THE DIALOGUES OF SULPITIUS SEVERUS
THE DIALOGUES OF SULPITIUS SEVERUS.
DIALOGUE I.
CONCERNING THE VIRTUES OF THE MONKS OF THE EAST.
CHAPTER I.
When I and a Gallic friend had assembled in one place, this Gaul being a
man very dear to me, both on account of his remembrance of Martin (for he had
been one of his disciples), and on account of his own merits, my friend
Postumianus joined us. He had just, on my account, returned from the East, to which,
leaving his native country, he had gone three years before. Having embraced this
most affectionate friend, and kissed both his knees and his feet, we were for a
moment or two, as it were, astounded; and, shedding mutual tears of joy, we
walked about a good deal. But by and by we sat down on our garments of sackcloth
laid upon the ground. Then Postumianus, directing his looks towards me is the
first to speak, and
says,--
"When I was in the remote parts of Egypt, I felt a desire to go on as far
as the sea. I there met with a merchant vessel, which was ready to set sail
with the view of making for Narbonne.(1) The same night you seemed in a dream to
stand beside me, and laying hold of me with your hand, to lead me away that I
should go on board that ship. Ere long, when the dawn dispersed the darkness, and
when I rose up in the place in which I had been resting, as I revolved my
dream in my mind, I was suddenly seized with such a longing after you, that without
delay I went on board the ship. Landing on the thirtieth day at Marseilles, I
came on from that and arrived here on the tenth day--so prosperous a voyage was
granted to my dutiful desire of seeing you. Do thou only, for whose sake I
have sailed over so many seas, and have traversed such an extent of land, yield
yourself over to me to be embraced and enjoyed apart from all others."
"I truly," said I, "while you were still staying in Egypt, was ever
holding fellowship with you in my mind and thoughts, and affection for you had full
possession of me as I meditated upon you day and night. Surely then, you cannot
imagine that I will now fail for a single moment to gaze with delight upon you,
as I hang upon your lips. I will listen to you, I will converse with you,
while no one at all is admitted to our retirement, which this remote cell of mine
furnishes to us. For, as I suppose, you will not take amiss the presence of this
friend of ours, the Gaul, who, as you perceive, rejoices with his whole heart
over this arrival of yours, even as I do myself."
"Quite right," said Postumianus, "that Gaul will certainly be retained in
our company; who, although I am but little acquainted with him, yet for this
very reason that he is greatly beloved by you, cannot fail also to be dear to
me. This must especially be the case, since he is of the school of Martin; nor
will I grudge, as you desire, to talk with you in connected discourse, since I
came hither for this very purpose, that I should, even at the risk of being
tedious, respond to the desire of my dear Sulpitius "and in so speaking he
affectionately took hold of me with both his hands.
CHAPTER II.
"Truly" said I, "you have clearly proved how much a sincere love can
accomplish, inasmuch as, for my sake, you have traveled over so many seas, and such
an extent of land, journeying, so to speak, from the rising of the sun in the
East to where he sets in the West. Come, then, because we are here in a retired
spot by ourselves, and not being otherwise occupied, feel it our duty to attend
to your discourse, come, I pray thee, relate to us the whole history of your
wanderings. Tell us, if you please, how the faith of Christ is flourishing in
the East; what peace the saints enjoy; what are the customs of the monks; and
with what signs and miracles Christ is working in his servants. For assuredly,
because in this region of ours and amid the circumstances in which we are placed,
life itself has become a weariness to us, we shall gladly hear from you, if
life is permitted to Christians even in the desert."
In reply to these words, Postumianus declares, " I shall do as I see you
desire. But I beg you first to tell me, whether all those persons whom I left
here as priests, continue the same as I knew them before taking my departure."
Then I exclaim, "Forbear, I beseech thee, to make any enquiry on such
points, which you either, I think, know as well as I do, or if you are ignorant of
them, it is better that you should hear nothing regarding them. I cannot,
however, help saying, that not only are those, of whom you enquire, no better than
they were when you knew them, but even that one man, who was formerly a great
friend of mine, and in whose affection I was wont to find some consolation from
the persecutions of the rest, has shown himself more unkind towards me than he
ought to have been. However, I shall not say anything harsher regarding him,
both because I once esteemed him as a friend, and loved him even when he was
deemed my enemy. I shall only add that while I was silently meditating on these
things in my thoughts, this source of grief deeply afflicted me, that I had almost
lost the friendship of one who was both a wise and a religious man. But let us
turn away from these topics which are full of sorrow, and let us rather listen
to you, according to the promise which you gave some time ago."
