St.
Augustine
City of God
Book
I, Chap. 33
That the overthrow of Rome has not corrected the vices
of the Romans.
Oh
infatuated men, what is this blindness, or rather madness, which
possesses you?... Depraved by good fortune, and not chastened by
adversity, what you desire in the restoration of a peaceful and secure
state, is not the tranquility of the commonwealth, but the impunity of
your own vicious luxury. Scipio wished you to be hard pressed by an
enemy, that you might not abandon yourselves to luxurious manners; but
so abandoned are you, that not even when crushed by the enemy is your
luxury repressed. You have missed the profit of your calamity; you have
been made most wretched, and have remained most profligate.
Book
XI, Chap. 1
Of this part of the work, wherein we begin to explain
the origin and end of the two cities.
The
City of God we speak of is the same to which testimony is borne by that
Scripture, which excels all the writings of all nations by its divine
authority, and has brought under its influence all kinds of minds, and
this not by a casual intellectual movement, but obviously by an express
providential arrangement. For there it is written, "Glorious things
are spoken of thee, O city of God." And in another psalm we read,
"Great is the Lord, and greatly to be praised in the city of our
God, in the mountain of His holiness, increasing the joy of the whole
earth." And, a little after, in the same psalm, "As we have
heard, so have we seen in the city of the Lord of hosts, in the city of
our God. God has established it for ever." And in another,
"There is a river the streams whereof shall make glad the city of
our God, the holy place of the tabernacles of the Most High. God is in
the midst of her, she shall not be moved." From these and similar
testimonies, all of which it were tedious to cite, we have learned that there is a city of God, and its Founder has inspired us with a love
which makes us covet its citizenship. To this Founder of the holy city
the citizens of the earthly city prefer their own gods, not knowing that
He is the God of gods, not of false, i.e., of impious and proud gods,
who, being deprived of His unchangeable and freely communicated light,
and so reduced to a kind of poverty-stricken power, eagerly grasp at
their own private privileges, and seek divine honors from their deluded
subjects; but of the pious and holy gods, who are better pleased to
submit themselves to one, than to subject many to themselves, and who
would rather worship God than be worshipped as God. But to the enemies
of this city we have replied in the ten preceding books, according to
our ability and the help afforded by our Lord and King. Now, recognizing
what is expected of me, and not unmindful of my promise, and relying,
too, on the same succor, I will endeavor to treat of the origin, and
progress, and deserved destinies of the two cities (the earthly and the
heavenly, to wit), which, as we said, are in this present world
commingled, and as it were entangled together. And, first, I will
explain how the foundations of these two cities were originally laid, in
the difference that arose among the angels.
Book
XIV, Chap. 28
Of the nature of the two cities, the earthly and the
heavenly.
Accordingly,
two cities have been formed by two loves: the earthly by the love of
self, even to the contempt of God; the heavenly by the love of God, even
to the contempt of self. The former, in a word, glories in itself, the
latter in the Lord. For the one seeks glory from men; but the greatest
glory of the other is God, the witness of conscience. The one lifts up
its head in its own glory; the other says to its God, "Thou art my
glory, and the lifter up of mine head." In the one, the princes and
the nations it subdues are ruled by the love of ruling; in the other,
the princes and the subjects serve one another in love, the latter
obeying, while the former take thought for all. The one delights in its
own strength, represented in the persons of its rulers; the other says
to its God, "I will love Thee, O Lord, my strength." And
therefore the wise men of the one city, living according to man, have
sought for profit to their own bodies or souls, or both, and those who
have known God "glorified Him not as God, neither were thankful,
but became vain in their imaginations, and their foolish heart was
darkened; professing themselves to be wise,"--that is, glorying in
their own wisdom, and being possessed by pride,--"they became
fools, and changed the glory of the incorruptible God into an image made
like to corruptible man, and to birds, and four-footed beasts, and
creeping things." For they were either leaders or followers of the
people in adoring images, "and worshipped and served the creature
more than the Creator, who is blessed for ever." But in the other
city there is no human wisdom, but only godliness, which offers due
worship to the true God, and looks for its reward in the society of the
saints, of holy angels as well as holy men, "that God may be all in
all."
BOOK
XV
CHAPTER
1 -- OF THE TWO LINES OF THE HUMAN RACE WHICH FROM FIRST TO LAST DIVIDE
IT.
