Table of Contents
|
Words
:
Alphabetical
-
Frequency
-
Inverse
-
Length
-
Statistics
|
Help
|
IntraText Library
St. Augustine
On Christian Doctrine
IntraText CT - Text
BOOK IV.
chap. 11. The Christian teacher must speak clearly, but not inelegantly
Previous
-
Next
Click here to hide the links to concordance
chap
.
11
.
The
Christian
teacher
must
speak
clearly
,
but
not
inelegantly
For
teaching
,
of
course
,
true
eloquence
consists
,
not
in
making
people
like
what
they
disliked
,
nor
in
making
them
do
what
they
shrank
from
,
but
in
making
clear
what
was
obscure
;
yet
if
this
be
done
without
grace
of
style
,
the
benefit
does
not
extend
beyond
the
few
eager
students
who
are
anxious
to
know
whatever
is
to
be
learnt
,
however
rude
and
unpolished
the
form
in
which
it
is
put
,
and
who
,
when
they
have
succeeded
in
their
object
,
find
the
plain
truth
pleasant
food
enough
.
And
it
is
one
of
the
distinctive
features
of
good
intellects
not
to
love
words
,
but
the
truth
in
words
.
For
of
what
service
is
a
golden
key
,
if
it
cannot
open
what
we
want
it
to
open
?
Or
what
objection
is
there
to
a
wooden
one
if
it
can
,
seeing
that
to
open
what
is
shut
is
all
we
want
?
But
as
there
is
a
certain
analogy
between
learning
and
eating
,
the
very
food
without
which
it
is
impossible
to
live
must
be
flavoured
to
meet
the
tastes
of
the
majority
.
Previous
-
Next
Table of Contents
|
Words
:
Alphabetical
-
Frequency
-
Inverse
-
Length
-
Statistics
|
Help
|
IntraText Library
Best viewed with any browser at 800x600 or 768x1024 on Tablet PC
IntraText®
(V89) - Some rights reserved by
EuloTech SRL
- 1996-2007. Content in this page is licensed under a
Creative Commons License