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2005 1, XVIII | multitude surrounds him, and inveighs against his enemy with the
2006 6, VII | hotly followed - he had been inveigled into the madness of the
2007 Int | Christian life. He did not invent the doctrines of original
2008 1, XIII | For Homer was skillful in inventing such poetic fictions and
2009 9, XL | storehouse of my memory, investigating some things, depositing
2010 6, XVII | I saw thy invisibility [invisibilia tua] understood by means
2011 11, III(459) | should have preferred the invisibilis et incomposita of the Old
2012 6, XVII | which is.214 And I saw thy invisibility [invisibilia tua] understood
2013 12, XV | submissive to thy yoke, and invite me to serve thee for nothing
2014 5, XII | scorn thee, who abidest and invitest us to return to thee and
2015 11, XIV | Their surface is before us, inviting the little ones; and yet
2016 4, III | they used no sacrifices and invoked the aid of no spirit for
2017 12, XXIII | discoursing, disputing, blessing, invoking thee, so that the people
2018 7, III | upon us unexpectedly and involuntarily, but also those which are
2019 Int, 1 | parataxis, and his deliberate involutions of thought and word order.
2020 12, XXVI | his reward.” The “gift” involves receiving a prophet, receiving
2021 11, VI | to form I had regarded as involving something like a formless
2022 Int, 1 | them is their own affair [ipse viderint]; but I do know
2023 Int | double predestination and irresistible grace.~For all this the
2024 6, VI | thoughts still came into my irresolute mind, although I did add
2025 Int | allowed the excuse of human irresponsibility before God - but against
2026 9, XXXIII | though I pronounce no irrevocable opinion on the subject -
2027 6, VI | she was! And thou didst irritate her sore wound so that she
2028 9, XXXVII | happens to me? Why am I more irritated at that reproach which is
2029 Int, 1 | to Professor William A. Irwin, who greatly aided with
2030 6, IX(201) | allegorical interpretation of the Israelites' despoiling the Egyptians (
2031 Int | that reflective thought issue in practical consequence;
2032 1, XVII | Bar off Italy~From all the approaches
2033 5, II | its rule even to the last item in creation? Indeed, where
2034 12, XI(530) | Trinity in De Trinitate, IX-XII.~
2035 Int, 1 | Auflage, Tübingen, 1930), and Jean Rivière, Enchiridion in
2036 3, III | they amused themselves in jeering and horseplay at the expense
2037 3, III | tormenting them by uncalled-for jeers, gratifying their mischievous
2038 11, III(459) | them may have not known Jerome's version or, at least,
2039 8, IX | seriously - though in a jesting manner - that from the hour
2040 1, XIII | blandishments of my nurses, the jests of those who smiled on me,
2041 12, XXIII | just as there is neither Jew nor Greek, nor bond nor
2042 5, XI | who desired to ingraft the Jewish law into the Christian faith.
2043 1, IX | treated my stripes as a joke, though they were then a
2044 6, VI | believe was a full belly - joking and hilarious. And I sighed
2045 12, XII | O Lord, from the land of Jordan, and from the mountain535 -
2046 9, XXXIV | upon his grandchildren by Joseph (not as their father, who
2047 10, XXIII(442) | Cf. Josh. 10:12-14.~
2048 7, II | to the other, in tones of jubilation. Who was there among them
2049 8, XIII | praiseworthy man if thou judgedst it with thy mercy set aside.
2050 3, VII | by foolish men who were judging by human judgment and gauging
2051 3, IV(61) | civitate Dei, III, 15; Contra Julianum, IV, 15:78; De Trinitate,
2052 11, XV | between the Righteousness that justifies and the righteousness that
2053 9, II | righteous, but first thou justifiest him while he is yet ungodly.
2054 8, VII | not much more - since Justina, the mother of the boy-emperor
2055 6, XIII(171) | marriage was twelve! Cf. Justinian, Institutiones, I, 10:22.~
2056 6, I(176) | although the term "youth" (juventus) normally included the years
2057 11, XXXII(504) | full text of Genesis. Cf. Karl Barth's 274 pages devoted
2058 5, IX | in the spirit with a far keener anguish than when she bore
2059 1, XI | for even then thou wast my keeper, with what agitation and
2060 9, XXXIV | around me. However, thou who “keepest Israel shall neither slumber
2061 12, XIV | in the voice of him that keeps holyday.553 And still it
2062 11, III(459) | him. Since this is to be a key phrase in the succeeding
2063 3, VIII | rebelling against thee, “kicking against the pricks”77; or
2064 6, IV | diligently as a rule: “The letter kills, but the spirit gives life,”157
2065 1, XVIII | Father when thou gavest; and kinder still when he returned destitute!
2066 4, XIV | I should never have been kindled and provoked to love him.
