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AUGUSTINE:
CONFESSIONS INDEX
BOOK ONE
CHAPTER
XVI
27.
Bear with me, O my God, while I speak a little of those
talents, thy gifts, and of the follies on which I wasted
them. For a lesson was given me that sufficiently disturbed
my soul, for in it there was both hope of praise and fear
of shame or stripes. The assignment was that I should declaim
the words of Juno, as she raged and sorrowed that she could
not
"Bar
off Italy
From all the approaches of the Teucrian king."[33]
I
had learned that Juno had never uttered these words. Yet
we were compelled to stray in the footsteps of these poetic
fictions, and to turn into prose what the poet had said
in verse. In the declamation, the boy won most applause
who most strikingly reproduced the passions of anger and
sorrow according to the "character" of the persons presented
and who clothed it all in the most suitable language. What
is it now to me, O my true Life, my God, that my declaiming
was applauded above that of many of my classmates and fellow
students? Actually, was not all that smoke and wind? Besides,
was there nothing else on which I could have exercised my
wit and tongue? Thy praise, O Lord, thy praises might have
propped up the tendrils of my heart by thy Scriptures; and
it would not have been dragged away by these empty trifles,
a shameful prey to the spirits of the air. For there is
more than one way in which men sacrifice to the fallen angels.
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