THE SEVEN BOOKS OF ARNOBIUS AGAINST THE HEATHEN. BOOK VI
BOOK VI.
1. Having shown briefly how impious and infamous are the opinions which
you have formed about your gods, we have now to(1) speak of their temples, their
images also, and sacrifices, and of the other things which are(2) nailed and
closely related to them. For you are here in the habit of fastening upon us a
very serious charge of impiety because we do not rear temples for the ceremonies
of worship, do not set up statues and images(3) of any god, do not build
altars,(4) do not offer the blood of creatures slain in sacrifices, incense,(5) nor
sacrificial meal, and finally, do not bring wine flowing in libations from sacred
bowls; which, indeed, we neglect to build and do, not as though we cherish
impious and wicked dispositions, or have conceived any madly desperate feeling of
contempt for the gods, but because we think and believe that they(6)--if only
they are true gods, and are called by this exalted name(7)--either scorn such
honours, if they give way to scorn, or endure them with anger, if they are roused
by feelings of rage.
2. For--that you may learn what are our sentiments and opinions about that
race--we think that they--if only they are true gods. that the same things may
be said again till you are wearied hearing them(8)--should have all the
virtues in perfection, should be wise, upright. venerable,--if only our heaping upon
them human honours is not a crime,--strong in excellences within themselves,
and should not give themselves(1) up to external props, because the completeness
of their unbroken bliss is made perfect; should be free from all agitating and
disturbing passions; should not burn with anger, should not he excited by any
desires; should send misfortune to none, should not find a cruel pleasure in the
ills of men; should not terrify by portents, should not show prodigies to
cause fear; should not hold men responsible and liable to be punished for the vows
which they owe, nor demand expiatory sacrifices by threatening omens; should
not bring on pestilences and diseases by corrupting the air, should not burn up
the fruits with droughts; should take no part in the slaughter of war and
devastation of cities; should not wish ill to one party, and be favourable to the
success of another; but, as becomes great minds, should weigh all in a just
balance, and show kindness impartially to all. For it belongs to a mortal race and
human weakness to act otherwise;(2) and the maxims and declarations of wise men
state distinctly, that those who are touched by passion live a life of
suffering,(3) and are weakened by grief,(4) and that it cannot be but that those who
have been given over to disquieting feelings, have been bound by the laws of
mortality. Now, since this is the case, how can we be supposed to hold the gods in
contempt, who we say are not gods, and cannot be connected with the powers of
heaven, unless they are just and worthy of the admiration which great minds
excite?
3. But, we are told, we rear no temples to them, and do not worship their
images; we do not slay victims in sacrifice, we do not offer incense(5) and
libations of wine. And what greater honour or dignity can we ascribe to them, than
that we put them in the same position as the Head and Lord of the universe, to
whom the gods owe it in common with us,(6) that they are conscious that they
exist, and have a living being?(7) For do we honour Him with shrines, and by
building temples?(8) Do we even slay victims to Him? Do we give Him the other
things, to take which and pour them forth in libation shows not a careful regard to
reason, but heed to a practice maintained(9) merely by usage? For it is
perfect folly to measure greater powers by your necessities, and to give the things
useful to yourself to the gods who give all things, and to think this an honour,
not an insult. We ask, therefore, to do what service to the gods, or to meet
what want, do you say that temples have been reared,(10) and think that they
should be again built? Do they feel the cold of(11) winter, or are they scorched
by summer suns? Do storms of rain flow over them, or whirlwinds shake them? Are
they in danger of being exposed to the onset of enemies, or the furious attacks
of wild beasts, so that it is right and becoming to shut them up in places of
security,(12) or guard them by throwing up a rampart of stones? For what are
these temples? If you ask human weakness(13)--something vast and spacious; if you
consider the power of the gods--small caves, as it were,(14) and even, to
speak more truly, the narrowest kind of caverns formed and contrived with sorry,
judgment.(15) Now, if you ask to be told who was their first founder(16) and
builder, either Phoroneus or the Egyptian Merops(17) will be mentioned to you, or,
as Varro relates in his treatise "de Admirandis," Aeacus the offspring of
Jupiter. Though these, then, should be built of heaps of marble, or shine
resplendent with ceilings fretted with gold, though precious stones sparkle here, and
gleam like stars set at varying intervals, all these things are made up of earth,
and of the lowest dregs of even baser matter. For not even, if you value these
more highly, is it to be believed that the gods take pleasure in them, or that
they do not refuse and scorn to shut themselves up, and be confined within
these barriers. This, my opponent says, is the temple of Mars, this that of Juno
and of Venus, this that of Hercules, of Apollo, of Dis. What is this but to say
this is the house of Mars, this of Juno and Venus,(18) Apollo dwells here, in
this abides Hercules, in that Summanus? Is it not, then, the very(19) greatest
affront to hold the gods kept fast(1) in habitations, to give to them little
huts, to build lockfast places and cells, and to think that the things are(2)
necessary to them which are needed by men, cats, emmets, and lizards, by quaking,
timorous, and little mice?
