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St. Augustine
On Christian Doctrine
IntraText CT - Text
BOOK IV.
chap. 6. The sacred writers unite eloquence with wisdom
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chap
.
6
.
The
sacred
writers
unite
eloquence
with
wisdom
Here
,
perhaps
,
some
one
inquires
whether
the
authors
whose
divinely-inspired
writings
constitute
the
canon
,
which
carries
with
it
a
most
wholesome
authority
,
are
to
be
considered
wise
only
,
or
eloquent
as
well
.
A
question
which
to
me
,
and
to
those
who
think
with
me
,
is
very
easily
settled
.
For
where
I
understand
these
writers
,
it
seems
to
me
not
only
that
nothing
can
be
wiser
,
but
also
that
nothing
can
be
more
eloquent
.
And
I
venture
to
affirm
that
all
who
truly
understand
what
these
writers
say
,
perceive
at
the
same
time
that
it
could
not
have
been
properly
said
in
any
other
way
.
For
as
there
is
a
kind
of
eloquence
that
is
more
becoming
in
youth
,
and
a
kind
that
is
more
becoming
in
old
age
,
and
nothing
can
be
called
eloquence
if
it
be
not
suitable
to
the
person
of
the
speaker
,
so
there
is
a
kind
of
eloquence
that
is
becoming
in
men
who
justly
claim
the
highest
authority
,
and
who
are
evidently
inspired
of
God
.
With
this
eloquence
they
spoke
;
no
other
would
have
been
suitable
for
them
;
and
this
itself
would
be
unsuitable
in
any
other
,
for
it
is
in
keeping
with
their
character
,
while
it
mounts
as
far
above
that
of
others
(
not
from
empty
inflation
,
but
from
solid
merit
)
as
it
seems
to
fall
below
them
.
Where
,
however
,
I
do
not
understand
these
writers
,
though
their
eloquence
is
then
less
apparent
,
I
have
no
doubt
but
that
it
is
of
the
same
kind
as
that
I
do
understand
.
The
very
obscurity
,
too
,
of
these
divine
and
wholesome
words
was
a
necessary
element
in
eloquence
of
a
kind
that
was
designed
to
profit
our
understandings
,
not
only
by
the
discovery
of
truth
.
but
also
by
the
exercise
of
their
powers
.
I
could
,
however
,
if
I
had
time
,
show
those
men
who
cry
up
their
own
form
of
language
as
superior
to
that
of
our
authors
(
not
because
of
its
majesty
,
but
because
of
its
inflation
),
that
all
those
powers
and
beauties
of
eloquence
which
they
make
their
boast
,
are
to
be
found
in
the
sacred
writings
which
God
in
His
goodness
has
provided
to
mould
our
characters
,
and
to
guide
us
from
this
world
of
wickedness
to
the
blessed
world
above
.
But
it
is
not
the
qualities
which
these
writers
have
in
common
with
the
heathen
orators
and
poets
that
give
me
such
unspeakable
delight
in
their
eloquence
;
I
am
more
struck
with
admiration
at
the
way
in
which
,
by
an
eloquence
peculiarly
their
own
,
they
so
use
this
eloquence
of
ours
that
it
is
not
conspicuous
either
by
its
presence
or
its
absence
:
for
it
did
not
become
them
either
to
condemn
it
or
to
make
an
ostentatious
display
of
it
;
and
if
they
had
shunned
it
,
they
would
have
done
the
former
;
if
they
had
made
it
prominent
,
they
might
have
appeared
to
be
doing
the
latter
.
And
in
those
passages
where
the
learned
do
note
its
presence
,
the
matters
spoken
of
are
such
,
that
the
words
in
which
they
are
put
seem
not
so
much
to
be
sought
out
by
the
speaker
as
spontaneously
to
suggest
themselves
;
as
if
wisdom
were
walking
out
of
its
house
,
that
is
,
the
breast
of
the
wise
man
,
and
eloquence
,
like
an
inseparable
attendant
,
followed
it
without
being
called
for
.
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