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AUGUSTINE:
CONFESSIONS INDEX
BOOK SIX
CHAPTER
VIII
13. He had gone on to Rome before me to study law--which
was the worldly way which his parents were forever urging
him to pursue--and there he was carried away again with
an incredible passion for the gladiatorial shows. For, although
he had been utterly opposed to such spectacles and detested
them, one day he met by chance a company of his acquaintances
and fellow students returning from dinner; and, with a friendly
violence, they drew him, resisting and objecting vehemently,
into the amphitheater, on a day of those cruel and murderous
shows. He protested to them: "Though you drag my body to
that place and set me down there, you cannot force me to
give my mind or lend my eyes to these shows. Thus I will
be absent while present, and so overcome both you and them."
When they heard this, they dragged him on in, probably interested
to see whether he could do as he said. When they got to
the arena, and had taken what seats they could get, the
whole place became a tumult of inhuman frenzy. But Alypius
kept his eyes closed and forbade his mind to roam abroad
after such wickedness. Would that he had shut his ears also!
For when one of the combatants fell in the fight, a mighty
cry from the whole audience stirred him so strongly that,
overcome by curiosity and still prepared (as he thought)
to despise and rise superior to it no matter what it was,
he opened his eyes and was struck with a deeper wound in
his soul than the victim whom he desired to see had been
in his body. Thus he fell more miserably than the one whose
fall had raised that mighty clamor which had entered through
his ears and unlocked his eyes to make way for the wounding
and beating down of his soul, which was more audacious than
truly valiant--also it was weaker because it presumed on
its own strength when it ought to have depended on Thee.
For, as soon as he saw the blood, he drank in with it a
savage temper, and he did not turn away, but fixed his eyes
on the bloody pastime, unwittingly drinking in the madness--delighted
with the wicked contest and drunk with blood lust. He was
now no longer the same man who came in, but was one of the
mob he came into, a true companion of those who had brought
him thither. Why need I say more? He looked, he shouted,
he was excited, and he took away with him the madness that
would stimulate him to come again: not only with those who
first enticed him, but even without them; indeed, dragging
in others besides. And yet from all this, with a most powerful
and most merciful hand, thou didst pluck him and taught
him not to rest his confidence in himself but in thee--but
not till long after.
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