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Works Augustine of Hippo (354-430) Epistulae (CCEL) Letters of St. Augustin
Third Division.
Letter CLXV.

2.

I have long wished to begin the volume of Ezekiel, and fulfil a promise frequently made to studious readers; but at the time when I had just begun to dictate the proposed exposition, my mind was so much agitated by the devastation of the western provinces of the empire, and especially by the sack of Rome itself by the barbarians, that, to use a common proverbial phrase, I scarcely knew my own name; and for a long while I was silent, knowing that it was a time for tears. Moreover when I had, in the course of this year, prepared three books of the Commentary, a sudden furious invasion of the barbarous tribes mentioned by your Virgil as "the widely roaming Barcaei," 1 and by sacred Scripture in the words concerning Ishmael, "He shall dwell in the presence of his brethren," 2 swept over the whole of Egypt, Palestine, Phenice, and Syria, carrying all before them with the vehemence of a mighty torrent, so that it was only with the greatest difficulty that we were enabled, by the mercy of Christ, to escape their hands. But if, as a famous orator has said, "Laws are silent amid the clash of arms," 3 how much more may this be said of scriptural studies, which demand a multitude of books and silence, together with uninterrupted diligence of amanuenses, and especially the enjoyment of tranquillity and leisure by those who dictate! I have accordingly sent two books to my holy daughter Fabiola, of which, if you wish copies, you may borrow them from her. Through lack of time I have been unable to transcribe others; when you have read these, and have seen the portico, as it were, you may easily conjecture what the house itself is designed to be. But I trust in the mercy of God, who has helped me in the very difficult commencement of the foresaid work, that He will help me also in the predictions concerning the wars of Gog and Magog, which occupy the last division but one of the prophecy, 4 and in the concluding portion itself, describing the building, the details, and the proportions of that most holy and mysterious temple. 5


  1. "Lateque vagantes Barcaei."--Virg. Aeneid, iv. 43. ↩

  2. Gen. xvi. 12. ↩

  3. Cicero pro Milone: "Leges inter arma silent." ↩

  4. Ezek. ch. xxxviii.-xxxix. ↩

  5. Ibid. ch. xl.-xliii. ↩

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