4. But, says my opponent, it is not for this reason that we assign temples
to the gods as though we wished to ward off from them drenching storms of
rain, winds, showers, or the rays of the sun; but in order that we may be able to
see them in person and close at hand, to come near and address them, and impart
to them, when in a measure present, the expressions of our reverent feelings.
For if they are invoked under the open heaven, and the canopy of ether, they
hear nothing, I suppose; and unless prayers are addressed to them near at hand,
they will stand deaf and immoveable as if nothing were said. And yet we think
that every god whatever--if only he has the power of this name--should hear what
every one said from every part of the world, just as if he were present; nay,
more, should foresee, without waiting to be told(3) what every one conceived in
his secret and silent(4) thoughts. And as the stars, the sun, the moon, while
they wander above the earth, are steadily and everywhere in sight of all those
who gaze at them without any exception; so, too,(5) it is fitting that the ears
of the gods should be closed against no tongue, and should be ever within reach,
although voices should flow together to them from widely separated regions.
For this it is that belongs specially to the gods,--to fill all things with their
power, to be not partly at any place, but all everywhere, not to go to dine
with the Aethiopians, and return after twelve days to their own dwellings.(6)
5. Now, if this be not the case, all hope of help is taken away, and it
will be doubtful whether you are heard (7) by the gods or not, if ever you
perform the sacred rites with due ceremonies. For, to make it clear,(8) let us
suppose that there is a temple of some deity in the Canary Islands, another of the
same deity in remotest Thyle, also among the Seres, among the tawny Garamantes,
and any others(9) who are debarred from knowing each other by seas, mountains,
forests, and the four quarters of the world. If they all at one time beg of the
deity with sacrifices what their wants compel each one to think about,(10) what
hope, pray, will there be to all of obtaining the benefit, if the god does not
hear the cry sent up to him everywhere, and if there shall be any distance to
which the words of the suppliant for help cannot penetrate? For either he will
be nowhere present, if he may at times not be anywhere,(11) or he will be at
one place only, since he cannot give his attention generally, and without making
any distinction. And thus it is brought about, that either the god helps none
at all, if being busy with something he has been unable to hasten to give ear to
their cries, or one only goes away with his prayers heard, while the rest have
effected nothing.
6. What can you say as to this, that it is attested by the writings of
authors, that many of these temples which have been raised with golden domes and
lofty roofs cover bones and ashes, and are sepulchres of the dead? Is it not
plain and manifest, either that you worship dead men for immortal gods, or that an
inexpiable affront is cast upon the deities, whose shrines and temples have
been built over the tombs of the dead? Antiochus,(12) in the ninth book of his
Histories, relates that Cecrops was buried in the temple of Minerva,(13) at
Athens; again, in the temple of the same goddess, which is in the citadel of
Larissa,(14) it is related and declared that Acrisius was laid, and in the sanctuary
of Polias,(15) Erichthonius; while the brothers Dairas and Immarnachus were
buried in the enclosure of Eleusin, which lies near the city. What say you as to
the virgin daughters of Coleus? are they not said to be buried(16) in the temple
of Ceres at Eleusin? and in the shrine of Diana, which was set up in the temple
of the Delian Apollo, are not Hyperoche and Laodice buried, who are said to
have been brought thither from the country of the Hyperboreans? In the Milesian
Didymae,(17) Leandrius says that Cleochus had the last honours of burial paid to
him. Zeno of Myndus openly relates that the monument of Leucophryne is in the
sanctuary of Diana at Maghesia. Under the altar of Apollo, which is seen in the
city of Telmessus, is it not invariably declared by writings that the prophet
Telmessus lies buried? Ptolemaeus, the son of Agesarchus, in the first book of
the History of Philopatar(1) which he published, affirms, on the authority of
literature, that Cinyras, king of Paphos, was interred in the temple of Venus
with all his family, nay, more, with all his stock. It would be(2) an endless and
boundless task to describe in what sanctuaries they all are throughout the
world; nor is anxious care required, although(3) the Egyptians fixed a penalty for
any one who should have revealed the places in which Apis lay hid, as to those
Polyandria(4) of Varro,(5) by what temples they are covered, and what heavy
masses they have laid upon them.
7. But why do I speak of these trifles? What man is there who is ignorant
that in the Capitol of the imperial people is the sepulchre of Tolus(6)
Vulcentanus? Who is there, I say, who does not know that from beneath(7) its
foundations there was rolled a man's head, buried for no very long time before, either
by itself without the other parts of the body,--for some relate this,--or with
all its members? Now, if you require this to be made clear by the testimonies of
authors, Sammonicus, Granius, Valerianus,(8) and Fabius will declare to you
whose son Aulus(9) was, of what race and nation, how(10) he was bereft of life
and light by the slave of his brother, of what crime he was guilty against his
fellow-citizens, that he was denied burial in his father(11) land. You will learn
also--although they pretend to be unwilling to make this public--what was done
with his head when cut off, or in what place it was shut up, and the whole
affair carefully concealed, in order that the omen which the gods had attested
might stand without interruption,(12) unalterable, and sure. Now, while it was
proper that this story, should be suppressed, and concealed, and forgotten in the
lapse of time, the composition at the name published it, and, by a testimony
which could not be got rid of, caused it to remain in men's minds, together with
its causes, so long as it endured itself;(13) and the state which is greatest
of all, and worships all deities, did not blush in giving a name to the temple,
to name it from the head of Olus(14) Capitolium rather than from the name of
Jupiter.
