LETTERS (I TO XVIII)
VI. LETTERS
LETTER I.
TO EUSEBIUS(2).
WHEN the length of the day begins to expand in winter-time, as the sun
mounts to the upper part of his course, we keep the feast of the appearing of the
true Light divine, that through the veil of flesh has cast its bright beams
upon the life of men: but now when that luminary has traversed half the heaven in
his course, so that night and day are of equal length, the upward return of
human nature from death to life is the theme of this great and universal festival,
which all the life of those who have embraced the mystery of the Resurrection
unites in celebrating. What is the meaning of the subject thus suggested for my
letter to you? Why, since it is the custom in these general holidays for us to
take every way to show the affection harboured in our hearts, and some, as you
know, give proof of their good will by presents of their own, we thought it
only right not to leave you without the homage of our gifts, but to lay before
your lofty and high-minded soul the scanty offerings of our poverty. Now our
offering which is tendered for your acceptance in this letter is the letter itself,
in which there is not a single word wreathed with the flowers of rhetoric or
adorned with the graces of composition, to make it to be deemed a gift at all in
literary circles, but the mystical gold, which is wrapped up in the faith of
Christians, as in a packet(3), must be my present to you, after being unwrapped,
as far as possible, by these lines, and showing its hidden brilliancy.
Accordingly we must return to our prelude. Why is it that then only, when the night
has attained its utmost length, so that no further addition is possible, that He
appears in flesh to us, Who holds the Universe in His grasp, and controls the
same Universe by His own power, Who cannot be contained even by all
intelligible things, but includes the whole, even at the time that He enters the narrow
dwelling of a fleshly tabernacle, while His mighty power thus keeps pace with His
beneficent purpose, and shows itself even as a shadow wherever the will
inclines, so that neither in the creation of the world was the power found weaker
than the will, nor when He was eager to stoop down to the lowliness of our mortal
nature did He lack power to that very end, but actually did come to be in that
condition, yet without leaving the universe unpiloted(4)? Since, then, there is
some account to be given of both those seasons, how it is that it is
winter-time when He appears in the flesh, but it is when the days are as long as the
nights that He restores to life man, who because of his sins returned to the earth
from whence he came,--by explaining the reason of this, as well as I can in
few words, I will make my letter my present to you. Has your own sagacity, as of
course it has, already divined the mystery hinted at by these coincidences;
that the advance of night is stopped by the accessions to the light, and the
period of darkness begins to be shortened, as the length of the day is increased by
the successive additions? For thus much perhaps would be plain enough even to
the uninitiated, that sin is near akin to darkness; and in fact evil is so
termed by the Scripture. Accordingly the season in which our mystery of godliness
begins is a kind of exposition of the Divine dispensation on behalf of our souls.
For meet and right it was that, when vice was shed abroad(5) without bounds,
[upon this night of evil the Sun of righteousness should rise, and that in us
who have before walked in darkness(6) ] the day which we receive from Him Who
placed that light in our hears should increase more and more; so that the life
which is in the light should be extended to the greatest length possible, being
constantly augmented by additions of good; and that the life in vice should by
gradual subtraction be reduced to the smallest possible compass; for the increase
of things good comes to the same thing as the diminution of things evil. But
the feast of the Resurrection; occurring when the days are of equal length, of
itself gives us this interpretation of the coincidence, namely, that we shall no
longer fight with evils only upon equal terms, vice grappling with virtue in
indecisive strife, but that the life of light will prevail, the gloom of
idolatry melting as the day waxes stronger. For this reason also, after the moon has
run her course for fourteen days, Easter exhibits her exactly opposite to the
rays of the sun, full with all the wealth of his brightness, and not permitting
any interval of darkness to take place in its turn(7): for, after taking the
place of the sun at its setting, she does not herself set. before she mingles her
own beams with the genuine rays of the sun, so that one light remains
continuously, throughout the whole space of the earth's course by day and night, without
any break whatsoever being caused by the interposition of darkness. This
discussion, dear one, we contribute by way of a gift from our poor and needy hand;
and may your whole life be a continual festival and a high day, never dimmed by
a single stain of nightly gloom.
LETTER II.
TO THE CITY OF SEBASTEIA(8).
SOME of the brethren whose heart is as our heart told us of the slanders
that were being propagated to our detriment by those who hate peace, and privily
backbite their neighbour; and have no fear of the great and terrible
judgment-seat of Him Who has declared that account will be required even of idle words
in that trial of our life which we must all look for: they say that the charges
which are being circulated against us are such as these; that we entertain
opinions opposed to those who at Nicaea set forth the right and sound faith, and
that without due discrimination and inquiry we received into the communion of the
Catholic Church those who formerly assembled at Ancyra under the name of
Marcellus. Therefore, that falsehood may not overpower the truth, in another letter
we made a sufficient defence against the charges levelled at us, and before the
Lord we protested that we had neither departed from the faith of the Holy
Fathers, nor had we done anything without due discrimination and inquiry in the
case of those who came over from the communion of Marcellus to that of the Church:
but all that we did we did only after the orthodox in the East, and our
brethren in the ministry had entrusted to us the consideration of the case of these
persons, and had approved our action. But inasmuch as, since we composed that
written defence of our conduct, again some of the brethren who are of one mind
with us begged us to make separately(9) with our own lips a profession of our
faith, which we entertain with full conviction(10), following as we do the
utterances of inspiration and the tradition of the Fathers, we deemed it necessary to
discourse briefly of these heads as well. We confess that the doctrine of the
Lord, which He taught His disciples, when He delivered to them the mystery of
godliness, is the foundation and root of right and sound faith, nor do we believe
that there is aught else loftier or safer than that tradition. Now the
doctrine of the Lord is this: "Go," He said, "teach all nations, baptizing them in the
name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost." Since, then, in
the case of those who are regenerate from death to eternal life, it is through
the Holy Trinity that the life-giving power is bestowed on those who with faith
are deemed worthy of the grace, and in like manner the grace is imperfect, if
any one, whichever it be, of the names of the Holy Trinity be omitted in the
saving baptism--for the sacrament of regeneration is not completed in the Son and
the Father alone without the Spirit: nor is the perfect boon of life imparted to
Baptism in the Father and the Spirit, if the name of the Son be suppressed:
nor is the grace of that Resurrection accomplished in the Father and the Son, if
the Spirit be left out(1) :--for this reason we rest all our hope, and the
persuasion of the salvation of our souls, upon the three Persons, recognized (2) by
these names; and we believe in the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, Who is the
Fountain of life, and in the Only-begotten Son of the Father, Who is the
Author of life, as saith the Apostle, and in the Holy Spirit of God, concerning Whom
the Lord hath spoken, "It is the Spirit that quickeneth". And since on us who
have been redeemed from death the grace of immortality is bestowed, as we have
said, through faith in the Father, and the Son, and the Holy Spirit, guided by
these we believe that nothing servile, nothing created, nothing unworthy of the
majesty of the Father is to be associated in thought with the Holy Trinity;
since, I say, our life is one which comes to us by faith in the Holy Trinity,
taking its rise from the God of all, flowing through the Son, and working in us by
the Holy Spirit. Having, then, this full assurance, we are baptized as we were
commanded, and we believe as we are baptized, and we hold as we believe; so
that with one accord our baptism, our faith, and our ascription of praise are
to(3) the Father, and to the Son, and to the Holy Ghost. But if any one makes
mention of two or three Gods, or of three God-heads, let him be accursed. And if
any, following the perversion of Arius, says that the Son or the Holy Spirit
were produced from things that are not, let him be accursed. But as many as walk
by the rule of truth and acknowledge the three Persons, devoutly recognized in
Their several properties, and believe that there is one Godhead, one goodness,
one rule, one authority and power, and neither make void the supremacy of the
Sole-sovereignty(4), nor fall away into polytheism, nor confound the Persons,
nor make up the Holy Trinity of heterogeneous and unlike elements, but in
simplicity receive the doctrine of the faith, grounding all their hope of salvation
upon the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit,--these according to our judgment
are of the same mind as we, and with them we also trust to have part in the Lord.
LETTER III.
TO ABLABIUS(5).
THE Lord, as was meet and right, brought us safe through, accompanied as
we had been by your prayers, and I will tell you a manifest token of His loving
kindness. For when the sun was just over the spot which we left behind
Earsus(6), suddenly the clouds gathered thick, and there was a change from clear sky to
deep gloom. Then a chilly breeze blowing through the clouds, bringing a
drizzling with it, and striking upon us with a very damp feeling, threatened such
rain as had never yet been known, and on the left there were continuous claps of
thunder, and keen flashes of lightning alternated with the thunder, following
one crash and preceding the next, and all the mountains before, behind, and on
each side were shrouded in clouds. And already a heavy(7) cloud hung over our
heads, caught by a strong wind and big with rain, and yet we, like the Israelites
of old in their miraculous passage of the Red Sea, though surrounded on all
sides by rain, arrived unwetted at Vestena. And when we had already found shelter
there, and our mules had got a rest, then the signal for the down-pour was
given by God to the air. And when we had spent some three or four hours there, and
had rested enough, again God stayed the down-fall, and our conveyance moved
along more briskly than before, as the wheel easily slid through the mud just
moist and on the surface. Now the road from that point to our little town is all
along the river side, going down stream with the water, and there is a continuous
string of villages along the banks, all close upon the road, and with very
short distances between them. In consequence of this unbroken line of habitations
all the road was full of people, some coming to meet us, and others escorting
us, mingling tears in abundance with their joy. Now there was a little drizzle,
not unpleasant, lust enough to moisten the air; but a little way before we got
home the cloud that overhung us was condensed into a more violent shower, so
that our entrance was quite quiet, as no one was aware beforehand of our coming.
