O Lord, I am Thy servant; I am Thy
servant, and the son of Thy handmaid: Thou hast
broken my bonds in sunder. I will offer to Thee
the sacrifice of Let my heart and my tongue praise
Thee; yea, let all my bones say, O Lord, who is like
unto Thee? Let them say, and answer Thou me,
and say unto my soul, I am thy salvation. Who
am I, and what am I? What evil have not been
either my deeds, or if not my deeds, my words, or
if not my words, my will? But Thou, O Lord, are
good and merciful, and Thy right hand had respect unto
the depth of my death, and from the bottom of my heart
emptied that abyss of corruption. And this Thy
whole gift was, to nill what I willed, and to will
what Thou willedst. But where through all those
years, and out of what low and deep recess was my
free-will called forth in a moment, whereby to submit
my neck to Thy easy yoke, and my shoulders unto Thy
light burden, O Christ Jesus, my Helper and my Redeemer?
How sweet did it at once become to me, to want the
sweetnesses of those toys! and what I feared to be
parted from, was now a joy to part with. For
Thou didst cast them forth from me, Thou true and highest
sweetness. Thou castest them forth, and for them
enteredst in Thyself, sweeter than all pleasure, though
not to flesh and blood; brighter than all light, but
more hidden than all depths, higher than all honour,
but not to the high in their own conceits. Now
was my soul free from the biting cares of canvassing
and getting, and weltering in filth, and scratching
off the itch of lust. And my infant tongue spake
freely to Thee, my brightness, and my riches, and
my health, the Lord my God.
And I resolved in Thy sight, not tumultuously
to tear, but gently to withdraw, the service of my
tongue from the marts of lip-labour: that the
young, no students in Thy law, nor in Thy peace, but
in lying dotages and law-skirmishes, should no longer
buy at my mouth arms for their madness. And
very seasonably, it now wanted but very few days unto
the Vacation of the Vintage, and I resolved to endure
them, then in a regular way to take my leave, and having
been purchased by Thee, no more to return for sale.
Our purpose then was known to Thee; but to men, other
than our own friends, was it not known. For
we had agreed among ourselves not to let it out abroad
to any: although to us, now ascending from the
valley of tears, and singing that song of degrees,
Thou hadst given sharp arrows, and destroying coals
against the subtle tongue, which as though advising
for us, would thwart, and would out of love devour
us, as it doth its meat.
Thou hadst pierced our hearts with
Thy charity, and we carried Thy words as it were fixed
in our entrails: and the examples of Thy servants,
whom for black Thou hadst made bright, and for dead,
alive, being piled together in the receptacle of our
thoughts, kindled and burned up that our heavy torpor,
that we should not sink down to the abyss; and they
fired us so vehemently, that all the blasts of subtle
tongues from gainsayers might only inflame us the more
fiercely, not extinguish us. Nevertheless, because
for Thy Name’s sake which Thou hast hallowed
throughout the earth, this our vow and purpose might
also find some to commend it, it seemed like ostentation
not to wait for the vacation now so near, but to quit
beforehand a public profession, which was before the
eyes of all; so that all looking on this act of mine,
and observing how near was the time of vintage which
I wished to anticipate, would talk much of me, as if
I had desired to appear some great one. And
what end had it served me, that people should repute
and dispute upon my purpose, and that our good should
be evil spoken of.
Moreover, it had at first troubled
me that in this very summer my lungs began to give
way, amid too great literary labour, and to breathe
deeply with difficulty, and by the pain in my chest
to show that they were injured, and to refuse any
full or lengthened speaking; this had troubled me,
for it almost constrained me of necessity to lay down
that burden of teaching, or, if I could be cured and
recover, at least to intermit it. But when the
full wish for leisure, that I might see how that Thou
art the Lord, arose, and was fixed, in me; my God,
Thou knowest, I began even to rejoice that I had this
secondary, and that no feigned, excuse, which might
something moderate the offence taken by those who,
for their sons’ sake, wished me never to have
the freedom of Thy sons. Full then of such joy,
I endured till that interval of time were run; it
may have been some twenty days, yet they were endured
manfully; endured, for the covetousness which aforetime
bore a part of this heavy business, had left me, and
I remained alone, and had been overwhelmed, had not
patience taken its place. Perchance, some of
Thy servants, my brethren, may say that I sinned in
this, that with a heart fully set on Thy service,
I suffered myself to sit even one hour in the chair
of lies. Nor would I be contentious. But
hast not Thou, O most merciful Lord, pardoned and
remitted this sin also, with my other most horrible
and deadly sins, in the holy water?
Verecundus was worn down with care
about this our blessedness, for that being held back
by bonds, whereby he was most straitly bound, he saw
that he should be severed from us. For himself
was not yet a Christian, his wife one of the faithful;
and yet hereby, more rigidly than by any other chain,
was he let and hindered from the journey which we
had now essayed. For he would not, he said, be
a Christian on any other terms than on those he could
not. However, he offered us courteously to remain
at his country-house so long as we should stay there.
