THE SEVEN BOOKS OF ARNOBIUS AGAINST THE HEATHEN. BOOK IV
BOOK IV.
1. We would ask you, and you above all, O Romans, lords and princes of the
world, whether you think that Piety, Concord, Safety, Honour, Virtue,
Happiness, and other such names, to which we see you rear(1) altars and splendid
temples, have divine power, and live in heaven?(2) or, as is usual, have you classed
them with the deities merely for form's sake, because we desire and wish these
blessings to fall to our lot? For if, while you think them empty names without
any substance, you yet deify them with divine honours,(3) you will have to
consider whether that is a childish frolic, or tends to bring your deities into
contempt,(4) when you make equal, and add to their number vain and feigned names.
But if you have loaded them with temples and couches, holding with more
assurance that these, too, are deities, we pray you to teach us in our ignorance, by
what course, in what way, Victory, Peace, Equity, and the others mentioned among
the gods, can be understood to be gods, to belong to the assembly of the
immortals?
2. For we--but, perhaps, you would rob and deprive us of
common-sense--feel and perceive that none of these has divine power, or possesses a form of its
own;(5) but that, on the contrary, they are the excellence of manhood,(6) the
safety of the safe, the honour of the respected, the victory of the conqueror,
the harmony of the allied, the piety of the pious, the recollection of the
observant, the good fortune, indeed, of him who lives happily and without exciting
any ill-feeling. Now it is easy to perceive that, in speaking thus, we speak
most reasonably when we observe(7) the contrary qualities opposed to them,
misfortune, discord, forgetfulness, injustice, impiety, baseness of spirit, and
unfortunate(8) weakness of body. For as these things happen accidentally, and(9)
depend on human acts and chance moods, so their contraries, named(10) after more
agreeable qualities, must be found in others; and from these, originating in this
wise, have arisen those invented names.
3. With regard, indeed, to your bringing forward to us other bands of
unknown(11) gods, we cannot determine whether you do that seriously, and from a
belief in its certainty; or, merely playing with empty fictions, abandon
yourselves to an unbridled imagination. The goddess Luperca, you tell us on the
authority of Varro, was named because the fierce wolf spared the exposed childrenˇ Was
that goddess, then, disclosed, not by her own power, but by the course of
events? and was it only after the wild beast restrained its cruel teeth, that she
both began to be herself and was marked by(12) her name? or if she was already a
goddess long before the birth of Romulus and his brother, show us what was her
name and title. Praestana was named, according to you, because, in throwing the
javelin, Quirinus excelled all in strength;(13) and the goddess Panda, or
Pantica, was named because Titus Tatius was allowed to open up and make passable a
road, that he might take the Capitoline. Before these events, then, had the
deities never existed? and if Romulus had not held the first place in casting the
javelin, and if the Sabine king had been unable to take the Tarpeian rock,
would there be no Pantica, no Praestana? And if you say that they(1) existed before
that which gave rise to their name, a question which has been discussed in a
preceding section,(2) tell us also what they were called.
4. Pellonia is a goddess mighty to drive back enemies. Whose enemies, say,
if it is convenient? Opposing armies meet, and fighting together, hand to
hand, decide the battle; and to one this side, to another that, is hostile. Whom,
then, will Pellonia turn to flight, since on both sides there will be fighting?
or in favour of whom will she incline, seeing that she should afford to both
sides the might and services of her name? But if she indeed(3) did so, that is,
if she gave her good-will and favour to both sides, she would destroy the
meaning of her name, which was formed with regard to the beating back of one side.
But you will perhaps say, She is goddess of the Romans only, and, being on the
side of the Quirites alone, is ever ready graciously to help them.(4) We wish,
indeed, that it were so, for we like the name; but it is a very doubtful matter.
What! do the Romans have gods to themselves, who do not help(5) other nations?
and how can they be gods, if they do not exercise their divine power
impartially towards all nations everywhere? and where, I pray you, was this goddess
Pellonia long ago, when the national honour was brought under the yoke at the
Caudine Forks? when at the Trasimene lake the streams ran with blood? when the plains
of Diomede(6) were heaped up with dead Romans when a thousand other blows were
sustained in countless disastrous battles? Was she snoring and sleeping;(7)
or, as the base often do, had she deserted to the enemies' camp?
5. The sinister deities preside over the regions on the left hand only,
and are opposed to those(8) on the right. But with what reason this is said, or
with what meaning, we do not understand ourselves; and we are sure that you
cannot in any degree cause it to be clearly and generally understood.(9) For in the
first place, indeed, the world itself has in itself neither right nor left
neither upper nor under regions, neither fore nor after parts. For whatever is
round, and bounded on every side by the circumference(10) of a solid sphere, has
no beginning, no end; where there is no end and beginning, no part can have(11)
its own name and form the beginning. Therefore, when we say, This is the right,
and that the left side, we do not refer to anything(12) in the world, which is
everywhere very much the same, but to our own place and position, we being(13)
so formed that we speak of some things as on our right hand, of others as on
our left; and yet these very things which we name left, and the others which we
name right, have in us no continuance, no fixedness, but take their forms from
our sides, just as chance, and the accident of the moment, may have placed us.
If I look towards the rising sun, the north pole and the north are on my left
hand; and if I turn my face thither, the west will be on my left, for it will be
regarded as behind the sun's back. But, again, if I turn my eyes to the region
of the west, the wind and country of the south are now said to be on(14) my
left. And if I am turned to this side by the necessary business of the moment,
the result is, that the east is said to be on the left, owing to a further change
of position,(15)--from which it can be very easily seen that nothing is either
on our right or on our left by nature, but from position, time,(16) and
according as our bodily position with regard to surrounding objects has been taken
up. But in this case, by what means, in what way, will there be gods of the
regions of the left, when it is clear that the same regions are at one time on the
right, at another on the left? or what have the regions of the right done to the
immortal gods, to deserve that they should be without any to care for them,
while they have ordained that these should be fortunate, and ever accompanied by
lucky omens?