But just as we got inside our portico, as the sound of our carriage wheels
along the dry hard ground was heard, the people turned up in shoals, as though by
some mechanical contrivance, I know not whence nor how, flocking round us so
closely that it was not easy to get down from our conveyance, for there was not a
foot of clear space. But after we had persuaded them with difficulty to allow
us to get down, and to let our mules pass, we were crushed on every side by
folks crowding round, insomuch that their excessive kindness all but made us faint.
And when we were near the inside of the portico, we see a stream of fire
flowing into the church; for the choir of virgins, carrying their wax torches in
their hands, were just marching in file along the entrance of the church, kindling
the whole into splendour with their blaze. And when I was within and had
rejoiced and wept with my people--for I experienced both emotions from witnessing
both in the multitude,--as soon as I had finished the prayers, I wrote off this
letter to your Holiness as fast as possible, under the pressure of extreme
thirst, so that I might when it was done attend to my bodily wants.
LETTER IV.
TO CYNEGIUS(8).
We have a law that bids us "rejoice with them that rejoice, and weep with
them that weep ": but of these commandments it often seems that it is in our
power to put only one into practice. For there is a great scarcity in the world
of "them that rejoice," so that it is not easy to find with whom we may share
our blessings, but there are plenty who are in the opposite case. I write thus
much by way of preface, because of the sad tragedy which some spiteful power has
been playing among people of long-standing nobility. A young man of good
family, Synesius by name, not unconnected with myself, in the full flush of youth,
who has scarcely begun to live yet, is in great dangers, from which God alone has
power to rescue him, and next to God, you, who are entrusted with the
decisions of all questions of life and death. An involuntary mishap has taken place.
Indeed, what mishap is voluntary? And now those who have made up this suit
against him, carrying with it the penalty of death, have turned his mishap into
matter of accusation. However, I will try by private letters to soften their
resentment and incline them to pity; but I beseech your kindliness to side with
justice and with us, that your benevolence may prevail over the wretched plight of
the youth, hunting up any and every device by which the young man may be placed
out of the reach of danger, having conquered the spiteful power which assails
him by the help of your alliance. I have said all that I want in brief; but to go
into details, in order that my endeavour may be successful, would be to say
what I have no business to say, nor you to hear from me.
LETTER V.
A. TESTIMONIAL.
THAT for which the king of the Macedonians is most admired by people of
understanding,--for he is admired not so much for his famous victories(9) over
the Persians and Indians, and his penetrating as far the Ocean, as for his saying
that he had his treasure in his friends;--in this respect I dare to compare
myself with his marvellous exploits, and it will be right for me to utter such a
sentiment too. Now because I am rich in friendships, perhaps I surpass in that
kind of property even that great man who plumed himself upon that very thing.
For who was such a friend to him as you are to me, perpetually endeavouring to
surpass yourself in every kind of excellence? For assuredly no one would ever
charge me with flattery, when I say this, if he were to look at my age and your
life: for grey hairs are out of season for flattery, and old age is ill-suited
for complaisance, and as for you, even if you are ever in season for flattery,
yet praise would not fall under the suspicion of flattery, is your life shows
forth your praise before words. But since, when men are rich in blessings, it is
a special gift to know how to use what one has, and the best use of
superfluities is to let one's friends share them with one, and since my beloved son
Alexander is most of all a friend united to me in all sincerity, be persuaded to show
him my treasure, and not only to show it to him, but also to put it at his
disposal to enjoy abundantly, by extending to him your protection in those matters
about which he has come to you, begging you to be his patron. He will tell you
all with his own lips. For it is better so than that I should go into details
in a letter.
LETTER VI.
TO STAGIRIUS.
THEY say that conjurors(10) in theatres contrive some such marvel as this
which I am going to describe. Having taken some historical narrative, or some
old story as the ground-plot of their sleight of hand, they relate the story to
the spectators in action. And it is in this way that they make their
representations of the narrative(1). They put on their dresses and masks, and rig up
something to resemble a town on the stage with hangings, and then so associate the
bare scene with their life-like imitation of action that they are a marvel to
the spectators--both the actors themselves of the incidents of the play, and the
hangings, or rather their imaginary city. What do I mean, do you think, by
this allegory? Since we must needs show to those who are coming together that
which is not a city as though it were one, do you let yourself be persuaded to
become for the nonce the founder of our city(2), by just putting in an appearance
there; I will make the desert-place seem to be a city; now it is no great
distance for you, and the favour which you will confer is very great; for we wish to
show ourselves more splendid to our companions here, which we shall do if, in
place of any other ornament, we are adorned with the splendour of your party.
LETTER VII.
TO A FRIEND.
WHAT flower in spring is so bright, what voices of singing birds are so
sweet, what breezes that soothe the calm sea are so light and mild, what glebe is
so fragrant to the husbandman--whether it be teeming with green blades, or
waving with fruitful ears as is the spring of the soul, lit up with your peaceful
beams, from the radiance which shone m your letter, which raised our life from
despondency to gladness? For thus, perhaps, it will not be unfitting to adapt
the word of the prophet to our present blessings: "In the multitude of the
sorrows which I had in my heart, the comforts of God," by your kindness, "have
refreshed my soul,"(3) like sunbeams, cheering and warming our life nipped by frost.
For both reached the highest pitch--the severity of my troubles, I mean, on
the one side, and the sweetness of your favours on the other. And if you have so
gladdened us, by only sending us the joyful tidings of your coming, that
everything changed for us from extremest woe to a bright condition, what will your
precious and benign coming, even the sight of it, do? what consolation will the
sound of your sweet voice in our ears afford our soul? May this speedily come to
pass, by the good help of God, Who giveth respite from pain to the fainting,
and rest to the afflicted. But be assured, that when we look at our own case we
grieve exceedingly at the present state of things, and men cease not to tear us
in pieces(4): but when we turn our eyes to your excellence, we own that we
have great cause for thankfulness to the dispensation of Divine Providence, that
we are able to enjoy in your neighbourhood(5) your sweetness and good-will
towards us, and feast at will on such food to satiety, if indeed there is such a
thing as satiety of blessings like these.
LETTER VIII(6).
TO A STUDENT OF THE CLASSICS.
WHEN I was looking for some suitable and proper exordium, I mean of course
from Holy Scripture, to put at the head of my letter, according to my usual
custom, I did not know which to choose, not from inability to find what was
suitable, but because I deemed it superfluous to write such things to those who knew
nothing about the matter. For your eager pursuit of profane literature proved
incontestably to us that you did not care about sacred. Accordingly I will say
nothing about Bible texts, but will select a prelude adapted to your literary
tastes taken from the poets you love so well. By the great master of your
education there is introduced one, showing all an old man's joy, when after long
affliction he once more beheld his son, and his son's son as well. And the special
theme of his exultation is the rivalry between the two, Ulysses and Telemachus,
for the highest meed of valour, though it is true that the recollection of his
own exploits against the Cephallenians adds to the point of his speech(7). For
you and your admirable father, when you welcomed me, as they did Laertes, in
your affection, contended in most honourable rivalry for the prize of virtue, by
showing us all possible respect and kindness; he in numerous ways which I need
not here mention, and you by pelting me with(8) your letters from Cappadocia.
What, then, of me the aged one? I count that day one to be blessed, in which I
witness such a competition between father and son. May you, then, never cease
from accomplishing the rightful prayer of an excellent and admirable father, and
surpassing in your readiness to all good works the renown which from him you
inherit. I shall be a judge acceptable to both of you, as I shall award you the
first prize against your father, and the same to your father against you. And
we will put up with rough Ithaca, rough not so much with stones as with the
manners of the inhabitants, an island in which there are many suitors, who are
suitors(9) most of all for the possessions of her whom they woo, and insult their
intended bride by this very fact, that they threaten her chastity with marriage,
acting in a way worthy of a Melantho, one might say, or some other such
person; for nowhere is there a Ulysses to bring them to their senses with his bow.
You see how in an old man's fashion I go maundering off into matters with which
you have no concern. But pray let indulgence be readily extended to me in
consideration of my grey hairs; for garrulity is just as characteristic of old age as
to be blear-eyed, or for the limbs to fail(1). But you by entertaining us with
your brisk and lively language, like a bold young man as you are, will make
our old age young again, supporting the feebleness of our length of days with
this kind attention which so well becomes you.
LETTER IX.
AN INVITATION.
IT is not the natural wont of spring to shine forth in its radiant beauty
all at once, but there come as preludes of spring the sunbeam gently warming
earth's frozen surface, and the bud half hidden beneath the clod, and breezes
blowing over the earth, so that the fertilizing and generative power of the air
penetrates deeply into it. One may see the fresh and tender grass, and the return
of birds which winter had banished, and many such tokens, which are rather
signs of spring, not spring itself. Not but that these are sweet, because they are
indications of what is sweetest. What is the meaning of all that I have been
saying? Why, since the expression of your kindness which reached us in your
letters, as a forerunner of the treasures contained in you, with a goodly prelude
brings the glad tidings of the blessing which we expect at your hands, we both
welcome the boon which those letters convey, like some first-appearing flower of
spring, and pray that we may soon enjoy in you the full beauty of the season.