Thou, O Lord, shalt reward him in the resurrection
of the just, seeing Thou hast already given him the
lot of the righteous. For although, in our absence,
being now at Rome, he was seized with bodily sickness,
and therein being made a Christian, and one of the
faithful, he departed this life; yet hadst Thou mercy
not on him only, but on us also: lest remembering
the exceeding kindness of our friend towards us, yet
unable to number him among Thy flock, we should be
agonised with intolerable sorrow. Thanks unto
Thee, our God, we are Thine: Thy suggestions and
consolations tell us, Faithful in promises, Thou now
requitest Verecundus for his country-house of Cassiacum,
where from the fever of the world we reposed in Thee,
with the eternal freshness of Thy Paradise: for
that Thou hast forgiven him his sins upon earth, in
that rich mountain, that mountain which yieldeth milk,
Thine own mountain.
He then had at that time sorrow, but
Nebridius joy. For although he also, not being
yet a Christian, had fallen into the pit of that most
pernicious error, believing the flesh of Thy Son to
be a phantom: yet emerging thence, he believed
as we did; not as yet endued with any Sacraments of
Thy Church, but a most ardent searcher out of truth.
Whom, not long after our conversion and regeneration
by Thy Baptism, being also a faithful member of the
Church Catholic, and serving Thee in perfect chastity
and continence amongst his people in Africa, his whole
house having through him first been made Christian,
didst Thou release from the flesh; and now he lives
in Abraham’s bosom. Whatever that be,
which is signified by that bosom, there lives my Nebridius,
my sweet friend, and Thy child, O Lord, adopted of
a freed man: there he liveth. For what other
place is there for such a soul? There he liveth,
whereof he asked much of me, a poor inexperienced
man. Now lays he not his ear to my mouth, but
his spiritual mouth unto Thy fountain, and drinketh
as much as he can receive, wisdom in proportion to
his thirst, endlessly happy. Nor do I think
that he is so inebriated therewith, as to forget me;
seeing Thou, Lord, Whom he drinketh, art mindful of
us. So were we then, comforting Verecundus,
who sorrowed, as far as friendship permitted, that
our conversion was of such sort; and exhorting him
to become faithful, according to his measure, namely,
of a married estate; and awaiting Nebridius to follow
us, which, being so near, he was all but doing:
and so, lo! those days rolled by at length; for long
and many they seemed, for the love I bare to the easeful
liberty, that I might sing to Thee, from my inmost
marrow, My heart hath said unto Thee, I have sought
Thy face: Thy face, Lord, will I seek.
Now was the day come wherein I was
in deed to be freed of my Rhetoric Professorship,
whereof in thought I was already freed. And it
was done. Thou didst rescue my tongue, whence
Thou hadst before rescued my heart. And I blessed
Thee, rejoicing; retiring with all mine to the villa.
What I there did in writing, which was now enlisted
in Thy service, though still, in this breathing-time
as it were, panting from the school of pride, my books
may witness, as well what I debated with others, as
what with myself alone, before Thee: what with
Nebridius, who was absent, my Epistles bear witness.
And when shall I have time to rehearse all Thy great
benefits towards us at that time, especially when
hasting on to yet greater mercies? For my remembrance
recalls me, and pleasant is it to me, O Lord, to confess
to Thee, by what inward goads Thou tamedst me; and
how Thou hast evened me, lowering the mountains and
hills of my high imaginations, straightening my crookedness,
and smoothing my rough ways; and how Thou also subduedst
the brother of my heart, Alypius, unto the name of
Thy Only Begotten, our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ,
which he would not at first vouchsafe to have inserted
in our writings. For rather would he have them
savour of the lofty cedars of the Schools, which the
Lord hath now broken down, than of the wholesome herbs
of the Church, the antidote against serpents.
Oh, in what accents spake I unto Thee,
my God, when I read the Psalms of David, those faithful
songs, and sounds of devotion, which allow of no swelling
spirit, as yet a Catechumen, and a novice in Thy real
love, resting in that villa, with Alypius a Catechumen,
my mother cleaving to us, in female garb with masculine
faith, with the tranquillity of age, motherly love,
Christian piety! Oh, what accents did I utter
unto Thee in those Psalms, and how was I by them kindled
towards Thee, and on fire to rehearse them, if possible,
through the whole world, against the pride of mankind!
And yet they are sung through the whole world, nor
can any hide himself from Thy heat. With what
vehement and bitter sorrow was I angered at the Manichees!
and again I pitied them, for they knew not those Sacraments,
those medicines, and were mad against the antidote
which might have recovered them of their madness.
How I would they had then been somewhere near me,
and without my knowing that they were there, could
have beheld my countenance, and heard my words, when
I read the fourth Psalm in that time of my rest, and
how that Psalm wrought upon me: When I called,
the God of my righteousness heard me; in tribulation
Thou enlargedst me. Have mercy upon me, O Lord,
and hear my prayer. Would that what I uttered
on these words, they could hear, without my knowing
whether they heard, lest they should think I spake
it for their sakes! Because in truth neither
should I speak the same things, nor in the same way,
if I perceived that they heard and saw me; nor if
I spake them would they so receive them, as when I
spake by and for myself before Thee, out of the natural
feelings of my soul.
