Augustine Confessions - Latin
About the WORK: One of the most influential spiritual classics ever written, this is in many ways an odd work. It starts with the question of how we can praise God, goes through a retrospective on how God had been in his life, a philosophical discussion about how memory works, and then exegesis of Genesis - all in prayer to God. If you have never experienced this work, you should...
About the TEXT: I release this in the fear that this quick effort will delay a the edition that this text deserves. The Latin is from http://www9.georgetown.edu/faculty/jod/latinconf/latinconf.html where Dr. O'Donnell describes it as "a freeware
edition (I cannot yet confirm exactly which edition this represents; best
indications suggest that it is Knöll's editio minor of 1898)
which I found on another WWW site" I did a quick cut and paste and then tagged it to be a target of the relevant datatypes. Unfortunately it is NOT tagged with the many scriptural and classical quotations and allusions that Augustine makes, which would be in a proper edition.
It would be wonderful if the edition and Commentary that O'Donnell made, which is freely available on the web at http://www.stoa.org/hippo/ were made into a Logos resource, but while freely available, it is copyrighted.
SDG
Ken McGuire
The Gospel is not ... a "new law," on the contrary, ... a "new life." - William Julius Mann
L8 Anglican, Lutheran and Orthodox Silver, Reformed Starter, Academic Essentials
L7 Lutheran Gold, Anglican Bronze
Comments
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It would be wonderful if the edition and Commentary that O'Donnell made, which is freely available on the web at http://www.stoa.org/hippo/ were made into a Logos resource, but while freely available, it is copyrighted.
SDG
Wow, Ken! Am so pleased with this "offering"! Thank you very much! My Latin is coming back a wee bit lately; and I look forward to working my way through this document. I try to use Latin every day to see if there might be a resurrection of my ability with it ............ *smile*
Did you notice that Logos has the 95 Theses free yet for a least a couple of days yet? Reformation, I guess. You probably have it already??
I continue to remember you and your near and dear ones in prayer now and again. I really don't know a lot about your situation; however, what I do know is very pleasant! My own struggles have been difficult; and I am still hopeful that I can steadily improve in strength and endurance in my health issues. Right now I'm a bit antsy since my daughter and youngest son are engaged in a three week Odyssey and are now working their way back down to Katmandu, coming down from Mount Everest base camp. I certainly trust our gracious Lord and His Holy Angels; however, I'll feel a lot more comfortable once they make it back to civilization. Miracles still happen; and a minor one is that my son’s Blackberry carried somehow for miles upon miles and a signal carried to some communications tower, and we’ve heard twice from them on their trip. Impossible, but true…..
Hopefully one of these days I will get truly activiely involved in the FaithLife Groups. However, I’m pleased to share that Logos has now made me an MVP, and I have lots and lots to learn to serve well. Am very honoured …. Feel very humble! And … quite excited! I think I am the very oldest MVP, BTW! *smile*
Peace to you! And Always Joy in the Lord!
Philippians 4: 4 Rejoice in the Lord always; again I will say, Rejoice. 5 Let your reasonableness be known to everyone. The Lord is at hand..........
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Thank you Kenneth, much appreciated!
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With an assist from Bradley, this attached document has been updated so that the text is reported within Word as Latin. The language of text in the resource comes from the language applied to that text inside the Word document. (This lets you mix English, Latin, French, etc. in one resource.)
Now, with this copy of Confessions, if you right-click on a Latin word within the text and you have a Latin dictionary in your library (like Dictionary of Latin Forms currently FREE at logos.com), a right click on a word will show an option to go to the dictionary and look up the word.
If you want to make the change yourself to the original docx file uploaded by Kenneth, here is how: Select the Latin text in the Word document, on the Review tab choose Language > Set Proofing Language, then select Latin in the list. Do this for every block of Latin text.
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I thank you for the added functionality. In the past I had just set the language at the Personal Book compiler, and it does let me look up things in the Collins Latin Dictionary I had. I should probably update the other Latin texts I have put out there.
That said, when I compiled your version, I got MANY warnings, saying that Unknown Language - 'la-Latn'. But it works!
SDG
The Gospel is not ... a "new law," on the contrary, ... a "new life." - William Julius Mann
L8 Anglican, Lutheran and Orthodox Silver, Reformed Starter, Academic Essentials
L7 Lutheran Gold, Anglican Bronze
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Wow, Ken! Am so pleased with this "offering"! Thank you very much! My Latin is coming back a wee bit lately; and I look forward to working my way through this document. I try to use Latin every day to see if there might be a resurrection of my ability with it ............ *smile*
Have you noticed that selections of Augustine's epistles are in the Perseus collection?
george
gfsomselיְמֵי־שְׁנוֹתֵינוּ בָהֶם שִׁבְעִים שָׁנָה וְאִם בִּגְבוּרֹת שְׁמוֹנִים שָׁנָה וְרָהְבָּם עָמָל וָאָוֶן
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In the past I had just set the language at the Personal Book compiler
This is only used for filtering within the library, to create collections, etc. It does not let Logos recognize the text as a different language.
when I compiled your version, I got MANY warnings, saying that Unknown Language - 'la-Latn'.
I see that too! They are just warnings, I'll mention to Bradley. But it does work fine.
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Augustine divided his works into "Books", but those books are too long for anything like proper citations. And so people ever since have added subdivisions to his works to show the logical structure, as well as for convenient citations. The "standard" way of describing those subdivisions is "Chapters" and "Paragraphs". Both Chapters and Paragraphs are numbered consecutively by book, and so the information is a bit redundant between the two, and so some authors give both Chapter and Paragraph and others give either the Chapter or Paragraph. The original file designated the Chapters, and so I tagged it to that level. But some Logos links to this work are to the Paragraph...
And so, by referencing the text at http://www.thelatinlibrary.com/august.html (which is O'Donnell's Copyrighted one) I have added tags for the paragraphs to this freeware edition. The text itself remains unchanged from before. How the text is displayed in still the same - I did not insert actual paragraphs. But I did add tags to the text with the standard paragraph numbers.
SDG
Ken McGuire
The Gospel is not ... a "new law," on the contrary, ... a "new life." - William Julius Mann
L8 Anglican, Lutheran and Orthodox Silver, Reformed Starter, Academic Essentials
L7 Lutheran Gold, Anglican Bronze
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Thanks Ken.
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I also greatly appreciate this. If anyone has done more St. Augustine, or other Early Church Fathers, in original Greek and/or Latin in importable docx, and not yet posted it, please do so. God bless.
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Thanks!
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I also greatly appreciate this. If anyone has done more St. Augustine, or other Early Church Fathers, in original Greek and/or Latin in importable docx, and not yet posted it, please do so.
I am glad that you have found this to be useful. That said, I personally do not plan on releasing more church fathers in Greek or Latin. The ones I put up here I viewed as supplements to the Perseus texts Logos was literally giving away.
But Logos has expanded their offerings. Now lots of Loeb volumes are for sale. A few volumes of Migne are for sale, even if the rest of them seem stuck. Especially with my limited Greek and Latin, I have no desire to have Logos host questionable texts that compete with their own offerings.
The Gospel is not ... a "new law," on the contrary, ... a "new life." - William Julius Mann
L8 Anglican, Lutheran and Orthodox Silver, Reformed Starter, Academic Essentials
L7 Lutheran Gold, Anglican Bronze
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