2067 7, VI | he was a most sweet and kindly friend, he was unwilling,
2068 7, VII | above the treasures and kingdoms of this world; better than
2069 11, XXXII(504) | to Gen., chs. 1;2, in the Kirchliche Dogmatik, III, I, pp. 103-
2070 6, XVII(214) | differences. Cf. also K.E. Kirk, The Vision of God (London,
2071 12, XXVII(645) | catechumens. See Th. Zahn in Neue kirkliche Zeitschrift (1899), pp.
2072 8, IV | Presently, as we bowed our knees in supplication, the pain
2073 8, VIII | insult, like a surgeon’s knife from thy secret store, and
2074 6, III | those deceivers of ours had knit together against the divine
2075 6, IV | could subsist, I should have knocked on the door and propounded
2076 9, XXXI | O my God and Master, who knockest at my ears and enlightenest
2077 Int, 1 | colloquial. Even in his knottiest arguments, or in the labyrinthine
2078 2, X | such a twisted and tangled knottiness? It is unclean. I hate to
2079 4, XV | and disentangle all those knotty volumes, without help from
2080 9, I | Let me know thee, O my Knower; let me know thee even as
2081 10, I | Truth tells us, “Your Father knoweth what things you need before
2082 10, XIV | nothing more familiarly or knowingly than time? And surely we
2083 Int, 1 | IX: Exposés généraux de la foi (Paris, 1947).~It remains
2084 4, I | and “holy,” which, in the laboratory of their stomachs, they
2085 6, VI | such as those I was then laboring in, dragging the burden
2086 8, XII | solutos ut quies ~Reddat laboris usui ~Mentesque fessas allevet, ~
2087 9, XXXIX | these and similar perils and labors, thou perceivest the agitation
2088 7, IX | an answer, amid the dark labyrinth of human punishment and
2089 Int, 1 | knottiest arguments, or in the labyrinthine mazes of his allegorizing (
2090 9, XXXV | there in the sight of a lacerated corpse, which makes you
2091 12, IX | move forward. We ascend thy ladder which is in our heart, and
2092 9, XVII | they could never find their lairs and nests again, nor display
2093 9, XXXII | deceived. For there is a lamentable darkness in which my capabilities
2094 8, VII | worn out with the tedium of lamentation. This custom, retained from
2095 3, XI | was my soul’s doom she was lamenting, he bade her rest content
2096 7, VIII | house - for the master, our landlord, did not live there. The
2097 12, XXIV | mysteries and countless languages, and, in each language,
2098 2, VI | security save with thee? Grief languishes for things lost in which
2099 6, VII | cure the hopeful mind thus languishing. Let him be silent in thy
2100 6, XVII | weakness was dashed back, and I lapsed again into my accustomed
2101 4, VIII | CHAPTER VIII~ ~13. Time never lapses, nor does it glide at leisure
2102 9, XXX | grace, to quench even the lascivious motions of my sleep? Thou
2103 7, VII | scourges of rebuke did I not lash my soul to make it follow
2104 7, XI | severe mercy, redoubling the lashes of fear and shame; lest
2105 2, II | proud dejection and restless lassitude.~3. If only there had been
2106 10, XXVII | say that this silence has lasted as long as that voice lasts?
2107 6, XV | course. Thus in bondage to a lasting habit, the disease of my
2108 8, IX | them swerving from thee. Lastly, to all of us, O Lord -
2109 10, XXVII | lasted as long as that voice lasts? Do we not project our thought
2110 Int | cursus completus, Series Latina (Vols. 32-45). In his old
2111 Int, 1 | Scriptorum ecclesiasticorum Latinorum XXXIII text of Pius Knöll (
2112 9, XX | happiness which Greeks and Latins and men of all the other
2113 2, IX | else is about, a fit of laughter will overcome them when
2114 Int, 1 | and love which he hopes Laurence will put to use and not
2115 2, VI | liberality; but thou art the most lavish giver of all good things.
