ON THE WORKMANSHIP OF GOD, OR THE FORMATION OF MAN
ON THE WORKMANSHIP OF GOD, OR THE FORMATION OF MAN
A TREATISE ADDRESSED TO HIS PUPIL DEMETRIANUS.
CHAP. I.--THE INTRODUCTION, AND EXHORTATION TO DEMETRIANUS.(1)
How disturbed I am, and in the greatest necessities, you will be able to
judge from this little book which I have written to you, Demetrianus, almost in
unadorned words, as the mediocrity of my talent permitted, that you might know
my daily pursuit, and that I might not be wanting to you, even now an
instructor, but of a more honourable subject and of a better system. For if you afforded
yourself a ready hearer in literature, which did nothing else than form the
style, how much more teachable ought you to be in these true studies, which have
reference even to the life! And I now profess to you, that I am hindered by no
necessity of circumstance or time from composing something by which the
philosophers of our sect(2) which we uphold may become better instructed and more
learned for the future, although they now have a bad reputation, and are commonly
reproved, as living otherwise than is befitting for wise men, and as concealing
their vices under the covering of a name; whereas they ought either to have
remedied them, or to have altogether avoided them, that they might render the name
of wisdom happy and uncorrupted, their life itself agreeing with their
precepts. I, however, shrink from no labour that I may at once instruct ourselves and
others. For I am not able to forget myself, and especially at that time when
it is most necessary for me to remember; as also you do not forget yourself, as
I hope and wish. For although the necessity of the state may turn you aside
from true and just works, yet it is impossible that a mind conscious of rectitude
should not from time to time look to the heaven.
I indeed rejoice that all things which are esteemed blessings turn out
prosperously to you, but only on condition of their changing nothing of your state
of mind. For I fear lest custom and the pleasantness of these subjects should,
as usually happens, creep by degrees into your mind. Therefore I advise you,
"And repeating it, will again and again advise you,"(3)
not to believe that you have these enjoyments of the earth as great or true
blessings, since they are not only deceitful because they are doubtful, but also
treacherous because they are pleasant. For you know how crafty that wrestler
and adversary of ours is, and also often violent, as we now see that he is. He
employs all these things which are able to entice as snares, and with such
subtilty that they escape the notice of the eyes of the mind, so that they cannot be
avoided by the foresight of man. Therefore it is the highest prudence to
advance step by step, since he occupies the passes on both sides, and secretly places
stumbling-blocks for our feet. Accordingly I advise you, either to disregard,
if you are able according to your virtue, your prosperity in which you live, or
not to admire it greatly. Remember your true parent, and in what(4) city you
have given your name, and of what rank you have been. You understand assuredly
what I say. For I do not charge you with pride, of which there is not even a
suspicion in your case; but the things which I say are to be referred to the mind,
not to the body, the whole system of which has been arranged on this account,
that it may be in subjection to the soul as to a master, and may be ruled by
its will. For it is in a certain manner an earthen vessel in which the soul, that
is, the true man himself, is contained, and that vessel indeed not made by
Prometheus, as the poets say, but by that supreme Creator and Artificer of the
world, God, whose divine providence and most perfect excellence it is neither
possible to comprehend by the perception, nor to express in word.
I will attempt, however, since mention has been made of the body and soul,
to explain the nature of each, as far as the weakness of my understanding sees
through; and I think that this duty is especially to be undertaken on this
account, because Marcus Tullius, a man of remarkable talent, in his fourth book on
the Republic, when he had attempted to do this, concluded a subject of wide
extent within narrow limits, lightly selecting the chief points. And that there
might be no excuse, because he had not followed up this subject, he testified
that neither inclination nor attention had been wanting to him. For in his first
book concerning the Laws, when he was concisely summing up the same subject, he
thus spoke: "Scipio, as it appears to me, has sufficiently expressed this
subject in those books which you have read." Afterwards, however, in his second
book concerning the Nature of the Gods, he endeavoured to follow up the same
subject more extensively. But since he did not express it sufficiently even there, I
will approach this office, and will take upon myself boldly to explain that
which a man of the greatest eloquence has almost left untouched. Perhaps you may
blame me for attempting to discuss something in matters of obscurity, when you
see that there have been men of such rashness who are commonly called
philosophers, that they scrutinized those things which God willed to be abstruse and
hidden, and investigated the nature of things in heaven and on earth, which are
far removed from us, and cannot be examined(1) by the eyes, nor touched by the
hand, nor perceived by the senses; and yet they so dispute concerning the nature
of these things, as to wish that the things, which they bring forward may
appear to be proved and known. What reason is there, I pray, why any one should
think it an invidious thing in us, if we wish to look into and contemplate the
system of our body,(2) which is not altogether obscure, because from the very
offices of the limbs, and the uses of the several parts, it is permitted us to
understand with what great power of providence each part has been made?
CHAP. II.--OF THE PRODUCTION OF THE BEASTS AND OF MAN.
For our Creator and Parent, God, has given to man perception and reason,
that it might be evident from this that we are descended from Him, because He
Himself is intelligence, He Himself is perception and reason. Since He did not
give that power of reason to the other animals, He provided beforehand in what
manner their life might be more safe. For He clothed them all with their own
natural hair,(3) in order that they might more easily be able to endure the
severity of frosts and colds. Moreover, He has appointed to every kind its own
peculiar defence for the repelling of attacks from without; so that they may either
oppose the stronger animals with natural weapons, or the feebler ones may
withdraw themselves from danger by the swiftness of their flight, or those which
require at once both strength and swiftness may protect themselves by craft, or
guard themselves in hiding-places.(4) And so others of them either poise themselves
aloft with light plumage, or are supported by hoofs,(5) or are furnished with
horns; some have arms in their mouth--namely, their teeth(6)--or hooked talons
on their feet; and none of them is destitute of a defence for its own
protection.
But if any fall as a prey to the greater animals, that their race might
not utterly perish, they have either been banished to that region where the
greater ones cannot exist, or they have received a more abundant fruitfulness in
production, that food might be supplied from them to the beasts which are
nourished by blood, and yet their very multitude might survive the slaughter inflicted
upon them, so as to preserve the race.(7) But He made man--reason being granted
to him, and the power of perceiving and speaking being given to him--destitute
of those things which are given to the other animals, because wisdom was able
to supply those things which the condition of nature had denied to him. He made
him naked and defenceless, because he could be armed by his talent, and
clothed by his reason.(8) But it cannot be expressed how wonderfully the absence of
those things which are given to the brutes contributes to the beauty of man. For
if He had given to man the teeth of wild beasts, or horns, or claws, or hoofs,
or a tail, or hairs of various colour, who cannot perceive how misshapen an
animal he would be, as the dumb animals, if they were made naked and defenceless?
For if you take from these the natural clothing of their body, or those things
by which they are armed of themselves, they can be neither beautiful nor safe,
so that they appear wonderfully furnished if you think of utility, and
wonderfully adorned if you think of appearance: in such a wonderful manner is utility
combined with beauty.
But with reference to man, whom He formed an eternal and immortal being,
He did not arm him, as the others, without, but within; nor did He place his
protection in the body, but in the soul: since it would have been superfluous,
when He had given him that which was of the greatest value, to cover him with
bodily defences, especially when they hindered the beauty of the human body. On
which account I am accustomed to wonder at the senselessness of the philosophers
who follow Epicurus, who blame the works of nature, that they may show that the
world is prepared and governed by no providence;(1) but they ascribe the origin
of all things to indivisible and solid bodies, from the fortuitous meetings of
which they say that all things are and were produced. I pass by the things
relating to the work itself with which they find fault, in which matter they are
ridiculously mad; I assume that which belongs to the subject of which we are now
treating.
CHAP. III.--OF THE CONDITION OF THE BEASTS AND MAN.
They complain that man is born in a more feeble and frail condition than
that in which the other animals are born: for that these, as soon as they are
produced from the womb, immediately raise themselves on their feet, and express
their joy by running to and fro, and are at once fit for enduring the air,
inasmuch as they have come forth to the light protected by natural coverings; but
man, on the contrary, being naked and defenceless, is cast forth, and driven, as
it were, from a shipwreck, to the miseries of this life; who is neither able to
move himself from the place where he has been born,(2) nor to seek the
nourishment of milk, nor to endure the injury of time. Therefore they say that Nature
is not the mother of the human race, but a stepmother, who has dealt so
liberally with the dumb creation, but has so produced man, that, without resources,
and without strength, and destitute of all aid, he can do nothing else than give
tokens(3) of the state of his frailty by wailing and lamentations; "as well he
may, whose destiny it is to go through in life so many ills."(4)
And when they say these things they are believed to be very wise, because
every one without consideration is displeased with his own condition; but I
contend that they are never more foolish than when they say these things.(1) For
when I consider the condition of things, I understand that nothing ought to have
been otherwise than it is--not to say could have been otherwise, for God is
able to do all things: but it must be, that that most provident majesty made that
which was better and more right.
I should like, therefore, to ask those censurers of the divine works, what
they think to be wanting in man, on account of his being born in a more feeble
condition. Do they think that men are, on this account, brought up worse? Or
that they advance the less to the greatest strength of age? Or that weakness is
a hindrance to their growth or safety, since reason bestows(5) the things which
are wanting? But, they say, the bringing up of man costs the greatest labours:
in truth, the condition of the brute creation is better, because all these,
when they have brought forth their young, have no care except for their own food;
from which it is effected that, their teats being spontaneously distended, the
nourishment of milk is supplied to their offspring, and that they seek this
nourishment by the compulsion of nature, without any trouble on the part of the
mothers. How is it with birds, which have a different nature? do they not
undergo the greatest labours in bringing up their young, so that they sometimes
appear to have something of human intelligence? For they either build their nests of
mud, or construct them with twigs and leaves, and they sit upon the eggs
without taking food; and since it has not been given to them to nourish their young
from their own bodies, they convey to them food, and spend whole days in going
to and fro in this manner; but by night they defend, cherish, and protect them.