6. Lateranus,(17) as you say, is the god and genius of hearths, and
received this name because men build that kind of fireplace of unbaked bricks. What
then? if hearths were made of baked clay, or any other material whatever, will
they have no genii? and will Lateranus, whoever he is, abandon his duty as
guardian, because the kingdom which he possesses has not been formed of bricks of
clay? And for what purpose,(18) I ask, has that god received the charge of
hearths? He runs about the kitchens of men, examining and discovering with what kinds
of wood the heat in their fires is produced; he gives strength(1) to earthen
vessels that they may not fly in pieces, overcome by the violence of the flames;
he sees that the flavour of unspoilt dainties reaches the taste of the palate
with their own pleasantness, and acts the part of a taster, and tries whether
the sauces have been rightly prepared. Is not this unseemly, nay--to speak with
more truth--disgraceful, impious, to introduce some pretended deities for this
only, not to do them reverence with fitting honours, but to appoint them over
base things, and disreputable actions?(2)
7. Does Venus Militaris, also, preside over the evil-doing(3) of camps,
and the debaucheries of young men? Is there one Perfica,(4) also, of the crowd of
deities, who causes those base and filthy delights to reach their end with
uninterrupted pleasure? Is there also Pertunda, who presides over the marriage(5)
couch? Is there also Tutunus, on whose huge members(6) and horrent fascinum you
think it auspicious, and desire, that your matrons should be borne? But if
facts themselves have very little effect in suggesting to volt a right
understanding of the truth, are you not able, even from the very names, to understand that
these are the inventions of a most meaningless superstition, and the false
gods of fancy?(7) Puta, you say, presides over the pruning of trees, Peta over
prayers; Nemestrinus(8) is the god of groves; Patellana is a deity, and Patella,
of whom the one has been set over things brought to light, the other over those
yet to be disclosed. Nodutis is spoken of as a god, because he(9) brings that
which has been sown to the knots: and she who presides over the treading out of
grain, Noduterensis;(10) the goddess Upibilia(11) delivers from straying from
the right paths; parents bereaved of their children are under the care of
Orbona,--those very near to death, under that of Naenia. Again,(12) Ossilago herself
is mentioned as she who gives firmness and solidity to the bones of young
children. Mellonia is a goddess, strong and powerful in regard to bees, caring for
and guarding the sweetness of their honey.
8. Say, I pray you,--that Peta, Puta, Patella may graciously favour
you,--if there were no(13) bees at all on the earth then, or if we men were born
without bones, like some worms, would there be no goddess Mellonia;(14) or would
Ossilago, who gives bones their solidity, be without a name of her own? I ask
truly, and eagerly inquire whether you think that gods, or men, or bees, fruits,
twigs, and the rest, are the more ancient in nature, time, long duration? No man
will doubt that you say that the gods precede all things whatever by
countless ages and generations. But if it is so, how, in the nature of things, can it
be that, from things produced afterwards, they received those names which are
earlier in point of time? or that the gods were charged with the care(15) of
those things which were not yet produced, and assigned to be of use to men? Or
were the gods long without names; and was it only after things began to spring up,
and be on the earth, that you thought it right that they should be called by
these names(16) and titles? And whence could you have known what name to give to
each, since you were wholly ignorant of their existence; or that they
possessed any fixed powers, seeing that you were equally unaware which of them had any
power, and over what he should be placed to suit his divine might?
9. What then? you say; do you declare that these gods exist nowhere in the
world, and have been created by unreal fancies? Not we alone, but truth
itself, and reason, say so, and that common-sense in which all men share. For who
there who believes that there are gods of gain, and that they preside over the
getting of it, seeing that it springs very often from the basest employments, and
is always at the expense of others? Who believes that Libentina, who that
Burnus.(17) is set over those lusts which wisdom bills us avoid, and which, in a
thousand ways, vile and filthy wretches(18) attempt and practise? Who that
Limentinus and Lima have the care of thresholds, and do the duties of their keepers,
when every day we see the thresholds of temples and private houses destroyed and
overthrown, and that the infamous approaches to stews are not without them?
Who believes that the Limi(1) watch over obliquities? who that Saturnus presides
over the sown crops? who that Montinus is the guardian of mountains; Murcia,(2)
of the slothful? Who, finally, would believe that Money is a goddess, whom
your writings declare, as though she were the greatest deity, to give golden
rings,(3) the front seats at games and shows, honours in the greatest number, the
dignity of the magistracy, and that which the indolent love most of all,--an
undisturbed ease, by means of riches.
10. But if you urge that bones, different kinds of honey, thresholds, and
all the other things which we have either run over rapidly, or, to avoid
prolixity, passed by altogether, have(4) their own peculiar guardians, we may in like
manner introduce a thousand other gods, who should care for and guard
innumerable things. For why should a god have charge of honey only, and not of gourds,
rape, cunila, cress, figs, beets, cabbages? Why should the bones alone have
found protection, and not the nails, hair, and all the other things which are
placed in the hidden parts and members of which we feel ashamed, and are exposed to
very many accidents, and stand more in need of the care and attention of the
gods? Or if you say that these parts, too, act under the care of their own
tutelar deities, there will begin to be as many gods as there are things; nor will
the cause be stated why the divine care does not protect all things, if you say
that there are certain things over which the deities preside, and for which
they care.
11. What say you, O fathers of new religions, and powers?(5) Do you cry
out, and complain that these gods are dishonoured by us, and neglected with
profane contempt, viz. Lateranus, the genius of hearths; Limentinus, who presides
over thresholds; Pertunda,(6) Perfica, Noduterensis:(7) and do you say that
things have sunk into ruin, and that the world itself has changed its laws and
constitution, because we do not bow humbly in supplication to Mutunus(8) and
Tutunus? But now look and see, lest while you imagine such monstrous things, and form
such conceptions, you may have offended the gods who most assuredly exist, if
only there are any who are worthy to bear and hold that most exalted title; and
it be for no other reason that those evils, of which you speak, rage, and
increase by accessions every day.(9) Why, then, some one of you will perhaps say, do
you maintain(10) that it is not true that these gods exist? And, when invoked
by the diviners, do they obey the call, and come when summoned by their own
names, and give answers which may be relied on, to those who consult them? We can
show that what is said is false, either because in the whole matter there is
the greatest room for distrust, or because we, every day, see many of their
predictions either prove untrue or baffled expectation to suit the opposite issues.
