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AUGUSTINE:
CONFESSIONS INDEX
BOOK ONE
CHAPTER
IX 14.
O my God! What miseries and mockeries did I then experience
when it was impressed on me that obedience to my teachers
was proper to my boyhood estate if I was to flourish in
this world and distinguish myself in those tricks of speech
which would gain honor for me among men, and deceitful riches!
To this end I was sent to school to get learning, the value
of which I knew not--wretch that I was. Yet if I was slow
to learn, I was flogged. For this was deemed praiseworthy
by our forefathers and many had passed before us in the
same course, and thus had built up the precedent for the
sorrowful road on which we too were compelled to travel,
multiplying labor and sorrow upon the sons of Adam. About
this time, O Lord, I observed men praying to thee, and I
learned from them to conceive thee--after my capacity for
understanding as it was then--to be some great Being, who,
though not visible to our senses, was able to hear and help
us. Thus as a boy I began to pray to thee, my Help and my
Refuge, and, in calling on thee, broke the bands of my tongue.
Small as I was, I prayed with no slight earnestness that
I might not be beaten at school. And when thou didst not
heed me--for that would have been giving me over to my folly--my
elders and even my parents too, who wished me no ill, treated
my stripes as a joke, though they were then a great and
grievous ill to me.
15. Is there anyone, O Lord, with a spirit so great, who
cleaves to thee with such steadfast affection (or is there
even a kind of obtuseness that has the same effect)--is
there any man who, by cleaving devoutly to thee, is endowed
with so great a courage that he can regard indifferently
those racks and hooks and other torture weapons from which
men throughout the world pray so fervently to be spared;
and can they scorn those who so greatly fear these torments,
just as my parents were amused at the torments with which
our teachers punished us boys? For we were no less afraid
of our pains, nor did we beseech thee less to escape them.
Yet, even so, we were sinning by writing or reading or studying
less than our assigned lessons.
For I did not, O Lord, lack memory or capacity, for, by
thy will, I possessed enough for my age. However, my mind
was absorbed only in play, and I was punished for this by
those who were doing the same things themselves. But the
idling of our elders is called business; the idling of boys,
though quite like it, is punished by those same elders,
and no one pities either the boys or the men. For will any
common sense observer agree that I was rightly punished
as a boy for playing ball--just because this hindered me
from learning more quickly those lessons by means of which,
as a man, I could play at more shameful games? And did he
by whom I was beaten do anything different? When he was
worsted in some small controversy with a fellow teacher,
he was more tormented by anger and envy than I was when
beaten by a playmate in the ball game.
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