What more can men do? unless it be this only, that they do not drive away
their young when grown up, but retain them bound by perpetual relationship and the
bond of affection. Why should I say that the offspring of birds is much more
fragile than that of man? Inasmuch as they do not bring forth the animal itself
from the body of the mother, but that which, being warmed by the nourishment and
heat of the body of the mother, produces the animal; and this, even when
animated by breath, being unfledged and tender, is not only without the power of
flying, but even of walking. Would he not, therefore, be most senseless, if any
one should think that nature has dealt badly with birds, first, because they are
twice born, and then because they are so weak, that they have to be nourished
by food sought with labour by their parents? But they select the stronger, and
pass by the more feeble animals.
I ask, therefore, from those who prefer the condition of the beasts to
their own, what they would choose if God should give them the choice: would they
prefer the wisdom of man together with his weakness, or the strength of the
beasts together with their nature? In truth, they are not so much like the beasts
as not to prefer even a much more fragile condition, provided that it be human,
to that strength of theirs unattended with reason. But, in truth, prudent men
neither desire the reason of man together with frailty, nor the strength of the
dumb animals without reason. Therefore it is nothing so repugnant or
contradictory,(1) that either reason or the condition of nature should of necessity
prepare each animal. If it is furnished with natural protection, reason is
superfluous. For what will it contrive?(2) What will it do? Or what will it plan? Or in
what will it display that light of the intellect, when Nature of its own accord
grants those things which are able to be the result of reason? But if it be
endued with reason, what need will there be of defences for the body, when reason
once granted is able to supply the office of nature? And this has such power
for the adorning and protection of man, that nothing greater or better can be
given by God. Finally, since man is possessed of a body which is not great, and
of slight strength, and of infirm health, nevertheless, since he has received
that which is of greater value, he is better equipped than the other animals, and
more adorned. For though he is born frail and feeble, yet he is safe from all
the dumb animals, and all those which are born with greater strength, though
they are able to bear patiently the inclemency of the sky, yet are unable to be
safe from man. Thus it comes to pass that reason bestows more on man than nature
does on the dumb animals; since, in their case, neither greatness of strength
nor firmness of body can prevent them from being oppressed by us, or from being
made subject to our power.
Can any one, then, when he sees that even elephants,(3) with their vast
bodies and strength, are subservient to man, complain respecting God, the Maker
of all things, because he has received moderate strength, and a small body; and
not estimate according to their deserts the divine benefits towards himself,
which is the part of an ungrateful man, or (to speak more truly) of a madman?
Plato, I believe, that he might refute these ungrateful men, gave thanks to nature
that he was born a man.(4) How much better and more soundly did he act, who
perceived that the condition of man was better, than they did who would have
preferred that they had been born beasts! For if God should happen to change them
into those animals whose condition they prefer to their own, they would now
immediately desire to return to their previous state, and o would with great
outcries eagerly demand their former condition, because strength and firmness of
body are not of such consequence that you should be without the office of the
tongue; or the free course of birds through the air, that you should be without the
hands. For the hands o are of greater service than the lightness and use n of
the wings; the tongue is of greater service y than the strength of the whole
body. What h madness is it, therefore, to prefer those things which, if they were
given, you would refuse to receive!
CHAP. IV.--OF THE WEAKNESS OF MAN.
They also complain that man is liable to diseases, and to untimely death.
They are indignant, it appears, that they are not born gods. By no means, they
say; but we show from this, that man was made with no foresight, which ought
to have been otherwise. What if I shall show, that this very thing was foreseen
with great reason, that he might be able to be harassed by diseases, and that
his life might often be cut short in the midst of its course? For, since God had
known that the animal which He had made, of its own accord passed to death,
that it might be capable of receiving death itself, which is the dissolution of
nature, He gave to it frailty, which might find an approach for death in order
to the dissolution of the animal. For if it had been of such strength that
disease and sickness could not approach it, not even could death, since death is
the consequence of diseases. But how could a premature death be absent from him,
for whom a mature death had been appointed? Assuredly they wish that no man
should die, unless when he has completed his hundredth year. How can they maintain
their consistency in so great an opposition of circumstances? For, in order
that no one may be capable of dying before a hundred years, something of the
strength which is immortal must be given to him; and when this is granted, the
condition of death must necessarily be excluded. But of what kind can that be,
which can render a man firm and impregnable against diseases and attacks from
without? For, inasmuch as he is composed of bones, and nerves, and flesh, and
blood, which of these can be so firm as to repel frailty and death? That man,
therefore, may not be liable to dissolution before that time which they think ought
to have been appointed for him, of what material will they assign to him a body?
All things which can be seen and touched are frail. It remains that they seek
something from heaven, since there is nothing on earth which is not weak.
Since, therefore, man had to be so formed by God, that he should at some
time be mortal, the matter itself required that he should be made with a frail
and earthly body. It is necessary, therefore, that he should at some time
receive death, since he is possessed of a body; for every body is liable to
dissolution and to death. Therefore they are most foolish who complain of premature
death, since the condition of nature makes a place for it. Thus it will follow
that he is subject also to diseases; for nature does not admit that infirmity can
be absent from that body which is at some time to undergo dissolution. But let
us suppose it to be possible, as they wish, that man is not born under those
conditions by which he is subject to disease or death, unless, having completed
the course of his life, he shall have arrived at the extremity of old age. They
do not, therefore, see what would be the consequence if it were so arranged,
that it would be plainly impossible to die at another time; but if any one can
be deprived of nourishment by another, it will be possible for him to die.
Therefore the case requires that man, who cannot die before an appointed day, should
have no need of the nourishment of food, because it may be taken from him; but
if he shall have no need of food, he will now not be a man, but will become a
god. Therefore, as I have already said, they who complain of the frailty of
man, make this complaint especially, that they were not born immortal and
everlasting. No one ought to die unless he is old. On this account, in truth, he ought
to die, because he is not God. But mortality cannot be united with immortality:
for if a man is mortal in old age, he cannot be immortal in youth; neither is
the condition of death foreign to him who is at some time about to die; nor is
there any immortality to which a limit is appointed. Thus it comes to pass,
that the exclusion of immortality for ever, and the reception of mortality for a
time, place man in such a condition that he is at some time mortal.
Therefore the necessity is in all points suitable,(1) that he ought not to
have been otherwise than he is, and that it was impossible. But they do not
see the order of consequences, because they have once committed an error in the
main point itself. For the divine providence having been excluded from the
affairs of men, it necessarily followed that all things were produced of their own
accord. Hence they invented the notion of those blows and fortuitous meetings
together of minute seeds, because they did not see the origin of things. And when
they had thrown themselves into this difficulty, necessity now compelled them
to think that souls were born together with bodies, and in like manner were
extinguished together with bodies; for they had made the assumption, that nothing
was made by the divine mind. And they were unable to prove this m any other
way, than by showing that there were some things in which the system of providence
appeared to be at fault.(2) Therefore they blamed those things in which
providence wonderfully expressed its divinity, as those things which I have related
concerning diseases and premature death; whereas they ought to have considered,
these things being assumed, what would be the necessary consequences (but those
things which I have spoken are the consequences) if he were not liable to
diseases, and did not require a dwelling, nor clothing. For why should he fear the
winds, or rains, or colds, the power of which consists in this, that they bring
diseases? For on this account he has received wisdom, that he may guard his
frailty against things that would injure him. The necessary consequence is, that
since he is liable to diseases for the sake of retaining his wisdom, he must
also be liable to death; because he to whom death does not come, must of
necessity be firm. But infirmity has in itself the condition of death; but where there
shall be firmness, neither can old age have any place, nor death, which follows
old age.
Moreover, if death were appointed for a fixed age, man would become most
arrogant, and would be destitute of all humanity. For almost all the rights of
humanity, by which we are united with one another, arise from fear and the
consciousness of frailty. In short, all the more feeble and timid animals herd
together, that, since they are unable to protect themselves by strength, they may
protect themselves by their multitude; but the stronger animals seek solitudes,
since they trust in their force and strength.(3) If man also, in the same
manner, had sufficient strength for the repelling of dangers, and did not stand in
need of the assistance of any other, what society would there be? Or what system?
What humanity? Or what would be more harsh than man? What more brutal? What
more savage? But since he is feeble, and not able to live by himself apart from
man, he desires society, that his life, passed in intercourse with others, may
become both more adorned and more safe. You see, therefore, that the whole
reason of man centres most of all in this, that he is born naked and fragile, that
he is attacked by diseases, that he is punished by premature death. And if these
things should be taken away from man, reason also, and wisdom, must
necessarily be taken away. But I am discussing too long respecting things which are
manifest, since it is clear that nothing ever was made, or could have been made,
without providence. And if I should now wish to discuss respecting all its works
in order, the subject would be infinite. But I have purposed to speak so much
concerning the body of man only, that I may show in it the power of divine
providence, how great it has been in those things only which are easy of
comprehension and open; for those things which relate to the soul can neither be subjected
to the eyes, nor comprehended. Now we speak concerning the vessel itself of
man, which we see.
CHAP. V.--OF THE FIGURES AND LIMBS OF ANIMALS.