I trembled for fear, and again kindled
with hope, and with rejoicing in Thy mercy, O Father;
and all issued forth both by mine eyes and voice,
when Thy good Spirit turning unto us, said, O ye sons
of men, how long slow of heart? why do ye love vanity,
and seek after leasing? For I had loved vanity,
and sought after leasing. And Thou, O Lord,
hadst already magnified Thy Holy One, raising Him from
the dead, and setting Him at Thy right hand, whence
from on high He should send His promise, the Comforter,
the Spirit of truth. And He had already sent
Him, but I knew it not; He had sent Him, because He
was now magnified, rising again from the dead, and
ascending into heaven. For till then, the Spirit
was not yet given, because Jesus was not yet glorified.
And the prophet cries out, How long, slow of heart?
why do ye love vanity, and seek after leasing?
Know this, that the Lord hath magnified His Holy
One. He cries out, How long? He cries out,
Know this: and I so long, not knowing, loved vanity,
and sought after leasing: and therefore I heard
and trembled, because it was spoken unto such as I
remembered myself to have been. For in those
phantoms which I had held for truths, was there vanity
and leasing; and I spake aloud many things earnestly
and forcibly, in the bitterness of my remembrance.
Which would they had heard, who yet love vanity and
seek after leasing! They would perchance have
been troubled, and have vomited it up; and Thou wouldest
hear them when they cried unto Thee; for by a true
death in the flesh did He die for us, who now intercedeth
unto Thee for us.
I further read, Be angry, and sin
not. And how was I moved, O my God, who had
now learned to be angry at myself for things past,
that I might not sin in time to come! Yea,
to be justly angry; for that it was not another nature
of a people of darkness which sinned for me, as they
say who are not angry at themselves, and treasure up
wrath against the day of wrath, and of the revelation
of Thy just judgment. Nor were my good things
now without, nor sought with the eyes of flesh in
that earthly sun; for they that would have joy from
without soon become vain, and waste themselves on the
things seen and temporal, and in their famished thoughts
do lick their very shadows. Oh that they were
wearied out with their famine, and said, Who will
show us good things? And we would say, and they
hear, The light of Thy countenance is sealed upon
us. For we are not that light which enlighteneth
every man, but we are enlightened by Thee; that having
been sometimes darkness, we may be light in Thee.
Oh that they could see the eternal Internal, which
having tasted, I was grieved that I could not show
It them, so long as they brought me their heart in
their eyes roving abroad from Thee, while they said,
Who will show us good things? For there, where
I was angry within myself in my chamber, where I was
inwardly pricked, where I had sacrificed, slaying
my old man and commencing the purpose of a new life,
putting my trust in Thee,- there hadst Thou begun to
grow sweet unto me, and hadst put gladness in my heart.
And I cried out, as I read this outwardly, finding
it inwardly. Nor would I be multiplied with
worldly goods; wasting away time, and wasted by time;
whereas I had in Thy eternal Simple Essence other corn,
and wine, and oil.
And with a loud cry of my heart I
cried out in the next verse, O in peace, O for The
Self-same! O what said he, I will lay me down
and sleep, for who shall hinder us, when cometh to
pass that saying which is written, Death is swallowed
up in victory? And Thou surpassingly art the
Self-same, Who art not changed; and in Thee is rest
which forgetteth all toil, for there is none other
with Thee, nor are we to seek those many other things,
which are not what Thou art: but Thou, Lord,
alone hast made me dwell in hope. I read, and
kindled; nor found I what to do to those deaf and
dead, of whom myself had been, a pestilent person,
a bitter and a blind bawler against those writings,
which are honied with the honey of heaven, and lightsome
with Thine own light: and I was consumed with
zeal at the enemies of this Scripture.
When shall I recall all which passed
in those holy-days? Yet neither have I forgotten,
nor will I pass over the severity of Thy scourge,
and the wonderful swiftness of Thy mercy. Thou
didst then torment me with pain in my teeth; which
when it had come to such height that I could not speak,
it came into my heart to desire all my friends present
to pray for me to Thee, the God of all manner of health.
And this I wrote on wax, and gave it them to read.
Presently so soon as with humble devotion we had
bowed our knees, that pain went away. But what
pain? or how went it away? I was affrighted,
O my Lord, my God; for from infancy I had never experienced
the like. And the power of Thy Nod was deeply
conveyed to me, and rejoicing in faith, I praised
Thy Name. And that faith suffered me not to be
at ease about my past sins, which were not yet forgiven
me by Thy baptism.
The vintage-vacation ended, I gave
notice to the Milanese to provide their scholars with
another master to sell words to them; for that I had
both made choice to serve Thee, and through my difficulty
of breathing and pain in my chest was not equal to
the Professorship. And by letters I signified
to Thy Prelate, the holy man Ambrose, my former errors
and present desires, begging his advice what of Thy
Scriptures I had best read, to become readier and fitter
for receiving so great grace. He recommended
Isaiah the Prophet: I believe, because he above
the rest is a more clear foreshower of the Gospel and
of the calling of the Gentiles. But I, not understanding
the first lesson in him, and imagining the whole to
be like it, laid it by, to be resumed when better
practised in our Lord’s own words.
Thence, when the time was come wherein
I was to give in my name, we left the country and
returned to Milan. It pleased Alypius also to
be with me born again in Thee, being already clothed
with the humility befitting Thy Sacraments; and a
most valiant tamer of the body, so as, with unwonted
venture, to wear the frozen ground of Italy with his
bare feet. We joined with us the boy Adeodatus,
born after the flesh, of my sin. Excellently
hadst Thou made him. He was not quite fifteen,
and in wit surpassed many grave and learned men.
