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Œuvres Jérôme de Stridon (347-420) Epistolaes (CCEL) The Letters of St. Jerome
Letter LX. To Heliodorus.

9.

Another would perhaps describe how for his salvation you left the east and the desert and how you soothed me your dearest comrade by holding out hopes of a return: and all this that you might save, if possible, both your sister, then a widow with one little child, or, should she reject your counsels, at any rate your sweet little nephew. It was of him that I once used the prophetic words: “though your little nephew cling to your neck.” 1 Another, I say, would relate how while Nepotian was still in the service of the court, beneath his uniform and his brilliantly white linen, 2 his skin was chafed with sackcloth; how, while standing before the powers of this world, his lips were discoloured with fasting; how still in the uniform of one master he served another; and how he wore the sword-belt only that he might succour widows and wards, the afflicted and the unhappy. For my part I dislike men to delay the complete dedication of themselves to God. When I read of the centurion Cornelius 3 that he was a just man I immediately hear of his baptism.


  1. Letter XIV. § 2.  ↩

  2. For other allusions to a Roman officer’s uniform see Letters LXXIX. § 2 and CXVIII. § 1.  ↩

  3. Acts x .  ↩

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The Letters of St. Jerome

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