In the beginning, when God was forming the animals, He did not wish to
conglobate(1) and collect them into a round shape, that they might be able easily
to put themselves in motion for walking, and to turn themselves in any
direction; but from the highest part of the body He lengthened out the head. He also
carried out to a greater length some of the limbs, which are called feet, that,
being fixed on the ground with alternate motions, they might lead forward the
animal wherever his inclination had borne him, or the necessity of seeking food
had called him. Moreover, He made four limbs standing out from the very vessel
of the body: two behind, which are in all animals--the feet; also two close to
the head and neck, which supply various uses to animals. For in cattle and wild
beasts they are feet like the hinder ones; but in man they are hands, which are
produced not for walking, but for acting and controlling.(2) There is also a
third class, in which those former limbs are neither feet nor hands; but wings,
which, having feathers arranged in order, supply the use of flying.(3) Thus one
formation has different forms and uses; and that He might firmly hold together
the density itself of the body, by binding together greater and small bones,
He compacted a kind of keel, which we call the spine; and He did not think fit
to form it of one continued bone, lest the animal should not have the power of
walking and bending itself. From its middle part, as it were, He has extended
in a different direction transverse and fiat bones, by which, being slightly
curved, and almost drawn together to themselves as into a circle, the inward
organs(4) may be covered, that those parts which needed to be soft and less strong
might be protected by the encircling of a solid framework.(5) Bat at the end of
that joining together which we have said to resemble the keel of a ship, He
placed the head, in which might be the government of the whole living creature;
and this name was given to it, as indeed Varro writes to Cicero, because from
this the senses and the nerves take their beginning.
But those parts, which we have said to be lengthened out from the body,
either for the sake of walking, or of acting, or of flying, He would have to
consist of bones, neither too long, for the sake of rapidity of motion, nor too
short, for the sake of firmness, but of a few, and those large. For either they
are two as in man, or four as in a quadruped. And these He did not make solid,
lest in walking sluggishness and weight should retard; but He made them hollow,
and full of marrow within, to preserve the vigour of the body. And again, He did
not make them equally extended to the end; but He conglobated their
extremities with coarse knots, that they might be able more easily to be bound with
sinews, and to be turned more easily, from which they are called joints. (6) These
knots He made firmly solid, and covered with a soft kind of covering, which is
called cartilage; for this purpose, that they might be bent without galling or
any sense of pain. He did not, however, form these after one fashion. For He
made some simple and round into an orb, in those joints at least in which it was
befitting that the limbs should move in all directions, as in the shoulders,
since it is necessary that the hands should move and be twisted about in any
direction; but others He made broad, and equal, and round towards one part, and that
plainly in those places where only it was necessary for the limbs to be bent,
as in the knees, and in the elbows, and in the hands themselves. For as it was
at the same time pleasant to the sight, and useful, that the hands should move
in every direction from that position from which they spring; so assuredly, if
this same thing should happen to the elbows, a motion of that kind would be at
once superfluous and unbecoming. For then the hand, having lost the dignity
which it now has, through its excessive flexibility,(7) would appear like the
trunk of an elephant; and man would be altogether snake-handed,(8)--an instance of
which has been wonderfully effected in that monstrous beast. For God, who
wished to display His providence and power by a wonderful variety of many things,
inasmuch as He had not extended the head of that animal to such a length that he
might be able to touch the earth with his mouth, which would have been horrible
and hideous, and because He bad so armed the mouth itself with extended tusks,
that even if he touched the earth the tusks would still deprive him of the
power of feeding, He lengthened out between these from the top of the forehead a
soft and flexible limb, by which he might be able to grasp and lay hold of
anything, lest the prominent magnitude of the tusks, or the shortness of the neck,
should interfere with the arrangement for taking food.
CHAP. VI.--OF THE ERROR OF EPICURUS, AND OF THE LIMBS AND THEIR USE.
I cannot here be prevented from again showing the folly of Epicurus. For
all the ravings of Lucretius(1) belong to him, who, in order that he might show
that animals are not produced by any contrivance of the divine mind, but, as he
is wont to say, by chance, said that in the beginning of the world innumerable
other animals of wonderful form and magnitude were produced; but that they
were unable to be permanent, because either the power of taking food, or the
method of uniting and generating, had failed them. It is evident that, in order to
make a place for his atoms flying about through the boundless and empty space,
he wished to exclude the divine providence. But when he saw that a wonderful
system of providence is contained in all things which breathe, what vanity was it
(O mischievous one!) to say that there had been animals of immense size, in
which the system of production ceased!
Since, therefore, all things which we see are produced with reference to a
plan--for nothing but a plan(2) can effect this very condition of being
born--it is manifest that nothing could have been born without a plan. For it was
previously foreseen in the formation of everything, how it should use the service
of the limbs for the necessaries of life; and how the offspring, being produced
from the union of bodies, might preserve all living creatures by their several
species. For if a skilful architect, when he designs to construct some great
building, first of all considers what will be the effect(3) of the complete
building, anti previously ascertains by measurement what situation is suitable for
a light weight, in what place a massive part of the structure will stand, what
will be the intervals between the columns, what or where will be the descents
and outlets of the falling waters and the reservoirs,--he first, I say,
foresees these things, that he may begin together with the very foundations whatever
things are necessary for the work when now completed,--why should any one
suppose that, in the contrivance of animals, God did not foresee what things were
necessary for living, before giving life itself? For it is manifest that life
could not exist, unless those things by which it exists were previously arranged.(4)
Therefore Epicurus saw in the bodies of animals the skill of a divine
plan; but that he might carry into effect that which he had before imprudently
assumed, he added another absurdity agreeing with the former. For he said that the
eyes were not produced for seeing, nor the ears for hearing, nor the feet for
walking, since these members were produced before there was the exercise of
seeing, hearing, and walking; but that all the offices of these members arose from
hem after their production.(5) I fear lest the refutation of such extravagant
and ridiculous stories should appear to be no less foolish; but it pleases me
to be foolish, since we are dealing with a foolish man, lest he should think
himself too clever.(6) What do you say, Epicurus? Were not the eyes produced for
seeing? Why, then, do they see? Their use, he says, afterwards showed itself.
Therefore they were produced for the sake of seeing, since they can do nothing
else but see. Likewise, in the case of the other limbs, use itself shows for
what purpose they were produced. For it is plain that this use could have no
existence, unless all the limbs had been made with such arrangement and foresight,
that they might be able to have their use.
For what if you should say, that birds were not made to fly, nor wild
beasts to rage, nor fishes to swim, nor men to be wise, when it is evident that
living creatures are subject to that natural disposition and office to which each
was created? But it is evident that he who has lost the main point itself of
the truth must always be in error. For if all things are produced not by
providence, but by a fortuitous meeting together of atoms, why does it never happen by
chance, that those first principles meet together in such a way as to make an
animal of such a kind, that it might rather hear with its nostrils, smell with
its eyes, and see(7) with its ears? For if the first principles leave no kind of
position untried, monstrous productions of this kind ought daily to have been
brought forth, in which the arrangement of the limbs might be distorted,(8) and
the use far different from that which prevails. But since all the races of
animals, and all the limbs, observe their own laws and arrangements, and the uses
assigned to them, it is plain that nothing is made by chance, since a perpetual
arrangement of the divine plan is preserved. But we will refute Epicurus at
another time. Now let us discuss the subject of providence, as we have begun.
CHAP. VII.--OF ALL THE PARTS OF THE BODY.
God therefore connected and bound together the parts which strengthen(1)
the body, which we call bones, being knotted and joined to one another by
sinews, which the mind might make use of, as bands,(2) if it should wish to hasten
forward or to lag behind; and, indeed, without any labour or effort, but with a
very slight inclination, it might moderate and guide the mass of the whole body.
But He covered these with the inward organs,(3) as was befitting to each
place, that the parts which were solid might be enclosed and concealed. Also He
mixed with the inward organs, veins as streams divided through the whole body,
through which the moisture and the blood, running in different directions, might
be-dew all the limbs with the vital juices; and He fashioned these inward organs
after that manner which was befitting to each kind and situation, and covered
them with skin drawn over them, which He either adorned with beauty only, or
covered with thick hair, or fenced with scales, or adorned with brilliant
feathers. But that is a wonderful contrivance of God, that one arrangement and one
state exhibits innumerable varieties of animals. For in almost all things which
breathe there is the same connection and arrangement of the limbs. For first of
all is the head, and annexed to this the neck; also the breast adjoined to the
neck, and the shoulders projecting from it, the belly adhering to the breast;
also the organs of generation subjoined to the belly; in the last place, the
thighs and feet. Nor do the limbs only keep their own course and position in all,
but also the parts of the limbs. For in the head itself alone the ears occupy a
fixed position the eyes a fixed position likewise the nostrils, the mouth also,
and in it the teeth and tongue. And though all these things are the same in
all animals, yet there is an infinite and manifold diversity of the things
formed; because those things of which I have spoken, being either more drawn out or
more contracted, are comprehended by lineaments differing in various ways.
What! is not that divine, that in so great a multitude of living creatures each
animal is most excellent in its own class and species?--so that if any part
should be taken from one to another, the necessary result would be, that nothing
would be more embarrassed for use, nothing more unshapely to look upon; as if you
should give a prolonged neck to an elephant, or a short neck to a camel; or if
you should attach feet or hair to serpents, in which the length of the body
equally stretched out required nothing else, except that being marked as to their
backs with spots, and supporting themselves by their smooth scales, with
winding courses they should glide into slippery tracts. But in quadrupeds the same
designer lengthened out the arrangement of the spine, which is drawn out from the
top of the head to a greater length on the outside of the body, and pointed it
into a tail, that the parts of the body which are offensive might either be
covered on account of their unsightliness, or be protected on account of their
tenderness, so that by its motion certain minute and injurious animals might be
driven away from the body; and if you should take away this member, the animal
would be imperfect and weak. But where there is reason and the hand, that is not
so necessary as a covering of hair. To such an extent are all things most
befittingly arranged, each in its own class, that nothing can be conceived more
unbecoming than a quadruped which is naked, or a man that is covered.