For, be well assured, we have been deeply, deeply distressed by the passions
and spite of the people here, and their ways; and just as ice forms in cottages
after the rains that come in--for I will draw my comparison from the weather of
our part of the world(2),--and so moisture, when it gets in, if it spreads over
the surface that is already frozen, becomes congealed about the ice, and an
addition is made to the mass already existing, even so one may notice much the
same kind of thing in the character of most of the people in this neighbourhood,
how they are always plotting and inventing something spiteful, and a fresh
mischief is congealed on the top of that which has been wrought before, and another
one on the top of that, and then again another, and this goes on without
intermission, and there is no limit to their hatred and to the increase of evils; so
that we have great need of many prayers that the grace of the Spirit may
speedily breathe upon them, and thaw the bitterness of their hatred, and melt the
frost that is hardening upon them from their malice. For this cause the spring,
sweet as it is by nature, becomes yet more to be desired than ever to those who
after such storms look for you. Let not the boon, then, linger. Especially as
our great holiday(3) is approaching, it would be more reasonable that the land
which bare you should exult in her own treasures than that Pontus should in
ours. Come then, dear one, bringing us a multitude of blessings, even yourself; for
this will fill up the measure of our beatitude.
LETTER X(4).
TO LIBANIUS.
I ONCE heard a medical man tell of a wonderful freak of nature. And this
was his story. A man was ill of an unmanageable complaint, and began to find
fault with the medical faculty, as being able to do far less than it professed;
for everything that was devised for his cure was ineffectual. Afterwards when
some good news beyond his hopes was brought him, the occurrence did the work of
the healing art, by putting an end to his disease. Whether it were that the soul
by the overflowing sense of release from anxiety, and by a sudden rebound,
disposed the body to be in the same condition as itself, or in some other way, I
cannot say: for I have no leisure to enter upon such disquisitions, and the
person who told me did not specify the cause. But I have just called to mind the
story very seasonably, as I think: for when I was not as well as I could wish--now
I need not tell you exactly the causes of all the worries which befel me from
the time I was with you to the present,--after some one told me all at once of
the letter which had arrived from your unparalleled Erudition, as soon as I got
the epistle and ran over what you had written, forthwith, first my soul was
affected in the same way as though I had been proclaimed before all the world as
the hero of most glorious achievements--so highly did I value the testimony
which you favoured me with in your letter,--and then also my bodily health
immediately began to improve: and I afford an example of the same marvel as the story
which I told you just now, in that I was ill when I read one half of the
letter, and well when I read the other half of the same. Thus much for those matters.
But now, since Cynegius was the occasion of that favour, you are able, in the
overflowing abundance of your ability to do good, not only to benefit us, but
also our benefactors; and he is a benefactor of ours, as has been said before,
by having been the cause and occasion of our having a letter from you; and for
this reason he well deserves both our good offices. But if you ask who are our
teachers,--if indeed we are thought to have learned anything,--you will find
that they are Paul and John, and the rest of the Apostles and Prophets; if I do
not seem to speak too boldly in claiming any knowledge of that art in which you
so excel, that competent judges declares that the rules of oratory stream down
from you, as from an overflowing spring, upon all who have any pretensions to
excellence in that department. This I have heard the admirable Basil say to
everybody, Basil, who was your disciple, but my father and teacher. But be assured,
first, that I found no rich nourishment in the precepts of my teachers(6),
inasmuch as I enjoyed my brother's society only for a short time, and got only just
enough polish from his diviner tongue to be able to discern the ignorance of
those who are uninitiated in oratory; next, however, that whenever I had
leisure, I devoted my time and energies to this study, and so became enamoured of your
beauty, though I never yet obtained the object of my passion. If, then, on the
one side we never had a teacher, which I deem to have been our case, and if on
the other it is improper to suppose that the opinion which you entertain of us
is other than the true one--nay, you are correct in your statement, and we are
not quite contemptible in your judgment,--give me leave to presume to
attribute to you the cause of such proficiency as we may have attained. For if Basil
was the author of our oratory, and if his wealth came from your treasures, then
what we possess is yours, even though we received it through others. But if our
attainments are scanty, so is the water in a jar; still it comes from the Nile.
LETTER XI.
TO LIBANIUS.
IT was a custom with the Romans(7) to celebrate a feast in winter-time,
after the custom of their fathers, when the length of the days begins to draw
out, as the sun climbs to the upper regions of the sky. Now the beginning of the
month is esteemed holy, and by this day auguring the character of the whole
year, they devote themselves to forecasting lucky accidents, gladness, and
wealth(8). What is my object in beginning my letter in this way? Why, I do so because I
too kept this feast, having got my present of gold as well as any of them; for
then there came into my hands as well as theirs gold, not like that vulgar
gold, which potentates treasure and which those that have it give,--that heavy,
vile, and soulless possession,--but that which is loftier than all wealth, as
Pindar says(9), in the eyes of those that have sense, being the fairest
presentation, I mean your letter, and the vast wealth which it contained. For thus it
happened; that on that day, as I was going to the metropolis of the Cappadocians,
I met an acquaintance, who handed me this present, your letter, as a new year's
gift. And I, being overjoyed at the occurrence, threw open my treasure to all
who were present; and all shared in it each getting the whole of it, without
any rivalry, and I was none the worse off. For the letter by passing through the
hands of all, like a ticket for a feast, is the private wealth of each, some by
steady continuous reading engraving the words upon their memory, and others
taking an impression(10) of them upon tablets; and it was again in my hands,
giving me more pleasure than the hard(1) metal does to the eyes of the rich. Since,
then, even to husbandmen--to use a homely comparison--approbation of the
labours which they have already accomplished is a strong stimulus to those which
follow, bear with us if we treat what you have yourself given as so much seed, and
if we write that we may provoke you to write back. But I beg of you a public
and general boon for our life; that you will no longer entertain the purpose
which you expressed to us in a dark hint at the end of your letter For I do not
think that it is at all a fair decision to come to, that,--because there are some
who disgrace themselves by deserting from the Greek language to the barbarian,
becoming mercenary soldiers and choosing a soldier's rations instead of the
renown of eloquence,--you should therefore condemn oratory altogether, and
sentence human life to be as voiceless as that of beasts. For who is he who will open
his lips, if you carry into effect this severe sentence against oratory? But
perhaps it will be well to remind you of a passage in our Scriptures. For our
Word bids those that can to do good, not looking at the tempers of those who
receive the benefit, so as to be eager to benefit only those who are sensible of
kindness, while we close our beneficence to the unthankful, but rather to imitate
the Disposer of all, Who distributes the good things of His creation alike to
all, to the good and to the evil. Having regard to this, admirable Sir, show
yourself in your way of life such an one as the time past has displayed you. For
those who do not see the sun do not thereby hinder the sun's existence. Even so
neither is it right that the beams of your eloquence should be dimmed, because
of those who are purblind as to the perceptions of the soul. But as for
Cynegius, I pray that he may be as far as possible from the common malady, which now
has seized upon young men; and that he will devote himself of his own accord to
the study of rhetoric. But if he is otherwise disposed, it is only right, even
if he be unwilling, he should be forced to it; so as to avoid the unhappy and
discreditable plight in which they now are, who have previously abandoned the
pursuit of oratory.
LETTER XII(2).
ON HIS WORK AGAINST EUNOMIUS.
WE Cappadocians are poor in well-nigh all things that make the possessors
of them happy, but above all we are badly off for people who are able to write.
This, be sure, is the reason why I am so slow about sending you a letter: for,
though my reply to the heresy(of Eunomius) had been long ago completed, there
was no one to transcribe it. Such a dearth of writers it was that brought upon
us the suspicion of sluggishness or of inability to frame an answer. But since
now at any rate, thank God, the writer and reviser have come, I have sent this
treatise to you; not, as Isocrates says(3), as a present, for I do not reckon
it to be such that it should be received in lieu of something of substantial
value, but that it may be in our power to cheer on those who are in the full
vigour of youth to do battle with the enemy, by stirring up the naturally sanguine
temperament of early life. But if any portion of the treatise should appear
worthy of serious consideration, after examining some parts, especially those
prefatory to the "trials,"(4) and those which are of the same cast, and perhaps also
some of the doctrinal parts of the book, you will think them not ungratefully
composed. But to whatever conclusion you come, you will of course read them, as
to a teacher and corrector, to those who do not act like the players at
ball(5), when they stand in three different places and throw it from one to the
other, aiming it exactly and catching one ball from one and one from another, and
they baffle the player who is in the middle, as he jumps up to catch it,
pretending that they are going to throw with a made-up expression of face, and such and
such a motion of the hand to left or right, and whichever way they see him
hurrying, they send the ball just the contrary way, and cheat his expectation by a
trick. This holds even now in the case of most of us, who, dropping all
serious purpose, play at being good-natured(6), as if at ball, with men, instead of
realizing the favourable hope which we hold out, beguiling to sinister(7) issues
the souls of those who repose confidence in us. Letters of reconciliation,
caresses, tokens, presents, affectionate embrace by letters--these are the making
as if to throw with the ball to the right. But instead of the pleasure which
one expects therefrom, one gets accusations, plots, slanders, disparagement,
charges brought against one, bits of a sentence torn from their context, caught up,
and turned to one's hurt. Blessed in your hopes are ye, who through all such
trials exercise confidence towards God, But we beseech you not to look at our
words, but to the teaching of our Lord in the Gospel. For what consolation to one
in anguish can another be, who surpasses him in the extremity of his own
anguish, to help his luckless fortunes to obtain their proper issue? As He saith,
"Vengeance is Mine; I will repay, saith the Lord." But do you, best of men, go on
in a manner worthy of yourself, and trust in God, and do not be hindered by
the spectacle of our misfortunes from being good and true, but commit to God that
judgeth righteously the suitable and just issue of events, and act as Divine
wisdom guides you. Assuredly Joseph had in the result no reason to grieve at the
envy of his brethren, inasmuch as the malice of his own kith and kin became to
him the road to empire.