2116 11, XVIII | edification if a man use it lawfully: for the end of the law “
2117 3, VIII | may not be violated at the lawless pleasure of any, whether
2118 Int, 1 | to that faith which I was laying waste with a very wretched
2119 Int, 1 | Laurentius, a Christian layman who was the brother of the
2120 3, VI(65) | experience. Cf. H.C. Puech, Le Manichéisme, son fondateur -
2121 6, IX | him, got in as far as the leaden bars which protected the
2122 10, II | terrors and comforts and leadings by which thou didst bring
2123 5, I | weariness toward thee and lean on those things which thou
2124 8, X | that she and I stood alone, leaning in a certain window from
2125 7, XII | it had occurred - and she leaped for joy triumphant; and
2126 7, I | to be purged of the old leaven. “The Way” - the Saviour
2127 6, VII | Alypius began again to hear my lectures and became involved with
2128 11, XVIII(486) | defense of allegory as both legitimate and profitable in the interpretation
2129 1, VI | would fling my arms and legs about and cry, making the
2130 12, XV(569) | Legunt, eligunt, diligunt.~
2131 Int, 1 | Confessionum Libri Tredecim (Leipzig, 1934) - itself a recension
2132 10, XXIII | So many days,” and their lengths not counted separately) -
2133 1, VII | sustain his life? Yet we look leniently on such things, not because
2134 9, XXXI | deceived by his hungering after lentils and that David blamed himself
2135 6, VIII | healing my swelling was lessened, the disordered and darkened
2136 7, V | drowsiness when there is a heavy lethargy in his limbs; and he is
2137 11, XXV(497) | Cf. Deut. 6:5; Lev. 19:18; see also Matt. 22:
2138 8, IV | thou broughtest me low, leveling the mountains and hills
2139 1, XVI(31) | whom Augustine had heard levy a rather common philosopher'
2140 1, XVI | of Jove as his example of lewdness and telling the tale~ ~“
2141 7, V(249) | placebat et vincebat, hoc libebat et vinciebat.~
2142 2, VI | Prodigality presents a show of liberality; but thou art the most lavish
2143 9, XXXIII | but thou didst unbind and liberate me. In those melodies which
2144 Int | Book VII). The “Platonists” liberated him from error, but they
2145 11, XXV(493) | Cf. De libero arbitrio, II, 8:20, 10:28.~
2146 1, XVIII | could tell of their own licentiousness and be applauded for it,
2147 8, IV(275) | Alypius, Trygetius, and Licentius (former pupils).~
2148 8, IV | their starving thoughts they lick their very shadows. If only
2149 5, VIII | wind to set sail. Thus I lied to my mother - and such
2150 1, XI | initiation and washing by thy life-giving sacraments, confessing thee,
2151 1, VI | I came hither into this life-in-death. Or should I call it death-in-life?
2152 5, I | up to thee; animals and lifeless matter by the mouths of
2153 11, XV | difference between the Light that lightens and that which is enlightened
2154 4, XV | was the true Light that lighteth every man that cometh into
2155 12, II | thee - that it should flow lightlessly like the abyss - since it
2156 1, XVI(29) | Lignum is a common metaphor for
2157 3, VIII | according to their private likes and dislikes.~This is what
2158 9, VIII | distinguish the scent of lilies from that of violets while
2159 7, VI | When he learned this, he lingered on the topic, giving us
2160 9, XXXIV | Thus I will finish the list of the temptations of carnal
2161 5, XIII | careless and contemptuous listener. I was delighted with the
2162 7, I | of inner turbulence and listless indecision, because from
2163 9, IV | insufficient, but my Father liveth forever, and my Defender
2164 1, VII | could not speak; it was livid as it watched another infant
2165 9, XXXV | when I am sitting at home a lizard catching flies, or a spider
2166 1, VII | according to thy law.~I am loath to dwell on this part of
2167 4, V | this only as long as we loathe them?~
2168 3, II | forth those huge tides of loathsome lusts in which it is changed
2169 12, IX(523) | Exposition on the Psalms, loc. cit.~
2170 6, XII(207) | A locus classicus of the doctrine
2171 9, XXXI | creatures (that is, the locusts) on which he fed. And I
2172 2, III | I rolled in its mire and lolled about on it, as if on a
2173 1, XVIII | and dost keep silence - “long-suffering, and plenteous in mercy
2174 8, VIII | carried babies. Because of her long-time service and also because
2175 5, VIII | time, thou wast using my longings as a means and wast hastening
2176 Int, 1 | forgiven sinner. But redemption looks forward toward resurrection,
2177 5, X | doctrine, I began to hold more loosely and negligently even to
2178 9, XXXV | how many of them I have lopped off and cast from my heart,
2179 11, I | language. Inquiry is more loquacious than discovery. Demanding
2180 8, IX | up in opposition to their lords. And, knowing what a furious,
2181 5, V | knowledge of this worldly lore, it is folly to make a profession
2182 1, IV | thou dost cancel debts thou losest nothing thereby. Yet, O
2183 9, XXXI | drinking we restore the daily losses of the body until that day
2184 6, XV | And so, since I was not a lover of wedlock so much as a
2185 5, X | spiritual ones smile blandly and lovingly at me if they read these
2186 8, XII | custom is there, before it is lowered down into it - neither in
2187 6, XVIII | to bring subject to him; lowering their pride and heightening
2188 6, XII | pleased God and had been loyal and affectionate to their
2189 Int | and held together by its loyalties and love has become an integral
2190 8, XII | Mentesque fessas allevet, ~Luctusque solvat anxios.”~ ~“O God,
2191 6, XIV | little and my madness was lulled to sleep; and I awoke in
2192 5, III | of the eclipses of those luminaries, the sun and the moon. Their
2193 8, XII | rector, vestiens ~Diem decoro lumine, ~Noctem sopora gratia;~
2194 3, I | concupiscence and I dimmed its luster with the slime of lust.