I confess unto Thee Thy gifts, O Lord my God, Creator
of all, and abundantly able to reform our deformities:
for I had no part in that boy, but the sin.
For that we brought him up in Thy discipline, it was
Thou, none else, had inspired us with it. I confess
unto Thee Thy gifts. There is a book of ours
entitled The Master; it is a dialogue between him
and me. Thou knowest that all there ascribed
to the person conversing with me were his ideas, in
his sixteenth year. Much besides, and yet more
admirable, I found in him. That talent struck
awe into me. And who but Thou could be the workmaster
of such wonders? Soon didst Thou take his life
from the earth: and I now remember him without
anxiety, fearing nothing for his childhood or youth,
or his whole self. Him we joined with us, our
contemporary in grace, to he brought up in Thy discipline:
and we were baptised, and anxiety for our past life
vanished from us. Nor was I sated in those days
with the wondrous sweetness of considering the depth
of Thy counsels concerning the salvation of mankind.
How did I weep, in Thy Hymns and Canticles, touched
to the quick by the voices of Thy sweet-attuned Church!
The voices flowed into mine ears, and the Truth distilled
into my heart, whence the affections of my devotion
overflowed, and tears ran down, and happy was I therein.
Not long had the Church of Milan begun
to use this kind of consolation and exhortation, the
brethren zealously joining with harmony of voice and
hearts. For it was a year, or not much more,
that Justina, mother to the Emperor Valentinian, a
child, persecuted Thy servant Ambrose, in favour of
her heresy, to which she was seduced by the Arians.
The devout people kept watch in the Church, ready
to die with their Bishop Thy servant. There
my mother Thy handmaid, bearing a chief part of those
anxieties and watchings, lived for prayer. We,
yet unwarmed by the heat of Thy Spirit, still were
stirred up by the sight of the amazed and disquieted
city. Then it was first instituted that after
the manner of the Eastern Churches, Hymns and Psalms
should be sung, lest the people should wax faint through
the tediousness of sorrow: and from that day
to this the custom is retained, divers (yea, almost
all) Thy congregations, throughout other parts of
the world following herein.
Then didst Thou by a vision discover
to Thy forenamed Bishop where the bodies of Gervasius
and Protasius the martyrs lay hid (whom Thou hadst
in Thy secret treasury stored uncorrupted so many years),
whence Thou mightest seasonably produce them to repress
the fury of a woman, but an Empress. For when
they were discovered and dug up, and with due honour
translated to the Ambrosian Basilica, not only they
who were vexed with unclean spirits (the devils confessing
themselves) were cured, but a certain man who had
for many years been blind, a citizen, and well known
to the city, asking and hearing the reason of the
people’s confused joy, sprang forth desiring
his guide to lead him thither. Led thither,
he begged to be allowed to touch with his handkerchief
the bier of Thy saints, whose death is precious in
Thy sight. Which when he had done, and put to
his eyes, they were forthwith opened. Thence
did the fame spread, thence Thy praises glowed, shone;
thence the mind of that enemy, though not turned to
the soundness of believing, was yet turned back from
her fury of persecuting. Thanks to Thee, O my
God. Whence and whither hast Thou thus led my
remembrance, that I should confess these things also
unto Thee? which great though they be, I had passed
by in forgetfulness. And yet then, when the
odour of Thy ointments was so fragrant, did we not
run after Thee. Therefore did I more weep among
the singing of Thy Hymns, formerly sighing after Thee,
and at length breathing in Thee, as far as the breath
may enter into this our house of grass.
Thou that makest men to dwell of one
mind in one house, didst join with us Euodius also,
a young man of our own city. Who being an officer
of Court, was before us converted to Thee and baptised:
and quitting his secular warfare, girded himself to
Thine. We were together, about to dwell together
in our devout purpose. We sought where we might
serve Thee most usefully, and were together returning
to Africa: whitherward being as far as Ostia,
my mother departed this life. Much I omit, as
hastening much. Receive my confessions and thanksgivings,
O my God, for innumerable things whereof I am silent.
But I will not omit whatsoever my soul would bring
forth concerning that Thy handmaid, who brought me
forth, both in the flesh, that I might be born to
this temporal light, and in heart, that I might be
born to Light eternal. Not her gifts, but Thine
in her, would I speak of; for neither did she make
nor educate herself. Thou createdst her; nor
did her father and mother know what a one should come
from them. And the sceptre of Thy Christ, the
discipline of Thine only Son, in a Christian house,
a good member of Thy Church, educated her in Thy fear.
Yet for her good discipline was she wont to commend
not so much her mother’s diligence, as that of
a certain decrepit maid-servant, who had carried her
father when a child, as little ones used to be carried
at the backs of elder girls. For which reason,
and for her great age, and excellent conversation,
was she, in that Christian family, well respected
by its heads. Whence also the charge of her
master’s daughters was entrusted to her, to
which she gave diligent heed, restraining them earnestly,
when necessary, with a holy severity, and teaching
them with a grave discretion. For, except at
those hours wherein they were most temporately fed
at their parents’ table, she would not suffer
them, though parched with thirst, to drink even water;
preventing an evil custom, and adding this wholesome
advice: “Ye drink water now, because you
have not wine in your power; but when you come to be
married, and be made mistresses of cellars and cupboards,
you will scorn water, but the custom of drinking will
abide.” By this method of instruction,
and the authority she had, she refrained the greediness
of childhood, and moulded their very thirst to such
an excellent moderation that what they should not,
that they would not.