" Let it be so," exclaimed Postumianus. And on his saying this, we all
kept silence, while, moving his robe of sackcloth, on which he had sat down, a
little nearer me, he thus began.
CHAPTER III.
"Three years ago, Sulpitius, at which time, leaving this neighborhood, I
bade thee farewell, after setting sail from Narbonne, on the fifth day we
entered a port of Africa: so prosperous, by the will of God, had been the voyage. I
had in my mind a great desire to go to Carthage, to visit those localities
connected with the saints, and, above all, to worship at the tomb(1) of the
martyr Cyprian. On the fifth day we returned to the harbor, and launched forth into
the deep. Our destination was Alexandria; but as the south wind was against
us, we were almost driven upon the Syrtis;(2) the cautious sailors, however,
guarding against this, stopped the ship by casting anchor. The continent of
Africa then lay before our eyes ; and, landing on it in boats, when we perceived
that the whole country round was destitute of human cultivation, I penetrated
farther inland, for the purpose of more carefully exploring the locality. About
three miles from the sea-coast, I beheld a small hut in the midst of the sand, the
roof of which, to use the expression(3) of Sallust, was like the keel of a
ship. It was close to(4) the earth, and was floored with good strong boards, not
because any very heavy rains are there feared (for, in fact, such a thing as
rain has there never even been heard of), but because, such is the strength of the
winds in that district, that, if at any time only a little breath of air
begins there to be felt, even when the weather is pretty mild, a greater wreckage
takes place in those lands than on any sea. No plants are there, and no seeds
ever spring up, since, in such shifting soil, the dry sand is swept along with
every motion of the winds. But where some promontories, back from the sea, act as
a check to the winds, the soil, being somewhat more firm, produces here and
there some prickly grass, and that furnishes fair pasturage for sheep. The
inhabitants live on milk, while those of them that are more skillful, or, so to speak,
more wealthy, make use of barley bread. That is the only kind of grain which
flourishes there, for barley, by he quickness of its growth in that sort of
soil, generally escapes the destruction caused by the fierce winds. So rapid is its
growth that we are old it is ripe on the thirtieth day after the sowing of the
seed. But there is no reason why hen should settle there, except that all are
free from the payment of taxes. The sea-coast of he Cyrenians is indeed the
most remote, bordering upon that desert which lies between Egypt and Africa,(5)
and through which Cato formerly, when fleeing from Caesar, led an army.(6)
CHAPTER IV.
I Therefore bent my steps toward the hut which I had beheld from a
distance. There I find an old man, in a garment made of skins, turning a mill with his
hand. He saluted and received us kindly. We explain to him that we had been
forced to land on that coast, and were prevented by the continued raging of the
sea(1) from being able at once to pursue our voyage; that, having made our way
on shore, we had desired, as is in keeping with ordinary human nature, to become
acquainted with the character of the locality, and the manners of the
inhabitants. We added that we were Christians, and that the principal object of our
enquiry was whether there were any Christians amid these solitudes. Then, indeed,
he, weeping for joy, throws himself at our feet; and, kissing us over and over
again, invites us to prayer, while, spreading on the ground the skins of sheep,
he makes us sit down upon them. He then serves up a breakfast truly
luxurious,(2) consisting of the half of a barley cake. Now, we were four, while he
himself constituted the fifth. He also brought in a bundle of herbs, of which I
forget the name but they were like mint, were rich in leaves, and yielded a taste
like honey. We were delighted with the exceedingly sweet taste of this plant, and
our hunger was fully satisfied."
Upon this I smiled, and said to my friend the Gaul, "What, Gaul, do you
think of this? Are you pleased with a bundle of herbs and half a barley cake as a
breakfast for five men?"
Then he, being an exceedingly modest person, and blushing somewhat, while
he takes my(3) joke in good part, says, "You act, Sulpitius, in a way like
yourself, for you never miss any opportunity which is offered you of joking us on
the subject of our fondness for eating. But it is unkind of you to try to force
us Gauls to live after the fashion of angels; and yet, through my own liking
for eating, I could believe that even the angels are in the habit of eating; for
such is my appetite that I would be afraid even singly to attack that half
barley cake. However, let that man of Cyrene be satisfied with it, to whom it is
either a matter of necessity or nature always to feel hungry; or, again, let
those be content with it from whom, I suppose, their tossing at sea had taken away
all desire for food. We, on the other hand, are at a distance from the sea;
and, as I have often testified to you, we are, in one word, Gauls. But instead of
wasting time over such matters, let our friend here rather go on to complete
his account of the Cyrenian."
CHAPTER V.
