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AUGUSTINE:
CONFESSIONS INDEX
BOOK
TWELVE
CHAPTER
III
3. And truly this earth was invisible and unformed,[459]
and there was an inexpressibly profound abyss[460]
above which there was no light since it had no form. Thou
didst command it written that "darkness was on the face
of the deep."[461]
What else is darkness except the absence of light? For if
there had been light, where would it have been except by
being over all, showing itself rising aloft and giving light?
Therefore, where there was no light as yet, why was it that
darkness was present, unless it was that light was absent?
Darkness, then, was heavy upon it, because the light from
above was absent; just as there is silence where there is
no sound. And what is it to have silence anywhere but simply
not to have sound? Hast thou not, O Lord, taught this soul
which confesses to thee? Hast thou not thus taught me, O
Lord, that before thou didst form and separate this formless
matter there was nothing: neither color, nor figure,
nor body, nor spirit? Yet it was not absolutely nothing;
it was a certain formlessness without any shape.
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