But, however, though nakedness itself on the part of man tends in a
wonderful manner to beauty, yet it was not adapted to his head; for what great
deformity there would be in this, is evident from baldness. Therefore He clothed the
head with hair; and because it was about to be on the top, He added it as an
ornament, as it were, to the highest summit of the building. And this ornament is
not collected into a circle, or rounded into the figure of a cap, lest it
should be unsightly by leaving some parts bare; but it is freely poured forth in
some places, and with drawn in others, according to the comeliness of each
place. Therefore, the forehead entrenched by a circumference, and the hair put
forth from the temples before the ears, and the uppermost parts of these being
surrounded after the manner of a crown, and all the back part of the head covered,
display an appearance of wonderful comeliness. Then the nature of the beard
contributes in an incredible degree to distinguish the maturity of bodies, or to
the distinction of sex, or to the beauty of manliness and strength; so that it
appears that the system of the whole work would not have been in agreement, if
anything had been made otherwise than it is.
CHAP. VIII.--OF THE PARTS OF MAN: THE EYES AND EARS.
Now I will show the plan of the whole man, and will explain the uses and
habits of the several members which are exposed to view in the body, or
concealed. When, therefore, God had determined of all the animals to make man alone
heavenly, and all the rest earthly, He raised him erect(1) to the contemplation of
the heaven, and made him a biped, doubtless that he might look to the same
quarter from which he derives his origin; but He depressed the others to the
earth, that, inasmuch as they have no expectation of immortality, being cast down
with their whole body to the ground, they might be subservient to their appetite
and food. And thus the right reason and elevated position of man alone, and his
countenance, shared with and closely resembling God his Father, bespeak his
origin and Maker.(2) His mind, nearly divine, because it has obtained the rule
not only over the animals which are on the earth, but even over his own body,
being situated in the highest part, the head, as in a lofty citadel, looks out
upon and observes all things. He formed this its palace, not drawn out and
extended, as in the case of the dumb animals, but like an orb and a globe, because
all(3) roundness belongs to a perfect plan and figure. Therefore the mind and
that divine fire is covered with it,(4) as with a vault;(5) and when He had
covered its highest top with a natural garment, He alike furnished and adorned the
front part which is called the, face, with the necessary services of the members.
And first, He closed the orbs of the eyes with concave apertures, from
which boring(6)' Varro thought that the forehead(7) derived its name; and He
would have these to be neither less nor more than two, because no number is more
perfect as to appearance than that of two: as also He made the ears two, the
doubleness(8) of which bears with it an incredible degree of beauty, both because
each part is adorned with a resemblance, and that voices coming from both
sides(9) may more easily be collected. For the form itself is fashioned after a
wonderful manner: because He would not have their apertures to be naked and
uncovered, which would have been less becoming and less useful; since the voice might
fly beyond the narrow space of simple caverns, and be scattered, did not the
apertures themselves confine it, received through hollow windings and kept back
from reverberation, like those small vessels, by the application of which
narrow-mouthed vessels are accustomed to be filled.
These ears, then, which have their name from the drinking(10) in of
voices, from which Virgil says,(11) or because the Greeks call the voice itself
<greek>audhn</greek>, from hearing,--the ears (aures) were named as though audes by
the change of a letter,-God would not form of soft skins, which, hanging down
and flaccid, might take away beauty; nor of hard and solid bones, lest, being
stiff and immoveable, they should be inconvenient for use. But He designed that
which might be between these, that a softer cartilage might bind them, and that
they might have at once a befitting anti flexible firmness. In these the
office of bearing only is placed, as that of seeing is in the eyes, the acuteness
of which is especially inexplicable and wonderful; for He covered their orbs,
presenting the similitude of gems in that part with which they had to see, with
transparent membranes, that the images of objects placed opposite them, being
refracted(12) as in a mirror, might penetrate to the innermost perception.
Through these membranes, therefore, that faculty which is called the mind sees those
things which are without; lest you should happen to think that we see either
by the striking" of the images, as the philosophers discuss, since the office of
seeing ought to be in that which sees, not in that which is seen; or in the
tension of the air together with the eyesight; or in the outpouring of the rays:
since, if it were so, we should see the ray towards which we turn with our
eyes, until the air, being extended together with the eyesight, or the rays being
poured out, should arrive at the object which was to be seen.
But since we see at the same moment of time, and for the most part, while
engaged on other business, we nevertheless behold all things which are placed
opposite to us, it is more true and evident that it is the mind which, through
the eves, sees those things which are placed opposite to it, as though through
windows covered with pellucid crystal or transparent stone;(14) and therefore
the mind and inclination are often known from the eyes. For the refutation of
which Lucretius(15) employed a very senseless argument. For if the mind, he says,
sees through the eye, it would see better if the eyes were torn out and dug up,
inasmuch as doors being torn up together with the door-posts let in more light
than if they were covered. Truly his eyes, or rather those of Epicurus who
taught him, ought to have been dug out, that they might not see, that the torn-out
orbs, and the burst fibres of the eyes, and the blood flowing through the
veins, and the flesh increasing from wounds, and the scars drawn over at last can
admit no light; unless by chance he would have it that eyes are produced
resembling cars, so that we should see not so much with eyes as with apertures, than
which there can be nothing more unsightly or more useless. For how little should
we be able to see, if from the innermost recesses of the head the mind should
pay attention through Slight fissures of caverns; as, if any one should wish to
look through a stalk of hemlock. he would see no more than the capability of
the stalk itself admitted! For sight, therefore, it was rather needful that the
members should be collected together into an orb, that the sight might be
spread in breadth and the parts which adjoined them in the front of the face, that
they might freely behold all things. Therefore the unspeakable power of the
divine providence made two orbs most resembling each other, and so bound them
together that they might be able not only to be altogether turned, but to be moved
and directed with moderation.(1) And He willed that the orbs themselves should
be full of a pure and clear moisture, in the middle part of which sparks of
lights might be kept shut up, which we call the pupils, in which, being pure and
delicate, are contained the faculty and method of seeing. The mind therefore
directs itself through these orbs that it may see, and the sight of both the eyes
is mingled and joined together in a wonderful manner.
CHAP. IX.--OF THE SENSES AND THEIR POWER.
It pleases me in this place to censure the folly of those who, while they
wish to show that the senses are false, collect many instances in which the
eyes are deceived; and among them this also, that all things appear double to the
mad and intoxicated, as though the cause of that error were obscure. For it
happens on this account, because there are two eyes. But hear how it happens. The
sight of the eyes consists in the exertion of the soul. Therefore, since the
mind, as has been above said, uses the eyes as windows, this happens not only to
those who are intoxicated or mad, but even to those who are of sound mind, and
sober. For if you place any object too near, it will appear double, for there
is a certain interval and space in which the sight of the eyes meets together.
Likewise, if you call the soul back as if to reflection, and relax the exertion
of the mind, then the sight of each eye is drawn asunder, and they each begin
to see separately.
If you, again, exert the mind and direct the eyesight, whatever appeared
double unites into one. What wonder, therefore, if the mind, impaired by poison
anti the powerful influence of wine, cannot direct itself to seeing, as the
feet cannot to walking when they are weak through the numbness of the sinews, or
if the force of madness raging against the brain disunites the agreement of the
eyes? Which is so true, that in the case of one-eyed(2) men, if they become
either mad or intoxicated, it can by no means happen that they see any object
double. Wherefore, if the reason is evident why the eyes are deceived, it is clear
that the senses are not false: for they either are not deceived if they are
pure and sound; or if they are deceived, yet the mind is not deceived which
recognises their error.
CHAP. X.--OF THE OUTER LIMBS OF MAN, AND THEIR USE.
But let us return to the works of God. That the eyes, therefore, might be
better protected from injury, He concealed them with the coverings of the
eyelashes,(3) from which Varro thinks that the eyes(4) derived their name. For even
the eyelids themselves, in which there is the power of rapid motion, and to
which throbbing(5) gives their name, being protected by hairs standing in order,
afford a most becoming fence to the eyes; the continual motion of which, meeting
with incomprehensible rapidity, does not impede the course of the sight, and
relieves the eyes.(6) For the pupil--that is, the transparent membrane--which
ought not to be drained and to become dry, unless it is cleansed by continual
moisture so that it shines clearly, loses its power.(7) Why should I speak of the
summits of the eyebrows themselves, furnished with short hair? Do they not, as
it were by mounds, both afford protection to the eyes. so that nothing may fall
into them from above,(8) and at the same time ornament? And the nose, arising
from the confines of these, and stretched out, as it were, with an equal ridge,
at once serves to separate anti to protect the two eyes. Below also, a not
unbecoming swelling of the cheeks, gently rising after the similitude of hills,
makes the eyes safer on every side; and it has been provided by the great
Artificer, that if there shall happen to be a more violent blow, it may be repelled
by the projecting parts. But the upper part of the nose as far as the middle has
been made solid; but the lower part has been made with a softened cartilage
annexed to it, that it may be pliant(9) to the use of the fingers. Moreover, in
this, though a single member, three offices are placed: one, that of drawing the
breath; the second, that of smelling; the third, that the secretions of the
brain may escape through its caverns. And in how wonderful, how divine a manner
did God contrive these also, so that the very cavity of the nose should not
deform the beauty of the face: which would certainly have been the case if one
single aperture only were open. But He enclosed and divided that, as though by a
wall drawn through the middle, and made it most beautiful by the very
circumstance of its being double.(1) From which we understand of how much weight the
twofold number, made firm by one simple connection, is to the perfection of things.
For though the body is one, yet the whole could not be made up of single
members, unless it were that there should be parts on the right hand or on the
left. Therefore, as the two feet and also hands not only avail to some utility
and practice either of walking or of doing something, but also bestow an
admirable character and comeliness; so in the head, which is, as it were, the crown of
the divine work, the hearing has been divided by the great Artificer into two
ears, and the sight into two eyes, and the smelling into two nostrils, because
the brain, in which is contained the system of the sensation, although it is
one, yet is divided into two parts by the intervening membrane. But the heart
also, which appears to be the abode of wisdom, although it is one, yet has two
recesses within, in which are contained the living fountains of blood, divided by
an intervening barrier: that as in the world itself the chief control, being
twofold from simple matter, or simple from a twofold matter, governs and keeps
together the whole; so in the body, all the parts, being constructed of two,
might present an inseparable unity. Also how useful and how becoming is the
appearance and the opening of the mouth transversely cannot be expressed; the use of
which consists in two offices, that of taking food and speaking.