Of
the bliss of Paradise, of Paradise itself, and of the life of our first
parents there, and of their sin and punishment, many have thought much,
spoken much, written much. We ourselves, too, have spoken of these
things in the foregoing books, and have written either what we read in
the Holy Scriptures, or what we could reasonably deduce from them. And
were we to enter into a more detailed investigation of these matters, an
endless number of endless questions would arise, which would involve us
in a larger work than the present occasion admits. We cannot be expected
to find room for replying to every question that may be started by
unoccupied and captious men, who are ever more ready to ask questions
than capable of understanding the answer. Yet I trust we have already
done justice to these great and difficult questions regarding the
beginning of the world, or of the soul, or of the human race itself.
This race we have distributed into two parts, the one consisting of those
who live according to man, the other of those who live according
to God. And these we also mystically call the two cities, or the two
communities of men, of which the one is predestined to reign eternally
with God, and the other to suffer eternal punishment with the devil.
This, however, is their end, and of it we are to speak afterwards. At
present, as we have said enough about their origin, whether among the
angels, whose numbers we know not, or in the two first human beings, it
seems suitable to attempt an account of their career, from the time when
our two first parents began to propagate the race until all human
generation shall cease. For this whole time or world-age [history],
in which the dying give place and those who are born succeed, is the
career of these two cities concerning which we treat.
Of
these two first parents of the human race, then, Cain was the
first-born, and he belonged to the city of men; after him was born Abel,
who belonged to the city of God. For as in the individual the truth of
the apostle's statement is discerned, "that is not first which is
spiritual, but that which is natural, and afterward that which is
spiritual," whence it comes to pass that each man, being derived from a condemned stock, is first
of all born of Adam evil and carnal, and becomes good and spiritual only
afterwards, when he is grafted into Christ by regeneration: so
was it in the human race as a whole. When these two cities began to run
their course by a series of deaths and births, the citizen of this world
was the first-born, and
after him the stranger in this world, the citizen of the city of God,
predestinated by grace, elected by grace, by grace a stranger below, and
by grace a citizen above. By grace -- for so far as regards
himself he is sprung from the same mass, all of which is condemned in
its origin: but God, like a potter (for this comparison is introduced by
the apostle judiciously, and not without thought), of the same lump made
one vessel to honor, another to dishonor. But first the vessel to
dishonor was made, and after it another to honor. For in each
individual, as I have already said, there is first of all that which is
reprobate, that from which we must begin, but in which we need not
necessarily remain; afterwards is that which is well-approved, to which
we may by advancing attain, and in which, when we have reached it we may
abide. Not, indeed, that every wicked man shall be good, but that no one
will be good who was not first of all wicked but the sooner any one
becomes a good man, the more speedily does he receive this title, and
abolish the old name in the new. Accordingly, it is recorded of Cain
that he built a city, but Abel, being a sojourner, built none. For the
city of the saints is above, although here below it begets citizens, in
whom it sojourns till the time of its reign arrives, when it shall
gather together all in the day of the resurrection; and then shall the
promised kingdom be given to them, in which they shall reign with their
Prince, the King of the ages, time without end.
CHAPTER 14
-- CONCERNING THE ERADICATION OF THE LOVE OF HUMAN PRAISE, BECAUSE ALL
THE GLORY OF THE RIGHTEOUS IS IN GOD.