And yet (as Thy handmaid told me her
son) there had crept upon her a love of wine.
For when (as the manner was) she, as though a sober
maiden, was bidden by her parents to draw wine out
of the hogshed, holding the vessel under the opening,
before she poured the wine into the flagon, she sipped
a little with the tip of her lips; for more her instinctive
feelings refused. For this she did, not out of
any desire of drink, but out of the exuberance of youth,
whereby it boils over in mirthful freaks, which in
youthful spirits are wont to be kept under by the
gravity of their elders. And thus by adding to
that little, daily littles (for whoso despiseth little
things shall fall by little and little), she had fallen
into such a habit as greedily to drink off her little
cup brim-full almost of wine. Where was then
that discreet old woman, and that her earnest countermanding?
Would aught avail against a secret disease, if Thy
healing hand, O Lord, watched not over us? Father,
mother, and governors absent, Thou present, who createdst,
who callest, who also by those set over us, workest
something towards the salvation of our souls, what
didst Thou then, O my God? how didst Thou cure her?
how heal her? didst Thou not out of another soul bring
forth a hard and a sharp taunt, like a lancet out
of Thy secret store, and with one touch remove all
that foul stuff? For a maid-servant with whom
she used to go to the cellar, falling to words (as
it happens) with her little mistress, when alone with
her, taunted her with this fault, with most bitter
insult, calling her wine-bibber. With which taunt
she, stung to the quick, saw the foulness of her fault,
and instantly condemned and forsook it. As flattering
friends pervert, so reproachful enemies mostly correct.
Yet not what by them Thou doest, but what themselves
purposed, dost Thou repay them. For she in her
anger sought to vex her young mistress, not to amend
her; and did it in private, either for that the time
and place of the quarrel so found them; or lest herself
also should have anger, for discovering it thus late.
But Thou, Lord, Governor of all in heaven and earth,
who turnest to Thy purposes the deepest currents,
and the ruled turbulence of the tide of times, didst
by the very unhealthiness of one soul heal another;
lest any, when he observes this, should ascribe it
to his own power, even when another, whom he wished
to be reformed, is reformed through words of his.
Brought up thus modestly and soberly,
and made subject rather by Thee to her parents, than
by her parents to Thee, so soon as she was of marriageable
age, being bestowed upon a husband, she served him
as her lord; and did her diligence to win him unto
Thee, preaching Thee unto him by her conversation;
by which Thou ornamentedst her, making her reverently
amiable, and admirable unto her husband. And
she so endured the wronging of her bed as never to
have any quarrel with her husband thereon. For
she looked for Thy mercy upon him, that believing
in Thee, he might be made chaste. But besides
this, he was fervid, as in his affections, so in anger:
but she had learnt not to resist an angry husband,
not in deed only, but not even in word. Only
when he was smoothed and tranquil, and in a temper
to receive it, she would give an account of her actions,
if haply he had overhastily taken offence. In
a word, while many matrons, who had milder husbands,
yet bore even in their faces marks of shame, would
in familiar talk blame their husbands’ lives,
she would blame their tongues, giving them, as in
jest, earnest advice: “That from the time
they heard the marriage writings read to them, they
should account them as indentures, whereby they were
made servants; and so, remembering their condition,
ought not to set themselves up against their lords.”
And when they, knowing what a choleric husband she
endured, marvelled that it had never been heard, nor
by any token perceived, that Patricius had beaten
his wife, or that there had been any domestic difference
between them, even for one day, and confidentially
asking the reason, she taught them her practice above
mentioned. Those wives who observed it found
the good, and returned thanks; those who observed
it not, found no relief, and suffered.
Her mother-in-law also, at first by
whisperings of evil servants incensed against her,
she so overcame by observance and persevering endurance
and meekness, that she of her own accord discovered
to her son the meddling tongues whereby the domestic
peace betwixt her and her daughter-in-law had been
disturbed, asking him to correct them. Then,
when in compliance with his mother, and for the well-ordering
of the family, he had with stripes corrected those
discovered, at her will who had discovered them, she
promised the like reward to any who, to please her,
should speak ill of her daughter-in-law to her:
and none now venturing, they lived together with a
remarkable sweetness of mutual kindness.
This great gift also thou bestowedst,
O my God, my mercy, upon that good handmaid of Thine,
in whose womb Thou createdst me, that between any
disagreeing and discordant parties where she was able,
she showed herself such a peacemaker, that hearing
on both sides most bitter things, such as swelling
and indigested choler uses to break out into, when
the crudities of enmities are breathed out in sour
discourses to a present friend against an absent enemy,
she never would disclose aught of the one unto the
other, but what might tend to their reconcilement.