2195 12, XVIII(593) | Exposition of the Psalms, LXXIV, 2: "The sacraments of the
2196 6, IX(186) | several years before; cf. M.P. Garvey, St. Augustine: Christian
2197 2, III | interrupted. I had come back from Madaura, a neighboring city46 where
2198 5, IX | increased in dishonor, and I madly scoffed at all the purposes
2199 9, XLII | deceived by the power of magic. Thus they sought a mediator
2200 9, XXXV | knowledge that we consult the magical arts. Even in religion itself,
2201 4, II | a theatrical prize, some magician - I do not remember him
2202 Int, 1 | effort of the theological magistrate of the Western Church to
2203 1, XVIII | and balls and sparrows, to magistrates and kings, to gold and lands
2204 8, XIII | redemption did thy hand maid bind her soul by the bond
2205 8, VIII | parents sent her as a sober maiden to draw wine from the cask,
2206 8, VIII | that of a certain elderly maidservant who had nursed her father,
2207 5, XIV | I now realized could be maintained without presumption. This
2208 3, XII(81) | Dedocere me mala ac docere bona; a typical
2209 6, IV | and applied them to the maladies of the whole world, and
2210 9, XXXV | complete analysis of it. This malady of curiosity is the reason
2211 8, IX | her by the whisperings of malicious servants, she conquered
2212 5, X | which they imagined as some malignant spirit penetrating that
2213 6, X | faithful in the unrighteous mammon, who will commit to your
2214 Int, 1 | and my wife, between them, managed the difficult task of putting
2215 6, XIV | year two of us should be managers and provide all that was
2216 10, XXIX | deepest places of my soul, are mangled by various commotions until
2217 6, I | I was passing into full manhood.176 As I increased in years,
2218 3, VI(65) | Steven Runciman, The Medieval Manichee (Cambridge, 1947).~
2219 3, VI(65) | Burkitt, The Religion of the Manichees (Cambridge, 1925); and Steven
2220 3, VI(65) | experience. Cf. H.C. Puech, Le Manichéisme, son fondateur - sa doctrine (
2221 10, III(419) | e.g., De Genesi contra Manicheos; De Genesi ad litteram,
2222 9, VI | ointments and spices; not manna and honey, not the limbs
2223 Int | eighth canon of Nicea (cf. Mansi, Sacrorum conciliorum, II,
2224 9, XXXIV | of the various arts and manufactures in our clothes, shoes, vessels,
2225 Int, 1 | Huston, who read the entire manuscript and made many valuable suggestions;
2226 5, III | stars and the sands, and map out the constellations,
2227 12, XXIV | only to the offspring of marine life and man - then we discover
2228 8, IX | to thee. She arrived at a marriageable age, and she was given to
2229 3, VI | inwardly even then did the marrow of my soul sigh for thee
2230 6, XII | Alypius who prevented me from marrying, urging that if I did so
2231 6, V | evil in my very search. I marshaled before the sight of my spirit
2232 Int, 1 | major critical editions: Martin Skutella, S. Aureli Augustini
2233 1, XIII | schoolmaster to the trials of the martyr and has the effect of mingling
2234 9, XL | manifold chambers of my mind, marvelously full of unmeasured wealth.
2235 5, X | not be born of the Virgin Mary without being mingled with
2236 2, VI | we see pride wearing the mask of high-spiritedness, although
2237 2, VI | foolishness themselves go masked under the names of simplicity
2238 Int | cornerstones in his “system,” matching them with a doctrine of
2239 Int | rescued him from this “materialism” and taught him how to think
2240 11, XXIX | or vessel is made. Such materials precede in time the forms
2241 8, XI | she had been talking in maternal confidence to some of my
2242 4, III | they call “astrologers” [mathematicos], because they used no sacrifices
2243 5, III | theories established by mathematics and my own eyes, but were
2244 8, IX | heard what are called the matrimonial tablets read to them, they
2245 11 | heaven and earth to the prior matrix from which it was formed.