8. we have therefore--as I suppose--shown sufficiently, that to the
immortal gods temples have been either reared in vain, or built in consequence of
insulting opinions held to their dishonour and to the belittling(15) of the power
believed to be in their hands. We have next to say something about statues and
images, which you form with much skill, and tend with religious care,--wherein
if there is any credibility, we can by no amount of consideration settle in our
own minds whether you do this in earnest and with a serious purpose, or amuse
yourselves in childish dreams by mocking at these very things.(16) For if you
are assured that the gods exist whom you suppose, and that they live in the
highest regions of heaven, what cause, what reason, is there that those images
should be fashioned by you, when you have true beings to whom you may pour forth
prayers, and from whom you may, ask help in trying circumstances? But if, on the
contrary, you do not believe, or, to speak with moderation, are in doubt, in
this case, also, what reason is there, pray, to fashion and set up images of
doubtful beings, and to form(17) with vain imitation what you do not believe to
exist? Do you perchance say, that under these images of deities there is displayed
to you their presence, as it were, and that, because it has not been given you
to see the gods, they are worshipped in this fashion,(18) and the duties owed
to them paid? He who says and asserts this, does not believe that the gods
exist; and he is proved not to put faith in his own religion, to whom it is
necessary to see what he may hold, lest that which being obscure is not seen, may
happen to be vain.
9. We worship the gods, you say, by means of images.(19) What then?
Without these, do the gods not know that they are worshipped, and will they not think
that any honour is shown to them by you? Through bypaths, as it were, then,
and by assignments to a third party,(20) as they are called, they receive and
accept your services; and before those to whom that service is owed experience it,
you first sacrifice to images, and transmit, as it were, some remnants to them
at the pleasure of others.(1) And what greater wrong, disgrace, hardship, can
be inflicted than to acknowledge one god, and yet make supplication to
something else--to hope for help from a deity, and pray to an image without feeling? Is
not this, I pray you, that which is said in the common proverbs: "to cut down
the smith when you strike at the fuller;"(2) "and when you seek a man's
advice, to require of asses and pigs their opinions as to what should be done?"
10. And whence, finally, do you know whether all these images which you
form and put in the place of(3) the immortal gods reproduce and bear a
resemblance to the gods? For it may happen that in heaven one has a beard who by you is
represented(4) with smooth cheeks; that another is rather advanced in years to
whom you give the appearance of a youth;(5) that here he is fair, with blue
eyes,(6) who really has grey ones; that he has distended nostrils whom you make and
form with a high nose. For it is not right to call or name that an image which
does not derive from the face of the original features like it; which(7) can
be recognised to be clear and certain from things which are manifest. For while
all we men see that the sun is perfectly round by our eyesight, which cannot
be doubted, you have given(8) to him the features of a man, and of mortal
bodies. The moon is always in motion, and in its restoration every month puts on
thirty faces:(9) with you, as leaders and designers, that is represented as a
woman, and has one countenance, which passes through a thousand different states,
changing each day.(10) We understand that all the winds are only a flow of air
driven and impelled in mundane ways in your hands they take(11) the forms of
men filling with breath twisted trumpets by blasts from out their breasts.(12)
Among the representations of your gods we see that there is the very stern face
of a lion(13) smeared with pure vermilion, and that it is named Frugifer. If
all these images are likenesses of the gods above, there must then be said to
dwell in heaven also a god such as the image which has been made to represent his
form and appearance;(14) and, of course, as here that figure of yours, so there
the deity himself(15) is a mere mask and face, without the rest of the body,
growling with fiercely gaping jaws, terrible, red as blood,(16) holding an apple
fast with his teeth, and at times, as dogs do when wearied, putting his tongue
out of his gaping mouth.(17) But if,(18) indeed, this is not the case, as we
all think that it is not, what, pray, is the meaning of so great audacity to
fashion to yourself whatever form you please, and to say(19) that it is an image
of a god whom you cannot prove to exist at all?
11. You laugh because in ancient times the Persians worshipped rivers, as
is told in the writings which hand down these things to memory; the Arabians an
unshapen stone;(20) the Scythian nations a sabre; the Thespians a branch
instead of Cinxia;(21) the Icarians(22) an unhewn log instead of Diana; the people
of Pessinus a flint instead of the mother of the gods; the Romans a spear
instead of Mars, as the muses of Varro point out; and, before they were acquainted
with the statuary's art, the Samians a plank(23) instead of Juno, as Aethlius(1)
relates: and you do not laugh when, instead of the immortal gods, you make
supplication to little images of men and human forms--nay, you even suppose that
these very little images are gods, and besides these you do not believe that
anything has divine power. What say you, O ye--! Do the gods of heaven have ears,
then, and temples, an occi-put, spine, loins, sides, hams, buttocks, houghs,(2)
ankles, and the rest of the other members with which we have been formed, which
were also mentioned in the first part of this book(3) a little more fully, and
cited with greater copiousness of language? Would that it were possible(4) to
look into the sentiments and very recesses of your mind, in which yon revolve
various and enter into the most obscure considerations: we should find that you
yourselves even feel as we do, and have no other opinions as to the form of the
deities. But what can we do with obstinate prejudices? what with those who are
menacing us with swords, and devising new punishments against us? In your
rage(5) you maintain a bad cause, and that although you are perfectly aware of it;
and that which you have once done without reason, you defend lest you should
seem to have ever been in ignorance; and you think it better not to be conquered,
than to yield and bow to acknowledged truth.