LETTER XIII.
TO THE CHURCH AT NIICOMEDIA(8).
MAY the Father of mercies and the God of all comfort, Who disposeth all
things in wisdom for the best, visit you by His own grace, and comfort you by
Himself, working in you that which is well-pleasing to Him, and may the grace of
our Lord Jesus Christ come upon you, and the fellowship of the Holy Spirit, that
ye may have healing of all tribulation and affliction, and advance towards all
good, for the perfecting of the Church, for the edification of your souls, and
to the praise of the glory of His name. But in making here a defence of
ourselves before your charity, we would say that we were not neglectful to render an
account of the charge entrusted to us, either in time past, or since the
departure hence of Patricius of blessed memory; but we insist that there were many
troubles in our Church, and the decay of our bodily powers was great, increasing,
as was natural, with advancing years; and great also was the remissness of
your Excellency towards us, inasmuch as no word ever came by letter to induce us
to undertake the task, nor was any connection kept up between your Church and
ourselves, although Euphrasius, your Bishop of blessed memory, had in all
holiness bound together our Humility to himself and to you with love, as with chains.
But even though the debt of love has not been satisfied before, either by our
taking charge of you, or your Piety's encouragement of us, now at any rate we
pray to God, taking your prayer to God as an ally to our own desire, that we may
with all speed possible visit you, and be comforted along with you, and along
with you show diligence, as the Lord may direct us; so as to discover a means of
rectifying the disorders which have already found place, and of securing
safety for the future, so that you may no longer be distracted by this discord, one
withdrawing himself from the Church in one direction, another in another, and
be thereby exposed as a laughing-stock to the Devil, whose desire and business
it is (in direct contrariety to the Divine will) that no one should be saved, or
come to the knowledge of the truth. For how do you think, brethren, that we
were afflicted upon hearing from those who reported to us your state, that there
was no return to better things(9); but that the resolution of those who had
once swerved aside is ever carried along in the same course; and--as water from a
conduit often overflows the neighbouring bank, and streaming off sideways,
flows away, and unless the leak is stopped, it is almost impossible to recall it to
its channel, when the submerged ground has been hollowed out in accordance
with the course of the stream,--even so the course of those who have left the
Church, when it has once through personal motives deflected from the straight and
right faith, has sunk deep in the rut of habit, and does not easily return to
the grace it once had. For which cause your affairs demand a wise and strong
administrator, who is skilled to guide such wayward tempers aright, so as to be
able to recall to its pristine beauty the disorderly circuit of this stream, that
the corn-fields of your piety may once again flourish abundantly, watered by
the irrigating stream of peace. For this reason great diligence and fervent
desire on the part of you all is needed for this matter, that such an one may be
appointed your President by the Holy Spirit, who will have a single eye to the
things of God alone, not turning his glance this way or that to any of those
things that men strive after. For for this cause I think that the ancient law gave
the Levite no share in the general inheritance of the land; that he might have
God alone for the portion of his possession, and might always be engaged about
the possession in himself, with no eye to any material object.
[What follows is unintelligible, and something has probably been lost.]
For it is not lawful that the simple should meddle with that with which
they have no concern, but which properly belongs to others. For you should each
mind your own business, that so that which is most expedient may come about [and
that your Church may again prosper], when those who have been dispersed have
returned again to the unit of the one body, and spiritual peace is established
by those who devoutly glorify God. To this end it is well, I think, to look out
for high qualifications in your election, that he who is appointed to the
Presidency may be suitable for the post. Now the Apostolic injunctions do not direct
us to look to high birth, wealth, and distinction in the eyes of the world
among the virtues of a Bishop; but if all this should, unsought, accompany your
spiritual chiefs, we do not reject it, but consider it merely as a shadow
accidentally(10) following the body; and none the less shall we welcome the more
precious endowments, even though they happen to be apart from those boons of
fortune. The prophet Amos was a goat-herd; Peter was a fisherman, and his brother
Andrew followed the same employment; so too was the sublime John; Paul was a
tent-maker, Matthew a publican, and the rest of the Apostles in the same way--not
consuls, generals, prefects, or distinguished in rhetoric and philosophy, but
poor, and of none of the learned professions, but starting from the more humble
occupations of life: and yet for all that their voice went out into all the
earth, and their words unto the ends of the world. "Consider your calling, brethren,
that not many wise after the flesh, not many mighty, not many noble are
called, but God hath chosen the foolish things of the world(11)." Perhaps even now it
is thought something foolish, as things appear to men, when one is not able to
do much from poverty, or is slighted because of meanness of extraction(1), not
of character. But who knows whether the horn of anointing is not poured out by
grace upon such an one, even though he be less than the lofty and more
illustrious? Which was mere to the interest of the Church at Rome, that it should at
its commencement be presided over by some high-born and pompous senator, or by
the fisherman Peter, who had none of this world's advantages to attract men to
him(2)? What house had he, what slaves, what property ministering luxury, by
wealth constantly flowing in? But that stranger, without a table, without a roof
over his head, was richer than those who have all things, because through having
nothing he had God wholly. So too the people of Mesopotamia, though they had
among them wealthy satraps, preferred Thomas above them all to the presidency of
their Church; the Cretans preferred Titus, the dwellers at Jerusalem James,
and we Cappadocians the centurion, who at the Cross acknowledged the Godhead of
the Lord, though there were many at that time of splendid lineage, whose
fortunes enabled them to maintain a stud, and who prided themselves upon having the
first place in the Senate. And in all the Church one may see those who are great
according to God's standard preferred above worldly magnificence. You too, I
think, ought to have an eye to these spiritual qualifications at this time
present, if you really mean to revive the ancient glory of your Church. For nothing
is better known to you than your own history, that anciently, before the city
near you(3) flourished, the seat of government was with you, and among Bithynian
cities there was nothing pre-eminent above yours. And now, it is true, the
public buildings that once graced it have disappeared, but the city that consists
in men--whether we look to numbers or to quality --is rapidly rising to a level
with its former splendour. Accordingly it would well become you to entertain
thoughts that shall not fall below the height of the blessings that now are
yours, but to raise your enthusiasm in the work before you to the height of the
magnificence of your city, that you may find such a one to preside over the laity
as will prove himself not unworthy of you(4). For it is disgraceful, brethren,
and utterly monstrous, that while no one ever becomes a pilot unless he is
skilled in navigation, he who sits at the helm of the Church should not know how to
bring the souls of those who sail with him safe into the haven of God. How many
wrecks of Churches, men and all, have ere now taken place by the inexperience
of their heads! Who can reckon what disasters might not have been avoided, had
there been aught of the pilot's skill in those who had command? Nay, we entrust
iron, to make vessels with, not to those who know nothing about the matter,
but to those who are acquainted with the art of the smith; ought we not therefore
to trust souls to him who is well-skilled to soften them by the fervent heat
of the Holy Spirit, and who by the impress of rational implements may fashion
each one of you to be a chosen and useful vessel? It is thus that the inspired
Apostle bids us to take thought, in his Epistle to Timothy(5), laying injunction
upon all who hear, when he says that a Bishop must be without reproach. Is this
all that the Apostle cares for, that he who is advanced to the priesthood
should be irreproachable? and what is so great an advantage as that all possible
qualifications should be included in one? But he knows full well that the subject
is moulded by the character of his superior, and that the upright walk of the
guide becomes that of his followers too. For what the Master is, such does he
make the disciple to be. For it is impossible that he who has been apprenticed
to the art of the smith should practise that of the weaver, or that one who has
only been taught to work at the loom should turn out an orator or a
mathematician: but on the contrary that which the disciple sees in his master he adopts
and transfers to himself. For this reason it is that the Scripture says, "Every
disciple that is perfect shall be as his master(6)." What then, brethren? Is it
possible to be lowly and subdued in character, moderate, superior to the love
of lucre, wise in things divine, and trained to virtue and considerateness in
works and ways, without seeing those qualities in one's master? Nay, I do not
know how a man can become spiritual, if he has been a disciple in a worldly
school. For how can they who are striving to resemble their master fail to be like
him? What advantage is the magnificence of the aqueduct to the thirsty, if there
is no water in it, even though the symmetrical disposition of columns(7)
variously shaped rear aloft the pediment(8)? Which would the thirsty man rather
choose for the supply of his own need, to see marbles beautifully disposed or to
find good spring water, even if it flowed through a wooden pipe, as long as the
stream which it poured forth was clear and drinkable? Even so, brethren, those
who look to godliness should neglect the trappings of outward show, and whether a
man exults in powerful friends, or plumes himself on the long list of his
dignities, or boasts that he receives large annual revenues, or is puffed up with
the thought of his noble ancestry, or has his mind on all sides clouded(9) with
the fumes of self-esteem, should have nothing to do with such an one, any more
than with a dry aqueduct, if he display not in his life the primary and
essential qualities for high office. But, employing the lamp of the Spirit for the
search(10), you should, as far as is possible, seek for "a garden enclosed, a
fountain sealed(11)," that, by your election the garden of delight having been
opened and the water of the fountain having been unstopped, there may be a common
acquisition to the Catholic Church. May God grant that there may soon be found
among you such an one, who shall be a chosen vessel, a pillar of the Church. But
we trust in the Lord that so it will be, if you are minded by the grace of
concord with one mind to see that which is good, preferring to your own wills the
will of the Lord, and that which is approved of Him, and perfect, and
well-pleasing in His eyes; that there may be such a happy issue among you, that therein
we may rejoice, and you triumph, and the God of all be glorified, Whom glory
becometh for ever and ever.