The tongue enclosed within, which by its motions divides the voice into
words, and is the interpreter of the mind, cannot, however, by itself alone
fulfil the office of speaking, unless it strikes its edge against the palate, unless
aided by striking against the teeth or by the compression of the lips. The
teeth, however, contribute more to speaking: for infants do not begin to speak
before they have teeth; and old men, when they have lost their teeth, so lisp that
they appear to have returned afresh to infancy. But these things relate to man
alone, or to birds, in which the tongue, being pointed and vibrating with
fixed motions, expresses innumerable in-flexions of songs and various kinds of
sounds. It has, moreover, another office also, which it exercises in all, and this
alone in the dumb animals, that it collects the food when bruised and ground by
the teeth, and by its force presses it down when collected into bails, and
transmits it to the belly. Accordingly, Varro thinks that the name of tongue was
given to it from binding(2) the food. It also assists the beasts in drinking:
for with the tongue stretched out and hollowed they draw water; and when they
have taken it in the hollow(3) of the tongue, lest by slowness and delay it should
flow away, they dash(4) it against the palate with swift rapidity. This,
therefore, is covered by the concave part of the palate as by a shell,(5) and God
has surrounded it with the enclosure of the teeth as with a wall.
But He has adorned the teeth themselves, which are arranged in order in a
wonderful manner, lest, being bare and exposed,(6) they should be a terror
rather than an ornament, with soft gums, which are so named from producing teeth,
and then with the coverings of the lips; and the hardness of the teeth, as in a
millstone, is greater and rougher than in the other bones, that they might be
sufficient for bruising the food and pasture. But how befittingly has He
divided(7) the lips themselves, which as it were before were united! the upper of
which, under the very middle of the nostrils, He has marked with a kind of slight
cavity, as with a valley: He has gracefully spread out(8) the lower for the sake
of beauty. For, as far as relates to the receiving of flavour, he is deceived,
whoever he is, who thinks that this sense resides in the palate; for it is the
tongue by which flavours are perceived, and not the whole of it: for the parts
of it which are more tender on either side, draw in the flavour with the most
delicate perceptions. And though nothing is diminished from that which is eaten
or drunk, yet the flavour in an indescribable manner penetrates to the sense,
in the same way in which the taking of the smell detracts nothing from any
material.
And how beautiful the other parts are can scarcely be expressed. The chin,
gently drawn down from the cheeks, and the lower part of it so closed that the
lightly imprinted division appears to mark its extreme point: the neck stiff
and well rounded: the shoulders let down as though by gentle ridges from the
neck: the fore-arms(9) powerful, and braced(10) by sinews for firmness: the great
strength of the upper-arms(11) standing out with remarkable muscles: the useful
and becoming bending of the elbows. What shall I say of the hands, the
ministers of reason and wisdom? Which the most skilful Creator made with a flat and
moderately concave bend, that if anything was to be held, it might conveniently
rest upon them, and terminated them in the fingers; in which it is difficult to
explain whether the appearance or the usefulness is greater. For the perfection
and completeness of their number, and the comeliness of their order and
gradation, and the flexible bending of the equal joints, and the round form of the
nails, comprising and strengthening the tips of the fingers with concave
coverings, lest the softness of the flesh should yield in holding any object, afford
great adornment. But this is convenient for use, in wonderful ways, that one
separated from the rest rises together with the hand itself, and is enlarged(1) in
a different direction, which, offering itself as though to meet the others,
possesses all the power of holding and doing either alone, or in a special manner,
as the guide and director of them all; from which also it received the name of
thumb,(2) because it prevails among the others by force and power. It has two
joints standing out, not as the others, three; but one is annexed by flesh to
the hand for the sake of beauty: for if it had been with three joints, and
itself separate, the foul and unbecoming appearance would have deprived the hand of
all grace.
Again, the breadth of the breast, being elevated, and exposed to the eyes,
displays a wonderful dignity of its condition; of which this is the cause,
that God appears to have made man only, as it were, reclining with his face
upward: for scarcely any other animal is able to lie upon its back. But He appears to
have formed the dumb animals as though lying on one side, and to have pressed
them to the earth. For this reason He gave them a narrow breast, and removed
from sight, and prostrate(3) towards the earth. But He made that of man open and
erect, because, being full of reason given from heaven, it was not befitting
that it should be humble or unbecoming. The nipples also gently rising, and
crowned with darker and small orbs, add something of beauty; being given to females
for the nourishment of their young, to males for grace only, that the breast
might not appear mis-shapen, and, as it were, mutilated. Below this is placed the
fiat surface of the belly, about the middle of which the navel distinguishes
by a not unbecoming mark, being made for this purpose, that through it the
young, while it is in the womb, may be nourished.
CHAP. XI.--OF TITLE INTESTINES IN MAN, AND THEIR USE.
It necessarily follows that I should begin to speak of the inward parts
also, to which has been assigned not beauty, because they are con-cealed from
view, but incredible utility, since it was necessary that this earthly body should
be nourished with some moisture from food and drink, as the earth itself is by
showers and frosts. The most provident Artificer placed in the middle of it a
receptacle for articles of food, by means of which, when digested and
liquefied, it might distribute the vital juices to all the members. But since man is
composed of body and soul, that receptacle of which I have spoken above affords
nourishment only to the body; to the soul, in truth, He has given another abode.
For He has made a kind of intestines soft and thin,(4) which we call the lungs,
into which the breath might pass by an alternate interchange;(5) and He did
not form this after the fashion of the uterus, lest the breath should all at once
be poured forth, or at once inflate it. And on this account He did not make it
a full intestine,(6) but capable of being inflated, and admitting the air, so
that it might gradually receive the breath; while the vital air is spread
through that thinness, and might again gradually give it back, while it spreads
itself forth from it: for the very alternation of blowing and breathing,(7) and the
process of respiration, support life in the body.
Since, therefore, there are in man two receptacles,--one of the air which
nourishes the soul,(8) the other of the food which nourishes the body,--there
must be two tubes(9) through the neck for food, and for breath, the upper of
which leads from the mouth to the belly, the lower from the nostrils to the lungs.
And the plan and nature of these are different: for the passage which is from
the mouth has been made soft, and which when closed always adheres(10) to
itself, as the month itself; since drink and food, being corporeal, make for
themselves a space for passage, by moving aside and opening the gullet. The breath, on
the other hand, which is incorporeal and thin, because it was unable to make
for itself a space, has received an open way, which is called the windpipe. This
is composed of flexible and soft bones, as though of rings fitted together
after the manner of a hemlock stalk,(11) and adhering together; and this passage
is always open. For the breath can have no cessation in passing; because it,
which is always passing to and fro, is checked as by a kind of obstacle through
means of a portion of a member usefully sent down from the brain, and which is
called the uvula, lest, drawn by pestilential air, it should come with
impetuosity and spoil the slightness(1) of its abode, or bring the whole violence of the
injury upon the inner receptacles. And on this account also the nostrils are
slightly open, which are therefore so named, because either smell or breath does
not cease to flow(2) through these, which are, as it were, the doors of this
tube. Yet this breathing-tube lies open(3) not only to the nostrils, but also to
the mouth in the extreme regions of the palate, where the risings of(4) the
jaws, looking towards the uvula, begin to raise themselves into a swelling. And
the reason of this arrangement is not obscure: for we should not have the power
of speaking if the windpipe were open to the nostrils only, as the path of the
gullet is to the mouth only; nor could the breath proceeding from it cause the
voice, without the service of the tongue.
Therefore the divine skill opened a way for the voice from that
breathing-tube, so that the tongue might be able to discharge its office, and by its
strokes divide into words the even s course of the voice itself. And this passage,
if by any means it is intercepted, must necessarily cause dumbness. For he is
assuredly mistaken, whoever thinks that there is any other cause why men are
dumb. For they are not tongue-tied, as is commonly believed; but they pour forth
that vocal breath through the nostrils, as though bellowing,(6) because there is
either no passage at all for the voice to the mouth, or it is not so open as
to be able to send forth the full voice. And this generally comes to pass by
nature; sometimes also it happens by accident that this entrance is blocked up and
does not transmit the voice to the tongue, and thus makes those who can speak
dumb. And when this happens, the hearing also must necessarily be blocked up;
so that because it cannot emit the voice, it is also incapable of admitting it.
Therefore this passage has been opened for the purpose of speaking. It also
affords this advantage, that in frequenting the bath,(7) because the nostrils are
not able to endure the heat, the hot air is taken in by the mouth; also, if
phlegm contracted by cold shall have happened to stop up the breathing pores of
the nostrils, we may be able to draw the air through the mouth, lest, if the
passage s should be obstructed, the breath should be stifled. But the food being
received into the stomach, and mixed with the moisture of the drink, when it
has now been digested by the heat, its juice, being in an indescribable manner
diffused through the limbs, bedews and invigorates the whole body.
The manifold coils also of the intestines, and their length rolled
together on themselves, and yet fastened with one band, are a wonderful work of God.
