing I had no joy therein,
but sought to please men by it; and that not to instruct,
but simply to please. Wherefore also Thou didst
break my bones with the staff of Thy correction.
Away with those then from my soul
who say to her, “It makes a difference whence
a man’s joy is. That beggar-man joyed in
drunkenness; Thou desiredst to joy in glory.”
What glory, Lord? That which is not in Thee.
For even as his was no true joy, so was that no true
glory: and it overthrew my soul more. He
that very night should digest his drunkenness; but
I had slept and risen again with mine, and was to
sleep again, and again to rise with it, how many days,
Thou, God, knowest. But “it doth make a
difference whence a man’s joy is.”
I know it, and the joy of a faithful hope lieth incomparably
beyond such vanity. Yea, and so was he then beyond
me: for he verily was the happier; not only for
that he was thoroughly drenched in mirth, I disembowelled
with cares: but he, by fair wishes, had gotten
wine; I, by lying, was seeking for empty, swelling
praise. Much to this purpose said I then to my
friends: and I often marked in them how it fared
with me; and I found it went ill with me, and grieved,
and doubled that very ill; and if any prosperity smiled
on me, I was loth to catch at it, for almost before
I could grasp it, it flew away.
These things we, who were living as
friends together, bemoaned together, but chiefly and
most familiarly did I speak thereof with Alypius and
Nebridius, of whom Alypius was born in the same town
with me, of persons of chief rank there, but younger
than I. For he had studied under me, both when I
first lectured in our town, and afterwards at Carthage,
and he loved me much, because I seemed to him kind,
and learned; and I him, for his great towardliness
to virtue, which was eminent enough in one of no greater
years. Yet the whirlpool of Carthaginian habits
(amongst whom those idle spectacles are hotly followed)
had drawn him into the madness of the Circus.
But while he was miserably tossed therein, and I, professing
rhetoric there, had a public school, as yet he used
not my teaching, by reason of some unkindness risen
betwixt his father and me. I had found then
how deadly he doted upon the Circus, and was deeply
grieved that he seemed likely, nay, or had thrown
away so great promise: yet had I no means of
advising or with a sort of constraint reclaiming him,
either by the kindness of a friend, or the authority
of a master. For I supposed that he thought of
me as did his father; but he was not such; laying
aside then his father’s mind in that matter,
he began to greet me, come sometimes into my lecture
room, hear a little, and be gone.
I however had forgotten to deal with
him, that he should not, through a blind and headlong
desire of vain pastimes, undo so good a wit.
But Thou, O Lord, who guidest the course of all Thou
hast created, hadst not forgotten him, who was one
day to be among Thy children, Priest and Dispenser
of Thy Sacrament; and that his amendment might plainly
be attributed to Thyself, Thou effectedst it through
me, unknowingly. For as one day I sat in my accustomed
place, with my scholars before me, he entered, greeted
me, sat down, and applied his mind to what I then
handled. I had by chance a passage in hand,
which while I was explaining, a likeness from the
Circensian races occurred to me, as likely to make
what I would convey pleasanter and plainer, seasoned
with biting mockery of those whom that madness had
enthralled; God, Thou knowest that I then thought not
of curing Alypius of that infection. But he took
it wholly to himself, and thought that I said it simply
for his sake. And whence another would have
taken occasion of offence with me, that right-minded
youth took as a ground of being offended at himself,
and loving me more fervently. For Thou hadst
said it long ago, and put it into Thy book, Rebuke
a wise man and he will love Thee. But I had not
rebuked him, but Thou, who employest all, knowing
or not knowing, in that order which Thyself knowest
(and that order is just), didst of my heart and tongue
make burning coals, by which to set on fire the hopeful
mind, thus languishing, and so cure it. Let him
be silent in Thy praises, who considers not Thy mercies,
which confess unto Thee out of my inmost soul.
For he upon that speech burst out of that pit so
deep, wherein he was wilfully plunged, and was blinded
with its wretched pastimes; and he shook his mind
with a strong self-command; whereupon all the filths
of the Circensian pastimes flew off from him, nor
came he again thither. Upon this, he prevailed
with his unwilling father that he might be my scholar.
He gave way, and gave in. And Alypius beginning
to be my hearer again, was involved in the same superstition
with me, loving in the Manichees that show of continency
which he supposed true and unfeigned. Whereas
it was a senseless and seducing continency, ensnaring
precious souls, unable as yet to reach the depth of
virtue, yet readily beguiled with the surface of what
was but a shadowy and counterfeit virtue.