LETTER XIV(12).
TO THE BISHOP OF MELITENE.
How beautiful are the likenesses of beautiful objects, when they preserve
in all its clearness the impress of the original beauty! For of your soul, so
truly beautiful, I saw a most clear image in the sweetness of your letter,
which, as the Gospel says, "out of the abundance of the heart" you filled with
honey. And for this reason I fancied I saw you in person, and enjoyed your cheering
company, from the affection expressed in your letter; and often taking your
letter into my hands and going over it again from beginning to end, I only came
more vehemently to crave for the enjoyment, and there was no sense of satiety.
Such a feeling can no more put an end to my pleasure, than it can to that
derived from anything that is by nature beautiful and precious. For neither has our
constant participation of the benefit blunted the edge of our longing to behold
the sun, nor does the unbroken enjoyment of health prevent our desiring its
continuance; and we are persuaded that it is equally impossible for our enjoyment
of your goodness, which we have often experienced face to face and now by
letter, ever to reach the point of satiety. But our case is like that of those who
from some circumstance are afflicted with unquenchable thirst; for just in the
same way, the more we taste your kindness, the more thirsty we become. But
unless you suppose our language to be mere blandishment and unreal flattery--and
assuredly you will not so suppose, being what you are in all else, and to us
especially good and staunch, if any one ever was,--you will certainly believe what
I say; that the favour of your letter, applied to my eyes like some medical
prescription, stayed my ever-flowing "fountain of tears," and that fixing our
hopes on the medicine of your holy prayers, we expect that soon and completely the
disease of our soul will be healed: though, for the present at any rate, we are
in such a case, that we spare the ears of one who is fond of us, and bury the
truth in silence, that we may not drag those who loyally love us into
partnership with our troubles. For when we consider that, bereft of what is dearest to
us, we are involved in wars, and that it is our children that we were compelled
to leave behind, our children whom we were counted worthy to bear to God in
spiritual pangs, closely joined to us by the law of love, who at the time of
their own trials amid their afflictions extended their affection to us; and over
and above these, a fondly-loved(1) home, brethren, kinsmen, companions, intimate
associates, friends, hearth, table, cellar, bed, seat, sack, converse,
tears--and how sweet these are, and how dearly prized from long habit, I need not write
to you who know full well--but not to weary you further, consider for yourself
what I have in exchange for those blessings. Now that I am at the end of my
life, I begin to live again, and am compelled to learn the graceful versatility
of character which is now in vogue: but we are late learners in the shifty
school of knavery;(2) so that we are constantly constrained to blush at our
awkwardness and inaptitude for this new study. But our adversaries. equipped with all
the training of this wisdom, are well able to keep what they have learned, and
to invent what they have not learned. Their method of warfare accordingly is to
skirmish at a distance, and then at a preconcerted signal to form their phalanx
in solid order; they utter by way of prelude(3) whatever suits their
interests, they execute surprises by means of exaggerations, they surround themselves
with allies from every quarter. But a vast amount of cunning invincible in
power(4) accompanies them, advanced before them to lead their host, like some
right-and-left-handed combatant, fighting with both hands in front of his army, on one
side levying tribute upon his subjects, on the other smiting those who come in
his way. But if you care to inquire into the state of our internal affairs,
you will find other troubles to match; a stifling hut, abundant in cold, gloom,
confinement, and all such advantages; a life the mark of every one's censorious
observation, the voice, the look, the way of wearing one's cloak, the movement
of the hands, the position of one's feet, and everything else, all a subject
for busy-bodies. And unless one from time to time emits a deep breathing, and
unless a continuous groaning is uttered with the breathing, and unless the tunic
passes gracefully through the girdle (not to mention the very disuse of the
girdle itself), and unless our cloak flows aslant down our backs--the omission of
any one of these niceties is a pretext for war against us. And on such grounds
as these, they gather together to battle against us, man by man(5), township
by township, even down to all sorts of out-of-the-way places. Well, one cannot
be always faring well or always ill, for every one's life is made up of
contraries. But if by God's grace your help should stand by us steadily, we will bear
the abundance of annoyances, in the hope of being always a sharer in your
goodness. May you, then, never cease bestowing on us such favours, that by them you
may refresh us, and prepare for yourself in ampler measure the reward promised
to them that keep the commandments.
LETTER XV.
TO ADELPHIUS THE LAWYER(6)·
I WRITE you this letter from the sacred Vanota, if I do not do the place
injustice by giving it its local title:--do it injustice, I say, because in its
name it shows no polish. At the same time the beauty of the place, great as it
is, is not conveyed by this Galatian epithet eyes are needed to interpret its
beauty. For I, though I have before this seen much, and that in many places,
and have also observed many things by means of verbal description in the accounts
of old writers, think both all I have seen, and all of which I have heard, of
no account in comparison with the loveliness that is to be found here. Your
Helicon is nothing the Islands of the Blest are a fable: the Sicyonian plain is a
trifle: the accounts of the Peneus are another case of poetic
exaggeration--that river which they say by overflowing with its rich current the banks which
flank its course makes for the Thessalians their far-famed Tempe. Why, what beauty
is there in any one of these places I have mentioned, such as Vanota can show
us of its own? For if one seeks for natural beauty in the place, it needs none
of the adornments of art: and if one considers what has been done for it by
artificial aid, there has been so much done, and that so well, as might overcome
even natural disadvantages. The gifts bestowed upon the spot by Nature who
beautifies the earth with unstudied grace are such as these: below, the river Halys
makes the place fair to look upon with his banks, and gleams like a golden
ribbon through their deep purple, reddening his current with the soil he washes
down. Above, a mountain densely overgrown with wood stretches with its long ridge,
covered at all points with the foliage of oaks, worthy of finding some Homer
to sing its praises more than that Ithacan Neritus, which the poet calls
"far-seen with quivering leaves(7)." But the natural growth of wood, as it comes down
the hill-side, meets at the foot the planting of men's husbandry. For forthwith
vines, spread out over the slopes, and swellings, and hollows at the
mountain's base, cover with their colour, like a green mantle, all the lower ground: and
the season at this time even added to their beauty, displaying its
grape-clusters wonderful to behold. Indeed this caused me yet more surprise, that while
the neighbouring country shows fruit still unripe, one might here enjoy the full
clusters, and be sated with their perfection. Then, far off, like a watch-fire
from some great beacon, there shone before our eyes the fair beauty of the
buildings. On the left as we entered was the chapel built for the martyrs, not yet
complete in its structure, but still lacking the roof, yet making a good show
notwithstanding. Straight before us in the way were the beauties of the house,
where one part is marked out from another by some delicate invention. There
were projecting towers, and preparations for banqueting among the wide and
high-arched rows of trees crowning the entrance before the gates(8). Then about the
buildings are the Phaeacian gardens; rather, let not the beauties of Vanota be
insulted by comparison with those Homer never saw "the apple with bright
fruit(9)" as we have it here, approaching to the hue of its own blossom in the
exceeding brilliancy of its colouring: he never saw the pear whiter than new-polished
ivory. And what can one say of the varieties of the peach, diverse and
multiform, yet blended and compounded out of different species? For just as with those
who paint "goat-stags," and "centaurs," and the like, commingling things of
different kind, and making themselves wiser than Nature, so it is in the case of
this fruit: Nature, under the despotism of art, turns one to an almond, another
to a walnut, yet another to a "Doracinus(1)," mingled alike in name and in
flavour. And in all these the number of single trees is more noted than their
beauty; yet they display tasteful arrangement in their planting, and that harmonious
form of drawing--drawing, I call it, for the marvel belongs rather to the
painter's art than to the gardener's. So readily does Nature fall in with the
design of those who arrange these devices, that it seems impossible to express this
by words. Who could find words worthily to describe the road under the climbing
vines, and the sweet shade of their cluster, and that novel wall-structure
where roses with their shoots, and vines with their trailers, twist themselves
together and make a fortification that serves as a wall against a flank attack,
and the pond at the summit of this path, and the fish that are bred there? As
regards all these, the people who have charge of your Nobility's house were ready
to act as our guides with a certain ingenuous kindliness, and pointed them out
to us, showing us each of the things you had taken pains about, as if it were
yourself to whom, by our means, they were showing courtesy. There too, one of
the lads, like a conjuror, showed us such a wonder as one does not very often
find in nature: for he went down to the deep water and brought up at will such of
the fish as he selected; and they seemed no strangers to the fisherman's touch,
being tame and submissive under the artist's hands, like well-trained dogs.
Then they led me to a house as if to rest--a house, I call it, for such the
entrance betokened, but, when we came inside, it was not a house but a portico which
received us. The portico was raised up aloft to a great height over a deep
pool: the basement supporting the portico of triangular shape, like a gateway
leading to the delights within, was washed by the water. Straight before us in the
interior a sort of house occupied the vertex of the triangle, with lofty roof,
lit on all sides by the sun's rays, and decked with varied paintings; so that
this spot almost made us forget what had preceded it. The house attracted us to
itself; and again, the portico on the pool was a unique sight. For the
excellent fish would swim up from the depths to the surface, leaping up into the very
air like winged things, as though purposely mocking us creatures of the dry
land. For showing half their form and tumbling through the air, they plunged once
more into the depth. Others, again, in shoals, following one another in order,
were a sight for unaccustomed eyes: while in another place one might see another
shoal packed in a cluster round a morsel of bread, pushed aside one by
another, and here one leaping up, there another diving downwards. But even this we
were made to forget by the grapes that were brought us in baskets of twisted
shoots, by the varied bounty of the season's fruit, the preparation for breakfast,
the varied dainties, and savoury dishes, and sweetmeats, and drinking of
healths, and wine-cups. So now since I was sated and inclined to sleep, I got a scribe
posted beside me, and sent to your Eloquence, as if it were a dream, this
chattering letter. But I hope to recount in full to yourself and your friends, not
with paper and ink, but with my own voice and tongue, the beauties of your home.