" Assuredly," continues Postumianus, "I shall take care in future not to
mention the abstinence of any one, in case the difficult example should quite
offend our friends the Gauls. I had intended, however, to give an account also of
the dinner of that man of Cyrene--for we were seven days with him--or some of
the subsequent feasts; but these things had better be passed over, lest the
Gaul should think that he was jeered at. However, on the following day, when some
of the natives had come together to visit us, we discovered that that host of
ours was a Presbyter--a fact which he had concealed from us with the greatest
care. We then went with him to the church, which was about two miles distant, and
was concealed from our view by an intervening mountain. We found that it was
constructed of common and worthless trees, and was not much more imposing than
the hut of our host, in which one could not stand without stooping. On enquiring
into the customs of the men of the district, we found that they were not in
the habit of either buying or selling anything. They knew not the meaning of
either fraud or theft. As to gold and silver, which mankind generally deem the most
desirable of all things, they neither possess them, nor do they desire to
possess them. For when I offered that Presbyter ten gold coins, he refused them,
declaring, with profound wisdom, that the church was not benefited but rather(1)
injured by gold. We presented him, however, with some pieces of clothing.
CHAPTER VI.
"After he had kindly accepted our gifts, on the sailors calling us back to
the sea, we departed; and after a favorable passage, we arrived at Alexandria
on the seventh day. There we found a disgraceful strife raging between the
bishops and monks, the cause or occasion of which was that the priests were known
when assembled together often to have passed decrees in crowded synods to the
effect that no one should read or possess the books of Origen. He was, no doubt,
regarded as a most able disputant on the sacred Scriptures. But the bishops
maintained that there were certain things in his books of an unsound character;
and his supporters, not being bold enough to defend these, rather took the line
of declaring that they had been inserted by the heretics. They affirmed,
therefore, that the other portions of his writings were not to be condemned on account
of those things which justly fell under censure, since the faith of readers
could easily make a distinction, so that they should not follow what had been
forged, and yet should keep hold of those points which were handled in accordance
with the Catholic faith. They remarked that there was nothing wonderful if, in
modern and recent writings, heretical guile had been at work; since it had not
feared in certain places to attack even Gospel truth. The bishops, struggling
against these positions to the utmost extent of their power, insisted that what
was quite correct in the writings of Origen should, along with the author
himself, and even his whole works, be condemned, because those books were more than
sufficient which the church had received. They also said that the reading was
to be avoided of such works as would do more harm to the unwise than they would
benefit the wise. For my part, on being led by curiosity to investigate some
portions of these writings, I found very many things which pleased me, but some
that were to be blamed. I think it is clear that the author himself really
entertained these impious opinions, though his defenders maintain that the passages
have been forged. I truly Wonder that one and the same man could have been so
different from himself as that, in the portion which is approved, he has no
equal since the times of the Apostles, while in that which is justly condemned, no
one can be shown to have erred more egregiously.
CHAPTER VII.
For while many things in his books which were extracted from them by the
bishops were read to show that they were written in opposition to the Catholic
faith, that passage especially excited bad feeling against him, in which we read
in his published works that the Lord Jesus, as he had come in the flesh for
the redemption of mankind, and suffering upon the cross for the salvation of
man, had tasted death to procure eternal life for the human race, so he was, by
the same course of suffering, even to render the devil a partaker of redemption.
He maintained this on the ground that such a thing would be in harmony with
his goodness and beneficence, inasmuch as he who had restored fallen and mined
man, would thus also set free an angel who had previously fallen. When these and
other things of a like nature were brought forward by the bishops, a tumult
arose owing to the zeal of the different parties; and when this could not be
quelled by the authority of the priests, the governor of the city was called upon to
regulate the discipline of the church by a perverse precedent; and through the
terror which he inspired, the brethren were dispersed, while the monks took to
flight in different directions; so that, on the decrees being published, they
were not permitted to find lasting acceptance(1) in any place. This fact
influenced me greatly, that Hieronymus, a man truly Catholic and most skillful in the
holy law, was thought at first to have been a follower of Origen, yet now,
above most others, went the length of condemning the whole of his writings.
Assuredly, I am not inclined to judge rashly in regard to any one; but even the most
learned men were said to hold different opinions in this controversy. However,
whether that opinion of Origen was simply an error, as I think, or whether it
was a heresy, as is generally supposed, it not only could not be suppressed by
multitudes of censures on the part of the priests, but it never could have
spread itself so far and wide, had it not gathered strength from their contentions.
