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AUGUSTINE:
CONFESSIONS INDEX
BOOK
ELEVEN
CHAPTER
XI
13. Those who say these things do not yet understand thee,
O Wisdom of God, O Light of souls. They do not yet understand
how the things are made that are made by and in thee. They
endeavor to comprehend eternal things, but their heart still
flies about in the past and future motions of created things,
and is still unstable. Who shall hold it and fix it so that
it may come to rest for a little; and then, by degrees,
glimpse the glory of that eternity which abides forever;
and then, comparing eternity with the temporal process in
which nothing abides, they may see that they are incommensurable?
They would see that a long time does not become long, except
from the many separate events that occur in its passage,
which cannot be simultaneous. In the Eternal, on the other
hand, nothing passes away, but the whole is simultaneously
present. But no temporal process is wholly simultaneous.
Therefore, let it[431] see that all time past is forced
to move on by the incoming future; that all the future follows
from the past; and that all, past and future, is created
and issues out of that which is forever present. Who will
hold the heart of man that it may stand still and see how
the eternity which always stands still is itself neither
future nor past but expresses itself in the times that are
future and past? Can my hand do this, or can the hand of
my mouth bring about so difficult a thing even by persuasion?
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