LETTER XVI.
TO AMPHILOCHIUS.
I AM well persuaded that by God's grace the business of the Church of the
Martyrs is in a fair way. Would that you were willing in the matter. The task
we have in hand will find its end by the power of God, Who is able, wherever He
speaks, to turn word into deed. Seeing that, as the Apostle says, "He Who has
begun a good work will also perform it(2)", I would exhort you in this also to
be an imitator of the great Paul, and to advance our hope to actual fulfilment,
and send us so many workmen as may suffice for the work we have in hand.
Your Perfection might perhaps be informed by calculation of the dimensions
to which the total work will attain: and to this end I will endeavour to
explain the whole structure by a verbal description. The form of the chapel is a
cross, which has its figure completed throughout, as you would expect, by four
structures. The junctions of the buildings intercept one another, as we see
everywhere in the cruciform pattern. But within the cross there lies a circle,
divided by eight angles(I call the octagonal figure a circle in view of its
circumference), in such wise that the two pairs of sides of the octagon which are
diametrically opposed to one another, unite by means of arches the central circle to
the adjoining blocks of building; while the other four sides of the octagon,
which lie between the quadrilateral buildings, will not themselves be carried to
meet the buildings, but upon each of them will be described a semicircle like a
shell(3), terminating in an arch above: so that the arches will be eight in
all, and by their means the quadrilateral and semicircular buildings will be
connected, side by side, with the central structure. In the blocks of masonry
formed by the angles there will be an equal number of pillars, at once for ornament
and for strength, and these again will carry arches built of equal size to
correspond with those within(4). And above these eight arches, with the symmetry of
an upper range of windows, the octagonal building will be raised to the height
of four cubits: the part rising from it will be a cone shaped like a top, as
the vaulting s narrows the figure of the roof from its full width to a pointed
wedge. The dimensions below will be,--the width of each of the quadrilateral
buildings, eight cubits, the length of them half as much again, the height as much
as the proportion of the width allows. It will be as much in the semicircles
also. The whole length between the piers extends in the same way to eight
cubits, and the depth will be as much as will be given by the sweep of the compasses
with the fixed point placed in the middle of the side(6) and extending to the
end. The height will be determined in this case too by the proportion to the
width. And the thickness of the wall, an interval of three feet from inside these
spaces, which are measured internally, will run round the whole building.
I have troubled your Excellency with this serious trifling, with this
intention, that by the thickness of the walls, and by the intermediate spaces, you
may accurately ascertain what sum the number of feet gives as the measurement;
because your intellect is exceedingly quick in all matters, and makes its way,
by God's grace, in whatever subject you will, and it is possible for you, by
subtle calculation, to ascertain the sum made up by all the parts, so as to send
us masons neither more nor fewer than our need requires. And I beg you to
direct your attention specially to this point, that some of them may be skilled in
making vaulting(7) without supports: for I am informed that when built in this
way it is more durable than what is made to rest on props. It is the scarcity of
wood that brings us to this device of roofing the whole fabric with stone;
because the place supplies no timber for roofing. Let your unerring mind be
persuaded, because some of the people here contract with me to furnish thirty workmen
for a staler, for the dressed stonework, of course with a specified ration
along with the stater. But the material of our masonry is not of this sort(8), but
brick made of clay and chance stones, so that they do not need to spend time
in fitting the faces of the stones accurately together. I know that so far as
skill and fairness in the matter of wages are concerned, the workmen in your
neighbourhood are better for our purpose than those who follow the trade here. The
sculptor's work lies not only in the eight pillars, which must themselves be
improved and beautified, but the work requires altar-like base-mouldings(9), and
capitals carved in the Corinthian style. The porch, too, will be of marbles
wrought with appropriate ornaments. The doors set upon these will be adorned with
some such designs as are usually employed by way of embellishment at the
projection of the cornice. Of all these, of course, we shall furnish the materials;
the form to be impressed on the materials art will bestow. Besides these there
will be in the colonnade not less than forty pillars: these also will be of
wrought stone. Now if my account has explained the work in detail, I hope it may be
possible for your Sanctity, on perceiving what is needed, to relieve us
completely from anxiety so far as the workmen are concerned. If, however, the workman
were inclined to make a bargain favourable to us, let a distinct measure of
work, if possible, be fixed for the day, so that he may not pass his time doing
nothing, and then, though he has no work to show for it, as having worked for us
so many days, demand payment for them. I know that we shall appear to most
people to be higglers, in being so particular about the contracts. But I beg you
to pardon me; for that Mammon about whom I have so often said such hard things,
has at last departed from me as far as he can possibly go, being disgusted, I
suppose, at the nonsense that is constantly talked against him, and has
fortified himself against me by an impassable gulf--to wit, poverty--so that neither
can he come to me, nor can I pass to him(10). This is why I make a point of the
fairness of the workmen, to the end that we may be able to fulfil the task
before us, and not be hindered by poverty--that laudable and desirable evil. Well,
in all this there is a certain admixture of jest. But do you, man of God, in
such ways as are possible and legitimate, boldly promise in bargaining with the
men that they will all meet with fair treatment at our hands, and full payment
of their wages: for we shall give all and keep back nothing, as God also opens
to us, by your prayers, His hand of blessing.
LETTER XVII.
TO EUSTATHIA, AMBROSIA, AND BASILISSA(1)
To the most discreet and devout Sisters, Eustathia and Ambrosia, and to the
most discreet and noble Daughter, Basilissa, Gregory sends greeting in the Lord.
The meeting with the good and the beloved, and the memorials of the
immense love of the Lord for us men, which are shown in your localities, have been
the source to me of the most intense joy and gladness. Doubly indeed have these
shone upon divinely festal days; both in beholding the saving tokens(2) of the
God who gave us life, and in meeting with souls in whom the tokens of the Lord's
grace are to be discerned spiritually in such clearness, that one can believe
that Bethlehem and Golgotha, and Olivet, and the scene of the Resurrection are
really in the God-containing heart. For when through a good conscience Christ
has been formed in any, when any has by dint of godly fear nailed down the
promptings of the flesh and become crucified to Christ, when any has rolled away
from himself the heavy stone of this world's illusions, and coming forth from the
grave of the body has begun to walk as it were in a newness of life, abandoning
this low-lying valley of human life, and mounting with a soaring desire to
that heavenly country(3) with all its elevated thoughts, where Christ is, no
longer feeling the body's burden, but lifting it by chastity, so that the flesh with
cloud-like lightness accompanies the ascending soul--such an one, in my
opinion, is to be counted in the number of those famous ones in whom the memorials of
the Lord's love for us men are to be seen. When, then, I not only saw with the
sense of sight those Sacred Places, but I saw the tokens of places like them,
plain in yourselves as well, I was filled with joy so great that the
description of its blessing is beyond the power of utterance. But because it is a
difficult, not to say an impossible thing for a human being to enjoy unmixed with evil
any blessing, therefore something of bitterness was mingled with the sweets I
tasted: and by this, after the enjoyment of those blessings, I was saddened in
my journey back to my native land, estimating now the truth of the Lord's
words, that "the whole world lieth in wickedness(4)," so that no single part of the
inhabited earth is without its share of degeneracy. For if the spot itself that
has received the footprints of the very Life is not clear of the wicked
thorns, what are we to think of other places where communion with the Blessing has
been inculcated by hearing and preaching alone(5). With what view I say this,
need not be explained more fully in words; facts themselves proclaim more loudly
than any speech, however intelligible, the melancholy truth.
The Lawgiver of our life has enjoined upon us one single hatred. I mean,
that of the Serpent: for no other purpose has He bidden us exercise this faculty
of hatred, but as a resource against wickedness. "I will put enmity," He says,
"between thee and him." Since wickedness is a complicated and multifarious
thing, the Word allegorizes it by the Serpent, the dense array of whose scales is
symbolic of this multiformity of evil. And we by working the will of our
Adversary make an alliance with this serpent, and so turn this hatred against one
another(6), and perhaps not against ourselves alone, but against Him Who gave the
commandment; for He says, "Thou shalt love thy neighbour and hate thine enemy,"
commanding us to hold the foe to our humanity as our only enemy, and declaring
that all who share that humanity are the neighbours of each one of us. But
this gross-hearted age has disunited us from our neighbour, and has made us
welcome the serpent, and revel in his spotted scales(7). I affirm, then, that it is a
lawful thing to hate God's enemies, and that this kind of hatred is pleasing
to our Lord: and by God's enemies I mean those who deny the glory of our Lord,
be they Jews, or downright idolaters, or those who through Arius' teaching
idolize the creature, and so adopt the error of the Jews. Now when the Father, the
Son, and the Holy Ghost, are with orthodox devotion being glorified and adored
by those who believe that in a distinct and unconfused Trinity there is One
Substance, Glory, Kingship, Power, and Universal Rule, in such a case as this what
good excuse for fighting can there be? At the time, certainly, when the
heretical views prevailed, to try issues with the authorities, by whom the
adversaries' cause was seen to be strengthened, was well; there was fear then lest our
saving Doctrine should be over-ruled by human rulers. But now, when over the whole
world from one end of heaven to the other the orthodox Faith is being
preached, the man who fights with them who preach it, fights not with them, but with
Him Who is thus preached. What other aim, indeed, ought that man's to be, who has
the zeal for God, than in every possible way to announce the glory of God? As
long, then, as the Only-begotten is adored with all the heart and soul and
mind, believed to be in everything that which the Father is, and in like manner the
Holy Ghost is glorified with an equal amount of adoration, what plausible
excuse for fighting is left these over-refined disputants, who are rending the
seamless robe, and parting the Lord's name between Paul and Cephas, and
undisguisedly abhorring contact with those who worship Christ, all but exclaiming in so
many words, "Away from me, I am holy"?