12. From such causes as these this also has followed, with your
connivance, that the wanton fancy of artists has found full scope in representing the
bodies of the gods, and giving forms to them, at which even the sternest might
laugh. And so Hammon is even now formed and represented with a ram's horns; Saturn
with his crooked sickle, like some guardian of the fields, and pruner of too
luxuriant branches; the son of Maia with a broad-brimmed travelling cap, as if
he were preparing to take the road, and avoiding the sun's rays and the dust;
Liber with tender limbs, and with a woman's perfectly free and easily flowing
lines of body(6) Venus, naked and unclothed, just as if you said that she exposed
publicly, and sold to all comers,(7) the beauty of her prostituted body; Vulcan
with his cap and hammer, but with his right hand free, and with his dress girt
up as a workman prepares(8) for his work; the Delian god with a plectrum and
lyre, gesticulating like a player on the cithern and an actor about to sing; the
king of the sea with his trident, just as if he had to fight in the
gladiatorial contest: nor can any figure of any deity be found(9) which does not have
certain characteristics(10) bestowed on it by the generosity of its makers. Lo, if
some witty and cunning king were to remove the Sun from his place before the
gate(11) and transfer him to that of Mercury, and again were to carry off
Mercury and make him migrate to the shrine of the Sun.--for both are made beardless
by you, and with smooth faces.--and to give to this one rays of light to place a
little cap(12) on the Sun's head, how will you be able to distinguish between
them, whether this is the Sun, or that Mercury, since dress, not the peculiar
appearance of the face, usually points out the gods to you? Again, if, having
transported them in like manner, he were to take away Iris horns from the unclad
Jupiter, and fix them upon the temples of Mars. and to strip Mars of his arms,
and, on the other hand, invest Hammon with them, what distinction can there be
between them, since he who had been Jupiter can be also supposed to be Mars,
and he who had been Mayors can assume the appearance of Jupiter Hammon? To such
an extent is there wantonness in fashioning those images and consecrating names,
as if they were peculiar to them; since, if you take away their dress, the
means of recognising each is put an end to, god may be believed to be god, one may
seem to be the other, nay, more, both may be considered both!
13. But why do I laugh at the sickles and tridents which have been given
to the gods? why at the horns, hammers, and caps, when I know that certain
images have(13) the forms of certain men, and the features of notorious courtesans?
For who is there that does not know that the Athenians formed the Hermae in the
likeness of Alcibiades? Who does not know--if he read Posidippus over
again--that Praxiteles, putting forth his utmost skill,(14) fashioned the face of the
Cnidian Venus on the model of the courtesan Gratina, whom the unhappy man loved
desperately? Blot is this the only Venus to whom there has been given beauty
taken from a harlot's face? Phryne.(15) the well-known native of Thespia--as
those who have written on Thespian affairs relate--when she was at the height of
her beauty. comeliness, and youthful vigour, is said to have ben the model of all
the Venuses which are held in esteem, whether throughout the cities of Greece
or here,(16) whither has flowed the longing and eager desire for such figures.
All the artists, therefore, who lived at that time, and to whom truth gave the
greatest ability to portray likenesses, vied in transferring with all
painstaking and zeal the outline of a prostitute to the images of the Cytherean. The
beautiful thoughts(1) of the artists were full of fire; and they strove each to
excel the other with emulous rivalry, not that Venus might become more august,
but that Phryne(2) might stand for Venus. And so it was brought to this, that
sacred honours were offered to courtesans instead of the immortal gods, and an
unhappy system of worship was led astray by the making of statues.(3) That
well-known and(4) most distinguished statuary, Phidias, when he had raised the form of
Olympian Jupiter with immense labour and exertion,(5) inscribed on the finger
of the god Pantarces(6) is BEAUTIFUL,--this, moreover, was the name of a boy
loved by him, and that with lewd desire,--and was not moved by any fear or
religious dread to call the god by the name of a prostitute; nay, rather, to
consecrate the divinity and image of Jupiter to a debauchee. To such an extent is there
wantonness and childish feeling in forming those little images, adoring them
as gods, heaping upon them the divine virtues, when we see that the artists
themselves find amusement in fashioning them, and set them up as monuments of their
own lusts! For what reason is there, if you should inquire, why Phidias should
hesitate to amuse himself, and be wanton when he knew that, but a little
before, the very Jupiter which he had made was gold, stones, and ivory,(7) formless,
separated, confused, and that it was he himself who brought all these together
and bound them fast, that their appearance(8) had been given to them by
himself in the imitation(9) of limbs which he had carved; and, which is more than(10)
all, that it was his own free gift, that Jupiter had been produced and was
adored among men?(11)
14. We would here, as if all nations on the earth were present, make one
speech, and pour into the ears of them all, words which should be heard in
common:(12) Why, pray, is this, 0 men! that of your own accord you cheat and
deceive yourselves by voluntary blindness? Dispel the darkness now, and, returning to
the light of the mind, look more closely and see what that is which is going
