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AUGUSTINE:
CONFESSIONS INDEX
BOOK ONE
CHAPTER
VI
7.
Still, dust and ashes as I am, allow me to speak before
thy mercy. Allow me to speak, for, behold, it is to thy
mercy that I speak and not to a man who scorns me. Yet perhaps
even thou mightest scorn me; but when thou dost turn and
attend to me, thou wilt have mercy upon me. For what do
I wish to say, O Lord my God, but that I know not whence
I came hither into this life-in-death. Or should I call
it death-in-life? I do not know. And yet the consolations
of thy mercy have sustained me from the very beginning,
as I have heard from my fleshly parents, from whom and in
whom thou didst form me in time--for I cannot myself remember.
Thus even though they sustained me by the consolation of
woman's milk, neither my mother nor my nurses filled their
own breasts but thou, through them, didst give me the food
of infancy according to thy ordinance and thy bounty which
underlie all things. For it was thou who didst cause me
not to want more than thou gavest and it was thou who gavest
to those who nourished me the will to give me what thou
didst give them. And they, by an instinctive affection,
were willing to give me what thou hadst supplied abundantly.
It was, indeed, good for them that my good should come through
them, though, in truth, it was not from them but by them.
For it is from thee, O God, that all good things come--and
from my God is all my health. This is what I have since
learned, as thou hast made it abundantly clear by all that
I have seen thee give, both to me and to those around me.
For even at the very first I knew how to suck, to lie quiet
when I was full, and to cry when in pain--nothing more.
8. Afterward I began to laugh--at first in my sleep, then
when waking. For this I have been told about myself and
I believe it--though I cannot remember it--for I see the
same things in other infants. Then, little by little, I
realized where I was and wished to tell my wishes to those
who might satisfy them, but I could not! For my wants were
inside me, and they were outside, and they could not by
any power of theirs come into my soul. And so I would fling
my arms and legs about and cry, making the few and feeble
gestures that I could, though indeed the signs were not
much like what I inwardly desired and when I was not satisfied--either
from not being understood or because what I got was not
good for me--I grew indignant that my elders were not subject
to me and that those on whom I actually had no claim did
not wait on me as slaves--and I avenged myself on them by
crying. That infants are like this, I have myself been able
to learn by watching them; and they, though they knew me
not, have shown me better what I was like than my own nurses
who knew me.
9. And, behold, my infancy died long ago, but I am still
living. But thou, O Lord, whose life is forever and in whom
nothing dies--since before the world was, indeed, before
all that can be called "before," thou wast, and thou art
the God and Lord of all thy creatures; and with thee abide
all the stable causes of all unstable things, the unchanging
sources of all changeable things, and the eternal reasons
of all non-rational and temporal things--tell me, thy suppliant,
O God, tell me, O merciful One, in pity tell a pitiful creature
whether my infancy followed yet an earlier age of my life
that had already passed away before it. Was it such another
age which I spent in my mother's womb? For something of
that sort has been suggested to me, and I have myself seen
pregnant women. But what, O God, my Joy, preceded that
period of life? Was I, indeed, anywhere, or anybody? No
one can explain these things to me, neither father nor mother,
nor the experience of others, nor my own memory. Dost thou
laugh at me for asking such things? Or dost thou command
me to praise and confess unto thee only what I know?
10. I give thanks to thee, O Lord of heaven and earth, giving
praise to thee for that first being and my infancy of which
I have no memory. For thou hast granted to man that he should
come to self-knowledge through the knowledge of others,
and that he should believe many things about himself on
the authority of the womenfolk. Now, clearly, I had life
and being; and, as my infancy closed, I was already learning
signs by which my feelings could be communicated to others.
Whence could such a creature come but from thee, O Lord?
Is any man skillful enough to have fashioned himself? Or
is there any other source from which being and life could
flow into us, save this, that thou, O Lord, hast made us--thou
with whom being and life are one, since thou thyself art
supreme being and supreme life both together. For thou art
infinite and in thee there is no change, nor an end to this
present day--although there is a sense in which it ends
in thee since all things are in thee and there would be
no such thing as days passing away unless thou didst sustain
them. And since "thy years shall have no end,"[20]
thy years are an ever-present day. And how many of ours
and our fathers' days have passed through this thy day and
have received from it what measure and fashion of being
they had? And all the days to come shall so receive and
so pass away. "But thou art the same"![21] And all the things of tomorrow and
the days yet to come, and all of yesterday and the days
that are past, thou wilt gather into this thy day. What
is it to me if someone does not understand this? Let him
still rejoice and continue to ask, "What is this?" Let him
also rejoice and prefer to seek thee, even if he fails to
find an answer, rather than to seek an answer and not find
thee!
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