Granting that the knowledge which they believe themselves to have acquired
is somewhat greater than that of others: yet can they possess more than the
belief that the Son of the Very God is Very God, seeing that in that article of
the Very God every idea that is orthodox, every idea that is our salvation, is
included? It includes the idea of His Goodness, His Justice, His Omnipotence:
that He admits of no variableness nor alteration, but is always the same;
incapable of changing to worse or changing to better, because the first is not His
nature, the second He does not admit of; for what can be higher than the Highest,
what can be better than the Best? In fact, He is thus associated with all
perfection, and, as to every form of alteration, is unalterable; He did not on
occasions display this attribute, but was always so, both before the Dispensation
that made Him man, and during it, and after it; and in all His activities in our
behalf He never lowered any part of that changeless and unvarying character to
that which was out of keeping with it. What is essentially imperishable and
changeless is always such; it does not follow the variation of a lower order of
things, when it comes by dispensation to be there; just as the sun, for example,
when he plunges his beam into the gloom, does not dim the brightness of that
beam; but instead, the dark is changed by the beam into light; thus also the True
Light, shining in our gloom, was not itself overshadowed with that shade, but
enlightened it by means of itself. Well, seeing that our humanity was in
darkness, as it is written, 'They know not, neither will they understand, they walk
on in darkness(8)," the Illuminator of this darkened world darted the beam of
His Divinity through the whole compound of our nature, through soul, I say, and
body too, and so appropriated humanity entire by means of His own light, and
took it up and made it just that thing which He is Himself. And as this Divinity
was not made perishable, though it inhabited a perishable body, so neither did
it alter in the direction of any change, though it healed the changeful in our
soul: in medicine, too, the physician of the body, when he takes hold of his
patient, so far from himself contracting the disease, thereby perfects the cure of
the suffering part. Let no one, either, putting a wrong interpretation on the
words of the Gospel, suppose that our human nature in Christ was transformed to
something more divine by any gradations and advance: for the increasing in
stature and in wisdom and in favour, is recorded in Holy Writ only to prove that
Christ really was present in the human compound, and so to leave no room for
their surmise, who propound that a phantom, or form in human outline, and not a
real Divine Manifestation, was there. It is for this reason that Holy Writ
records unabashed with regard to Him all the accidents of our nature, even eating,
drinking, sleeping, weariness, nurture, increase in bodily stature, growing
up--everything that marks humanity, except the tendency to sin. Sin, indeed, is a
miscarriage, not a quality of human nature: just as disease and deformity are not
congenital to it in the first instance, but are its unnatural accretions, so
activity in the direction Of sin is to be thought of as a mere mutilation of the
goodness innate in us; it is not found to be itself a real thing, but we see
it only in the absence of that goodness. Therefore He Who transformed the
elements of our nature into His divine abilities, rendered it secure from mutilation
and disease, because He admitted not in Himself the deformity which sin works
in the will. "He did no sin," it says, "neither was guile found in his mouth(9)
." And this in Him is not to be regarded in connection with any interval of
time: for at once the man in Mary(where Wisdom built her house), though naturally
part of our sensuous compound, along with the coming upon her of the Holy
Ghost, and her overshadowing with the power of the Highest, became that which that
overshadowing power in essence was: for, without controversy, it is the Less
that is blest by the Greater. Seeing, then, that the power of the Godhead is an
immense and immeasurable thing, while man is a weak atom, at the moment when the
Holy Ghost came upon the Virgin, and the power of the Highest over-shadowed
her, the tabernacle formed by such an impulse was not clothed with anything of
human corruption; but, just as it was first constituted, so it remained, even
though it was man, Spirit nevertheless, and Grace, and Power; and the special
attributes of our humanity derived lustre from this abundance of Divine Power(1) .
There are indeed two limits of human life: the one we start from, and the
one we end in: and so it was necessary that the. Physician of our being should
enfold us at both these extremities, and grasp not only the end, but the
beginning too, in order to secure in both the raising of the sufferer. That, then,
which we find to have happened on the side of the finish we conclude also as to
the beginning. As at the end He caused by virtue of the Incarnation that, though
the body was disunited from the soul, yet the indivisible Godhead which had
been blended once for all with the subject (who possessed them) was not stripped
from that body any more than it was from that soul, but while it was in
Paradise along with the soul and paved an entrance there in the person of the Thief
for all humanity, it remained by means of the body in the heart of the earth, and
therein destroyed him that had the power of Death (wherefore His body too is
called "the Lord(2) " on account of that inherent Godhead)--so also, at the
beginning, we conclude that the power of the Highest, coalescing with our entire
nature by that coming upon (the Virgin) of the Holy Ghost, both resides in our
soul, so far as reason sees it possible that it should reside there, and is
blended with our body, so that our salvation throughout every element may be
perfect, that heavenly passionlessness which is peculiar to the Deity being
nevertheless preserved both in the beginning and in the end of this life as Man(3). Thus
the beginning was not as our beginning, nor the end as our end. Both in the one
and in the other He evinced His Divine independence; the beginning had no
stain of pleasure upon it, the end was not the end in dissolution.
Now if we loudly preach all this, and testify to all this, namely that
Christ is the power of God and the wisdom of God, always changeless, always
imperishable, though He comes in the changeable and the perishable; never stained
Himself, but making clean that which is stained; what is the crime that we commit,
and wherefore are we hated? And what means this opposing array(4) of new
Altars? Do we announce another Jesus? Do we hint at another? Do we produce other
scriptures? Have any of ourselves dared to say "Mother of Man" of the Holy Virgin,
the Mother of God(5): which is what we hear that some of them say without
restraint? Do we romance about three Resurrections(5)? Do we promise the gluttony
of the Millennium? Do we declare that the Jewish animal-sacrifices shall be
restored? Do we lower men's hopes again to the Jerusalem below, Imagining its
rebuilding with stones of a more brilliant material? What charge like these can be
brought against us, that our company should be reckoned a thing to be avoided,
and that in some places another altar should be erected in opposition to us, as
if we should defile their sanctuaries? My heart was in a state of burning
indignation about this: and now that I have set foot in the City(7) again, I am
eager to unburden my soul of its bitterness, by appealing, in a letter, to your
love. Do ye, whithersoever the Holy Spirit shall lead you, there remain; walk with
God before you; confer not with flesh and blood; lend no occasion to any of
them for glorying, that they may not glory in you, enlarging their ambition by
anything in your lives. Remember the Holy Fathers, into whose hands ye were
commended by your Father now in bliss(8) , and to whom we by God's grace were deemed
worthy to succeed and remove not the boundaries which our Fathers have laid
down, nor put aside in any way the plainness of our simpler proclamation in
favour of their subtler school. Walk by the primitive rule of the Faith: and the God
of peace shall be with you, and ye shall be strong in mind and body. May God
keep you uncorrupted, is our prayer.
LETTER XVIII.
TO FLAVIAN(9).
THINGS with us, O man of God, are not in a good way. The development of
the bad feeling existing amongst certain persons who have conceived a most
groundless and unaccountable hatred of us is no longer a matter of mere conjecture;
it is now evinced with an earnestness and openness worthy only of some holy
work. You meanwhile, who have hitherto been beyond the reach of such annoyance, are
too remiss in stifling the devouring conflagration on your neighbour's land;
yet those who are well-advised for their own interests really do take pains to
check a fire close to them, securing themselves, by this help given to a
neighbour, against ever needing help in like circumstances. Well, you will ask, what
do I complain of? Piety has vanished from the world; Truth has fled from our
midst; as for Peace, we used to have the name at all events going the round upon
men's lips; but now not only does she herself cease to exist, but we do not even
retain the word that expresses her. But that you may know more exactly the
things that move our indignation, I will briefly detail to you the whole tragic
story.
Certain persons had informed me that the Right Reverend Helladius had
unfriendly feelings towards me, and that he enlarged in conversation to every one
upon the troubles that I had brought upon him. I did not at first believe what
they said, judging only from myself, and the actual truth of the matter. But
when every one kept bringing to us a tale of the same strain, and facts besides
corroborated their report, I thought it my duty not to continue to overlook this
ill-feeling, while it was still without root and development. I therefore wrote
by letter to your piety, and to many others who could help me in my intention,
and stimulated your zeal in this matter. At last, after I had concluded the
services at Sebasteia in(10) commemoration of Peter(1) of most blessed memory,
and of the holy martyrs, who had lived in his times, and whom the people were
accustomed to commemorate with him, I was returning to my own See, when some one
told me that Helladius himself was in the neighbouring mountain district,
holding martyrs' memorial services. At first I held on my journey, judging it more
proper that our meeting should take place in the metropolis itself. But when one
of his relations took the trouble to meet me, and to assure me that he was
sick, I left my carriage at the spot where this news arrested me; I performed on
horseback the intervening journey over a road that was like a precipice, and
well-nigh impassable with its rocky ascents. Fifteen milestones measured the
distance we had to traverse. Painfully travelling, now on foot, now mounted, in the
early morning, and even employing some part of the night, I arrived between
twelve and one o'clock at Andumocina; for that was the name of the place where,
with two other bishops, he was holding his conference. From a shoulder of the hill
overhanging this village, we looked down, while still at a distance, upon this
outdoor assemblage of the Church. Slowly, and on foot, and leading the horses,
I and my company passed over the intervening ground, and we arrived at the
chapel(2) just as he had retired to his residence.
