Sancti Eusebii Hieronymi Opera Omnia (tomus primus)
| Authors | Jerome, St. Migne, Jacques-Paul, 1800-1875 |
| Series | Patrologiae Cursus Completus: Series Latina [22.0] |
| Publisher | Apud Antonium Hierat, & Ioannem Gymnicum |
| Published | 16 gen 1845 |
| Date | 16 gen 2019 |
| Languages | lat |
| Identifiers | url: http://patristica.net/latina/, uri: https://archive.org/details/patrologiaecurs165unkngoog |
| Formats | DJVU |
Description
contains his famous Letter 22 to Eustochium (cols. 394-455, DjVu pp. 254-70), in which he calls virginity a "superbiam sanctam" (ยง16, DjVu p. 259).
Vizmanos p. 536 (DjVu p. 558) n. 16 mentions that St. Jerome wrote a commentary on Ps. 44 (Epist. 45 ad Principiam , PL 22, 622-39, DjVu pp. 370-9), but he was unable to write one on the Song of Songs due to sickness (sickness/death also prevented St. Thomas Aquinas from writing one).
his Letter 121 to Algasia q. 11 addresses 2 Thessalonians 2:3-4 (that Antichrist "sitteth in the temple of God"), cols. 1035-8, DjVu pp. 581-2
Ep. 106 on his translation philosophy/methodology is on DjVu pp. 478-493
Ep. 121.4 (DjVu pp. 570ff.) are on Mt. 24:19-20 ("woe to them who give suck in those days [of the Antichrist]").
Ep. 108, epitaph on death of St. Paula written to console her daughter St. Eustochium: DjVu pp. 497ff.
Ep. 45 (DjVu pp. 297-9): Ep. 45 to Asella:
It often happened that I found myself surrounded by virgins. To some of them I interpreted the sacred books as well as I was able. Our studies effected continuous communication which soon ripened into intimacy and then produced mutual confidence. If they [critics] have ever seen anything in my conduct unbecoming a Christian, let them say it! ... No, my sex was my only crime, and even on this score I am not attacked except when there is talk of Paula coming to Jerusalem.... Of all the ladies in Rome, only one had the power to subdue me, and that one was Paula. She mourned, fasted, was squalid with dirt, had eyes dim from weeping ... the only woman who stole my fancy [Nulla me potuit alia delectare, nisi illa] was one whom I had not even seen at table. But as I began to revere, respect, and venerate her as her outstanding chastity deserved, all my former virtues forsook me on the spot.