on, if only you retain your right,(13) and are not beyond the reach(14) of the
reason and prudence given to you.(15) Those images which fill you with terror,
and which you adore prostrate upon the ground(16) in all the temples, are bones,
stones, brass, silver, gold, clay, wood taken from a tree, or glue mixed with
gypsum. Having been heaped together, it may be, from a harlot's gauds or from a
woman's(17) ornaments, from camels' bones or from the tooth of the Indian
beast,(18) from cooking-pots and little jars, from candlesticks anti lamps, or from
other less cleanly vessels, and having been melted down, they were cast into
these shapes and came out into the forms which you see, baked in potters'
furnaces, produced by anvils and hammers, scraped with the silversmith's, and filed
down with ordinary, files, cleft and hewn with saws, with augers,(19) with axes,
dug and hollowed out by the turning of borers, and smoothed with planes. Is
not this, then, an error? Is it not, to speak accurately, folly to believe that a
god which you yourself made with care, to kneel down trembling in supplication
to that which has been formed by you, and while you know, and are assured that
it is the product(20) of the labour of your hands,(21)--to cast yourself down
upon your face, beg aid suppliantly, and, in adversity and time of distress,
ask it to succour(22) you with gracious and divine favour?
15. Lo, if some one were to place before you copper in the lump, and not
formed(23) into any worlds of art, masses of unwrought silver, and gold not
fashioned into shape, wood, stones, and bones, with all the other materials of
which statues and images of deities usually consist,--nay, more, if some one were
to place before you the faces of battered gods, images melted down(24) and
broken, and were also to bid you slay victims to the bits and fragments, and give
sacred and divine honours to masses without form,--we ask you to say to us,
whether you would do this, or refuse to obey. Perhaps you will say, why? Because
there is no man so stupidly blind that he will class among the gods silver,
copper, gold, gypsum, ivory, potter's clay, and say that these very things have, and
possess in themselves, divine power. What reason is there, then, that all these
bodies should want the power of deity and the rank of celestials if they
remain untouched and unwrought, but should forthwith become gods, and be classed and
numbered among the inhabitants of heaven if they receive the forms of men,
ears, noses, cheeks, lips, eyes, and eyebrows? Does the fashioning add any newness
to these bodies, so that from this addition you are compelled(1) to believe
that something divine and majestic has been united to them? Does it change copper
into gold, or compel worthless earthenware to become silver? Does it cause
things which but a little before were without feeling, to live and breathe?(2) If
they had any natural properties previously,(3) all these they retain(4) when
bulk up in the bodily forms of statues. What stupidity it is--for I refuse to
call it blindness--to suppose that the natures of things are changed by the kind
of form into which they are forced, and that that receives divinity from the
appearance given D it, which in its original body has been inert, and unreasoning,
and unmoved by feeling!(5)
16. And so unmindful and forgetful of what the substance and origin of the
images are, you, men, rational beings(6) and endowed with the gift of wisdom
and discretion, sink down before pieces of baked earthenware, adore plates of
copper, beg from the teeth of elephants good health, magistracies, sovereignties,
power, victories, acquisitions, gains, very good harvests, and very rich
vintages; and while it is plain and clear that you are speaking to senseless things,
you think that you are heard, and bring yourselves into disgrace of your own
accord, by vainly and credulously deceiving yourselves.(7) Oh, would that you
might enter into some statue! rather, would that you might separate(8) and break
up into parts(9) those Olympian and Capitoline Jupiters, and behold all those
parts alone and by themselves which make up the whole of their bodies! You would
at once see that these gods of yours, to whom the smoothness of their exterior
gives a majestic appearance by its alluring(10) brightness, are only a
framework of flexible(11) plates, particles without shape joined together; that they
are kept from falling into ruin and fear of destruction, by dove-tails and
clamps and brace-irons; and that lead is run into the midst of all the hollows and
where the joints meet, and causes delay(12) useful in preserving them. You would
see, I say, at once that they have faces only without the rest of the
head,(13) imperfect hands without arms, bellies and sides in halves, incomplete
feet,(14) and, which is most ridiculous, that they have been put together without
uniformity in the construction of their bodies, being in one part made of wood, but
in the other of stone. Now, indeed, if these things could not be seen through
the skill with which they were kept out of sight,(15) even those at least which
lie open to all should have taught and instructed you that you are effecting
nothing, and giving your services in vain to dead things. For, in this case,(16)
do you not see that these images, which seem to breathe,(17) whose feet and
knees you touch and handle when praying, at times fall into ruins from the
constant dropping of rain, at other times lose the firm union of their parts from
their decaying and becoming rotten,(18)--how they grow black, being fumigated and
discoloured by the steam of sacrifices, and by smoke,--how with continued
neglect they lose their position(19) and appearance, and are eaten away with rust?