Without any delay a messenger was despatched to inform him of our being
there; and a very short while after, the deacon in attendance on him met us, and
we requested him to tell Helladius at once, so that we might spend as much time
as possible with him, and so have an opportunity of leaving nothing in the
misunderstanding between us unhealed. As for myself, I then remained sitting,
still in the open air, and waited for the invitation indoors; and at a most
inopportune time I became, as I sat there, a gazing stock to all the visitors at the
conference. The time was long; drowsiness came on, and languor, intensified by
the fatigue of the journey and the excessive heat of the day; and all these
things, with people staring at me, and pointing me out to others, were so very
distressing that in me the words of the prophet were realized: "My spirit within me
was desolate(3) ." I was kept in this state till noon, and heartily did I
repent of this visit, and that I had brought upon myself this piece of discourtesy;
and my own reflection vexed me worse than this injury done me by my enemies(4)
, warring as it did against itself, and changing into a regret that I had made
the venture. At last the approach to the Altars was thrown open, and we were
admitted to the sanctuary; the crowd, however, were excluded, though my deacon
entered along with me, supporting with his arm my exhausted frame. I addressed
his Lordship, and stood for a moment, expecting from him an invitation to be
seated; but when nothing of the kind was heard from him, I turned towards one of
the distant seats, and rested myself upon it, still expecting that he would
utter something that was friendly, or at all events kind; or at least give one nod
of recognition.
Any hopes I had were doomed to complete disappointment. There ensued a
silence dead as night, and looks as downcast as in tragedy, and daze, and
dumbfoundedness, and perfect dumbness. A long interval of time it was, dragged out as
if it were in the blackness of night. So struck down was I by this reception, in
which he did not deign to accord me the merest utterance even of those common
salutations by which you discharge the courtesies of a chance
meeting(5),--"welcome," for instance, or "where do you come from?" or "to what am I indebted for
this pleasure?" or "on what important business are you here?"--that I was
inclined to make this spell of silence into a picture of the life led in the
underworld. Nay, I condemn the similitude as inadequate. For in that underworld the
equality of conditions is complete, and none of the things that cause the
tragedies of life on earth disturb existence. Their glory, as the Prophet says, does
not follow men down there; each individual soul, abandoning the things so
eagerly clung to by the majority here, his petulance, and pride, and conceit, enters
that lower world in simple unencumbered nakedness; so that none of the
miseries of this life are to be found among them. Still(6), notwithstanding this
reservation, my condition then did appear to me like an underworld, a murky dungeon,
a gloomy torture-chamber; the more so, when I reflected what treasures of
social courtesies we have inherited from our fathers, and what recorded deeds of it
we shall leave to our descendants. Why, indeed, should I speak at all of that
affectionate disposition of our fathers towards each other? No wonder that,
being all naturally equal(7), they wished for no advantage over one another, but
thought to exceed each other only in humility. But my mind was penetrated most
of all with this thought; that the Lord of all creation, the Only-begotten Son,
Who was in the bosom of the Father, Who was in the beginning, Who was in the
form of God, Who upholds all things by the word of His power, humbled Himself not
only in this respect, that in the flesh He sojourned amongst men, but also
that He welcomed even Judas His own betrayer, when he drew near to kiss Him, on
His blessed lips; and that when He had entered into the house of Simon the leper
He, as loving all men, upbraided his host, that He had not been kissed by him:
whereas I was not reckoned by him as equal even to that leper; and yet what was
I, and what was he? I cannot discover any difference between us. If one looks
at it from the mundane point of view, where was the height from which he had
descended, where was the dust in which I lay? If, indeed, one must regard things
of this fleshly life, thus much perhaps it will hurt no one's feelings to
assert that, looking at our lineage, whether as noble or as free, our position was
about on a par; though, if one looked in either for the true freedom and
nobility, i.e. that of the soul, each of us will be found equally a bondsman of Sin;
each equally needs One Who will take away his sins; it was Another Who ransomed
us both from Death and Sin with His own blood, Who redeemed us, and yet showed
no contempt of those whom He has redeemed, calling them though He does from
deadness to life, and healing every infirmity of their souls and bodies.
Seeing, then, that the amount of this conceit and overweening pride was so
great, that even the height of heaven was almost too narrow limits for it(and
yet I could see no cause or occasion whatever for this diseased state of mind,
such as might make it excusable in the case of some who in certain
circumstances contract it; when, for instance, rank or education, or pre-eminence in
dignities of office may have happened to inflate the vainer minds), I had no means
whereby to advise myself to keep quiet: for my heart within me was swelling with
indignation at the absurdity of the whole proceeding, and was rejecting all the
reasons for enduring it. Then, if ever, did I feel admiration for that divine
Apostle who so vividly depicts the civil war that rages within us, declaring
that there is a certain "law of sin in the members, warring against the law of
the mind," and often making the mind a captive, and a slave as well, to itself.
This was the very array, in opposition, of two contending feelings that I saw
within myself: the one, of anger at the insult caused by pride, the other
prompting to appease the rising storm. When by God's grace, the worse inclination had
failed to get the mastery, I at last said to him, "But is it, then, that some
one of the things required for your personal comfort is being hindered by our
presence, and is it time that we withdrew?" On his declaring that he had no
bodily needs, I spoke to him some words calculated to heal, so far as in me lay, his
ill-feeling. When he had, in a very few words, declared that the anger he felt
towards me was owing to many injuries done him, I for my part answered him
thus: "Lies possess an immense power amongst mankind to deceive but in the Divine
Judgment there will be no place for the misunderstandings thus arising. In my
relations towards yourself, my conscience is bold enough to prompt me to hope
that I may obtain forgiveness for all my other sins, but that, if I have acted in
any way to harm you, this may remain for ever unforgiven." He was indignant at
this speech, and did not suffer the proofs of what I had said to be added.
It was now past six o'clock, and the bath had been well prepared, and the
banquet was being spread, and the day was the sabbath(8), and a martyr's
commemoration. Again observe how this disciple of the Gospel imitates the Lord of the
Gospel: He, when eating and drinking with publicans and sinners, answered to
those who found fault with Him that He did it for love of mankind: this disciple
considers it a sin and a pollution to have us at his board, even after all
that fatigue which we underwent on the journey, after all that excessive heat out
of doors, in which we were baked while sitting at his gates; after all that
gloomy sullenness with which he treated us to the bitter end, when we had come
into his presence. He sends us off to toil painfully, with a frame now thoroughly
exhausted with the over-fatigue, over the same distance, the same route: so
that we scarcely reached our travelling company at sunset, after we had suffered
many mishaps on the way. For a storm-cloud, gathered into a mass in the clear
air by an eddy of wind, drenched us to the skin with its floods of rain; for
owing to the excessive sultriness, we had made no preparation against any shower.
However, by God's grace we escaped, though in the plight of shipwrecked sailors
from the waves: and right glad were we to reach our company.
Having joined our forces we rested there that night, and at last arrived
alive in our own district; having reaped in addition this result of our meeting
him, that the memory of all that had happened before was revived by this last
insult offered to us; and, you see, we are positively compelled to take
measures, for the future, on our own behalf, or rather on his behalf; for it was
because his designs were not checked on former occasions that he has proceeded to
this unmeasured display of vanity. Something, therefore, I think, must be done on
our part, in order that he may improve upon himself, and may be taught that he
is human, and has no authority to insult and to disgrace those who possess the
same beliefs and the same rank as himself. For just consider; suppose we
granted for a moment, for the sake of argument, that it is true that I have done
something that has annoyed him, what trial(9) was instituted against us, to judge
either of the fact or the hearsay? What proofs were given of this supposed
injury? What Canons were cited against us? What legitimate episcopal decision
confirmed any verdict passed upon us? And supposing any of these processes had taken
place, and that in the proper way, my standing(1) in the Church might certainly
have been at stake, but what Canons could have sanctioned insults offered to a
free-born person, and disgrace inflicted on one of equal rank with himself?
"Judge righteous judgment," you who look to God's law in this matter; say wherein
you deem this disgrace put-upon us to be excusable. If our dignity is to be
estimated on the ground of priestly jurisdiction, the privilege of each recorded
by the Council(2) is one and the same; or rather the oversight of Catholic
correction(3), from the fact that we possess an equal share of it, is so. But if
some are inclined to regard each of us by himself, divested of any priestly
dignity, in what respect has one any advantage over the other; in education for
instance, or in birth connecting with the noblest and most illustrious lineage, or
in theology? These things will be found either equal, or at all events not
inferior, in me. "But what about revenue?" he will say. I would rather not be
obliged to speak of this in his case; thus much only it will suffice to say, that
our own was so much at the beginning, and is so much now; and to leave it to
others to enquire into the causes of this increase of our revenue(4), nursed as it
is up till now, and growing almost daily by means of noble undertakings. What
licence, then, has he to put an insult upon us, seeing that he has neither
superiority of birth to show, nor a rank exalted above all others, nor a commanding
power of speech, nor any previous kindness done to me? While, even if he had
all this to show, the fault of having slighted those of gentle birth would still
be inexcusable. But he has not got it; and therefore I deem it right to see
that this malady of puffed-up pride is not left without a cure; and it will be its
cure to put it down to its proper level, and reduce its inflated dimensions,
by letting off a little of the conceit with which he is bursting.The manner of
effecting this we leave to God