12. But let them(11) be true, as you maintain, yet will you have us also
believe(12) that Mellonia, for example, introduces herself into the entrails, or
Limentinus, and that they set themselves to make known(13) what you seek to
learn? Did you ever see their face their deportment, their countenance? or can
even these be seen in lungs or livers? May it not happen, may it not come to
pass, although you craftily conceal it, that the one should take the other's place,
deluding, mocking, deceiving, and presenting the appearance of the deity
invoked? If the magi, who are so much akin to(14) soothsayers, relate that, in their
incantations, pretended gods(15) steal in frequently instead of those invoked;
that some of these, moreover, are spirits of grosser substance, (16) who
pretend that they are gods, and delude the ignorant by their lies and
deceit,--why(17) should we not similarly believe that here, too, others substitute themselves
for those who are not, that they may both strengthen your superstitious
beliefs, and rejoice that victims are slain in sacrifice to them under names not
their own?
13. Or, if you refuse to believe this on account of its novelty,(18) how
can you know whether there is not some one, who comes in place of all whom yon
invoke, and substituting himself in all parts of the world,(1) shows to you what
appear to be(2) many gods and powers? Who is that one? some one will ask. We
may perhaps, being instructed by truthful authors, be able to say; but, lest you
should be unwilling to believe us, let my opponent ask the Egyptians,
Persians, Indians, Chaldeans, Armenians, and all the others who have seen and become
acquainted with these things in the more recondite arts. Then, indeed, you will
learn who is the one God, or who the very many under Him are, who pretend to be
gods, and make sport of men's ignorance.
Even now we are ashamed to come to the point at which not only boys, young
anti pert, but grave men also, cannot restrain their laughter, and men who
have been hardened into a strict and stern humour.(3) For while we have all heard
it inculcated and taught by our teachers, that in declining the names of the
gods there was no plural number, because the gods were individuals, and the
ownership of each name could not be common to a great many;(4) you in fogetfulness,
and putting away the memory of your early lessons, both give to several gods
the same names, and, although you are elsewhere more moderate as to their number,
have multiplied them, again, by community of names; which subject, indeed, men
of keen discernment and acute intellect have before now treated both in Latin
and Greek.(5) And that might have lessened our labour,(6) if it were not that
at the same time we see that some know nothing of these books; and, also, that
the discussion which we have begun, compels us to bring forward something on
these subjects, although it has been already laid hold of, and related by those
writers.
14. Your theologians, then, and authors on unknown antiquity, say that in
the universe there are three Joves, one of whom has Aether for his father;
another, CAElus; the third, Saturn, born and buried(7) in the island of Crete. They
speak of five Suns and vie Mercuries,--of whom, as they relate, the first Sun
is called the son of Jupiter, and is regarded as grandson of Aether; the second
is also Jupiter's son, and the mother who bore him Hyperiona;(8) the third the
son of Vulcan, not Vulcan of Lemnos, but the son of the Nile; the fourth, whom
Acantho bore at Rhodes in the heroic age, was the father of Ialysus; while the
fifth is regarded as the son of a Scythian king and subtle Circe. Again, the
first Mercury, who is said to have lusted after Proserpina,(9) is son of Coelus,
who is above all. Under the earth is the second, who boasts that he is
Trophonius. The third was born of Maia, his mother, and the third Jove;(10) the fourth
is the offspring of the Nile, whose name the people of Egypt dread and fear to
utter. The fifth is the slayer of Argus, a fugitive and exile. and the
inventor of letters in Egypt. But there are five Minervas also, they say, just as
there are five Suns and Mercuries; the first of whom is no virgin but the mother
of Apollo by Vulcan; the second, the offspring of the Nile, who is asserted to
be the Egyptian Sais; the third is descended from Saturn, and is the one who
devised the use of arms; the fourth is sprung from Jove, and the Messenians name
her Coryphasia; and the fifth is she who slew her lustful(11) father, Pallas.
15. And lest it should seem tedious and prolix to wish to consider each
person singly, the same theologians say that there are four Vulcans and three
Dianas, as many Aesculapii and five Dionysi, six Hercules and four Venuses, three
sets of Castors and the same number of Muses, three winged Cupids, and four
named Apollo;(12) whose fathers they mention in like manner, in like manner their
mothers, and the places where they were born, and point out the origin and
family of each. But if it is true and certain, and is told in earnest as a
well-known matter, either they are not all gods, inasmuch as there cannot be several
under the same name, as we have been taught; or if there is one of them, he
will not be known and recognised, because he is obscured by the confusion of very
similar names. And thus it results from your own action, however unwilling you
may be that it should be so, that religion is brought into difficulty and
confusion, and has no fixed end to which it can turn itself, without being made the
sport of equivocal illusions.