In this case, I say, do yon not see that newts, shrews, mice, and cockroaches,
which shun the light, build their nests and live under the hollow parts of these
statues? that they gather carefully into these all kinds of filth, and other
things suited to their wants, hard and half-gnawed bread, bones dragged thither
in view of probable scarcity,(20) rags, down, and pieces of paper to make their
nests soft, and keep their young warm? Do you not see sometimes over the face
of an image cobwebs and treacherous nets spun by spiders, that they may be able
to entangle in them buzzing and imprudent flies while on the wing? Do you not
see, finally, that swallows full of filth, flying within the very domes of the
temples, toss themselves about, and bedaub now the very faces, now the mouths
of the deities, the beard, eyes, noses, and all the other parts on which their
excrements(1) fall? Blush, then, even though it is late, and accept true methods
and views from dumb creatures, and let these teach you that there is nothing
divine in images, into which they do not fear or scruple to cast unclean things
in obedience to the laws of their being, and led by their unerring instincts.(2)
17. But you err, says my opponent, and are mistaken, for we do not
consider either copper, or gold and silver, or those other materials of which statues
are made, to be in themselves gods and sacred deities; but in them we worship
and venerate those whom their(3) dedication as sacred introduces and causes to
dwell in statues made by workmen. The reasoning is not vicious nor despicable by
which any one--the dull, and also the most intelligent--can believe that the
gods, forsaking their proper seats--that is, heaven--do not shrink back and
avoid entering earthly habitations; nay, more, that impelled by the rite of
dedication, they are joined to images Do your gods, then, dwell in gypsum and in
figures of earthenware? Nay, rather, are the gods the minds, spirits, and souls of
figures of earthenware and of gypsum? and, that the meanest things may be able
to become of greater importance, do they suffer themselves to be shut up and
concealed and confined in(4) an obscure abode? Here, then, in the first place, we
wish and ask to be told this by you: do they do this against their will--that
is, do they enter the images as dwellings, dragged to them by the rite of
dedication--or are they ready and willing? and do you not summon them by any
considerations of necessity? Do they do this unwillingly?(5) and how can it be possible
that they should be compelled to submit to any necessity without their dignity
being impaired? With ready assent?(6) And what do the gods seek for in figures
of earthenware that they should prefer these prisons(7) to their starry
seats,--that, having been all but fastened to them, they should ennoble(8)
earthenware and the other substances of which images are made?
18. What then? Do the gods remain always in such substances, and do they
not go away to any place, even though summoned by the most momentous affairs? or
do they have free passage, when they please to go any whither, and to leave
their own seats and images? If they are under the necessity of remaining, what
can be more wretched than they, what more unfortunate than if hooks and leaden
bonds hold them fast in this wise on their pedestals? but if we allow that they
prefer these images to heaven and the starry seats, they have lost their divine
power.(9) But if, on the contrary, when they choose, they fly forth, and are
perfectly free to leave the statues empty, the images will then at some time
cease to be gods, and it will be doubtful when sacrifices should be offered,--when
it is right and fitting to withhold them. Oftentimes we see that by artists
these images are at one time made small, and reduced to the size of the hand, at
another raised to an immense height, and built up to a wonderful size. In this
way, then, it follows that we should understand that the gods contract
themselves in(10) little statuettes, and are compressed till they become like(11) a
strange body; or, again, that they stretch themselves out to a great length, and
extend to immensity in images of vast bulk. So, then, if this is the case, in
sitting statues also the gods should be said to be seated, and in standing ones to
stand, to be running in those stretching forward to run, to be hurling
javelins in those represented as casting them, to fit and fashion themselves to their
countenances, and to make themselves like(12) the other characteristics of the
body formed by the artist.
19. The gods dwell in images--each wholly in one, or divided into parts,
and into members? For neither is it possible that there can be at one time one
god in several images, nor, again, divided into parts by his being cut up.(13)
For let us suppose that there are ten thousand images of Vulcan in the whole
world: is it possible at all, as I said, that at one time one deity can be in all
the ten thousand? I do not think so. Do you ask wherefore? Because things which
are naturally single and unique, cannot become many while the integrity of
their simplicity(14) is maintained. And this they are further unable to become if
the gods have the forms of men, as your belief declares; for either a hand
separated froth the head, or a foot divided from the body, cannot manifest the
perfection of the whole, or it must be said that parts can be the same as the
whole, while the whole cannot exist unless it has been made by gathering together
its parts. Moreover, if the same deity shall be said to be in all the statues,
all reasonableness and soundness is lost to the truth, if this is assumed that at
one tithe one can remain in them all; or each of the gods must be said to
divide himself from himself, so that he is both himself and another, not separated
by any distinction, but himself the same as another. But as nature rejects and
spurns and scorns this, it must either be said and confessed that there are
Vulcans without number, if we decide that he exists anti is in all the images; or
he will be in none, because he is prevented by nature from being divided among
several.
