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Book of Rememberance
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as wee cannot enlighten our selves so wee cannot satisfie our selves but in thy light O Lord shall wee see light. psa 36.9 [S] Aust what shall I say in these cases. when the soule is not capable or refuseth to be comforted. when it is so wholy darkned that she cannot deserne the light neither it have any unlesse it be the first enlightened by thee which art the light thereof, who when the confused chaos of this world was, said. Let there be light and there was light. O light so lighten my darknes. that being illuminated I may deserne those things which of thee, that cleaving to thee I may walke in thy light, and be still pleased to say unto my soule that thou art my salvation,

And when satan could not overcome me but that I utterly hated all rebellious and blasfemus thoughts against my maker; yet then he would tempt me to curse my owne father. this also I utterly hated. for I not onely knew that by the Law of God it deserved death. \Exo 21.17/ but also that my fathers deserts was farr from any ill on my part. Thou Lord I trust wilt reward him for his tender dealing (or affection) towards /with\ me in the resurrection of the just. many times after this I was tempted to curse /and wish evill to\ my selfe. I confesse to my too much [yeelding] not that I said it, but that I did not resist the thoughts or temtations of it so much as I should have done yee\l/ding to this whereby it appeared that I loved my frinds better then my selfe. but when /after\ I considered I thought I had little cause to yeeld to this for I was ill enough already. and I suppose it was the longer before I could gett of it because I had not so much hart to resist for my owne good. at last a verse (of mr quarleses ) came /often\ in my mind, wee must love the building for the builders sake66. therefore I thought I had not so much cause to neglect soule or bodymy selfe as my weaknesse would have yealed unto. And now not onely my externall parts was troubled. but also thereby my externall was weakned. for my soule being the and though somtimes I was stirred to [praise] thee for gifts of nature and others, yet still to often I was proud [of] them though now I had lesse cause and of those rages of my shame which tho-ugh [cosly] cam short of naturall indowment. but since I had rather they had [bin] [plainer] that I [had] not offended thee. yet pardon the abuse of that gifte. life and vigour of my body. had not that strength to make me a peare so lively and freash as before, when thou correctest man for sinne \and excesses/ thou wakest his beauty to vanish etc and as if \my/ misery had it selfe had not bine enough. I agmented it being often ready to relent with the thoughts of what I had endured whereby my foolish h\e/art was weakened, but it had bine better and it may \be/ I had bine sooner well if I had then rather relented for my sinnes, for corrections are for our amendment and benefit, and taking this effect. the rememberance /of them\. ought to make me rejoyce because they are of thy love. but I was cast downe with the sence of my misery and I thought I had endured all mane\r/ of temptations. but impurity (which since I have bene tempted to) and to make away my selfe, as my sister was tempted to make an end of a miserable life having so much illnes of mind and body as she had, and as \she/ confessed to me she was tempted to make me away sleeping by her. yet she said through thy grace my God which kept her from it. that she laid aside those things whereby she might (divers times) have done evill. therefore not onely my life was preserved but also her owne soule through thy goodnesse. and as \she/ confessed to me she found much comfort in my Brother who I beleeve was not free from the suggestions of satan but being a man had more strenght and learning to withstand them and to comfort her. and being most inward with him for she would tell me she was most like him. and that she loved him better then she did me. but I said I was contented she should. I knew she loved me well too, and my selfe loved her*

65. The reference to Augustine is obscure, but possibly refers to the discussion of Platonic views of light in Book 7 chapter 9 of the Confessions.
66. The quotation is from Elegy 7, line 12.