16. For suppose that it had occurred to us, moved either by suitable
influence or violent fear of you,(1) to worship Minerva, for example, with the
rights you deem sacred, and the usual ceremony: if, when we prepare sacrifices, and
approach to make the offerings appointed for her on the flaming altars, all the
Minervas shall fly thither, and striving for the right to that name, each
demand that the offerings prepared be given to herself; what drawn-out animal shall
we place among them, or to whom shall we direct the sacred offices which are
our duty?(2) For the first one of whom we spoke will perhaps say: "The name
Minerva is mine, mine(3) the divine majesty, who bore Apollo and Diana, and by the
fruit of my womb enriched heaven with deities, and multiplied the number of the
gods." "Nay, Minerva," the fifth will say, "are you speaking,(4) who, being a
wife, and so often a mother, have lost the sanctity of spotless purity? Do you
not see that in all temples(5) the images of Minervas are those of virgins, and
that all artists refrain from giving to them the figures of matrons?(6) Cease,
therefore, to appropriate to yourself a name not rightfully(7) yours. For that
I am Minerva, begotten of father Pallas, the whole band of poets bear witness,
who call me Pallas, the surname being derived from my father." The second will
cry on hearing this: "What say you? Do you, then, bear the name of Minerva, an
impudent parricide, and one defiled by the pollution of lewd lust, who,
decking yourself with rouge and a harlot's arts, roused upon yourself even your
father's passions, full of maddening desires? Go further, then, seek for yourself
another name for this belongs to me, whom the Nile, greatest of rivers, begot
from among his flowing waters, and brought to a maiden's estate from the
condensing of moisture.(8) But if you inquire into the credibility of the matter, I too
will bring as witnesses the Egyptians, in whose language I am called Neith, as
Plato's Timoeus(9) attests." What, then, do we suppose will be the result? Will
she indeed cease to say that she is Minerva, who is named Coryphasia, either
to mark her mother, or because she sprung forth from the top of Jove's head,
bearing a shield, and girt with the terror of arms? Or are we to suppose that she
who is third will quietly surrender the name? and not argue(10) and resist the
assumption of the first two with such words as these: "Do you thus dare to
assume the honour of my name, O Sais,(11) sprung from the mud and eddies of a
stream, and formed in miry places? Or do you usurp(12) another's rank, who falsely
say that you were born a goddess from the head of Jupiter, and persuade very
silly men that you are reason? Does he conceive and bring forth children from ms
head? That the arms you bear might be forged and formed, was there even in the
hollow of his head a smith's workshop? were there anvils, hammers, furnaces,
bellows, coals, and pincers? Or if, as you maintain, it is true that you are
reason, cease to claim for yourself the name which is mine; for reason, of which you
speak, is not a certain form of deity, but the understanding of difficult
questions." If, then, as we have said, five Minervas should meet us when we essay
to sacrifice,(13) and contending as to whose this name is, each demand that
either fumigations of incense be offered to her, or sacrificial wines poured out
from golden cups; by what arbiter, by what judge, shall we dispose of so great a
dispute? or what examiner will there be, what umpire of so great boldness as to
attempt, with such personages, either to give a just decision, or to declare
their causes not founded on right? Will he not rather go home, and, keeping
himself apart from such matters, think it safer to have nothing to do with them,
test he should either make enemies of the rest, by giving to one what belongs to
all, or be charged with folly for yielding(14) to all what should be the
property of one?
17. We may say the very same things of the Mercuries, the Suns,--indeed of
all the others whose numbers you increase and multiply. But it is sufficient
to know from one case that the same principle applies to the rest; and, lest our
prolixity should chance to weary our audience, we shall cease to deal with
individuals, lest, while we accuse you of excess, we also should ourselves be
exposed to the charge of excessive loquacity. What do you say, you who, by the fear
of bodily tortures, urge us to worship the gods, and constrain us to undertake
the service of your deities? We can be easily won, if only something befitting
the conception of so great a race be shown to us. Show us Mercury, but only,
one; give us Bacchus, but only one; one Venus, and in like manner one Diana. For
you will never make us believe that there are four Apollos, or three Jupiters,
not even if you were to call Jove himself as witness, or make the Pythian god
your authority.
18. But some one on the opposite side says, How do we know whether the
theologians have written what is certain and well known, or set forth a wanton
fiction,(1) as they thought and judged? That has nothing to do with the matter;
nor does the reasonableness of your argument depend upon this,--whether the facts
are as the writings of the theologians state, or are otherwise and markedly
different. For to us it is enough to speak of things which come before the
public; and we need not inquire what is true, but only confute and disprove that
which lies open to all, and which men's thoughts have generally received. But if
they are liars, declare yourselves what is the truth, and disclose the
unassailable mystery. And how can it be done when the services of men of letters are set
aside? For what is there which can be said about. the immortal gods that has
not reached men's thoughts from what has been written by men on these
subjects?(2) Or can you relate anything yourselves about their rights and ceremonies,
which has not been recorded in books, and made known by what authors have written?
Or if you think these of no importance, let all the books be destroyed which
have been composed about the gods for you by theologians, pontiffs, and even some
devoted to the study of philosophy; nay, let us rather suppose that from the
foundation of the world no man ever wrote(3) anything about the gods: we wish to
find out, and desire to know, whether you can mutter or murmur in mentioning
the gods,(4) or conceive those in thought to whom no idea(5) from any book gave
shape in your minds. But when it is clear that you have been informed of their
names and powers by the suggestions of books,(6) it is unjust to deny the
reliableness of these books by whose testimony and authority you establish what you
say.
19. But perhaps these things will turn out to be false, and what you say
to be true. By what proof, by what evidence, will it be shown? For since both
parties are men, both those who have said the one thing and those who have said
the other, and on both sides the discussion was of doubtful matters, it is
arrogant to say that that is true which seems so to you, but that that which offends
your feelings manifests wantonness and falsehood. By the laws of the human
race, and the associations of mortality itself, when you read and hear, That god
was born of this father and of that mother, do you not feel in your mind(7) that
something is said which belongs to man, and relates to the meanness of our
earthly race? Or, while you think that it is so,(8) do you conceive no anxiety
lest you should in something offend the gods themselves, whoever they are, because
you believe that it is owing to filthy intercourse ...(9) that they have
reached the light they knew not of, thanks to lewdness? For we, lest any one should
chance to think that we are ignorant of, do not know, what befits the majesty
of that name, assuredly(10) think that the gods should not know birth; or if
they are born at all, we hold and esteem that the Lord and Prince of the universe,
by ways which He knew Himself, sent them forth spotless, most pure, undefiled,
ignorant of sexual pollution,(11) and brought to the full perfection of their
natures as soon as they were begotten? (12)
20. But you, on the contrary, forgetting how great(13) their dignity and
grandeur are, associate with them a birth,(14) and impute to them a descent,(14)
which men of at all refined feelings regard as at once execrable and terrible.