It is,
therefore, doubtless far better to resist this desire than to yield to
it, for the purer one is from this defilement, the liker is he to God;
and, though this vice be not thoroughly eradicated from his heart -- for
it does not cease to tempt even the minds of those who are making good
progress in virtue -- at any rate, let
the desire of glory be surpassed by the love of righteousness, so
that, if there be seen anywhere "lying neglected things which are
generally discredited," if they are good, if they are right, even
the love of human praise may blush and yield to the love of truth. For
so hostile is this vice to pious faith, if the love of glory be greater
in the heart than the fear or love of God, that the Lord said, "How
can ye believe, who look for glory from one another, and do not seek the
glory which is from God alone?" Also, concerning some who had
believed on Him, but were afraid to confess Him openly, the evangelist
says, "They loved the praise of men more than the praise of
God;" which did not the holy apostles, who, when they proclaimed
the name of Christ in those places where it was not only discredited,
and therefore neglected -- according as Cicero says, "Those things
are always neglected which are generally discredited," -- but was
even held in the utmost detestation, holding to what they had heard from
the Good Master, who was also the physician of minds, "If any one
shall deny me before men, him will I also deny before my Father who is
in heaven, and before the angels of God," amidst maledictions and
reproaches, and most grievous persecutions and cruel punishments, were
not deterred from the preaching of human salvation by the noise of human
indignation. And when, as they did and spake divine things, and lived
divine lives, conquering, as it were, hard hearts, and introducing into
them the peace of righteousness, great glory followed them in the church
of Christ, they did not rest in that as in the end of their virtue, but,
referring that glory itself to the glory of God, by whose grace they
were what they were, they sought to kindle, also by that same flame, the
minds of those for whose good they con-suited, to the love of Him, by
whom they could be made to be what they themselves were. For their
Master had taught them not to seek to be good for the sake of human
glory, saying, "Take heed that ye do not your righteousness before
men to be seen of them, or otherwise ye shall not have a reward from
your Father who is in heaven." But again, lest, understanding this
wrongly, they should, through fear of pleasing men, be less useful
through concealing their goodness, showing for what end they ought to
make it known, He says, "Let
your works shine before men, that they may see your good deeds, and
glorify your Father who is in heaven." Not, observe,
"that ye may be seen by them, that is, in order that their eyes may
be directed upon you," -- for of yourselves ye are, nothing -- but
"that they may glorify your Father who is in heaven," by
fixing their regards on whom they may become such as ye are. These the
martyrs followed, who surpassed the Scaevolas, and the Curtiuses, and
the Deciuses, both in true virtue, because in true piety, and also in
the greatness of their number. But since those Romans were in an earthly
city, and had before them, as the end of all the offices undertaken in
its behalf, its safety, and a kingdom, not in heaven, but in earth --
not in the sphere of eternal life, but in the sphere of demise and
succession, where the dead are succeeded by the dying -- what else but
glory should they love, by which they wished even after death to live in
the mouths of their admirers?
Book
V, Chap. 15
Concerning the temporal reward which God granted to
the virtues of the Romans.
...For as to those who seem to do some
good that they may receive glory from men, the Lord also says,
"Verily I say unto you, they have received their reward."
So also these despised their own private affairs for the sake of the
republic, and for its treasury resisted avarice, consulted for the good
of their country with a spirit of freedom, addicted neither to what
their laws pronounced to be crime nor to lust. By all these acts, as by
the true way, they pressed forward to honors, power, and glory; they
were honored among almost all nations; they imposed the laws of their
empire upon many nations; and at this day, both in literature and
history, they are glorious among almost all nations. There is no reason
why they should complain against the justice of the supreme and true
God,--"they have received their reward."
Book
V, Chap. 16
Concerning the reward of the holy citizens of the
celestial city, to whom the example of the virtues of the Romans are
useful.
But
the reward of the saints is far different, who even here endured
reproaches for that city of God which is hateful to the lovers of this
world. That city is eternal. There none are born, for none die. There is
true and full felicity,--not a goddess, but a gift of God. Thence we
receive the pledge of faith whilst on our pilgrimage we sigh for its
beauty. There rises not the sun on the good and the evil, but the Sun of
Righteousness protects the good alone. There no great industry shall be
expended to enrich the public treasury by suffering privations at home,
for there is the common treasury of truth. And, therefore, it was not
only for the sake of recompensing the citizens of Rome that her empire
and glory had been so signally extended, but also that the citizens of
that eternal city, during their pilgrimage here, might diligently and
soberly contemplate these examples, and see what a love they owe to the
supernal country on account of life eternal, if the terrestrial country
was so much beloved by its citizens on account of human glory.
CHAPTER 4 --
OF THE CONFLICT AND PEACE OF THE EARTHLY CITY.
But the earthly
city, which shall not be everlasting (for it will no longer be a city
when it has been committed to the extreme penalty), has its good in this
world, and rejoices in it with such joy as such things can afford. But
as this is not a good which can discharge its devotees of all
distresses, this city is often divided against itself by litigations,
wars, quarrels, and such victories as are either life-destroying or
short-lived. For each part of it that arms against another part of it
seeks to triumph over the nations through itself in bondage to vice. If,
when it has conquered, it is inflated with pride, its victory is
life-destroying; but if it turns its thoughts upon the common casualties
of our mortal condition, and is rather anxious concerning the disasters
that may befall it than elated with the successes already achieved, this
victory, though of a higher kind, is still only shot-lived; for it
cannot abidingly rule over those whom it has victoriously subjugated.