20. And yet, O you--if it is plain and clear to you that tim gods live.
and that the inhabitants of heaven dwell in the inner parts of the images, why do
you guard, protect, and keep them shut up under the strongest keys, and under
fastenings of immense size, under iron bars, bolts,(1) and other such things,
and defend them with a thousand men and a thousand women to keep guard, lest by
chance some thief or nocturnal robber should creep in? Why do you feed dogs in
the capitols?(2) Why do you give food and nourishment to geese? Rather, if you
are assured that the gods are there, and that they do not depart to any place
from their figures and images, leave to them the care of themselves, let their
shrines be always unlocked and open; and if anything is secretly carried off by
any one with reckless fraud, let them show the might of divinity, and subject
the sacrilegious robbers to fitting punishments at the moment(3) of their theft
and wicked deed. For it is unseemly, and subversive of their power and majesty,
to entrust the guardianship of the highest deities to the care of dogs, and
when you are seeking for some means of frightening thieves so as to keep them
away, not to beg it from the gods themselves, but to set and place it in the
cackling of geese.
21. They say that Antiochus of Cyzicum took from its shrine a statue of
Jupiter made of gold ten(4) cubits high, and set up in its place one made of
copper covered with thin plates of gold. If the gods are present, and dwell. in
their own images, with what business, with what cares, had Jupiter been entangled
that he could not punish the wrong done to himself, and avenge his being
substituted in baser metal? When the famous Dionysius--but it was the
younger(5)--despoiled Jupiter of his golden vestment, and put instead of it one of wool, and,
when mocking him with pleasantries also, he said that that which he was taking
away was cold in the frosts of winter, this warm, that that one was cumbrous in
summer, that this, again, was airy in hot weather,--where was the king of the
world that he did not show his presence by some terrible deed, and recall the
jocose buffoon to soberness by bitter torments? For why should I mention that
the dignity of Aesculapius was mocked by him? For when Dionysius was spoiling him
of his very ample beard, which was of great weight and philosophic
thickness,(6) he said that it was not right that a son sprung from Apollo, a father smooth
and beardless, and very like a mere boy,(7) should be formed with such a beard
that it was left uncertain which of them was father, which son, or rather
whether they were of the same(8) race and family. Now, when all these things were
being done, and the robber was speaking with impious mockery, if the deity was
concealed in the statue consecrated to his name and majesty, why did he not
punish with just and merited vengeance the affront of stripping his face of its
beard and disfiguring his countenance, and show by this, both that he was himself
present, and that he kept watch over his temples and images without ceasing?
22. But you will perhaps say that the gods do not trouble themselves about
these losses, and do not think that there is sufficient cause for them to come
forth and inflict punishment upon the offenders for their impious
sacrilege.(9) Neither. then. if this is the case, do they wish to have these images. which
they allow to be plucked up and torn away with impunity; nay, on the contrary,
they tell us plainly that they despise these statues, in which they do not care
to show that they were contemned, by taking any revenge. Philostephanus
relates in his Cypriaca, that Pygmalion, king(10) of Cyprus, loved as a woman an
image of Venus, which was held by the Cyprians holy and venerable from ancient
times,(1) his mind, spirit, the light of his reason, and his judgment being
darkened; and that he was wont in his madness, just as if he were dealing with his
wife, having raised the deity to his couch, to be joined with it in embraces and
face to face, and to do other vain things, carded away by a foolishly lustful
imagination.(2) Similarly, Posidippus,(3) in the book which he mentions to have
been written about Gnidus and about its affairs,(4) relates that a young man, of
noble birth,--but he conceals his name,--carried away with love of the Venus
because of which Gnidus is famous, joined himself also in amorous lewdness to
the image of the same deity, stretched on the genial couch, and enjoying(5) the
pleasures which ensue. To ask, again, in like manner: If the powers of the gods
above lurk in copper and the other substances of which images have been formed,
where in the world was the one Venus and the other to drive far away from them
the lewd wantonness of the youths, and punish their impious touch with
terrible suffering?(6) Or, as the goddesses are gentle and of calmer dispositions,
what would it have been for them to assuage the furious joys of(7) the wretched
men, and to bring back their insane minds again to their senses?