From Ops, you say, his mother, and from his father Saturn, Diespiter was born
with his brothers. Do the gods, then, have wives; and, the matches having been
previously planned, do they become subject to the bonds of marriage? Do they
take upon themselves(15) the engagements of the bridal couch by prescription, by
the cake of spelt, and by a pretended sale?(16) Have they their mistresses,(17)
their promised wives, their betrothed brides, on settled conditions? And what
do we say about their marriages, too, when indeed you say that some celebrated
their nuptials, and entertained joyous throngs, and that the goddesses sported
at these; and that some threw all things into utter confusion with dissensions
because they had no share in singing the Fescennine verses, and occasioned
danger and destruction(18) to the next generation of men?(19)
21. But perhaps this foul pollution may be less apparent in the rest. Did,
then, the ruler of the heavens, the father of gods and men, who, by the motion
of his eyebrow, and by his nod, shakes the whole heavens and makes them
tremble,--did he find his origin in man and woman? And unless both sexes abandoned
themselves to degrading pleasures in sensual embraces,(1) would there be no
Jupiter, greatest of all; and even to this time would the divinities have no king,
and heaven stand without its lord? And why do we marvel that you say Jove sprang
from a woman's womb, seeing that your authors relate that he both had a nurse,
and in the next place maintained the life given to him by nourishment drawn
from a foreign(2) breast? What say you, O men? Did, then, shall I repeat, the god
who makes the thunder crash, lightens and hurls the thunderbolt, and draws
together terrible clouds, drink in the streams of the breast, wail as an infant,
creep about, and, that he might be persuaded to cease his crying most foolishly
protracted, was he made silent by the noise of rattles,(3) and put to sleep
lying in a very soft cradle, and lulled with broken words? O devout assertion of
the existence of gods, pointing out and declaring the venerable majesty of their
awful grandeur! Is it thus in your opinion, ask, that the exalted powers(4) of
heaven are produced? do your gods come forth to the light by modes of birth
such as these, by which asses, pigs. dogs, by which the whole of this unclean
herd(5) of earthly beasts is conceived and begotten?
22. And, not content to have ascribed these carnal unions to the venerable
Saturn,(6) you affirm that the king of the world himself begot children even
more shamefully than he was himself born and begotten. Of Hyperiona,(7) as his
mother, you say, and Jupiter, who wields the thunderbolt, was born the golden
and blazing Sun; of Latona and the same, the Delian archer, and Diana,(8) who
rouses the woods; of Leda and the same,(9) those named in Greek Dioscori; of
Aclmena and the same, the Theban Hercules, whom his club and hide defended; of him
and Semele, Liber, who is named Bromius, and was born a second time from his
father's thigh; of him, again, and Main, Mercury, eloquent in speech, and bearer
of the harmless snakes. Can any greater insult be put upon your Jupiter, or is
there anything else which will destroy and ruin the reputation of the chief of
the gods, further than that you believe him to have been at times overcome by
vicious pleasures, and to have glowed with the passion of a heart roused to lust
after women? And what had the Saturnian king to do with strange nuptials? Did
Juno not suffice him; and could he not stay the force of his desires on the
queen of the deities, although so great excellence graced her, such beauty,
majesty of countenance, and snowy and marble whiteness of arms? Or did he, not
content with one wife, taking pleasure in concubines, mistresses, and courtezans, a
lustful god, show(10) his incontinence in all directions, as is the custom with
dissolute(11) youths; and in old age, after intercourse with numberless
persons, did he renew his eagerness for pleasures now losing their zest? What say
you, profane ones; or what vile thoughts do you fashion about your love? Do you
not, then, observe do you not see with what disgrace you brand him? of what
wrong-doing you make him the author? or what stains of vice, how great infamy you
heap upon him?
23. Men, though prone to lust, and inclined, through weakness of
character, to yield to the allurements of sensual pleasures, still punish adultery by
the laws, and visit with the penalty of death those whom they find to have
possessed themselves of others rights by forcing the marriage-bed. The greatest of
kings, however, you tell us, did not know how vile, how infamous the person of
the seducer and adulterer was; and he who, as is said, examines our merits and
demerits, did not, owing to the reasonings of his abandoned heart, see what was
the fitting course for him to resolve on. But this misconduct might perhaps be
endured, if you were to conjoin him with persons at least his equals, and if he
were made by you the paramour of the immortal goddesses. But what beauty, what
grace was there, I ask you, in human bodies, which could move, which could turn
to it(12) the eyes of Jupiter? Skin, entrails, phlegm, and all that filthy
mass placed under the coverings of the intestines, which not Lynceus only with his
searching gaze can shudder at, but any other also can be made to turn from
even by merely thinking.
24. If you will open your minds' eyes, and see the real(1) truth without
gratifying any private end, you will find that the causes of all the miseries by
which, as you say, the human race has long been afflicted, flow from such
beliefs which you held in former times about your gods; and which you have refused
to amend, although the truth was placed before your eyes. For what about them,
pray, have we indeed ever either imagined which was unbecoming, or put forth in
shameful writings that the troubles which assail men and the loss of the
blessings of life(2) should be used to excite a prejudice against us? Do we say that
certain gods were produced from eggs,(3) like storks and pigeons? Do we say
that the radiant Cytherean Venus grew up, having taken form from the sea's foam
and the severed genitals of Coelus? that Saturn was thrown into chains for
parricide, and relieved from their weight only on his own days?(4) that Jupiter was
saved from death(5) by the services of the Curetes? that he drove his father
from the seat of power, and by force and fraud possessed a sovereignty not his
own? Do we say that his aged sire, when driven out, concealed himself in the
territories of the Itali, and gave his name as a gift to Latium,(6) because he had
been there protected from his son? Do we say that Jupiter himself incestuously
married his sister? or, instead of pork, breakfasted in ignorance upon the son
of Lycaon, when invited to his table? that Vulcan, limping on one foot, wrought
as a smith in the island of Lemnos? that AEculapius was transfixed by a
thunderbolt because of his greed and avarice, as the Boeotian Pindar(7) sings? that
Apollo, having become rich, by his ambiguous responses, deceived the very kings
by whose treasures and gifts he had been enriched? Did we declare that Mercury
was a thief? that Laverna is so also, and along with him presides over secret
frauds? Is the writer Myrtilus one of us, who declares that the Muses were the
handmaids of Megalcon,(8) daughter of Macarus?(9)
25. Did we say(10) that Venus was a courtezan, deified by a Cyprian king
named Cinyras? Who reported that the palladium was formed from the remains of
Pelops? Was it not you? Who that Mars was Spartanus? was it not your writer
Epicharmus? Who that he was born within the confines of Thrace? was it not Sophocles
the Athenian, with the assent of all his spectators? Who that he was born in
Arcadia? was it not you? Who that he was kept a prisoner for thirteen
months?(11) was it not the son of the river Meles? Who said that dogs were sacrificed to
him by the Carians, asses by the Scythians? was it not Apollodorus especially,
along with the rest? Who that in wronging another's marriage couch, he was
caught entangled in snares? was it not your writings, your tragedies? Did we ever
write that the gods for hire endured slavery, as Hercules at Sardis(12) for lust
and wantonness; as the Delian Apollo, who served Admetus, as Jove's brother,
who served the Trojan Laomedon, whom the Pythian also served, but with his
uncle; as Minerva, who gives light, and trims the lamps to secret lovers? Is not he
one of your poets, who re resented Mars and Venus as wounded by men's hands? Is
not Panyassis one of you, who relates that father Dis and queenly Juno were
wounded by Hercules? Do not the writings of your Polemo say that Pallas(13) was
slain,(14) covered with her own blood, overwhelmed by Ornytus? Does not Sosibius
declare that Hercules himself was afflicted by the wound and pain he suffered
at the hands of Hipocoon's children? Is it related at our instance that Jupiter
was committed to the grave in the island of Crete? Do we say that the
brothers,(15) who were united in their cradle, were buried in the territories of Sparta
and Lacedaemon? Is the author of our number, who is termed Patrocles the
Thurian in the titles of his writings, who relates that the tomb and remains of
Saturn are found(16) in Sicily? Is Plutarch of Chaeronea(17) esteemed one of us,
who said that Hercules was reduced to ashes on the top of Mount (Eta, after his
loss of strength through epilepsy?