A small good this might appear to me, did I not to
my grief know numberless persons, who through some
horrible and wide-spreading contagion of sin, not
only disclose to persons mutually angered things said
in anger, but add withal things never spoken, whereas
to humane humanity, it ought to seem a light thing
not to toment or increase ill will by ill words, unless
one study withal by good words to quench it.
Such was she, Thyself, her most inward Instructor,
teaching her in the school of the heart.
Finally, her own husband, towards
the very end of his earthly life, did she gain unto
Thee; nor had she to complain of that in him as a
believer, which before he was a believer she had borne
from him. She was also the servant of Thy servants;
whosoever of them knew her, did in her much praise
and honour and love Thee; for that through the witness
of the fruits of a holy conversation they perceived
Thy presence in her heart. For she had been the
wife of one man, had requited her parents, had govemed
her house piously, was well reported of for good works,
had brought up children, so often travailing in birth
of them, as she saw them swerving from Thee.
Lastly, of all of us Thy servants, O Lord (whom on
occasion of Thy own gift Thou sufferest to speak),
us, who before her sleeping in Thee lived united together,
having received the grace of Thy baptism, did she
so take care of, as though she had been mother of us
all; so served us, as though she had been child to
us all.
The day now approaching whereon she
was to depart this life (which day Thou well knewest,
we knew not), it came to pass, Thyself, as I believe,
by Thy secret ways so ordering it, that she and I stood
alone, leaning in a certain window, which looked into
the garden of the house where we now lay, at Ostia;
where removed from the din of men, we were recruiting
from the fatigues of a long journey, for the voyage.
We were discoursing then together, alone, very sweetly;
and forgetting those things which are behind, and
reaching forth unto those things which are before,
we were enquiring between ourselves in the presence
of the Truth, which Thou art, of what sort the eternal
life of the saints was to be, which eye hath not seen,
nor ear heard, nor hath it entered into the heart
of man. But yet we gasped with the mouth of
our heart, after those heavenly streams of Thy fountain,
the fountain of life, which is with Thee; that being
bedewed thence according to our capacity, we might
in some sort meditate upon so high a mystery.
And when our discourse was brought
to that point, that the very highest delight of the
earthly senses, in the very purest material light,
was, in respect of the sweetness of that life, not
only not worthy of comparison, but not even of mention;
we raising up ourselves with a more glowing affection
towards the “Self-same,” did by degrees
pass through all things bodily, even the very heaven
whence sun and moon and stars shine upon the earth;
yea, we were soaring higher yet, by inward musing,
and discourse, and admiring of Thy works; and we came
to our own minds, and went beyond them, that we might
arrive at that region of never-failing plenty, where
Thou feedest Israel for ever with the food of truth,
and where life is the Wisdom by whom all these things
are made, and what have been, and what shall be, and
she is not made, but is, as she hath been, and so
shall she be ever; yea rather, to “have been,”
and “hereafter to be,” are not in her,
but only “to be,” seeing she is eternal.
For to “have been,” and to “be
hereafter,” are not eternal. And while
we were discoursing and panting after her, we slightly
touched on her with the whole effort of our heart;
and we sighed, and there we leave bound the first
fruits of the Spirit; and returned to vocal expressions
of our mouth, where the word spoken has beginning and
end. And what is like unto Thy Word, our Lord,
who endureth in Himself without becoming old, and
maketh all things new?
We were saying then: If to any
the tumult of the flesh were hushed, hushed the images
of earth, and waters, and air, hushed also the pole
of heaven, yea the very soul be hushed to herself,
and by not thinking on self surmount self, hushed
all dreams and imaginary revelations, every tongue
and every sign, and whatsoever exists only in transition,
since if any could hear, all these say, We made not
ourselves, but He made us that abideth for ever- If
then having uttered this, they too should be hushed,
having roused only our ears to Him who made them,
and He alone speak, not by them but by Himself, that
we may hear His Word, not through any tongue of flesh,
nor Angel’s voice, nor sound of thunder, nor
in the dark riddle of a similitude, but might hear
Whom in these things we love, might hear His Very
Self without these (as we two now strained ourselves,
and in swift thought touched on that Eternal Wisdom
which abideth over all); -could this be continued
on, and other visions of kind far unlike be withdrawn,
and this one ravish, and absorb, and wrap up its beholder
amid these inward joys, so that life might be for ever
like that one moment of understanding which now we
sighed after; were not this, Enter into thy Master’s
joy? And when shall that be? When we shall
all rise again, though we shall not all be changed?
Such things was I speaking, and even
if not in this very manner, and these same words,
yet, Lord, Thou knowest that in that day when we were
speaking of these things, and this world with all its
delights became, as we spake, contemptible to us,
my mother said, “Son, for mine own part I have
no further delight in any thing in this life.
What I do here any longer, and to what I am here, I
know not, now that my hopes in this world are accomplished.
One thing there was for which I desired to linger
for a while in this life, that I might see thee a
Catholic Christian before I died. My God hath
done this for me more abundantly, that I should now
see thee withal, despising earthly happiness, become
His servant: what do I here?”
What answer I made her unto these
things, I remember not. For scarce five days
after, or not much more, she fell sick of a fever;
and in that sickness one day she fell into a swoon,
and was for a while withdrawn from these visible things.
We hastened round her; but she was soon brought back
to her senses; and looking on me and my brother standing
by her, said to us enquiringly, “Where was I?”