For when the stomach has sent forth from itself the food softened, it is
gradually thrust forth through those windings of the intestines, so that whatever of
the moisture by which the body is nourished is in them, is divided to all the
members. And yet, lest in any place it should happen to adhere and remain fixed,
which might have taken place on account of the turnings of the coils,(9) which
often turn back to themselves, and which could not have happened without
injury, He has spread over(10) these from within a thicker juice, that the secretions
of the belly might more easily work their way through the slippery substance
to their outlets. It is also a most skilful arrangement, that the bladder, which
birds do not use, though it is separated from the intestines, and has no tube
by which it may draw the urine from them, is nevertheless filled and distended
with moisture. And it is not difficult to see how this comes to pass. For the
parts of the intestines which receive the food and drink from the belly are more
open than the other coils, and much more delicate. These entwine themselves
around and encompass the bladder; and when the meat and the drink have arrived at
these parts in a mixed state, the excrement becomes more solid, and passes
through, but all the moisture is strained through those tender parts,(11) and the
bladder, the membrane of which is equally fine and delicate, absorbs and
collects it, so as to send it forth where nature has opened an outlet.
CHAP. XII.--DE UTERO, ET CONCEPTIONE ATQUE SEXIBUS.(12)
De utero quoque et conceptione, quoniam de internis loquimur, dici necesse
est, ne quid praeterisse videamur; quae quamquam in operto latent, sensum
tamen atque intelligentiam latere non possunt. Vena in maribus, quae seminium
continet, duplex est, paulo interior, quam illud humoris obscoeni receptaculum.
Sicut enim renes duo sunt, itemque testes, ita et venae seminales duae, in una
tamen compage cohaerentes; quod videmus in corporibus animalium, cum interfecta(13)
patefiunt. Sed illa dexterior masculinum continet semen, sinisterior
foemininum; et omnino in toto corpore pars dextra masculina est, sinistra veto
foeminina. Ipsum semen quidam putant ex medullis tantum, qui dam ex omni corpore ad
venam genitalem confluere, ibique concrescere. Sed hoc, humana mens, quomodo fiat,
non potest comprehendere. Item in foeminis uterus in duas se dividit partes,
quae in diversum diffussae ac reflexae, circumplicantur, sicut arietis cornua.
Quae pars in dextram retorquetur, masculina est; quae in sinistram, foeminina.
Conceptum igitur Varro et Aristoteles sic fieri arbitrantur. Aiunt non
tantum maribus inesse semen, verum etiam foeminis, et inde plerumque matribus
similes procreari; sed earum semen sanguinem esse purgatum, quod si recte cum
virili mixture sit, utraque concreta et simul co-agulata informari: et primum
quidem cor hominis effingi, quod in eo sit et vita omnis et sapientia; denique totum
opus quadragesimo die consummari. Ex abortionibus haec fortasse collecta sunt.
In avium tamen foetibus primurn oculos fingi dubium non est, quod in ovis
saepe deprehendimus. Unde fieri non posse arbitror quin fictio a capite sumat
exordium.
Similitudines autem in corporibus filiorum sic fieri putant. Cum semina
inter se permixta coalescunt, si virile superaverit, patri similem provenire, seu
marem, seu foeminam; si muliebre praevaluerit, progeniem cujusque sexus ad
imaginem respondere maternam. Id autem praevalet e duobus, quod fuerit uberius;
alterum enim quodammodo amplectitur et includit: hinc plerumque fled, ut unius
tantum lineamenta praetendat. Si vero aequa fuerit ex pari semente permixtio,
figuras quoque misceri, ut soboles illa communis aut neutrum referre videatur,
quia totum ex altero non habet; aut utrumque, quia partem de singulis mutuata est.
Nam in cor-poribus animalium videmus aut confundi parentum colores, ac fieri
tertium neutri generantium simile; aut utriusque sic exprimi, ut discoloribus
membris per omne corpus concors mixtura varietur. Dispares quoque naturae hoc
modo fieri putantur. Cum forte in laevam uteri partem masculinae stirpis semen
inciderit, marem quidem gigni opinatio est; sed quia sit in foeminina parte
conceptus, aliquid in se habere foemineum, supra quam decus virile patiatur; vel
formam insignem, vel nimium candorem, vel cor-poris levitatem, vel artus delicatos,
vel staturam brevem, vel vocem gracilem, vel animum imbecillum, vel ex his
plura. Item, si partem in dextram semen foeminini sexus influxerit, foeminam
quidem procreari; sed quoniam in masculina parte concepta sit, habere in se aliquid
virilita-tis, ultra quam sexus; ratio permittat; aut valida membra, aut
immoderatam Iongitudinem, aut fuscum colorem, aut hispidam faciem, aut vulture
indecorum, aut vocem robustam, aut animum audacem, aut ex his plura.
Si vero masculinum in dexteram, foemininum in sinistram pervenerit,
utrosque foetus recte provenire; ut et foeminis per omnia naturae suae decus constet,
et maribus tam mente, quam corpore robur virile servetur. Istud vero ipsum
quam mirabile institutum Dei, quod ad conservationem generum singulorum, duos
sexus maris ac foeminae machinatus est; quibus inter se per voluptatis illecebras
copulatis, successiva soboles pareretur, ne omne genus viventium conditio
mortalitatis extingueret. Sed plus roboris maribus attributum est, quo facilius ad
patientiam jugi maritalis foeminae cogerentur. Vir itaque nominatus est, quod
major in eo vis est, quire in foemina; et hinc virtus nomen accepit. Item mulier
(ut Varro interpretatur) a mollitie, immutata et detracta littera, velut
mollier; cui suscepto foetu, cum partus appropinquare jam coepit, turgescentes mammae
dulcibus succis distenduntur, et ad nutrimenta nascentis fontibus lacteis
foecundum pectus exuberat. Nec enim decebat aliud quam ut sapiens animal a corde
alimoniam duceret. Idque ipsum solertissime comparatum est, ut candens ac pinguis
humor teneritudinem novi corporis irrigaret, donec ad capiendos fortiores
cibos, et dentibus instruatur, et viribus roboretur. Sed redeamus ad propositum, ut
caetera, quae supersunt, breviter explicemus.
CHAP. XIII.--OF THE LOWER MEMBERS.
Poteram nunc ego ipsorum quoque genitalium membrorum mirificam rationem
tibi exponere, nisi me pudor ab hujusmodi sermone revocaret: itaque a nobis
indumento verecundiae, quae sunt pudenda velentur. Quod ad hanc rem attinet, queri
satis est, homines impios ac profanos summum nefas admittere, qui divinum et
admirabile Dei opus, ad propagandam successionem inexcogitabili ratione provisum
et effectum, vel ad turpissimos quaestus, vel ad obscoenae libidinis pudenda
opera convertunt, ut jam nihil aliud ex re sanctissima petant, quam inanem et
sterilem voluptatem.
How is it with respect to the other parts of the body? Are they without
order and beauty? The flesh rounded off into the hates, how adapted to the office
of sitting! and this also more firm than in the other limbs, lest by the
pressure of the bulk of the body it should give way to the bones. Also the length of
the thighs drawn out, and strengthened by broader muscles, in order that it
might more easily sustain the weight of the body; and as this is gradually
contracted, it is bounded(1) by the knees, the comely joints(2) of which supply a
bend which is most adapted for walking and sitting. Also the legs not drawn out in
an equal manner, lest an unbecoming figure should deform the feet; but they
are at once strengthened and adorned by well-turned(1) calves gently standing out
and gradually diminishing.
But in the soles of the feet there is the same plan as in the hands, but
yet very different: for since these are, as it were, the foundations of the
whole body,(2) the admirable Artificer has not made them of a round appearance,
lest man should be unable to stand, or should need other feet for standing, as is
the case with quadrupeds; but He has formed them of a longer and more extended
shape, that they might make the body firm by their flatness,(3) from which
circumstance their name was given to them. The toes are of the same number with
the fingers, for the sake of appearance rather than utility; and on this account
they are both joined together, and short, and put together by gradations; and
that which is the greatest of these, since it was not befitting that it should
be separated from the others, as in the hand, has been so arranged in order,
that it appears to differ from the others m magnitude and the small space which
intervenes. This beautiful union(4) of them strengthens the pressure of the feet
with no slight aid; for we cannot be excited to running, unless, our toes being
pressed against the ground, and resting upon the soil, we take an impetus and
a spring. I appear to have explained all things of which the plan is capable of
being understood. I now come to those things which are either doubtful or
obscure.
CHAP. XIV.--OF THE UNKNOWN PURPOSE OF SOME OF THE INTESTINES.
It is evident that there are many things in the body, the force and
purpose of which no one can perceive but He who made them. Can any one suppose that
he is able to relate what is the advantage, and what the effect, of that slight
transparent membrane by which the stomach is netted over and covered? What the
twofold resemblance of the kidneys? which Varro says are so named because
streams of foul moisture arise from these; which is far from being the case,
because, rising on either side of the spine, they are united, and are separated from
the intestines. What is the use of the spleen? What of the liver? Organs which
appear as it were to be made up(5) of disordered blood. What of the very bitter
moisture of the gall? What of the heart? unless we shall happen to think that
they ought to be believed, who think that the affection of anger is placed in
the gall, that of fear in the heart, of joy in the spleen. But they will have it
that the office of the liver is, by its embrace and heat, to digest the food in
the stomach; some think that the desires of the amorous passions are contained
in the liver.
First of all, the acuteness of the human sense is unable to perceive these
things, because their offices lie concealed; nor, when laid open, do they show
their uses. For, if it were so, perhaps the more gentle animals would either
have no gall at all, or less than the wild beasts; the more timid ones would
have more heart, the more lustful would have more liver, the more playful more
spleen. As, therefore, we perceive that we bear with our ears, that we see with
our eyes, that we smell with our nostrils; so assuredly we should perceive that
we are angry with the gall, that we desire with the liver, that we rejoice with
the spleen. Since, therefore, we do not at all perceive from what part those
affections come, it is possible that they may come from another source, and that
those organs may have a different effect to that which we suppose. We cannot
prove, however, that they who discuss these things speak falsely. But I think
that all things which relate to the motions of the mind and soul, are of so
obscure and profound a nature, that it is beyond the power of man to see through them
clearly. This, however, ought to be sure and undoubted, that so many objects
and so many organs have one and the same office--to retain the soul in the body.