26. But what shall I say of the desires with which it is written in your
books, and contained in your writers, that the holy immortals lusted after
women? For is it by us that the king of the sea is asserted in the heat of maddened
passion to have robbed of their virgin purity Amphitrite,(1) Hippothoe,
Amymone, Menalippe, Alope?(2) that the spotless Apollo, Latona's son, most chaste and
pure, with the passions of a breast not governed by reason, desired Arsinoe,
AEthusa, Hypsipyle, Marpessa, Zeuxippe, and Prothoe, Daphne, and Sterope?(1) Is
it shown in our poems that the aged Saturn, already long covered with grey hair,
and now cooled by weight of years, being taken by his wife in adultery, put on
the form of one of the lower animals, and neighing loudly, escaped in the
shape of a beast? Do you not accuse Jupiter himself of having assumed countless
forms, and concealed by mean deceptions the ardour of his wanton lust? Have we
ever written that he obtained his desires by deceit, at one time changing into
gold, at another into a sportive satyr; into a serpent, a bird, a bull; and, to
pass beyond all limits of disgrace, into a little ant, that he might, forsooth,
make Clitor's daughter the mother of Myrmidon, in Thessaly? Who represented him
as having watched over Alcmena for nine nights without ceasing? was it not
you?--that he indolently abandoned himself to his lusts, forsaking his post in
heaven? was it not you? And, indeed, you ascribe(3) to him no mean favours; since,
in your opinion, the god Hercules was born to exceed and surpass in such
matters his father's powers. He in nine nights begot(4) with difficulty one son; but
Hercules, a holy god, in one night taught the fifty daughters of Thestius at
once to lay aside their virginal title, and to bear a mother's burden. Moreover,
not content to have ascribed to the gods love of women, do you also say that
they lusted after men? Some one loves Hylas; another is engaged with Hyacinthus;
that one burns with desire for Pelops; this one sighs more ardently for
Chrysippus; Catamitus is carried off to be a favourite and cup-bearer; and Fabius,
that he may be called Jove's darling, is branded on the soft parts, and marked in
the hinder.
27. But among you, is it only the males who lust; and has the female sex
preserved its purity?(5) Is it not proved in your books that Tithonus was loved
by Aurora; that Luna lusted after Endymion; the Nereid after AEacus; Thetis
after Achilles' father; Proserpina after Adonis; her mother, Ceres, after some
rustic Jasion, and afterwards Vulcan, Phaeton,(6) Mars; Venus herself, the mother
of AEneas, and founder of the Roman power, to marry Anchises? While,
therefore, you accuse, without making any exception, not one only by name, but the whole
of the gods alike, in whose existence you believe, of such acts of
extraordinary shamefulness and baseness, do you dare, without violation of modesty, to
say either that we are impious, or that you are pious, although they receive from
you much greater occasion for offence on account of all the shameful acts
which you heap up to their reproach, than in connection with the service and duties
required by their majesty, honour, and worship? For either all these things
are false which you bring forward about them individually, lessening their credit
and reputation; and it is in that case a matter quite deserving, that the gods
should utterly destroy the race of men; or if they are true and certain, and
perceived without any reasons for doubt, it comes to this issue, that, however
unwilling you may be, we believe them to be not of heavenly, but of earthly
birth.
28. For where there are weddings, marriages, births, nurses, arts,(7) and
weaknesses; where there are liberty and slavery; where there are wounds,
slaughter, and shedding of blood; where there are lusts, desires, sensual pleasures;
where there is every mental passion arising from disgusting emotions,--there
must of necessity be nothing godlike there; nor can that cleave to a superior
nature which belongs to a fleeting race, and to the frailty of earth. For who, if
only he recognises and perceives what the nature of that power is, can believe
either that a deity had the generative members, and was deprived of them by a
very base operation; or that he at one time cut off the children sprung from
himself, and was punished by suffering imprisonment; or that he, in a way, made
civil war upon his father, and deprived him of the right of governing; or that
he, filled with fear of one younger when overcome, turned to flight, and hid in
remote solitudes, like a fugitive and exile? Who, I say, can believe that the
deity reclined at men's tables, was troubled on account of his avarice, deceived
his suppliants by an ambiguous reply, excelled in the tricks of thieves,
committed adultery, acted as a slave, was wounded, and in love, and submitted to the
seduction of impure desires in all the forms of lust? But yet you declare all
these things both were, and are, in your gods; and you pass by no form of vice,
wickedness, error, without bringing it forward, in the wantonness of your
fancies, to the reproach of the gods. You must, therefore, either seek out other
gods, apply; or if there are only these whose names and character you have
declared, by your beliefs you do away with them: for all the things of which you speak
relate to men.