And then looking fixedly on us, with grief amazed:
“Here,” saith she, “shall you bury
your mother.” I held my peace and refrained
weeping; but my brother spake something, wishing for
her, as the happier lot, that she might die, not in
a strange place, but in her own land. Whereat,
she with anxious look, checking him with her eyes,
for that he still savoured such things, and then looking
upon me: “Behold,” saith she, “what
he saith”: and soon after to us both, “Lay,”
she saith, “this body any where; let not the
care for that any way disquiet you: this only
I request, that you would remember me at the Lord’s
altar, wherever you be.” And having delivered
this sentiment in what words she could, she held her
peace, being exercised by her growing sickness.
But I, considering Thy gifts, Thou
unseen God, which Thou instillest into the hearts
of Thy faithful ones, whence wondrous fruits do spring,
did rejoice and give thanks to Thee, recalling what
I before knew, how careful and anxious she had ever
been as to her place of burial, which she had provided
and prepared for herself by the body of her husband.
For because they had lived in great harmony together,
she also wished (so little can the human mind embrace
things divine) to have this addition to that happiness,
and to have it remembered among men, that after her
pilgrimage beyond the seas, what was earthly of this
united pair had been permitted to be united beneath
the same earth. But when this emptiness had
through the fulness of Thy goodness begun to cease
in her heart, I knew not, and rejoiced admiring what
she had so disclosed to me; though indeed in that our
discourse also in the window, when she said, “What
do I here any longer?” there appeared no desire
of dying in her own country. I heard afterwards
also, that when we were now at Ostia, she with a mother’s
confidence, when I was absent, one day discoursed with
certain of my friends about the contempt of this life,
and the blessing of death: and when they were
amazed at such courage which Thou hadst given to a
woman, and asked, “Whether she were not afraid
to leave her body so far from her own city?”
she replied, “Nothing is far to God; nor was
it to be feared lest at the end of the world, He should
not recognise whence He were to raise me up.”
On the ninth day then of her sickness, and the fifty-sixth
year of her age, and the three-and-thirtieth of mine,
was that religious and holy soul freed from the body.
I closed her eyes; and there flowed
withal a mighty sorrow into my heart, which was overflowing
into tears; mine eyes at the same time, by the violent
command of my mind, drank up their fountain wholly
dry; and woe was me in such a strife! But when
she breathed her last, the boy Adeodatus burst out
into a loud lament; then, checked by us all, held
his peace. In like manner also a childish feeling
in me, which was, through my heart’s youthful
voice, finding its vent in weeping, was checked and
silenced. For we thought it not fitting to solemnise
that funeral with tearful lament, and groanings; for
thereby do they for the most part express grief for
the departed, as though unhappy, or altogether dead;
whereas she was neither unhappy in her death, nor
altogether dead. Of this we were assured on good
grounds, the testimony of her good conversation and
her faith unfeigned.
What then was it which did grievously
pain me within, but a fresh wound wrought through
the sudden wrench of that most sweet and dear custom
of living together? I joyed indeed in her testimony,
when, in that her last sickness, mingling her endearments
with my acts of duty, she called me “dutiful,”
and mentioned, with great affection of love, that
she never had heard any harsh or reproachful sound
uttered by my mouth against her. But yet, O my
God, Who madest us, what comparison is there betwixt
that honour that I paid to her, and her slavery for
me? Being then forsaken of so great comfort in
her, my soul was wounded, and that life rent asunder
as it were, which, of hers and mine together, had
been made but one.
The boy then being stilled from weeping,
Euodius took up the Psalter, and began to sing, our
whole house answering him, the Psalm, I will sing
of mercy and judgments to Thee, O Lord. But hearing
what we were doing, many brethren and religious women
came together; and whilst they (whose office it was)
made ready for the burial, as the manner is, I (in
a part of the house, where I might properly), together
with those who thought not fit to leave me, discoursed
upon something fitting the time; and by this balm
of truth assuaged that torment, known to Thee, they
unknowing and listening intently, and conceiving me
to be without all sense of sorrow. But in Thy
ears, where none of them heard, I blamed the weakness
of my feelings, and refrained my flood of grief, which
gave way a little unto me; but again came, as with
a tide, yet not so as to burst out into tears, nor
to change of countenance; still I knew what I was keeping
down in my heart. And being very much displeased
that these human things had such power over me, which
in the due order and appointment of our natural condition
must needs come to pass, with a new grief I grieved
for my grief, and was thus worn by a double sorrow.
And behold, the corpse was carried
to the burial; we went and returned without tears.
For neither in those prayers which we poured forth
unto Thee, when the Sacrifice of our ransom was offered
for her, when now the corpse was by the grave’s
side, as the manner there is, previous to its being
laid therein, did I weep even during those prayers;
yet was I the whole day in secret heavily sad, and
with troubled mind prayed Thee, as I could, to heal
my sorrow, yet Thou didst not; impressing, I believe,
upon my memory by this one instance, how strong is
the bond of all habit, even upon a soul, which now
feeds upon no deceiving Word. It seemed also
good to me to go and bathe, having heard that the
bath had its name (balneum) from the Greek Balaneion
for that it drives sadness from the mind. And
this also I confess unto Thy mercy, Father of the
fatherless, that I bathed, and was the same as before
I bathed. For the bitterness of sorrow could
not exude out of my heart. Then I slept, and
woke up again, and found my grief not a little softened;
and as I was alone in my bed, I remembered those true
verses of Thy Ambrose. For Thou art the
“Maker of all, the Lord,
And Ruler of the height,
Who, robing day in light, hast poured
Soft slumbers o’er the night,
That to our limbs the power
Of toil may be renew’d,
And hearts be rais’d that sink and
cower,
And sorrows be subdu’d.”