2246 8, IX | As a result, while many matrons whose husbands were more
2247 8, XII(308) | Sir Tobie Matthew (adapted). For Augustine'
2248 Int, 1 | represents Augustine’s fully matured theological perspective -
2249 4, X | more rapidly they grow to maturity, so also the more rapidly
2250 Int | Benedictine edition of St. Maur) fill fourteen volumes as
2251 9, VIII | nothing; and I prefer honey to mead, a smooth thing to a rough,
2252 5, VI | in good Latin. With this meager learning and his daily practice
2253 3, XI | live with her, to have my meals in the same house at the
2254 8, VIII | sagacity. Thus, except at mealtimes at their parents’ table -
2255 12, XXIV | not understand what thou meanest by that phrase, let those
2256 1, XIX | friendship, shunned sorrow, meanness, ignorance. Is not such
2257 | Meantime
2258 6, I | if it were not itself a measurable entity.~So also I thought
2259 6, V | and everywhere through measureless space nothing but an infinite
2260 8, IX | son of the tales of the meddling servants which had disturbed
2261 11, XVI(483) | text is found in the Liber meditationum, erroneously ascribed to
2262 7, II | The dog Anubis, and a medley crew~Of monster gods who ‘
2263 12, XXI | shall be good beasts, acting meekly. For thou hast commanded
2264 5 | teaching post at Milan. Here he meets Ambrose, who confronts him
2265 9, XXXV | objects that are beautiful, melodious, fragrant, savory, soft.
2266 4, VIII | were all so much fuel to melt our souls together, and
2267 6, XIX(219) | eventual baptism and full membership in the Catholic Church.
2268 10, XX(437) | Memoria, contuitus, and expectatio:
2269 8, XII(303) | echo of Horace's famous memorial ode, Exegi monumentum aere
2270 6, II | also because these funereal memorials were very much like some
2271 8, II | law or thy peace, but with mendacious follies and forensic strifes,
2272 8, XII | quies ~Reddat laboris usui ~Mentesque fessas allevet, ~Luctusque
2273 11, IX | thy servant,470 when he mentions that “in the beginning thou
2274 8, XIII | recounts his actual and true merits to thee, what is he doing
2275 5, XIII(146) | ebrietatem spiritus." Cf. W.I. Merrill, Latin Hymns (Boston, 1904),
2276 3, VI(69) | Cf. Ovid, Metamorphoses, VII, 219-224.~
2277 Int, 1 | Library here at Southern Methodist University, were especially
2278 2, VI(53) | summum bonum et bonum verum meum.~
2279 Int | as they are reprinted in Migne, Patrologiae cursus completus,
2280 7, II | Victorinus then asked, with mild mockery, “Is it then the
2281 8, XII | reproached myself for the mildness of my feelings, and restrained
2282 2, III(46) | Twenty miles from Tagaste, famed as the
2283 6, IX(186) | Christian or Neo-Platonist (Milwaukee, 1939). There is also a
2284 9, XXXVI | might have to serve him, mimicking thee in perverse and distorted
2285 9, XIV(338) | Again, the mind-body dualism typical of the Augustinian
2286 7, II | arms ~‘Gainst Venus and Minerva, steel-clad Mars,”241~ ~
2287 6, XIII(171) | The normal minimum legal age for marriage was
2288 12, XXXIV | man. Finally, in all thy ministries which were needed to perfect
2289 3, IV(61) | A minor essay now lost. We know
2290 6, VI | of the days, hours, and minutes - both women were delivered
2291 12, XXI | Nor does it seek great, miraculous works by which to buttress
2292 6, XIX | especially because he was miraculously born of a virgin - sent
2293 Int | which is still our best mirror of the heart and mind of
2294 10, XX | still be said, then, as our misapplied custom has it: “There are
2295 Int | Bibliography), and di Capua, Miscellanea Agostiniana, II, 678).~Augustine
2296 3, III | jeers, gratifying their mischievous mirth. Nothing could more
2297 11 | reference to this in the misconstrued Scriptural phrase “the heaven
2298 5, IX | the fiery torment which my misdeeds deserved, measured by the
2299 3, XII | to the Manicheans by his misguided mother and not only had
2300 4, XIII | somehow they have been mislaid.~
2301 | miss
2302 5, IX | attentive to thy saints, never missing a visit to church twice
2303 2, III | all this there was that mist which shut out from my sight
2304 2, II | friendship. Instead, the mists of passion steamed up out
2305 3, VI | devil - a trap made out of a mixture of the syllables of thy
2306 4, IX | This is the source of our moaning when one dies - the gloom
2307 3, X | Yet what did I gain by mocking them save to be mocked in
2308 Int, 1 | scriptures were powerful modifiers of his classical literary
2309 9, XXXIII | with a clear and skillfully modulated voice), I then come to acknowledge
2310 10, XXX | and thy truth will be my mold. And I shall not have to
2311 11, XX(489) | Mole mundi.~
2312 10, XXIX | together into thee, purged and molten in the fire of thy love.~
2313 4, XV | And the first I called a Monad, as if it were a soul without
2314 7, VI | to the multitudes in the monasteries and their manners so fragrant
2315 7, VI | of Anthony, the Egyptian monk, whose name was in high
2316 7, II | Anubis, and a medley crew~Of monster gods who ‘gainst Neptune
2317 2, VI | shadow! O rottenness! O monstrousness of life and abyss of death!
