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St. Augustine
On Christian Doctrine
IntraText CT - Text
BOOK IV.
chap. 14. Beauty of diction to be in keeping with the matter
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chap
.
14
.
Beauty
of
diction
to
be
in
keeping
with
the
matter
And
so
much
labour
has
been
spent
by
men
on
the
beauty
of
expression
here
spoken
of
,
that
not
only
is
it
not
our
duty
to
do
,
but
it
is
our
duty
to
shun
and
abhor
,
many
and
heinous
deeds
of
wickedness
and
baseness
which
wicked
and
base
men
have
with
great
eloquence
recommended
,
not
with
a
view
to
gaining
assent
,
but
merely
for
the
sake
of
being
read
with
pleasure
.
But
may
God
avert
from
His
Church
what
the
prophet
Jeremiah
says
of
the
synagogue
of
the
Jews
: "
A
wonderful
and
horrible
thing
is
committed
in
the
land
:
the
prophets
prophesy
falsely
,
and
the
priests
applaud
them
with
their
hands
;
and
my
people
love
to
have
it
so
:
and
what
will
ye
do
in
the
end
thereof
?"
O
eloquence
,
which
is
the
more
terrible
from
its
purity
,
and
the
more
crushing
from
its
solidity
!
Assuredly
it
is
"
a
hammer
that
breaketh
the
rock
in
pieces
."
For
to
this
God
Himself
has
by
the
same
prophet
compared
His
own
word
spoken
through
His
holy
prophets
.
God
forbid
,
then
,
God
forbid
that
with
us
the
priest
should
applaud
the
false
prophet
,
and
that
God
'
s
people
should
love
to
have
it
so
.
God
forbid
,
I
say
,
that
with
us
there
should
be
such
terrible
madness
!
For
what
shall
we
do
in
the
end
thereof
?
And
assuredly
it
is
preferable
,
even
though
what
is
said
should
be
less
intelligible
,
less
pleasing
,
and
less
persuasive
,
that
truth
be
spoken
,
and
that
what
is
just
,
not
what
is
iniquitous
,
be
listened
to
with
pleasure
.
But
this
,
of
course
,
cannot
be
,
unless
what
is
true
and
just
be
expressed
with
elegance
.
In
a
serious
assembly
,
moreover
,
such
as
is
spoken
of
when
it
is
said
, "
I
will
praise
Thee
among
much
people
,"
no
pleasure
is
derived
from
that
species
of
eloquence
which
indeed
says
nothing
that
is
false
,
but
which
buries
small
and
unimportant
truths
under
a
frothy
mass
of
ornamental
words
,
such
as
would
not
be
graceful
or
dignified
even
if
used
to
adorn
great
and
fundamental
truths
.
And
something
of
this
sort
occurs
in
a
letter
of
the
blessed
Cyprian
,
which
,
I
think
,
came
there
by
accident
,
or
else
was
inserted
designedly
with
this
view
,
that
posterity
might
see
how
the
wholesome
discipline
of
Christian
teaching
had
cured
him
of
that
redundancy
of
language
,
and
confined
him
to
a
more
dignified
and
modest
form
of
eloquence
,
such
as
we
find
in
his
subsequent
letters
,
a
style
which
is
admired
without
effort
,
is
sought
after
with
eagerness
,
but
is
not
attained
without
great
difficulty
.
He
says
,
then
,
in
one
place
, "
Let
us
seek
this
abode
:
the
neighbouring
solitudes
afford
a
retreat
where
,
whilst
the
spreading
shoots
of
the
vine
trees
,
pendulous
and
intertwined
,
creep
amongst
the
supporting
reeds
,
the
leafy
covering
has
made
a
portico
of
vine
."
There
is
wonderful
fluency
and
exuberance
of
language
here
;
but
it
is
too
florid
to
be
pleasing
to
serious
minds
.
But
people
who
are
fond
of
this
style
are
apt
to
think
that
men
who
do
not
use
it
,
but
employ
a
more
chastened
style
,
do
so
because
they
cannot
attain
the
former
,
not
because
their
judgment
teaches
them
to
avoid
it
.
Wherefore
this
holy
man
shows
both
that
he
can
speak
in
that
style
.
for
he
has
done
so
once
,
and
that
he
does
not
choose
,
for
he
never
uses
it
again
.
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