Text Box: THE CONFESSIONS OF SAINT AUGUSTINE

CHAPTER VII

     12.  For as soon as it became plain to me that Faustus was ignorant in those arts in which I had believed him eminent, I began to despair of his being able to clarify and explain all these perplexities that troubled me -- though I realized that such ignorance need not have affected the authenticity of his piety, if he had not been a Manichean.  For their books are full of long fables about the sky and the stars, the sun and the moon; and I had ceased to believe him able to show me in any satisfactory fashion what I so ardently desired: whether the explanations contained in the Manichean books were better or at least as good as the mathematical explanations I had read elsewhere.  But when I proposed that these subjects should be considered and discussed, he quite modestly did not dare to undertake the task, for he was aware that he had no knowledge of these things and was not ashamed to confess it.  For he was not one of those talkative people -- from whom I had endured so much -- who undertook to teach me what I wanted to know, and then said nothing.  Faustus had a heart which, if not right toward thee, was at least not altogether false toward himself; for he was not ignorant of his own ignorance, and he did not choose to be entangled in a controversy from which he could not draw back or retire gracefully.  For this I liked him all the more.  For the modesty of an ingenious mind is a finer thing than the acquisition of that knowledge I desired; and this I found to be his attitude toward all abstruse and difficult questions.

     13.  Thus the zeal with which I had plunged into the Manichean system was checked, and I despaired even more of their other teachers, because Faustus who was so famous among them had turned out so poorly in the various matters that puzzled me.  And so I began to occupy myself with him in the study of his own favorite pursuit, that of literature, in which I was already teaching a class as a professor of Text Box: rhetoric among the young Carthaginian students.  With Faustus then I read whatever he himself wished to read, or what I judged suitable to his bent of mind.  But all my endeavors to make further progress in Manicheism came completely to an end through my acquaintance with that man.  I did not wholly separate myself from them, but as one who had not yet found anything better I decided to content myself, for the time being, with what I had stumbled upon one way or another, until by chance something more desirable should present itself.  Thus that Faustus who had entrapped so many to their death -- though neither willing nor witting it -- now began to loosen the snare in which I had been caught.  For thy hands, O my God, in the hidden design of thy providence did not desert my soul; and out of the blood of my mother's heart, through the tears that she poured out by day and by night, there was a sacrifice offered to thee for me, and by marvelous ways thou didst deal with me.  For it was thou, O my God, who didst it: for "the steps of a man are ordered by the Lord, and he shall choose his way."[135]  How shall we attain salvation without thy hand remaking what it had already made? 

CHAPTER VIII

     14.  Thou didst so deal with me, therefore, that I was persuaded to go to Rome and teach there what I had been teaching at Carthage.  And how I was persuaded to do this I will not omit to confess to thee, for in this also the profoundest workings of thy wisdom and thy constant mercy toward us must be pondered and acknowledged.  I did not wish to go to Rome because of the richer 
fees and the higher dignity which my friends promised me there -- though these considerations did affect my decision.  My principal and almost sole motive was that I had been informed that the students there studied more quietly and were better kept under the control of stern discipline, so that they did not capriciously and impudently rush into the classroom of a teacher not their own -- indeed, they were not admitted at all without the permission of the teacher.  At Carthage, on the Text Box: contrary, there was a shameful and intemperate license among the students.  They burst in rudely and, with furious gestures, would disrupt the discipline which the teacher had established for the good of his pupils.  Many outrages they perpetrated with astounding effrontery, things that would be punishable by law if they were not sustained by custom.  Thus custom makes plain that such behavior is all the more worthless because it allows men to do what thy eternal law never will allow.  They think that they act thus with impunity, though the very blindness with which they act is their punishment, and they suffer far greater harm than they inflict.

     The manners that I would not adopt as a student I was compelled as a teacher to endure in others.  And so I was glad to go where all who knew the situation assured me that such conduct was not allowed.  But thou, "O my refuge and my portion in the land of the living,"[136] didst goad me thus at Carthage so that I might thereby be pulled away from it and change my worldly habitation for the preservation of my soul.  At the same time, thou didst offer me at Rome an enticement, through the agency of men enchanted with this death-in-life -- by their insane conduct in the one place and their empty promises in the other.  To correct my wandering footsteps, thou didst secretly employ their perversity and my own.  For those who disturbed my tranquillity were blinded by shameful madness and also those who allured me elsewhere had nothing better than the earth's cunning.  And I who hated actual misery in the one place sought fictitious happiness in the other.

     15.  Thou knewest the cause of my going from one country to the other, O God, but thou didst not disclose it either to me or to my mother, who grieved deeply over my departure and followed me down to the sea.  She clasped me tight in her embrace, willing either to keep me back or to go with me, but I deceived her, pretending that I had a friend whom I could not leave until he had a favorable wind to set sail.  Thus I lied to my mother -- and such a mother! Text Box: your own sake, then for the sake of your companion(s).