2318 10, XV | present. For it takes twelve months to make the year, from which
2319 8, XIII | did she covet a handsome monument, or even care to be buried
2320 8, XII(303) | famous memorial ode, Exegi monumentum aere perennius . . . non
2321 3, VIII | offenses against customary morality are to be avoided according
2322 12, XXIII | finds amiss in the works and morals of the faithful, such as
2323 8, XII(303) | perennius . . . non omnis moriar? Cf. Odes, Book III, Ode
2324 8, XII(303) | Nec omnino moriebatur. Is this an echo of Horace'
2325 Int, 1 | remaining. Professors Raymond P. Morris, of the Yale Divinity School
2326 3, X | should beg for any food, the morsel that we gave to him would
2327 4, VI | And I marveled that other mortals went on living since he
2328 7, XI | yours, that they may be mortified. They tell you of delights,
2329 7, VI(253) | important imperial town on the Moselle; the emperor referred to
2330 8, IV | age and the fullness of motherly love and Christian piety.
2331 9, VII | by this very soul will I mount up to him. I will soar beyond
2332 6, XXI | land of peace from a wooded mountaintop: and fail to find the way
2333 6, XX | to seem wise. I did not mourn my ignorance, but rather
2334 10, I | be poor in spirit, meek, mourners, hungering and athirst for
2335 Int | that had been his prime mover on that way, it was a spontaneous
2336 12, XXXVII | seest not in time, thou movest not in time, thou restest
2337 | Mrs
2338 6, X(205) | Some MSS. add "immo vero" ("yea,
2339 3, XI | which I wallowed in the mud of that deep pit and in
2340 Int | a balanced digest of his multifaceted teaching. Thus, if he is
2341 12, XXIV(633) | ideas, they proliferate multiple - and valid - implications
2342 1, IX | were compelled to travel, multiplying labor and sorrow upon the
2343 2, V | contemptible. A man has murdered another man - what was his
2344 6, VIII | a day of those cruel and murderous shows. He protested to them: “
2345 1, VII | For it lies in the deep murk of my forgetfulness and
2346 7, II | not know him? And a low murmur ran through the mouths of
2347 9, XXXI | their desire for food they murmured against the Lord.~47. Set
2348 6, XVII | weighs down the mind, which muses upon many things.211 My
2349 8, X | soared higher yet by an inner musing, speaking and marveling
2350 7, V | as one in slumber, and my musings on thee were like the efforts
2351 Int | strong and he could not muster a full act of the whole
2352 6, I | mother had come to me, having mustered the courage of piety, following
2353 11, XI | formlessness there is in these mutations of these last and lowest
2354 9, VI | same way to both; but it is mute to this one and it speaks
2355 4, XV | asserts itself insolently and mutinously - and just as in the acts
2356 8, IX | not only repeat to enemies mutually enraged things said in passion
2357 10, XXXI | wonderfully, and far more mysteriously thou knowest them. For it
2358 6, IV | same time he drew aside the mystic veil and opened to view
2359 9, XXXIV | sons - and laid his hands mystically crossed upon his grandchildren
2360 2, II(41) | bono conjugali, 8-9, 39-35 (N-PNF, III, 396-413).~
2361 3, VII | shape, and has he hairs and nails?” and, “Are those patriarchs
2362 9, XV | was meant when health was named, unless the same image were
2363 7, II | then, should he shrink from naming thy Word before the sheep
2364 2, III | of Tagaste. ~To whom am I narrating all this? Not to thee, O
2365 Int | Regius (a small coastal town nearby). Here in 395 - with grave
2366 Int | In these two works - the nearest equivalent to summation
2367 8, XII(303) | Nec omnino moriebatur. Is this
2368 12, XXXVIII | But thou art the Good, and needest no rest, and art always
2369 10, IX | strength is brought down in neediness, so that I cannot endure
2370 1, IV | at rest; gathering, yet needing nothing; sustaining, pervading,
2371 6, V | being? Or if we fear it needlessly, then surely that fear is
2372 2, V | better and the higher good - neglecting thee, O our Lord God, and
2373 Int | firmly laid out. Augustine neglects to tell us (in 398) what
2374 6, XI | suffer the punishment of my negligence here? But suppose death
2375 6, VI | friend for me, who was not a negligent consulter of the astrologers
2376 5, X | to hold more loosely and negligently even to those points which
2377 6, XI | sweetness of its own, not at all negligible. We must not abandon it
2378 6, IX(186) | Augustine: Christian or Neo-Platonist (Milwaukee, 1939).
2379 7, II | monster gods who ‘gainst Neptune stand in arms ~‘Gainst Venus
2380 12, I(506) | untranslatable - Latin pun: neque ut sic te colam quasi terram,
2381 7, VIII | not have done it, if the nerves had not obeyed my will.