He, not forsaking that secular course
which his parents had charmed him to pursue, had gone
before me to Rome, to study law, and there he was
carried away incredibly with an incredible eagerness
after the shows of gladiators. For being utterly
averse to and detesting spectacles, he was one day
by chance met by divers of his acquaintance and fellow-students
coming from dinner, and they with a familiar violence
haled him, vehemently refusing and resisting, into
the Amphitheatre, during these cruel and deadly shows,
he thus protesting: “Though you hale my
body to that place, and there set me, can you force
me also to turn my mind or my eyes to those shows?
I shall then be absent while present, and so shall
overcome both you and them.” They, hearing
this, led him on nevertheless, desirous perchance
to try that very thing, whether he could do as he said.
When they were come thither, and had taken their
places as they could, the whole place kindled with
that savage pastime. But he, closing the passage
of his eyes, forbade his mind to range abroad after
such evil; and would he had stopped his ears also!
For in the fight, when one fell, a mighty cry of
the whole people striking him strongly, overcome by
curiosity, and as if prepared to despise and be superior
to it whatsoever it were, even when seen, he opened
his eyes, and was stricken with a deeper wound in
his soul than the other, whom he desired to behold,
was in his body; and he fell more miserably than he
upon whose fall that mighty noise was raised, which
entered through his ears, and unlocked his eyes, to
make way for the striking and beating down of a soul,
bold rather than resolute, and the weaker, in that
it had presumed on itself, which ought to have relied
on Thee. For so soon as he saw that blood, he
therewith drunk down savageness; nor turned away,
but fixed his eye, drinking in frenzy, unawares, and
was delighted with that guilty fight, and intoxicated
with the bloody pastime. Nor was he now the man
he came, but one of the throng he came unto, yea,
a true associate of theirs that brought him thither.
Why say more? He beheld, shouted, kindled,
carried thence with him the madness which should goad
him to return not only with them who first drew him
thither, but also before them, yea and to draw in
others. Yet thence didst Thou with a most strong
and most merciful hand pluck him, and taughtest him
to have confidence not in himself, but in Thee.
But this was after.
But this was already being laid up
in his memory to be a medicine hereafter. So
was that also, that when he was yet studying under
me at Carthage, and was thinking over at mid-day in
the market-place what he was to say by heart (as scholars
use to practise), Thou sufferedst him to be apprehended
by the officers of the market-place for a thief.
For no other cause, I deem, didst Thou, our God,
suffer it, but that he who was hereafter to prove
so great a man, should already begin to learn that
in judging of causes, man was not readily to be condemned
by man out of a rash credulity. For as he was
walking up and down by himself before the judgment-seat,
with his note-book and pen, lo, a young man, a lawyer,
the real thief, privily bringing a hatchet, got in,
unperceived by Alypius, as far as the leaden gratings
which fence in the silversmiths’ shops, and
began to cut away the lead. But the noise of
the hatchet being heard, the silversmiths beneath
began to make a stir, and sent to apprehend whomever
they should find. But he, hearing their voices,
ran away, leaving his hatchet, fearing to be taken
with it. Alypius now, who had not seen him enter,
was aware of his going, and saw with what speed he
made away. And being desirous to know the matter,
entered the place; where finding the hatchet, he was
standing, wondering and considering it, when behold,
those that had been sent, find him alone with the hatchet
in his hand, the noise whereof had startled and brought
them thither. They seize him, hale him away,
and gathering the dwellers in the market-place together,
boast of having taken a notorious thief, and so he
was being led away to be taken before the judge.
But thus far was Alypius to be instructed.
For forthwith, O Lord, Thou succouredst his innocency,
whereof Thou alone wert witness. For as he was
being led either to prison or to punishment, a certain
architect met them, who had the chief charge of the
public buildings. Glad they were to meet him
especially, by whom they were wont to be suspected
of stealing the goods lost out of the marketplace,
as though to show him at last by whom these thefts
were committed. He, however, had divers times
seen Alypius at a certain senator’s house, to
whom he often went to pay his respects; and recognising
him immediately, took him aside by the hand, and enquiring
the occasion of so great a calamity, heard the whole
matter, and bade all present, amid much uproar and
threats, to go with him. So they came to the
house of the young man who had done the deed.