29. And here, indeed, we can show that all those whom you represent to us
as and call gods, were but men, by quoting either Euhemerus of Acragas,(1)
whose books were translated by Ennius into Latin that all might be thoroughly
acquainted with them; or Nicanor(2) the Cyprian; or the Pellaean Leon; or Theodorus
of Cyrene; or Hippo and Diagoras of Melos; or a thousand other writers, who
have minutely, industriously, and carefully(3) brought secret things to light with
noble candour. We may, I repeat, at pleasure, declare both the acts of
Jupiter, and the wars of Minerva and the virgin(4) Diana; by what stratagems Liber
strove to make himself master of the Indian empire; what was the condition, the
duty, the gain(5) of Venus; to whom the great mother was bound in marriage; what
hope, what joy was aroused in her by the comely Attis; whence came the Egyptian
Serapis and Isis, or for what reasons their very names(6) were formed.
30. But in the discussion which we at present maintain, we do not
undertake this trouble or service, to show and declare who all these were. But this is
what we proposed to ourselves, that as you call us impious and irreligious,
and, on the other hand, maintain that you are pious anti serve the gods, we should
prove and make manifest that by no men are they treated with less respect than
by you. But if it is proved by the very insults that it is so, it must, as a
consequence, be understood that it is yon who rouse the gods to fierce and
terrible rage, because you either listen to or believe, or yourselves invent about
them, stories so degrading. For it is not he who is anxiously thinking of
religious rites,(7) and slays spotless victims, who gives piles of incense to be
burned with fire, not he must be thought to worship the deities, or alone discharge
the duties of religion. True worship is in the heart, and a belief worthy of
the gods; nor does it at all avail to bring blood and gore, if you believe about
them things which are not only far remote from and unlike their nature, but
even to some extent stain and disgrace both their dignity and virtue.
31. We wish, then, to question you, and invite you to answer a short
question, Whether you think it a greater offence to sacrifice to them being neither
wishes nor desires these; or, with foul beliefs, to hold opinions about them
so degrading, that they might rouse any one's spirit to a mad desire for
revenge? If the relative importance of the matters be weighed, you will find no judge
so prejudiced as not to believe it a greater crime to defame by manifest
insults any one's reputation, than to treat it with silent neglect. For this,
perhaps, may be held and believed from deference to reason; but the other course
manifests an impious spirit, and a blindness despaired of in fiction. If in your
ceremonies and rites neglected sacrifices and expiatory offerings may be demanded,
guilt is said to have been contracted; if by a momentary forgetfulness(8) any
one has erred either in speaking or in pouring wine;(9) or again,(10) if at the
solemn games and sacred races the dancer has halted, or the musician suddenly
become silent,--you all cry out immediately that something has been done
contrary to the sacredness of the ceremonies; or if the boy termed patrimus let go
the thong in ignorance,(11) or could not hold to the earth:(12) and yet do you
dare to deny that the gods are ever being wronged by you in sins so grievous,
while you confess yourselves that, in less matters, they are often angry, to the
national ruin?
32. But all these things, they say, are the fictions of poets, and games
arranged for pleasure. It is not credible, indeed, that men by no means
thoughtless, who sought to trace out the character of the remotest antiquity, either
did not(13) insert in their poems the fables which survived in men's minds(14)
and common conversation;(15) or that they would have assumed to themselves so
great licence as to foolishly feign what was almost sheer madness, and might give
them reason to be afraid of the gods, and bring them into danger with men. But
let us grant that the poets are, as yon say, the inventors anti authors of
tales so disgraceful; you are not, however, even thus free from the guilt of
dishonouring the gods, who either are remiss in punishing such offences, or have not,
by passing laws, and by severity of punishments, opposed such indiscretion,
and determined(1) that no man should henceforth say that which tended to the
dishonour,(2) or was unworthy of the glory of the gods.(3) For whoever allows the
wrongdoer to sin, strengthens his audacity; and it is more insulting to brand
and mark any one with false accusations, than to bring forward and upbraid their
real offences. For to be called what you are, and what you feel yourself to be,
is less offensive, because your resentment is checked by the evidence supplied
against you on privately reviewing your life;(4) but that wounds very keenly
which brands the innocent, and defames a man's honourable name and reputation.
33. Your gods, it is recorded, dine on celestial couches, and in golden
chambers, drink, and are at last soothed by the music of the lyre, and singing.
You fit them with ears not easily wearied;(5) and do not think it unseemly to
assign to the gods the pleasures by which earthly bodies are supported, and which
are sought after by ears enervated by the frivolity of an unmanly spirit. Some
of them are brought forward in the character of lovers, destroyers of purity,
to commit shameful and degrading deeds not only with women, but with men also.
You take no care as to what is said about matters of so much importance, nor do
you check, by any fear of chastisement at least, the recklessness of your
wanton literature; others, through madness and frenzy, bereave themselves, and by
the slaughter of their own relatives cover themselves with blood, just as though
it were that of an enemy. You wonder at these loftily expressed impieties; and
that which it was fitting should be subjected to all punishments, you extol
with praise that spurs them on, so as to rouse their recklessness to greater
vehemence. They mourn over the wounds of their bereavement, and with unseemly
wailings accuse the cruel fates; you are astonished at the force of their eloquence,
carefully study and commit to memory that which should have been wholly put
away from human society,(6) and are solicitous that it should not perish through
any forgetfulness. They are spoken of as being wounded, maltreated, making war
upon each other with hot and furious contests; you enjoy the description; and,
to enable you to defend so great daring in the writers, pretend that these
things are allegories, and contain the principles of natural science.
