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“Palladius - on Didymus the Blind”
From Palladius, Historia Lausiaca, IV
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    Relevant 
    books 
 
    Hicks, Jonathan Douglas 
    (2024), Lectures on the Psalms (Ancient Christian Texts),  (IVP 
    Academic) 
     
    Hill 
    R. C. (2005), Didymus the Blind: Commentary on Zechariah (Fathers of the Church 
    111) 
  | 
 Very many indeed of the men and women who reached 
perfection in the Church of Alexandria were worthy (to inherit) the land of the 
meek. Among these was Didymus the blind author. I met him four times in all, 
visiting him at intervals during a period of ten years. He was 85 years old when 
he died. He was blind, having lost his sight at the age of four, so he told me, 
and he had never learned to read nor gone to school. (This was not necessary) 
for he had nature’s teacher ----his own conscience----strongly developed. He was 
adorned with such a gift of knowledge, that, so it was said, the passage of 
scripture was fulfilled in him: “The Lord maketh the blind wise.” For he 
interpreted the Old and New Testament word by word, and such attention did he 
pay to doctrine, setting out his exposition of it subtly yet surely, that he 
surpassed all the ancients in knowledge. Once when he tried to make me say a 
prayer in his cell and I was unwilling, he told me this story: “Into this cell 
Antony entered for the third time on a visit to me. I besought him to say a 
prayer and he instantly knelt down in the cell and did not make me repeat my 
words, giving me by his action a lesson in obedience. So if you want to follow 
in the steps of his life, as you seem to, since you are a solitary and living 
away from home to acquire virtue, lay aside your contentiousness.” And he told 
me this also: “As I was thinking one day about the life of the wretched Emperor 
Julian, how he was a persecutor, and was feeling dejected ----and by reason of 
my thoughts I had not tasted bread even up to late evening----it happened that 
as I sat in my seat I was overcome by sleep and I saw in a trance white horses 
running with riders and proclaiming: ‘Tell Didymus, to-day at the seventh hour 
Julian died. Rise then and eat,’ they said, ‘and send to Athanasius the bishop, 
that he too may know,’ And I marked,” he said, “the hour and month and week and 
day, and it was found to be so.”  | 
    
  
 
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original Greek text
Palladius
Didymus the Blind
Cuthbert Butler Greek text
Lowther Clarke English translation