There, before the door, was a boy so young as to be
likely, not apprehending any harm to his master, to
disclose the whole. For he had attended his
master to the market-place. Whom so soon as Alypius
remembered, he told the architect: and he showing
the hatchet to the boy, asked him “Whose that
was?” “Ours,” quoth he presently:
and being further questioned, he discovered every
thing. Thus the crime being transferred to that
house, and the multitude ashamed, which had begun
to insult over Alypius, he who was to be a dispenser
of Thy Word, and an examiner of many causes in Thy
Church, went away better experienced and instructed.
Him then I had found at Rome, and
he clave to me by a most strong tie, and went with
me to Milan, both that he might not leave me, and
might practise something of the law he had studied,
more to please his parents than himself. There
he had thrice sat as Assessor, with an uncorruptness
much wondered at by others, he wondering at others
rather who could prefer gold to honesty. His
character was tried besides, not only with the bait
of covetousness, but with the goad of fear.
At Rome he was Assessor to the count of the Italian
Treasury. There was at that time a very powerful
senator, to whose favours many stood indebted, many
much feared. He would needs, by his usual power,
have a thing allowed him which by the laws was unallowed.
Alypius resisted it: a bribe was promised; with
all his heart he scorned it: threats were held
out; he trampled upon them: all wondering at
so unwonted a spirit, which neither desired the friendship,
nor feared the enmity of one so great and so mightily
renowned for innumerable means of doing good or evil.
And the very judge, whose councillor Alypius was,
although also unwilling it should be, yet did not
openly refuse, but put the matter off upon Alypius,
alleging that he would not allow him to do it:
for in truth had the judge done it, Alypius would
have decided otherwise. With this one thing
in the way of learning was he well-nigh seduced, that
he might have books copied for him at Praetorian prices,
but consulting justice, he altered his deliberation
for the better; esteeming equity whereby he was hindered
more gainful than the power whereby he were allowed.
These are slight things, but he that is faithful in
little, is faithful also in much. Nor can that
any how be void, which proceeded out of the mouth
of Thy Truth: If ye have not been faithful in
the unrighteous Mammon, who will commit to your trust
true riches? And if ye have not been faithful
in that which is another man’s, who shall give
you that which is your own? He being such, did
at that time cleave to me, and with me wavered in purpose,
what course of life was to be taken.
Nebridius also, who having left his
native country near Carthage, yea and Carthage itself,
where he had much lived, leaving his excellent family-estate
and house, and a mother behind, who was not to follow
him, had come to Milan, for no other reason but that
with me he might live in a most ardent search after
truth and wisdom. Like me he sighed, like me
he wavered, an ardent searcher after true life, and
a most acute examiner of the most difficult questions.
Thus were there the mouths of three indigent persons,
sighing out their wants one to another, and waiting
upon Thee that Thou mightest give them their meat
in due season. And in all the bitterness which
by Thy mercy followed our worldly affairs, as we looked
towards the end, why we should suffer all this, darkness
met us; and we turned away groaning, and saying, How
long shall these things be? This too we often
said; and so saying forsook them not, for as yet there
dawned nothing certain, which these forsaken, we might
embrace.
And I, viewing and reviewing things,
most wondered at the length of time from that my nineteenth
year, wherein I had begun to kindle with the desire
of wisdom, settling when I had found her, to abandon
all the empty hopes and lying frenzies of vain desires.
And lo, I was now in my thirtieth year, sticking
in the same mire, greedy of enjoying things present,
which passed away and wasted my soul; while I said
to myself, “Tomorrow I shall find it; it will
appear manifestly and I shall grasp it; to, Faustus
the Manichee will come, and clear every thing!
O you great men, ye Academicians, it is true then,
that no certainty can be attained for the ordering
of life! Nay, let us search the more diligently,
and despair not. Lo, things in the ecclesiastical
books are not absurd to us now, which sometimes seemed
absurd, and may be otherwise taken, and in a good sense.
I will take my stand, where, as a child, my parents
placed me, until the clear truth be found out.
But where shall it be sought or when? Ambrose
has no leisure; we have no leisure to read; where shall
we find even the books? Whence, or when procure
them? from whom borrow them? Let set times be
appointed, and certain hours be ordered for the health
of our soul. Great hope has dawned; the Catholic
Faith teaches not what we thought, and vainly accused
it of; her instructed members hold it profane to believe
God to be bounded by the figure of a human body:
and do we doubt to ‘knock,’ that the rest
’may be opened’? The forenoons our
scholars take up; what do we during the rest?