2382 9, XVII | never find their lairs and nests again, nor display many
2383 12, XXX | all these things in the nether parts of the world.647 They
2384 12, XV(574) | the gladiators who used nets to entangle their opponents.~
2385 12, XXVII(645) | catechumens. See Th. Zahn in Neue kirkliche Zeitschrift (1899),
2386 Int, 1 | from a distance or by a neutral observer. In all his writings
2387 9, XL | thou, for thou art that never-failing light from which I took
2388 Int | violation of the eighth canon of Nicea (cf. Mansi, Sacrorum conciliorum,
2389 Int | appropriated the heritage of Nicene orthodoxy; he was a Chalcedonian
2390 3, III(60) | overthrow or ruin. This was the nickname of a gang of young hoodlums
2391 6, V(159) | crederentur, omnino in hac vita nihil ageremus, which should be
2392 4, XV | good was it for me that my nimble wit could run through those
2393 3, IV | of that book. I was now nineteen; my father had been dead
2394 Int | us a critical review of ninety-three of his works he judged most
2395 8, XI | resurrect me.” And so on the ninth day of her sickness, in
2396 7, II | to which almost all the nobility of Rome were wedded; and
2397 7, IV | before the poor, or the nobly born before the rest - since “
2398 8, XII | vestiens ~Diem decoro lumine, ~Noctem sopora gratia;~
2399 12, XVIII(592) | principio diei and in principio noctis, below.~
2400 9, XXX | even one so slight that a nod might restrain it - should
2401 Int | able to conceive of God in non-dualistic categories. We can follow
2402 Int | of appeal to some of the non-evangelical aspects of Augustine’s thought
2403 1, VI | the eternal reasons of all non-rational and temporal things - tell
2404 | nonetheless
2405 11, XV | from thee like a perpetual noon. O house full of light and
2406 6, XIII(171) | The normal minimum legal age for marriage
2407 6, I(176) | term "youth" (juventus) normally included the years twenty
2408 3, VII | human race by the narrow norms of their own mores. It is
2409 9, XXXVI | exalt his throne in the north,385 that in the darkness
2410 10, XXVII(449) | Quartets and especially "Burnt Norton."~
2411 11, VI | condition, though not actual nothingness.462~But I desired to know,
2412 9, XXXIV | about other things, not noticing it. And it presents itself
2413 8, V | chest.~And by letters I notified thy bishop, the holy man
2414 5, VIII | thy own secret counsel and noting the real point to her desire,
2415 10, XXIII(440) | Communes notitias, the universal principles
2416 6, IX | boasting that they had caught a notorious thief. Thereupon he was
2417 3, X | the mother tree was tears. Notwithstanding this, if a fig was plucked,
2418 7, IV | not, in order to bring to nought the things that are.”245
2419 4, XV | become safely fledged and to nourish the wings of love by the
2420 1, IV | and protecting; creating, nourishing, and developing; seeking,
2421 1, VII | though he requires such nourishment to sustain his life? Yet
2422 3, XII | being inflated with the novelty of that heresy, and that
2423 8, IV | swelling pride! I was still a novice in thy true love, a catechumen
2424 10, X(429) | Carnalitas vetustas est, gratia novitas est, "Carnality is the old
2425 12, XXII | have to feed with milk and nurse as children - this is why
2426 11, XXV(495) | his theory of Christian nurture; cf. the De catechizandis
2427 8, VIII | Though father and mother and nurturers are absent, thou art present,
2428 1, XVIII | masters; they pass from nuts and balls and sparrows,
2429 9, XXXV | spirits. All sacrilegious oaths I abhor. And yet, O Lord
2430 6, II | acquiesced so devoutly and obediently that I myself marveled how
2431 2, IX | and would have strenuously objected. Yet, again, why did I find
2432 6, VIII | drew him, resisting and objecting vehemently, into the amphitheater,
2433 10, XXVII | me down that it exists [objectively]; do not overwhelm yourself
2434 8, IV(276) | A somewhat oblique acknowledgment of the fact
2435 1, XIII | wanderings of a certain Aeneas, oblivious of my own wanderings, and
2436 12, XXIV | ways what we find expressed obscurely in a single statement. Thus
2437 8, X | sound of thunder, nor the obscurity of a parable, but might
2438 7, VI(252) | The last obstacles that remained. His intellectual
2439 6, VI | alone providedst also for my obstinacy with which I struggled against
2440 11, I | Demanding takes longer than obtaining; and the hand that knocks
2441 6, VII | think, the images of bodies obtruded themselves into my way back
2442 1, IX | is there even a kind of obtuseness that has the same effect) -
2443 12, XXI | ear because of its fear of occult and strange things. For