But what office is particularly assigned to each, who can know, except the
Designer, to whom alone His own work is known?
CHAP. XV.--OF THE VOICE.
But what account can we give of the voice? Grammarians, indeed, and
philosophers, define the voice to be air struck by the breath; from which words(6)
derive their name: which is plainly false. For the voice is not produced
outside of the mouth, but within, and therefore that opinion is more probable, that
the breath, being compressed, when it has struck against the obstacle presented
by the throat, forces out the sound of the voice: as when we send down the
breath into an open hemlock stalk, having applied it to the lips, and the breath,
reverberating from the hollow of the stalk, and rolled back from the bottom,
while it returns(7) to that descending through meeting with itself, striving for
an outlet, produces a sound; and the wind, rebounding by itself, is animated
into vocal breath. Now, whether this is true, God, who is the designer, may see.
For the voice appears to arise not from the mouth, but from the innermost
breast. In fine, even when the mouth is closed, a sound such as is possible is
emitted from the nostrils. Moreover, also, the voice is not affected by that greatest
breath with which we gasp, but with a light and not compressed breath, as
often as we wish. It has not therefore been comprehended in what manner it takes
place, or what it is altogether. And do not imagine that I am now failing into
the opinion of the Academy, for all things are not incomprehensible. For as it
must be confessed that many things are unknown, since God has willed that they
should exceed the understanding of man; so, however, it must be acknowledged that
there are many which may both be perceived by the senses and comprehended by
the reason. But we shall devote an entire treatise to the refutation of the
philosophers. Let us therefore finish the course over which we are now running.
CHAP. XVI.--OF THE MIND AND ITS SEAT.
That the nature of the mind is also incomprehensible, who can be ignorant,
but he who is altogether destitute of mind, since it is not known in what
place the mind is situated, or of what nature it is? Therefore various things have
been discussed by philosophers concerning its nature and place. But I will not
conceal what my own sentiments are: not that I should affirm that it is so--for
in a doubtful matter it is the part of a foolish person to do this ; but that
when I have set forth the difficulty of the matter, you may understand how
great is the magnitude off the divine works. Some would have it, that the seat of
the mind is in the breast. But if this is so, how wonderful is it, that a
faculty which is situated in an obscure and dark habitation should be employed in
so great a light of reason and intelligence; then that the senses from every
part of the body come together to it, so that it appears to be present in any
quarter of the limbs ! Others have said that its seat is in the brain : and,
indeed, they have used probable arguments, saying that it was doubtless befitting
that that which had the government of the whole body should especially have its
abode in the highest place, as though in the citadel of the body; and that
nothing should be in a more elevated position than that which governs the whole by
reason,: just as the Lord Himself, and Ruler of the universe, is in the highest
place. Then they say, that the organs which are the ministers of each sense,
that is, of hearing, and seeing, and smelling, are situated in the head, and
that the channels of all these lead not to the breast, but to the brain:
otherwise we must be more slow in the exercise of our senses, until the power of
sensation by a long course should descend through the neck even to the breast. These,
in truth, do not greatly err, or perchance not at all. For the mind, which
exercises control over the body, appears to be placed in the highest part, the
head, as God is in heaven; but when it is engaged in any reflection, it appears
to pass to the breast, and, as it were, to withdraw to some secret recess, that
it may elicit and draw forth counsel, as it were, from a hidden treasury. And
therefore, when we are intent upon reflection, and when the mind, being
occupied, has withdrawn itself to the inner depth,(1) we are accustomed neither to hear
the things which sound about us, nor to see the things which stand in our way.
But whether this is the case, it is assuredly a matter of admiration how this
takes place, since there is no passage from the brain to the breast. But if it
is not so, nevertheless it is no less a matter of admiration that, by some
divine plan or other, it is caused that it appears to be so. Can any fail to admire
that that living and heavenly faculty which is called the mind or the soul, is
of such volubility(2) that it does not rest even then when it is asleep; of
such rapidity, that it surveys the whole heaven at one moment of time; and, if it
wills, flies over seas, traverses lands and cities,--in short, places in its
own sight all things which it pleases, however far and widely they are removed?
And does any one wonder if the divine mind of God, being extended(3)
through all parts of the universe, runs to and fro, and rules all things, governs
all things, being everywhere present, everywhere diffused; when the strength and
power of the human mind, though enclosed within a mortal body, is so great,
that it can in no way be restrained even by the barriers of this heavy and
slothful body, to which it is bound, froth bestowing upon itself, in its impatience of
rest, the power of wandering without restraint? Whether, therefore, the mind
has its dwelling in the head or in the breast, can any one comprehend what power
of reason effects, that that incomprehensible faculty either remains fixed in
the marrow of the brain, or in that blood divided into two parts(4) which is
enclosed in the heart; and not infer from this very circumstance how great is the
power of God, because the soul does not see itself, or of what nature or where
it is; and if it did see, yet it would not be able to perceive in what manner
an incorporeal substance is united with one which is corporeal? Or if the mind
has no fixed locality, but runs here and there scattered through the whole
body,--which is possible, and was asserted by Xenocrates, the disciple of
Plato,--then, inasmuch as intelligence is present in every part of the body, it cannot
be understood what that mind is, or what its qualities are, since its nature is
so subtle and refined, that, though infused into solid organs by a living and,
as it were, ardent perception, it is mingled with all the members.
But take care that you never think it probable, as Aristoxenus said, that
the mind has no existence, but that the power of perception exists from the
constitution of the body and the construction of the organs, as harmony does in
the case of the lyre. For musicians call the stretching and sounding of the
strings to entire strains, without any striking of notes in agreement with them,
harmony. They will have it, therefore, that the soul in man exists in a manner
like that by which harmonious modulation exists on the lyre; namely, that the firm
uniting of the separate parts of the body and the vigour of all the limbs
agreeing together, makes that perceptible motion, and adjusts(1) the mind, as
well-stretched things produce harmonious sound. And as, in the lyre, when anything
has been interrupted or relaxed, the whole method of the strain is disturbed and
destroyed; so in the body, when any part of the limbs receives an injury, the
whole are weakened, and all being corrupted and thrown into confusion, the
power of perception is destroyed: and this is called death. But he, if he had
possessed any mind, would never have transferred harmony from the lyre to man. For
the lyre cannot of its own accord send forth a sound, so that there can be in
this any comparison and resemblance to a living person; but the soul both
reflects and is moved of its own accord. But if there were in us anything resembling
harmony, it would be moved by a blow from without, as the strings of the lyre
are by the hands; whereas without the handling of the artificer, and the stroke
of the fingers, they lie mute and motionless. But doubtless he(2) ought to have
beaten by the hand, that he might at length observe; for his mind, badly
compacted From his members, was in a state of torpor.
CHAP.XVII.--OF THE SOUL, AND THE OPINION OF PHILOSOPHERS CONCERNING IT.
It remains to speak of the soul, although its system and nature cannot be
perceived. Nor, therefore, do we fail to understand that the soul. is
immortal, since whatever is vigorous and is in motion by itself at all times, and
cannot be seen or touched, must he eternal. But what the soul is, is not yet agreed
upon by philosophers, and perhaps will never be agreed upon. For some have said
that it is blood, others that it is fire, others wind, from which it has
received its name of anima, or animus, because in Greek the wind is called anemos(3)
and yet none of these appears to have spoken anything. For if the soul appears
to be extinguished when the blood is poured forth through a wound, or is
exhausted by the heat of fevers, it does not therefore follow that the system of the
soul is to be placed in the material of the blood; as though a question should
arise as to the nature of the light which we make use of, and the answer
should be given that it is oil, for when that is consumed the light is extinguished:
since they are plainly different, but the one is the nourishment of the other.
Therefore the soul appears to be like light, since it is not itself blood, but
is nourished by the moisture of the blood, as light is by oil.
But they who have supposed it to be fire made use of this argument, that
when the soul is present the body is warm, but on its departure the body grows
cold. But fire is both without perception and is seen, and burns when touched.
But the soul is both endowed with perception and cannot be seen, and does not
burn. From which it is evident that the soul is something like God. But they who
suppose that it is wind are deceived by this, because we appear to live by
drawing breath from the air. Varro gives this definition: "The soul is air
conceived in the mouth, warmed in the lungs, heated in the heart, diffused into the
body." These things are most plainly false. For I say that the nature of things of
this kind is not so obscure, that we do not even understand what cannot be
true. If any one should say to me that the heaven is of brass, or crystal, or, as
Empedocles says, that it is frozen air, must I at once assent because I do not
know of what material the heaven is? For as I know not this, I know that.
Therefore the soul is not air conceived in the mouth, because the soul is produced
much before air can be conceived in the mouth. For it is not introduced into the
body after birth, as it appears to some philosophers, but immediately alter
conception, when the divine necessity has formed the offspring in the womb; for
it so lives within the bowels of its mother, that it is increased in growth, and
delights to bound with repeated beatings. In short, there must be a
miscarriage if the living young within shall die. The other parts of the definition have
reference to this, that during those nine months in which we were in the womb
we appear to have been dead. None, therefore. of these three opinions is true.
We cannot, however, say that they who held these sentiments were false to such
an extent that they said nothing at all; for we live at once by the blood, and
heat, and breath. But since the soul exists in the body by the union of all
these, they did not express what it was in its own proper sense;(1) for as it
cannot be seen, so it cannot be expressed.
CHAP. XVIII.--OF THE SOUL AND THE MIND, AND THEIR AFFECTIONS.