But the things
which this city desires cannot justly be said to be evil, for it is
itself, in its own kind, better than all other human good. For it
desires earthly peace for the sake of enjoying earthly goods, and it
makes war in order to attain to this peace; since, if it has
conquered, and there remains no one to resist it, it enjoys a peace
which it had not while there were opposing parties who contested for the
enjoyment of those things which were too small to satisfy both. This
peace is purchased by toilsome wars; it is obtained by what they style a
glorious victory. Now, when victory remains with the party which had the
juster cause, who hesitates to congratulate the victor, and style it a
desirable peace? These things, then, are good things, and without doubt
the gifts of God. But if they neglect the better things of the heavenly
city, which are secured by eternal victory and peace never-ending, and
so inordinately covet these present good things that they believe them
to be the only desirable things, or love them better than those things
which are believed to be better -- if this be so, then it is necessary
that misery follow and ever increase.
Book
XIX, Chap. 4
What the Christians believe regarding the Supreme Good
and Evil, in opposition to the philosophers, who have maintained that
the Supreme Good is in themselves.
If,
then, we be asked what the city of God has to say upon these points,
and, in the first place, what its opinion regarding the supreme good and
evil is, it will reply that life eternal is the supreme good, death
eternal the supreme evil, and that to obtain the one and escape the
other we must live rightly. And thus it is written, "The just lives
by faith," for we do not as yet see our good, and must therefore
live by faith; neither have we in ourselves power to live rightly, but
can do so only if He who has given us faith to believe in His help do
help us when we believe and pray. As
for those who have supposed that the sovereign good and evil are to be
found in this life, and have placed it either in the soul or the body,
or in both, or, to speak more explicitly, either in pleasure or in
virtue, or in both; in repose or in virtue, or in both; in
pleasure and repose, or in virtue, or in all combined; in the primary
objects of nature, or in virtue, or in both,--all these have, with a
marvelous shallowness, sought to find their blessedness in this life and
in themselves. Contempt has been poured upon such ideas by the Truth,
saying by the prophet, "The Lord knoweth the thoughts of men"
(or, as the Apostle Paul cites the passage, "The Lord knoweth the
thoughts of the wise") "that they are vain."
For
what flood of eloquence can suffice to detail the miseries of this
life?...
Book
XIX, Chap. 17
What produces peace, and what discord, between the
heavenly and earthly cities.
But
the families which do not live by faith seek their peace in the earthly
advantages of this life; while the families which live by faith look for
those eternal blessings which are promised, and use as pilgrims such
advantages of time and of earth as do not fascinate and divert them from
God, but rather aid them to endure with greater ease, and to keep down
the number of those burdens of the corruptible body which weigh upon the
soul. Thus the things necessary for this mortal life are
used by both kinds of men and families alike, but each has its own
peculiar and widely different aim in using them. The earthly
city, which does not live by faith, seeks an earthly peace, and the end
it proposes, in the well-ordered concord of civic obedience and rule, is
the combination of men's wills to attain the things which are helpful to
this life. The
heavenly city, or rather the part of it which sojourns on earth and
lives by faith, makes use of this peace only because it must, until this
mortal condition which necessitates it shall pass away.
Consequently, so long as it lives like a captive and a stranger in the
earthly city, though it has already received the promise of redemption,
and the gift of the Spirit as the earnest of it, it makes no scruple to
obey the laws of the earthly city, whereby the things necessary for the
maintenance of this mortal life are administered; and thus, as this life
is common to both cities, so there is a harmony between them in regard
to what belongs to it.