Why not this? But when then pay we court to
our great friends, whose favour we need? When
compose what we may sell to scholars? When refresh
ourselves, unbending our minds from this intenseness
of care?
“Perish every thing, dismiss
we these empty vanities, and betake ourselves to the
one search for truth! Life is vain, death uncertain;
if it steals upon us on a sudden, in what state shall
we depart hence? and where shall we learn what here
we have neglected? and shall we not rather suffer
the punishment of this negligence? What, if death
itself cut off and end all care and feeling?
Then must this be ascertained. But God forbid
this! It is no vain and empty thing, that the
excellent dignity of the authority of the Christian
Faith hath overspread the whole world. Never
would such and so great things be by God wrought for
us, if with the death of the body the life of the
soul came to an end. Wherefore delay then to
abandon worldly hopes, and give ourselves wholly to
seek after God and the blessed life? But wait!
Even those things are pleasant; they have some,
and no small sweetness. We must not lightly abandon
them, for it were a shame to return again to them.
See, it is no great matter now to obtain some station,
and then what should we more wish for? We have
store of powerful friends; if nothing else offer, and
we be in much haste, at least a presidentship may
be given us: and a wife with some money, that
she increase not our charges: and this shall be
the bound of desire. Many great men, and most
worthy of imitation, have given themselves to the
study of wisdom in the state of marriage.
While I went over these things, and
these winds shifted and drove my heart this way and
that, time passed on, but I delayed to turn to the
Lord; and from day to day deferred to live in Thee,
and deferred not daily to die in myself. Loving
a happy life, I feared it in its own abode, and sought
it, by fleeing from it. I thought I should be
too miserable, unless folded in female arms; and of
the medicine of Thy mercy to cure that infirmity I
thought not, not having tried it. As for continency,
I supposed it to be in our own power (though in myself
I did not find that power), being so foolish as not
to know what is written, None can be continent unless
Thou give it; and that Thou wouldest give it, if with
inward groanings I did knock at Thine ears, and with
a settled faith did cast my care on Thee.
Alypius indeed kept me from marrying;
alleging that so could we by no means with undistracted
leisure live together in the love of wisdom, as we
had long desired. For himself was even then most
pure in this point, so that it was wonderful; and
that the more, since in the outset of his youth he
had entered into that course, but had not stuck fast
therein; rather had he felt remorse and revolting at
it, living thenceforth until now most continently.
But I opposed him with the examples of those who
as married men had cherished wisdom, and served God
acceptably, and retained their friends, and loved
them faithfully. Of whose greatness of spirit
I was far short; and bound with the disease of the
flesh, and its deadly sweetness, drew along my chain,
dreading to be loosed, and as if my wound had been
fretted, put back his good persuasions, as it were
the hand of one that would unchain me. Moreover,
by me did the serpent speak unto Alypius himself,
by my tongue weaving and laying in his path pleasurable
snares, wherein his virtuous and free feet might be
entangled.
For when he wondered that I, whom
he esteemed not slightly, should stick so fast in
the birdlime of that pleasure, as to protest (so oft
as we discussed it) that I could never lead a single
life; and urged in my defence when I saw him wonder,
that there was great difference between his momentary
and scarce-remembered knowledge of that life, which
so he might easily despise, and my continued acquaintance
whereto if the honourable name of marriage were added,
he ought not to wonder why I could not contemn that
course; he began also to desire to be married; not
as overcome with desire of such pleasure, but out
of curiosity. For he would fain know, he said,
what that should be, without which my life, to him
so pleasing, would to me seem not life but a punishment.
For his mind, free from that chain, was amazed at
my thraldom; and through that amazement was going on
to a desire of trying it, thence to the trial itself,
and thence perhaps to sink into that bondage whereat
he wondered, seeing he was willing to make a covenant
with death; and he that loves danger, shall fall into
it. For whatever honour there be in the office
of well-ordering a married life, and a family, moved
us but slightly. But me for the most part the
habit of satisfying an insatiable appetite tormented,
while it held me captive; him, an admiring wonder
was leading captive. So were we, until Thou,
O Most High, not forsaking our dust, commiserating
us miserable, didst come to our help, by wondrous and
secret ways.