23. But perhaps, as you say, the goddesses took the greatest pleasure in
these lewd and lustful insults, and did not think that an action requiring
vengeance to be taken, which soothed their minds, and which they knew was suggested
to human desires by themselves. But if the goddesses, the Venuses, being
endowed with rather calm dispositions, considered that favour should be shown to the
misfortunes of the blinded youths; when the greedy flames so often consumed the
Capitol, and had destroyed the Capitoline Jupiter himself with his wife and
his daughter,(8) where was the Thunderer at that time to avert that calamitous
fire, and preserve from destruction his property, and himself, and all his
family? Where was the queenly Juno when a violent fire destroyed her famous shrine,
and her priestess(9) Chrysis in Argos? Where the Egyptian Serapis, when by a
similar disaster his temple fell, burned to ashes, with all the mysteries, and
Isis? Where Liber Eleutherius, when his temple fell at Athens? Where Diana, when
hers fell at Ephesus? Where Jupiter of Dodona, when his fell at Dodona? Where,
finally, the prophetic Apollo, when by pirates and sea robbers he was both
plundered and set on fire,(10) so that out of so many pounds of gold, which ages
without number had heaped up, he did not have one scruple even to show to the
swallows which built under his caves,(11) as Varro says in his Saturae
Menippeoe?(12) It would be an endless task to write down what shrines have been destroyed
throughout the whole world by earth quakesand tempests--what have been set on
fire by enemies, and by kings and tyrants--what have been stript bare by the
overseers and priests themselves, even though they have turned suspicion away from
them(13)--finally, what have been robbed by thieves and Canacheni,(14) opening
them up, though barred by unknown means;(15) which, indeed, would remain safe
and exposed to no mischances, if the gods were present to defend them, or had
any care for their temples, as is said. But now because they are empty, and
protected by no indwellers, Fortune has power over them, and they are exposed to all
accidents just as much as are all other things which have not life.(16)
24. Here also the advocates of images are wont to say this also, that the
ancients knew well that images have no divine nature, and that there is no
sense in them, but that they formed them profitably and wisely, for the sake of the
unmanageable and ignorant mob, which is the majority in nations and in states,
in order that a kind of appearance, as it were, of deities being presented to
them, from fear they might shake off their rude natures, and, supposing that
they were acting in the presence of the gods, put(17) away their impious deeds,
and, changing their manners, learn to act as men;(18) and that august forms of
gold and silver were sought for them, for no other reason than that some power
was believed to reside in their splendour, such as not only to dazzle the eyes,
but even to strike terror into the mind itself at the majestic beaming lustre.
Now this might perhaps seem to be said with some reason, if, after the temples
of the gods were founded, and their images set up, there were no wicked man in
the world, no villany at all, if justice, peace, good faith, possessed the
hearts of men, and no one on earth were called guilty and guiltless, all being
ignorant of wicked deeds. But now when, on the contrary, all things are full of
wicked men, the name of innocence has almost perished, and every moment, every
second, evil deeds, till now unheard of, spring to light in myriads from the
wickedness of wrongdoers, how is it right to say that images have been set up for
the purpose of striking terror into the mob, while, besides innumerable forms of
crime and wickedness,(1) we see that even the temples themselves are attacked
by tyrants, by kings, by robbers, and by nocturnal thieves, and that these very
gods whom antiquity fashioned and consecrated to cause terror, are carried
away(2) into the caves of robbers, in spite even of the terrible splendour of the
gold?(3)
25. For what grandeur--if you look at the truth without any
prejudice(4)--is there in these images(5) of which they speak, that the men of old should
have had reason to hope and think that, by beholding them, the vices of men could
be subdued, and their morals and wicked ways brought under restraint?(6) The
reaping-hook, for example, which was assigned to Saturn,(7) was it to inspire
mortals with fear, that they should be willing to live peacefully, and to abandon
their malicious inclinations? Janus, with double face, or that spiked key by
which he has been distinguished; Jupiter, cloaked and bearded, and holding in his
right hand a piece of wood shaped like a thunderbolt; the cestus of Juno,(8)
or the maiden lurking under a soldier's helmet; the mother of the gods, with her
timbrel; the Muses, with their pipes and psalteries; Mercury, the winged
slayer of Argus; Aesculapius, with his staff; Ceres, with huge breasts, or the
drinking cup swinging in Liber's right hand; Mulciber, with his workman s dress; or
Fortune, with her horn full of apples, figs, or autumnal fruits; Diana, with
half-covered thighs, or Venus naked, exciting to lustful desire; Anubis, with his
dog's face; or Priapus, of less importance(9) than his own genitals: were
these expected to make men afraid?
26. O dreadful forms of terror and(10) frightful bugbears(11) on account
of which the human race was to be benumbed for ever, to attempt nothing in its
utter amazement, and to restrain itself from every wicked and shameful
act--little sickles, keys, caps, pieces of wood, winged sandals, staves, little
timbrels, pipes, psalteries, breasts protruding and of great size, little drinking
cups, pincers, and horns filled with fruit, the naked bodies of women, and huge
veretra openly exposed! Would it not have been better to dance and to sing, than
calling it gravity and pretending to be serious, to relate what is so insipid
and so silly, that images(12) were formed by the ancients to check wrongdoing,
and to arouse the fears of the wicked and impious? Were the men of that age and
time, in understanding, so void of reason and good sense, that they were kept
back from wicked actions, just as if they were little boys, by the
preternatural(13) savageness of masks, by grimaces also, and bugbears?(14) And how has this
been so entirely changed, that though there are so many temples in your states
filled with images of all the gods, the multitude of criminals cannot be
resisted even with so many laws and so terrible punishments, and their audacity cannot
be overcome(15) by any means, and wicked deeds, repeated again and again,
multiply the more it is striven by laws and severe judgments to lessen the number
of cruel deeds, and to quell them by the check given by means of punishments?
But if images caused any fear to men, the passing of laws would cease, nor would
so many kinds of tortures be established against the daring of the guilty: now,
however, because it has been proved and established that the supposed(16)
terror which is said to flow out from the images is in reality vain, recourse has
been had to the ordinances of laws, by which there might be a dread of
punishment which should be most certain fixed in men's minds also, and a condemnation
settled; to which these very images also owe it that they yet stand safe, and
secured by some respect being yielded to them.