But,
as the earthly city has had some philosophers whose doctrine is
condemned by the divine teaching, and who, being deceived either by
their own conjectures or by demons, supposed that many gods must be
invited to take an interest in human affairs, and assigned to each a
separate function and a separate department,--to one the body, to
another the soul; and in the body itself, to one the head, to another
the neck, and each of the other members to one of the gods; and in like
manner, in the soul, to one god the natural capacity was assigned, to
another education, to another anger, to another lust; and so the various
affairs of life were assigned,--cattle to one, corn to another, wine to
another, oil to another, the woods to another, money to another,
navigation to another, wars and victories to another, marriages to
another, births and fecundity to another, and other things to other
gods: and as the celestial city, on the other hand, knew that one God
only was to be worshipped, and that to Him alone was due that service
which the Greeks call latreia, and which can be given only to a
god, it has come to pass that the two cities could not have common laws
of religion, and that the heavenly city has been compelled in this
matter to dissent, and to become obnoxious to those who think
differently, and to stand the brunt of their anger and hatred and
persecutions, except in so far as the minds of their enemies have been
alarmed by the multitude of the Christians and quelled by the manifest
protection of God accorded to them.
This
heavenly city, then, while it sojourns on earth, calls citizens out of
all nations, and gathers together a society of pilgrims of all
languages, not scrupling about diversities in the manners, laws, and
institutions whereby earthly peace is secured and maintained, but
recognizing that, however various these are, they all tend to one and
the same end of earthly peace. It therefore is so far from rescinding
and abolishing these diversities, that it even preserves and adopts
them, so long only as no hindrance to the worship of the one supreme and
true God is thus introduced. Even the heavenly city, therefore, while in
its state of pilgrimage, avails itself of the peace of earth, and, so
far as it can without injuring faith and godliness, desires and
maintains a common agreement among men regarding the acquisition of the
necessaries of life, and makes this earthly peace bear upon the peace of
heaven; for this alone can be truly called and esteemed the peace of the
reasonable creatures, consisting as it does in the perfectly ordered and
harmonious enjoyment of God and of one another in God. When we shall
have reached that peace, this mortal life shall give place to one that
is eternal, and our body shall be no more this animal body which by its
corruption weighs down the soul, but a spiritual body feeling no want,
and in all its members subjected to the will. In its pilgrim state the
heavenly city possesses this peace by faith; and by this faith it lives
righteously when it refers to the attainment of that peace every good
action towards God and man; for the life of the city is a social life.
Book
VIII
CHAPTER 3 --
OF THE SOCRATIC PHILOSOPHY.
Socrates is
said to have been the first who directed the entire effort of philosophy
to the correction and regulation of manners, all who went before him
having expended their greatest efforts in the investigation of physical,
that is, natural phenomena. However, it seems to me that it cannot be
certainly discovered whether Socrates did this because he was wearied of
obscure and uncertain things, and so wished to direct his mind to the
discovery of something manifest and certain, which was necessary in
order to the obtaining of a blessed life -- that one great object toward
which the labor, vigilance, and industry of all philosophers seem to
have been directed -- or whether (as some yet more favorable to him
suppose) he did it because he was unwilling that minds defiled with
earthly desires should essay to raise themselves upward to divine
things. For he saw that the causes of things were sought for by them --
which causes he believed to be ultimately reducible to nothing else than
the will of the one true and supreme God -- and on this account he
thought they could only be comprehended by a purified mind; and
therefore that all diligence ought to be given to the purification of
the life by good morals, in order that the mind, delivered from the
depressing weight of lusts, might raise itself upward by its native
vigor to eternal things, and might, with purified understanding,
contemplate that nature which is incorporeal and unchangeable light,
where live the causes of all created natures. It is evident, however,
that he hunted out and pursued, with a wonderful pleasantness of style
and argument, and with a most pointed and insinuating urbanity, the
foolishness of ignorant men, who thought that they knew this or that --
sometimes confessing his own ignorance, and sometimes dissimulating his
knowledge, even in those very moral questions to which he seems to have
directed the whole force of his mind. And hence there arose hostility
against him, which ended in his being calumniously impeached, and
condemned to death. Afterwards, however, that very city of the
Athenians, which had publicly condemned him, did publicly bewail him --
the popular indignation having turned With such vehemence on his
accusers, that one of them perished by the violence of the multitude,
whilst the other only escaped a like punishment by voluntary and
perpetual exile.