Continual effort was made to have
me married. I wooed, I was promised, chiefly
through my mother’s pains, that so once married,
the health-giving baptism might cleanse me, towards
which she rejoiced that I was being daily fitted,
and observed that her prayers, and Thy promises, were
being fulfilled in my faith. At which time verily,
both at my request and her own longing, with strong
cries of heart she daily begged of Thee, that Thou
wouldest by a vision discover unto her something concerning
my future marriage; Thou never wouldest. She
saw indeed certain vain and fantastic things, such
as the energy of the human spirit, busied thereon,
brought together; and these she told me of, not with
that confidence she was wont, when Thou showedst her
any thing, but slighting them. For she could,
she said, through a certain feeling, which in words
she could not express, discern betwixt Thy revelations,
and the dreams of her own soul. Yet the matter
was pressed on, and a maiden asked in marriage, two
years under the fit age; and, as pleasing, was waited
for.
And many of us friends conferring
about, and detesting the turbulent turmoils of human
life, had debated and now almost resolved on living
apart from business and the bustle of men; and this
was to be thus obtained; we were to bring whatever
we might severally procure, and make one household
of all; so that through the truth of our friendship
nothing should belong especially to any; but the whole
thus derived from all, should as a whole belong to
each, and all to all. We thought there might
be some often persons in this society; some of whom
were very rich, especially Romanianus our townsman,
from childhood a very familiar friend of mine, whom
the grievous perplexities of his affairs had brought
up to court; who was the most earnest for this project;
and therein was his voice of great weight, because
his ample estate far exceeded any of the rest.
We had settled also that two annual officers, as
it were, should provide all things necessary, the
rest being undisturbed. But when we began to
consider whether the wives, which some of us already
had, others hoped to have, would allow this, all that
plan, which was being so well moulded, fell to pieces
in our hands, was utterly dashed and cast aside.
Thence we betook us to sighs, and groans, and our
steps to follow the broad and beaten ways of the world;
for many thoughts were in our heart, but Thy counsel
standeth for ever. Out of which counsel Thou
didst deride ours, and preparedst Thine own; purposing
to give us meat in due season, and to fill our souls
with blessing.
Meanwhile my sins were being multiplied,
and my concubine being torn from my side as a hindrance
to my marriage, my heart which clave unto her was
torn and wounded and bleeding. And she returned
to Afric, vowing unto Thee never to know any other
man, leaving with me my son by her. But unhappy
I, who could not imitate a very woman, impatient of
delay, inasmuch as not till after two years was I to
obtain her I sought not being so much a lover of marriage
as a slave to lust, procured another, though no wife,
that so by the servitude of an enduring custom, the
disease of my soul might be kept up and carried on
in its vigour, or even augmented, into the dominion
of marriage. Nor was that my wound cured, which
had been made by the cutting away of the former, but
after inflammation and most acute pain, it mortified,
and my pains became less acute, but more desperate.
To Thee be praise, glory to Thee,
Fountain of mercies. I was becoming more miserable,
and Thou nearer. Thy right hand was continually
ready to pluck me out of the mire, and to wash me
thoroughly, and I knew it not; nor did anything call
me back from a yet deeper gulf of carnal pleasures,
but the fear of death, and of Thy judgment to come;
which amid all my changes, never departed from my
breast. And in my disputes with my friends Alypius
and Nebridius of the nature of good and evil, I held
that Epicurus had in my mind won the palm, had I not
believed that after death there remained a life for
the soul, and places of requital according to men’s
deserts, which Epicurus would not believe. And
I asked, “were we immortal, and to live in perpetual
bodily pleasure, without fear of losing it, why should
we not be happy, or what else should we seek?”
not knowing that great misery was involved in this
very thing, that, being thus sunk and blinded, I could
not discern that light of excellence and beauty, to
be embraced for its own sake, which the eye of flesh
cannot see, and is seen by the inner man. Nor
did I, unhappy, consider from what source it sprung,
that even on these things, foul as they were, I with
pleasure discoursed with my friends, nor could I, even
according to the notions I then had of happiness, be
happy without friends, amid what abundance soever
of carnal pleasures. And yet these friends I
loved for themselves only, and I felt that I was beloved
of them again for myself only.
O crooked paths! Woe to the
audacious soul, which hoped, by forsaking Thee, to
gain some better thing! Turned it hath, and
turned again, upon back, sides, and belly, yet all
was painful; and Thou alone rest. And behold,
Thou art at hand, and deliverest us from our wretched
wanderings, and placest us in Thy way, and dost comfort
us, and say, “Run; I will carry you; yea I will
bring you through; there also will I carry you.”