34. But why do I complain that you have disregarded the insults(7) offered
to the other deities? That very Jupiter, whose name you should not have spoken
without fear and trembling over your whole body, is described as confessing
his faults when overcome by lust(8) of his wife, and, hardened in shamelessness,
making known, as if he were mad and ignorant,(9) the mistresses he preferred to
his spouse, the concubines he preferred to his wife; you say that those who
have uttered so marvellous things are chiefs and kings among poets endowed with
godlike genius, that they are persons most holy; and so utterly have you lost
sight of your duty in the matters of religion which you bring forward, that words
are of more importance, in your opinion, than the profaned majesty of the
immortals. So then, if only you felt any fear of the gods, or believed with
confident and unhesitating assurance that they existed at all, should you not, by
bills, by popular votes, by fear of the senate's decrees, have hindered, prevented,
and forbidden any one to speak at random of the gods otherwise than in a pious
manner?(10) Nor have they obtained this honour even at your hands, that you
should repel insults offered to them by the same laws by which you ward them off
from yourselves. They are accused of treason among you who have whispered any
evil about your kings. To degrade a magistrate, or use insulting language to a
senator, you have made by decree a crime, followed by the severest punishment.
To write a satirical poem, by which a slur is cast upon the reputation and
character of another, you determined, by the decrees of the decemvirs, should not go
unpunished; and that no one might assail your ears with too wanton abuse, you
established formulae(11) for severe affronts. With you only the gods are
unhonoured, contemptible, vile; against whom you allow any one liberty to say what he
will, to accuse them of the deeds of baseness which his lust has invented and
devised. And yet you do not blush to raise against us the charge of want of
regard for deities so infamous, although it is much better to disbelieve the
existence of the gods than to think they are such, and of such repute.
35. But is it only poets whom you have thought proper(12) to allow to
invent unseemly tales about the gods, and to turn them shamefully into sport? What
do your pantomimists, the actors, that crowd of mimics and adulterers?(13) Do
they(14) not abuse your gods to make to themselves gain, and do not the
others(1) find enticing pleasures in(2) the wrongs and insults offered to the gods? At
the public games, too, the colleges of all the priests and magistrates take
their places, the chief Pontiffs, and the chief priests of the curiae; the
Quindecemviri take their places, crowned with wreaths of laurel, and the flamines
diales with their mitres; the augurs take their places, who disclose the divine
mind and will; and the chaste maidens also, who cherish and guard the
ever-burning fire; the whole people and the senate take their places; the fathers who have
done service as consuls, princes next to the gods, and most worthy of
reverence; and, shameful to say, Venus, the mother of the race of Mars, and parent of
the imperial people, is represented by gestures as in love,(3) and is delineated
with shameless mimicry as raving like a Bacchanal, with all the passions of a
vile harlot.(4) The Great Mother, too, adorned with her sacred fillets, is
represented by dancing; and that Pessinuntic Dindymene(5) is, to the dishonour of
her age, represented as with shameful desire using passionate gestures in the
embrace of a herdsman; and also in the Trachiniae of Sophocles,(6) that son of
Jupiter, Hercules, entangled in the toils of a death-fraught garment, is
exhibited uttering piteous cries, overcome by his violent suffering, and at last
wasting away and being consumed, as his intestines soften and are dissolved.(7) But
in these tales even the Supreme Ruler of the heavens Himself is brought forward,
without any reverence for His name and majesty, as acting the part of an
adulterer, and changing His countenance for purposes of seduction, in order that He
might by guile rob of their chastity matrons, who were the wives of others, and
putting on the appearance of their husbands, by assuming the form of another.
36. But this crime is not enough: the persons of the most sacred gods are
mixed up with farces also, and scurrilous plays. And that the idle onlookers
may be excited to laughter and jollity, the deities are hit at in jocular quips,
the spectators shout and rise up, the whole pit resounds with the clapping of
hands and applause. And to the debauched scoffers(8) at the gods gifts and
presents are ordained, ease, freedom from public burdens, exemption and relief,
together with triumphal garlands,--a crime for which no amends can be made by any
apologies. And after this do you dare to wonder whence these ills come with
which the human race is deluged and overwhelmed without any interval, while you
daily both repeat and learn by heart all these things, with which are mixed up
libels upon the gods and slanderous sayings; and when(9) you wish your inactive
minds to be occupied with useless dreamings, demand that days be given to you,
and exhibition made without any interval? But if you felt any real indignation
on behalf of your religious beliefs, you should rather long ago have burned
these writings, destroyed those books of yours, and overthrown these theatres, in
which evil reports of your deities are daily made public in shameful tales. For
why, indeed, have our writings deserved to be given to the flames? our meetings
to be cruelly broken up,(10) in which prayer is made to the Supreme God, peace
and pardon are asked for all in authority, for soldiers, kings, friends,
enemies, for those still in life, and those freed from the bondage of the flesh;(11)
in which all that is said is such as to make men humane,(12) gentle, modest,
virtuous, chaste, generous in dealing with their substance, and inseparably
united to all embraced in our brotherhood?(13)
37. But this is the state of the case, that as you are exceedingly strong
in war and in military power, you think you excel in knowledge of the truth
also, and are pious before the gods,(14) whose might you have been the first to
besmirch with foul imaginings. Here, if your fierceness allows. and madness
suffers, we ask you to answer us this: Whether you think that anger finds a place in
the divine nature, or that the divine blessedness is far removed from such
passions? For if they are subject to passions so furious,(15) and are excited by
feelings of rage as your imaginings suggest.--for you say that they have often
shaken the earth with their roaring,(16) and bringing woful misery on men,
corrupted with pestilential contagion the character of the times,(1) both because
their games had been celebrated with too little care, and because their priests
were not received with favour, and because some small spaces were desecrated,
and because their rites were not duly performed,--it must consequently be
understood that they feel no little wrath on account of the opinions which have been
mentioned. But if, as follows of necessity, it is admitted that all these
miseries with which men have long been overwhelmed flow from such fictions, if the
anger of the deities is excited by these causes, you are the occasion of so
terrible misfortunes, because you never cease to jar upon the feelings of the gods,
and excite them to a fierce desire for vengeance. But if, on the other hand,
the gods are not subject to such passions, and do not know at all what it is to
be enraged, then indeed there is no ground for saying that they who know not
what anger is are angry with us, * and they are free from its presence,(2) and
the disorder(3) it causes. For it cannot be, in the nature of things, that what
is one should become two; and that unity, which is naturally uncompounded,
should divide and go apart into separate things.(4)