Illustrious,
therefore, both in his life and in his death, Socrates left very many
disciples of his philosophy, who vied with one another in desire for
proficiency in handling those moral questions which concern the chief
good (summum bonum), the possession of which can make a man blessed; and
because, in the
disputations of Socrates, where he raises all manner of questions, makes
assertions, and then demolishes them, it did not evidently appear what
he held to be the chief good, every one took from these disputations
what pleased him best, and every one placed the final good in whatever
it appeared to himself to consist. Now, that which is called the
final good is that at which, when one has arrived, he is blessed. But so
diverse were the opinions held by those followers of Socrates concerning
this final good, that (a thing scarcely to be credited with respect to
the followers of one master) some placed the chief good in pleasure, as
Aristippus, others in virtue, as Antisthenes. Indeed, it were tedious to
recount the various opinions of various disciples.
CHAPTER 4 --
CONCERNING PLATO, THE CHIEF AMONG THE DISCIPLES OF SOCRATES, AND HIS
THREEFOLD DIVISION OF PHILOSOPHY.
But, among the
disciples of Socrates, Plato was the one who shone with a glory which
far excelled that of the others, and who not unjustly eclipsed them all.
By birth, an Athenian of honorable parentage, he far surpassed his
fellow-disciples in natural endowments, of which he was possessed in a
wonderful degree. Yet, deeming himself and the Socratic discipline far
from sufficient for bringing philosophy to perfection, he traveled as
extensively as he was able, going to every place famed for the
cultivation of any science of which he could make himself master. Thus
he learned from the Egyptians whatever they held and taught as
important; and from Egypt, passing into those parts of Italy which were
filled with the fame of the Pythagoreans, he mastered, with the greatest
facility, and under the most eminent teachers, all the Italic philosophy
which was then in vogue. And, as he had a peculiar love for his master
Socrates, he made him the speaker in all his dialogues, putting into his
mouth whatever he had learned, either from others, or from the efforts
of his own powerful intellect, tempering even his moral disputations
with the grace and politeness of the Socratic style. And, as the study
of wisdom consists in action and contemplation, so that one part of it
may be called active, and the other contemplative -- the active part
having reference to the conduct of life, that is, to the regulation of
morals, and the contemplative part to the investigation into the causes
of nature and into pure truth -- Socrates is said to have excelled in
the active part of that study, while Pythagoras gave more attention to
its contemplative part, on which he brought to bear all the force of his
great intellect. To Plato is given the praise of having perfected
philosophy by combining both parts into one. He then divides it into
three parts -- the first moral, which is chiefly occupied with action;
the second natural, of which the object is contemplation; and the third
rational, which discriminates between the true and the false. And though
this last is necessary both to action and contemplation, it is
contemplation, nevertheless, which lays peculiar claim to the office of
investigating the nature of truth. Thus this tripartite division is not
contrary to that which made the study of wisdom to consist in action and
contemplation. Now, as to what Plato thought with respect to each of
these parts -- that is, what he believed to be the end of all actions,
the cause of all natures, and the light of all intelligences -- it would
be a question too long to discuss, and about which we ought not to make
any rash affirmation. For, as Plato liked and constantly affected the
well-known method of his master Socrates, namely, that of dissimulating
his knowledge or his opinions, it is not easy to discover dearly what he
himself thought on various matters, any more than it is to discover what
were the real opinions of Socrates. We must, nevertheless, insert into
our work certain of those opinions which he expresses in his writings,
whether he himself uttered them, or narrates them as expressed by
others, and seems himself to approve of -- opinions sometimes favorable
to the true religion, which our faith takes up and defends, and
sometimes contrary to it, as, for example, in the questions concerning
the existence of one God or of many, as it relates to the truly blessed
life which is to be after death. For those who are praised as having
most closely followed Plato, who is justly preferred to all the other
philosophers of the Gentiles, and who are said to have manifested the
greatest acuteness in understanding him, do perhaps entertain such an
idea of God as to admit that in Him are to be found
the cause of existence, the ultimate reason for the understanding, and
the end in reference to which the whole life is to be regulated.
Of which three things, the first is understood to pertain to the
natural, the second to the rational, and the third to the moral part of
philosophy. For if man has been so created as to attain, through that
which is most excellent in him, to that which excels all things -- that
is, to the one true and absolutely good God, without whom no nature
exists, no doctrine instructs, no exercise profits -- let Him be sought
in whom all things are secure to us, let Him be discovered in whom all
truth becomes certain to us, let Him be loved in whom all becomes right
to us.
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