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AUGUSTINE:
CONFESSIONS INDEX
BOOK
TEN
CHAPTER
XXXVIII
63. "I am needy and poor."[389]
Still, I am better when in secret groanings I displease
myself and seek thy mercy until what is lacking in me is
renewed and made complete for that peace which the eye of
the proud does not know. The reports that come from the
mouth and from actions known to men have in them a most
perilous temptation to the love of praise. This love builds
up a certain complacency in one's own excellency, and then
goes around collecting solicited compliments. It tempts
me, even when I inwardly reprove myself for it, and this
precisely because it is reproved. For a man may often glory
vainly in the very scorn of vainglory--and in this case
it is not any longer the scorn of vainglory in which he
glories, for he does not truly despise it when he inwardly
glories in it.
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