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St. Augustine
On Christian Doctrine
IntraText CT - Text
BOOK III.
chap. 29. The knowledge of tropes is necessary
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chap
.
29
.
The
knowledge
of
tropes
is
necessary
Moreover
,
I
would
have
learned
men
to
know
that
the
authors
of
our
Scriptures
use
all
those
forms
of
expression
which
grammarians
call
by
the
Greek
name
tropes
,
and
use
them
more
freely
and
in
greater
variety
than
people
who
are
unacquainted
with
the
Scriptures
,
and
have
learnt
these
figures
of
speech
from
other
writings
,
can
imagine
or
believe
.
Nevertheless
those
who
know
these
tropes
recognize
them
in
Scripture
,
and
are
very
much
assisted
by
their
knowledge
of
them
in
understanding
Scripture
.
But
this
is
not
the
place
to
teach
them
to
the
illiterate
,
lest
it
might
seem
that
I
was
teaching
grammar
.
I
certainly
advise
,
however
,
that
they
be
learnt
elsewhere
,
although
indeed
I
have
already
given
that
advice
above
,
in
the
second
book
namely
,
where
I
treated
of
the
necessary
knowledge
of
languages
.
For
the
written
characters
from
which
grammar
itself
gets
its
name
(
the
Greek
name
for
letters
being
"
grammata
")
are
the
signs
of
sounds
made
by
the
articulate
voice
with
which
we
speak
.
Now
of
some
of
these
figures
of
speech
we
find
in
Scripture
not
only
examples
(
which
we
have
of
them
all
),
but
the
very
names
as
well
:
for
instance
,
allegory
,
enigma
,
and
parable
.
However
,
nearly
all
these
tropes
which
are
said
to
be
learnt
as
a
matter
of
liberal
education
are
found
even
in
the
ordinary
speech
of
men
who
have
learnt
no
grammar
,
but
are
content
to
use
the
vulgar
idiom
.
For
who
does
not
say
, "
So
may
you
flourish
? "
And
this
is
the
figure
of
speech
called
metaphor
.
Who
does
not
speak
of
a
fish-pond
in
which
there
is
no
fish
,
which
was
not
made
for
fish
,
and
yet
gets
its
name
from
fish
?
And
this
is
the
figure
called
catachresis
.
It
would
be
tedious
to
go
over
all
the
rest
in
this
way
;
for
the
speech
of
the
vulgar
makes
use
of
them
all
,
even
of
those
more
curious
figures
which
mean
the
very
opposite
of
what
they
say
,
as
for
example
,
those
called
irony
and
antiphrasis
.
Now
in
irony
we
indicate
by
the
tone
of
voice
the
meaning
we
desire
to
convey
;
as
when
we
say
to
a
man
who
is
behaving
badly
, "
You
are
doing
well
."
But
it
is
not
by
the
tone
of
voice
that
we
make
an
antiphrasis
to
indicate
the
opposite
of
what
the
words
convey
;
but
either
the
words
in
which
it
is
expressed
are
used
in
the
opposite
of
their
etymological
sense
,
as
a
grove
is
called
lucus
from
its
want
of
light
;
or
it
is
customary
to
use
a
certain
form
of
expression
,
although
it
puts
yes
for
no
by
a
law
of
contraries
,
as
when
we
ask
in
a
place
for
what
is
not
there
,
and
get
the
answer
, "
There
is
plenty
;"
or
we
add
words
that
make
it
plain
we
mean
the
opposite
of
what
we
say
,
as
in
the
expression
, "
Beware
of
him
,
for
he
is
a
good
man
."
And
what
illiterate
man
is
there
that
does
not
use
such
expressions
,
although
he
knows
nothing
at
all
about
either
the
nature
or
the
names
of
these
figures
of
speech
?
And
yet
the
knowledge
of
these
is
necessary
for
clearing
up
the
difficulties
of
Scripture
;
because
when
the
words
taken
literally
give
an
absurd
meaning
,
we
ought
forthwith
to
inquire
whether
they
may
not
be
used
in
this
or
that
figurative
sense
which
we
are
unacquainted
with
;
and
in
this
way
many
obscure
passages
have
had
light
thrown
upon
them
.
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