There follows another, and in itself an inexplicable inquiry: Whether the
soul and the mind are the same, or there be one faculty by which we live, and
another by which we perceive and have discernment.(2) There are not wanting
arguments on either side. For they who say that they are one faculty make use of
this argument, that we cannot live without perception, nor perceive without life,
and therefore that that which is incapable of separation cannot be different;
but that whatever it is, it has the office of living and the method of
perception. On which account two(3) Epicurean poets speak of the mind and the soul
indifferently. But they who say that they are different argue in this way: That the
mind is one thing, and the soul another, may be understood from this, that the
mind may be extinguished while the soul is uninjured, which is accustomed to
happen in the case of the insane; also, that the soul is put to rest(4) by
death, the mind by sleep, and indeed in such a manner that it is not only ignorant
of what is taking place,(5) or where it is, but it is even deceived by the
contemplation of false objects. And how this takes place cannot accurately be
perceived; why it takes place can be perceived. For we can by no means rest unless
the mind is kept occupied by the similitudes(6) of visions. But the mind lies
hid, oppressed with sleep, as fire buried(7) by ashes drawn over it; but if you
stir it a little it again blazes, and, as it were, wakes up.(8) Therefore it is
called away by images,(9) until the limbs, bedewed with sleep, are invigorated;
for the body while the perception is awake, although it lies motionless, yet
is not at rest, because the perception burns in it, and vibrates as a flame, and
keeps all the limbs bound to itself. But when the mind is transferred from
its application to the contemplation of images, then at length the whole body is
resolved into rest. But the mind is transferred from dark thought, when, under
the influence of darkness, it has begun to be alone with itself. While it is
intent upon those things concerning which it is reflecting, sleep suddenly creeps
on, and the thought itself imperceptibly turns aside to the nearest
appearances:(10) thus it begins also to see those things which it had placed before its
eyes. Then it proceeds further, and finds diversions(11) for itself, that it may
not interrupt the most healthy repose of the body. For as the mind is diverted
in the day by true sights, so that it does not sleep; so is it diverted in the
night by false sights, so that it is not aroused. For if it perceives no
images, it will follow of necessity either that it is awake, or that it is asleep in
perpetual death. Therefore the system of dreaming has been given by God for
the sake of sleeping; and, indeed, it has been given to all animals in common;
but this especially to man, that when God gave this system on account of rest, He
left to Himself the power of teaching man future events by means of the
dream.(12) For narratives often testify that there have been dreams which have had an
immediate and a remarkable accomplishment,(13) and the answers of our prophets
have been after the character of a dream.(14) On which account they are not
always true, nor always false, as Virgil testified,(15) who supposed that there
were two gates for the passage of dreams. But those which are false are seen for
the sake of sleeping; those which are true are sent by God, that by this
revelation we may learn impending goods or evils.
CHAP. XIX.--OF THE SOUL, AND IT GIVEN BY GOD.
A question also may arise respecting this, whether the soul is produced
from the father, or rather from the mother, or indeed from both. But I think that
this judgment is to be formed as though in a doubtful matter.(16) For nothing
is true of these three opinions, because souls are produced neither from both
nor from either. For a body may be produced from a body, since something is
contributed from both; but a soul cannot be produced from souls, because nothing
can depart from a slight and incomprehensible subject. Therefore the manner of
the production of souls belongs entirely to God alone.
"In fine, we are all sprung from a heavenly seed, all all have that
sameFather."
as Lucretius(17) says. For nothing but what is mortal can be generated from
mortals. Nor ought he to be deemed a father who in no way perceives that he has
transmitted or breathed a soul from his own; nor, if he perceives it,
comprehends in his mind when or in what manner that effect is produced.
From this it is evident that souls are not given by parents, but by one
and the same God and Father of all, who alone has the law and method of their
birth, since He alone produces them. For the part of the earthly parent is nothing
more than with a sense of pleasure to emit the moisture of the body, in which
is the material of birth, or to receive it; and to this work man's power is
limited,(1) nor has he any further power. Therefore men wish for the birth of
sons, because they do not themselves bring it about. Everything beyond this is the
work of God,--namely, the conception itself, and the moulding of the body, and
the breathing in of life, and the bringing forth in safety, and whatever
afterwards contributes to the preservation of man: it is His gift that we breathe,
that we live, and are vigorous. For, besides that we owe it to His bounty that we
are safe in body, and that He supplies us with nourishment from various
sources, He also gives to man wisdom, which no earthly father can by any means give;
and therefore it often happens that foolish sons are born from wise parents,
and wise sons from foolish parents, which some persons attribute to fate and the
stars. But this is not now the time to discuss the subject of fate. It is
sufficient to say this, that even if the stars hold together the efficacy of all
things, it is nevertheless certain that all things are done by God, who both made
and set in order the stars themselves. They are therefore senseless who detract
this power from God, and assign it to His work.
He would have it, therefore, to be in our own power, whether we use or do
not use this divine and excellent gift of God. For, having granted this, He
bound man himself by the mystery(2) of virtue, by which he might be able to gain
life. For great is the power, great the reason, great the mysterious purpose of
man; and if any one shall not abandon this, nor betray his fidelity and
devotedness, he must be happy: he, in short, to sum up the matter in few words, must
of necessity resemble God. For he is in error whosoever judges of(3) man by his
flesh. For this worthless body(4) with which we are clothed is the receptacle
of man.(5) For man himself, can neither be touched, nor looked upon, nor
grasped, because he lies hidden within this body, which is seen. And if he shall be
more luxurious and delicate in this life than its nature demands, if he shall
despise virtue, and give himself to the pursuit of fleshly lusts, he will fall
and be pressed down to the earth; but if (as his duty is) he shall readily and
constantly maintain his position, which is right for him, and he has rightly
obtained,(6)--if he shall not be enslaved to the earth, which he ought to trample
upon and overcome, he will gain eternal life.
CHAP. XX.--OF HIMSELF AND THE TRUTH.
These things I have written to you, Demetrianus, for the present in few
words, and perhaps with more obscurity than was befitting, in accordance with the
necessity of circumstances and the time, with which you ought to be content,
since you are about to receive more and better things if God shall favour us.
Then, accordingly, I will exhort you with greater clearness and truth to the
learning of true philosophy. For I have determined to commit to writing as many
things as I shall be able, which have reference to the condition of a happy life;
and that indeed against the philosophers, since they are pernicious and weighty
for the disturbing of the truth. For the force of their eloquence is
incredible, and their subtlety in argument and disputation may easily deceive any one;
and these we will refute partly by our own weapons, but partly by weapons
borrowed from their mutual wrangling, so that it may be evident that they rather
introduced error than removed it.
Perhaps you may wonder that I venture to undertake so great a deed. Shall
we then suffer the truth to be extinguished or crushed? I, in truth, would more
willingly fail even under this burthen. For if Marcus Tullius, the
unparalleled example of eloquence itself, was often vanquished by men void of learning and
eloquence,--who, however, were striving for that which was true,--why should
we despair that the truth itself will by its own peculiar force and clearness
avail against deceitful and captious eloquence? They indeed are wont to profess
themselves advocates of the truth; but who can defend that which he has not
learned, or make clear to others that which he himself does not know? I seem to
promise a great thing; but there is need of the favour of Heaven, that ability and
time may be given us for following our purpose. But if life is to be wished
for by a wise man, assuredly I should wish to live for no other reason than that
I may effect something which may be worthy of life, and which may be useful to
my readers, if not for eloquence, because there is in me but a slight stream of
eloquence, at any rate for living, which is especially needful. And when I
have accomplished this, I shall think that I have lived enough, and that I have
discharged the duty of a man, if my labour shall have freed some men from errors,
and have directed them to the path which leads to heaven.
GENERAL NOTE BY THE AMERICAN EDITOR.
Just here I economize a little spare room to note the cynical Gibbon's
ideas about Lactantius and his works. He quotes him freely, and recognises his
Ciceronian Latinity, and even the elegance of his rhetoric, and the spirit and
eloquence with which he can garnish the "dismal tale" of coming judgments, based
on the Apocalypse. But then, again(1) he speaks of him as an "obscure
rhetorician," and affects a doubt as to his sources of information, notably in doubting
the conversation between Galerius and Diocletian which forced the latter to
abdicate. This is before he decides to attribute the work on the Deaths of
Persecutors to somebody else, or, rather, to quote its author ambiguously as Caecilius.
And here we may insert what he says on this subject, as follows:--
"It is certain that this . . . was composed and published while Licinius,
sovereign of the East, still preserved the friendship of Constantine and of the
Christians. Every reader of taste must perceive that the style is of a very
different and inferior character to that of Lactantius; and such, indeed, is the
judgment of Le Clerc(2) and Lardner.(3) Three arguments (from the title of the
book and from the names of Donatus and Caecilius) are produced by the advocates
of Lactantius.(4) Each of these proofs is, singly, weak and defective; but
their concurrence has great weight. I have often fluctuated, and shall tamely(5)
follow the Colbert MS. in calling the author, whoever he was, Caecilius."
After this the critic adheres to this ambiguity. I have no wish to argue
otherwise. Quite as important are his notes on the Institutes. He states the
probable conjecture of two original editions,--the one under Diocletian, and the
other under Licinius. Then he says:(6)--
"I am almost convinced that Lactantius dedicated his Institutions to the
sovereign of Gaul at a time when Galerius, Maximin, and even Licinius,
persecuted the Christians; that is, between the years A.D. 306 and A.D. 311
On the dubious passages(7) he remarks:(8)--
"The first and most important of these is, indeed, wanting in twenty-eight
MSS., but is found in nineteen. If we weigh the comparative value of those
MSS., one, . . . in the King of France's library,(9) may be alleged in its favour.
But the passage is omitted in the correct MS. of Bologna, which the Pere de
Montfaucon(10) ascribes to the sixth or seventh century. The taste of most of the
editors(11) has felt the genuine style of Lactantius."
Do not many indications point to the natural suggestion of a third
original edition, issued after the conversion of Constantine? Or the questionable
passages may be the interpolations of Lactantius himself.