And then by little and little I recovered
my former thoughts of Thy handmaid, her holy conversation
towards Thee, her holy tenderness and observance towards
us, whereof I was suddenly deprived: and I was
minded to weep in Thy sight, for her and for myself,
in her behalf and in my own. And I gave way
to the tears which I before restrained, to overflow
as much as they desired; reposing my heart upon them;
and it found rest in them, for it was in Thy ears,
not in those of man, who would have scornfully interpreted
my weeping. And now, Lord, in writing I confess
it unto Thee. Read it, who will, and interpret
it, how he will: and if he finds sin therein,
that I wept my mother for a small portion of an hour
(the mother who for the time was dead to mine eyes,
who had for many years wept for me that I might live
in Thine eyes), let him not deride me; but rather,
if he be one of large charity, let him weep himself
for my sins unto Thee, the Father of all the brethren
of Thy Christ.
But now, with a heart cured of that
wound, wherein it might seem blameworthy for an earthly
feeling, I pour out unto Thee, our God, in behalf
of that Thy handmaid, a far different kind of tears,
flowing from a spirit shaken by the thoughts of the
dangers of every soul that dieth in Adam. And
although she having been quickened in Christ, even
before her release from the flesh, had lived to the
praise of Thy name for her faith and conversation;
yet dare I not say that from what time Thou regeneratedst
her by baptism, no word issued from her mouth against
Thy Commandment. Thy Son, the Truth, hath said,
Whosoever shall say unto his brother, Thou fool, shall
be in danger of hell fire. And woe be even unto
the commendable life of men, if, laying aside mercy,
Thou shouldest examine it. But because Thou art
not extreme in enquiring after sins, we confidently
hope to find some place with Thee. But whosoever
reckons up his real merits to Thee, what reckons he
up to Thee but Thine own gifts? O that men would
know themselves to be men; and that he that glorieth
would glory in the Lord.
I therefore, O my Praise and my Life,
God of my heart, laying aside for a while her good
deeds, for which I give thanks to Thee with joy, do
now beseech Thee for the sins of my mother. Hearken
unto me, I entreat Thee, by the Medicine of our wounds,
Who hung upon the tree, and now sitting at Thy right
hand maketh intercession to Thee for us. I know
that she dealt mercifully, and from her heart forgave
her debtors their debts; do Thou also forgive her
debts, whatever she may have contracted in so many
years, since the water of salvation. Forgive
her, Lord, forgive, I beseech Thee; enter not into
judgment with her. Let Thy mercy be exalted
above Thy justice, since Thy words are true, and Thou
hast promised mercy unto the merciful; which Thou
gavest them to be, who wilt have mercy on whom Thou
wilt have mercy; and wilt have compassion on whom
Thou hast had compassion.
And, I believe, Thou hast already
done what I ask; but accept, O Lord, the free-will
offerings of my mouth. For she, the day of her
dissolution now at hand, took no thought to have her
body sumptuously wound up, or embalmed with spices;
nor desired she a choice monument, or to be buried
in her own land. These things she enjoined us
not; but desired only to have her name commemorated
at Thy Altar, which she had served without intermission
of one day: whence she knew the holy Sacrifice
to be dispensed, by which the hand-writing that was
against us is blotted out; through which the enemy
was triumphed over, who summing up our offences, and
seeking what to lay to our charge, found nothing in
Him, in Whom we conquer. Who shall restore to
Him the innocent blood? Who repay Him the price
wherewith He bought us, and so take us from Him?
Unto the Sacrament of which our ransom, Thy handmaid
bound her soul by the bond of faith. Let none
sever her from Thy protection: let neither the
lion nor the dragon interpose himself by force or
fraud. For she will not answer that she owes
nothing, lest she be convicted and seized by the crafty
accuser: but she will answer that her sins are
forgiven her by Him, to Whom none can repay that price
which He, Who owed nothing, paid for us.
May she rest then in peace with the
husband before and after whom she had never any; whom
she obeyed, with patience bringing forth fruit unto
Thee, that she might win him also unto Thee.
And inspire, O Lord my God, inspire Thy servants my
brethren, Thy sons my masters, whom with voice, and
heart, and pen I serve, that so many as shall read
these Confessions, may at Thy Altar remember Monnica
Thy handmaid, with Patricius, her sometimes husband,
by whose bodies Thou broughtest me into this life,
how I know not. May they with devout affection
remember my parents in this transitory light, my brethren
under Thee our Father in our Catholic Mother, and my
fellow-citizens in that eternal Jerusalem which Thy
pilgrim people sigheth after from their Exodus, even
unto their return thither. That so my mother’s
last request of me, may through my confessions, more
than through my prayers, be, through the prayers of
many, more abundantly fulfilled to her.