2444 6, VI | fools - who followed such an occupation and whom I longed to assail,
2445 5, VII | puzzled me. And so I began to occupy myself with him in the study
2446 10, VI | voice might have had its occurrence in time. But there was nothing
2447 Int | and favor, prevenient and occurrent. It touches man’s inmost
2448 Int, 1 | whom Augustine wrote the De octo dulcitii quaestionibus in
2449 8, II(268) | August to the middle of October.~
2450 8, XII(303) | non omnis moriar? Cf. Odes, Book III, Ode XXX.~
2451 Int, 1 | Bibliothèque Augustinienne, Œuvres de S. Augustin, première
2452 6, V | appeared incongruous and offensive to me, now that I had heard
2453 9, XXXVI | human society require the officeholder to be loved and feared of
2454 7, IV | thy Christ and became an officer of the great King, he also
2455 6, IX | be arrested by the police officers in the market place as a
2456 9, XXXVI | tremble.384~And yet certain offices in human society require
2457 8, VII | when the sweet savor of thy ointment was so fragrant, I did not
2458 1, XVI(31) | philosopher's complaint against Olympian religion and the poetic
2459 1, XVIII | syllable of “hominem” [“ominem,” and thus make it “a ‘uman
2460 8, XIII | she had served without the omission of a single day, and where
2461 Int | disorderly quest for wisdom. He omits very much indeed. Yet he
2462 4, V | unhappy. Hast thou - though omnipresent - dismissed our miseries
2463 8, XII(303) | aere perennius . . . non omnis moriar? Cf. Odes, Book III,
2464 8, IV(284) | Idipsum - the oneness and immutability of God.~
2465 Int | the truth one knows about oneself - and this obviously meant,
2466 12, XXV | an “earth” was the godly Onesiphorus, to whose house thou gavest
2467 10, XXII | labor is my lot until thou openest it. I beseech thee, through
2468 Int, 1 | reader in genuine respect and openness. He is never content to
2469 9, XIX | realized that it was not operating as smoothly as usual and
2470 Int | which cancels, ex opere operato, birth sin and hereditary
2471 Int | baptism which cancels, ex opere operato, birth sin and hereditary
2472 4, XIV | blow from the breast of the opinionated, so also the soul is tossed
2473 12, XV(574) | used nets to entangle their opponents.~
2474 8, II | that deceitful tongue which opposes under the guise of good
2475 8, IX | to set themselves up in opposition to their lords. And, knowing
2476 7, VII | certain, and still that burden oppresses you. At the same time those
2477 7, X | man’s house; or, a fourth option, whether he should commit
2478 Int, 1 | Augustin, première série: Opuscules, IX: Exposés généraux de
2479 4, XV | who not only explained it orally, but drew many diagrams
2480 1, XVIII | it in a full and ornate oration of well-chosen words. Thou
2481 6, II | deceivers and those dumb orators - dumb because thy Word
2482 9, VIII | vastness of the ocean, the orbits of the stars, and yet they
2483 8, XII | of us all, ~Guiding the orbs celestial, ~Clothing the
2484 4, III | blameless, while the Creator and Ordainer of heaven and the stars
2485 5, III | their calculations in the orderly sequence of seasons and
2486 Int | But by the time of his ordination to the presbyterate we can
2487 4, VI | fiction) of the friendship of Orestes and Pylades97; they would
2488 4, XV(116) | The first section of the Organon, which analyzes the problem
2489 10, III | nor barbarian, without any organs of voice and tongue, without
2490 12, XXIII | earth, they still take their origins from the waters.~The spiritual
2491 1, XVIII | they did it in a full and ornate oration of well-chosen words.
2492 Int | appropriated the heritage of Nicene orthodoxy; he was a Chalcedonian before
2493 7, II | people with the love of Osiris and~ ~“The dog Anubis, and
2494 9, XXXVI | wretched life and an unseemly ostentation. It is a special reason
2495 6, II | do so by the doorkeeper [ostiarius]. And as soon as she learned
2496 Int, 1 | and I have collated them: Otto Scheel, Augustins Enchiridion (
2497 11, II(457) | LXX reading (o ouranoz tou ouranou) seems to rest on a variant
2498 11, II(457) | 115:16. The LXX reading (o ouranoz tou ouranou) seems to rest
2499 11, XXV | mind, and our neighbor as ourself.”497 Unless we believe that
2500 Int | stable and coherent Christian outlook. Moreover, he had an unwearied,
2501 5, VIII | good of his pupils. Many outrages they perpetrated with astounding
2502 10, XX(437) | memories and forward to the outreach of hope and confidence in
2503 2, III | albeit slowly, toward its outskirts. For in counseling me to
2504 10, II | from my lips, inwardly and outwardly, all rashness and lying.
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