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CHAPTER
III
5. Now, in that year my studies were interrupted. I had come back from Madaura,
a neighboring city[46] where I had
gone to study grammar and rhetoric; and the money for a further term at Carthage
was being got together for me. This project was more a matter of my father's
ambition than of his means, for he was only a poor citizen of Tagaste.
To whom am I narrating all this? Not to thee, O my God, but to my own kind in
thy presence--to that small part of the human race who may chance to come upon
these writings. And to what end? That I and all who read them may understand
what depths there are from which we are to cry unto thee.[47] For what is more surely heard in thy
ear than a confessing heart and a faithful life?
Who did not extol and praise my father, because he went quite beyond his means
to supply his son with the necessary expenses for a far journey in the interest
of his education? For many far richer citizens did not do so much for their
children. Still, this same father troubled himself not at all as to how I was
progressing toward thee nor how chaste I was, just so long as I was skillful
in speaking--no matter how barren I was to thy tillage, O God, who art the one
true and good Lord of my heart, which is thy field.[48]
6. During that sixteenth year of my age, I lived with my parents, having a holiday
from school for a time--this idleness imposed upon me by my parents' straitened
finances. The thornbushes of lust grew rank about my head, and there was no
hand to root them out. Indeed, when my father saw me one day at the baths and
perceived that I was becoming a man, and was showing the signs of adolescence,
he joyfully told my mother about it as if already looking forward to grandchildren,
rejoicing in that sort of inebriation in which the world so often forgets thee,
its Creator, and falls in love with thy creature instead of thee--the inebriation
of that invisible wine of a perverted will which turns and bows down to infamy.
But in my mother's breast thou hadst already begun to build thy temple and the
foundation of thy holy habitation--whereas my father was only a catechumen,
and that but recently. She was, therefore, startled with a holy fear and trembling:
for though I had not yet been baptized, she feared those crooked ways in which
they walk who turn their backs to thee and not their faces.
7. Woe is me! Do I dare affirm that thou didst hold thy peace, O my God, while
I wandered farther away from thee? Didst thou really then hold thy peace? Then
whose words were they but thine which by my mother, thy faithful handmaid, thou
didst pour into my ears? None of them, however, sank into my heart to make me
do anything. She deplored and, as I remember, warned me privately with great
solicitude, "not to commit fornication; but above all things never to defile
another man's wife." These appeared to me but womanish counsels, which I would
have blushed to obey. Yet they were from thee, and I knew it not. I thought
that thou wast silent and that it was only she who spoke. Yet it was through
her that thou didst not keep silence toward me; and in rejecting her counsel
I was rejecting thee--I, her son, "the son of thy handmaid, thy servant."[49] But I did not realize this, and rushed
on headlong with such blindness that, among my friends, I was ashamed to be
less shameless than they, when I heard them boasting of their disgraceful exploits--yes,
and glorying all the more the worse their baseness was. What is worse, I took
pleasure in such exploits, not for the pleasure's sake only but mostly for praise.
What is worthy of vituperation except vice itself? Yet I made myself out worse
than I was, in order that I might not go lacking for praise. And when in anything
I had not sinned as the worst ones in the group, I would still say that I had
done what I had not done, in order not to appear contemptible because I was
more innocent than they; and not to drop in their esteem because I was more
chaste.
8. Behold with what companions I walked the streets of Babylon! I rolled in
its mire and lolled about on it, as if on a bed of spices and precious ointments.
And, drawing me more closely to the very center of that city, my invisible enemy
trod me down and seduced me, for I was easy to seduce. My mother had already
fled out of the midst of Babylon[50]
and was progressing, albeit slowly, toward its outskirts. For in counseling
me to chastity, she did not bear in mind what her husband had told her about
me. And although she knew that my passions were destructive even then and dangerous
for the future, she did not think they should be restrained by the bonds of
conjugal affection--if, indeed, they could not be cut away to the quick. She
took no heed of this, for she was afraid lest a wife should prove a hindrance
and a burden to my hopes. These were not her hopes of the world to come, which
my mother had in thee, but the hope of learning, which both my parents were
too anxious that I should acquire--my father, because he had little or no thought
of thee, and only vain thoughts for me; my mother, because she thought that
the usual course of study would not only be no hindrance but actually a furtherance
toward my eventual return to thee. This much I conjecture, recalling as well
as I can the temperaments of my parents. Meantime, the reins of discipline were
slackened on me, so that without the restraint of due severity, I might play
at whatsoever I fancied, even to the point of dissoluteness. And in all this
there was that mist which shut out from my sight the brightness of thy truth,
O my God; and my iniquity bulged out, as it were, with fatness![51]
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