Accordingly, when I came to Alexandria, I found that city in a ferment from
disturbances connected with the matter in question. The Bishop, indeed, of that
place received me very kindly, and in a better spirit than I expected, and even
endeavored to retain me with him. But I was not at all inclined to settle there,
where a recent outbreak of ill-will had resulted in a destruction of the
brethren. For, although perhaps it may seem that they ought to have obeyed the
bishops, yet such a multitude of persons, all living in an open confession of
Christ, ought not for that reason to have been persecuted, especially by bishops.
CHAPTER VIII.
Accordingly, setting out from that place, I made for the town of
Bethlehem, which is six miles distant from Jerusalem, but requires sixteen stoppages(1)
on the part of one journeying from Alexandria. The presbyter Jerome(2) rules
the church of this place; for it is a parish of the bishop who has possession of
Jerusalem. Having already in my former journey become acquainted with
Hieronymus, he had easily brought it about that I with good reason deemed no one more
worthy of my regard and love. For, besides the merit due to him on account of his
Faith, and the possession of many virtues, he is a man learned not only in
Latin and Greek, but also Hebrew, to such a degree that no one dare venture to
compare himself with him in all knowledge. I shall indeed be surprised if he s not
well known to you also through means of the works which he has written, since
he is, in fact, read the whole world over."
"Well," says the Gaul at this point, "he is, in truth, but too well known
to us. For, some five years ago, I read a certain book of his, in which the
whole tribe of our monks is most vehemently assaulted and reviled by him. For this
reason, our Belgian friend is accustomed to be very angry, because he has said
that we are in the habit of cramming ourselves even to repletion. But I, for
my part, pardon the eminent man; and am of opinion that he had made the remark
rather about Eastern than Western monks. For the love of eating is gluttony in
the case of the Greeks, whereas among the Gauls it is owing to the nature they
possess."
Then exclaimed I, "You defend your nation, my Gallic friend, by means of
rhetoric; but I beg to ask whether that book condemns only this vice in the case
of the monks?"
"No indeed," replies he; "the writer passed nothing over, which he did not
blame, scourge, and expose: in particular, he inveighed against avarice and no
less against arrogance. He discoursed much respecting pride, and not a little
about superstition; and I will freely own that he seemed to me to draw a true
picture of the vices of multitudes."
CHAPTER IX.
"But as to familiarities which take place between virgins and monks, or
even clerics, how true and how courageous were his words ! And, on account of
these, he is said not to stand high in favor with certain people whom I am
unwilling to name. For, as our Belgian friend is angry that we were accused of too
great fondness for eating, so those people, again, are said to express their rage
when they find it written in that little work,--The virgin despises her true
unmarried brother, and seeks a stranger.'"
Upon this I exclaim, "You are going too far, my Gallic friend: take heed
lest some one who perhaps owns to these things, hear what you are saying, and
begin to hold you, along with Hieronymus, in no great affection. For, since you
are a learned(1) man, not unreasonably will I admonish you in the verse of that
comic poet who says,--'Submission procures friends, while truth gives rise to
hatred.' Let rather, Postumianus, your discourse to us about the East, so well
begun, now be resumed."
"Well," says he, "as I had commenced to relate, I stayed with Hieronymus
six months, who carried on an unceasing warfare against the wicked, and a
perpetual struggle in opposition to the deadly hatred of ungodly men. The heretics
hate him, because he never desists from attacking them; the clerics hate him,
because he assails their life and crimes. But beyond doubt, all the good admire
and love him; for those people are out of their senses, who suppose that he is a
heretic. Let me tell the truth on this point, which is that the knowledge of
the man is Catholic, and that his doctrine is sound. He is always occupied in
reading, always at his books with his whole heart: he takes no rest day or
night; he is perpetually either reading or writing something. In fact, had I not
been resolved in mind, and had promised to God first to visit(2) the desert
previously referred to, I should have grudged to depart even for the shortest time
from so great a man. Handing over, then, and entrusting to him all my
possessions and my whole family, which having followed me against my own inclination,
kept me in a state of embarrassment, and thus being in a son of way delivered from
a heavy burden, and restored to freedom of action, I returned to Alexandria,
and having visited the brethren there I set out from the place for upper
Thebais, that is for the farthest off confines of Egypt. For a great multitude of
monks were said to inhabit the widely extending solitudes of that wilderness. But
here it would be tedious, were I to Seek to narrate all the things which I
witnessed: I shall only touch lightly on a few points.
CHAPTER X.
" Not far from the desert, and dose to the Nile, there are numerous
monasteries. For the most part, the monks there dwell together in companies of a
hundred; and their highest rule is to live under the orders of their Abbot, to do
nothing by their own inclination, but to depend in all things on his will and
authority. If it so happens that any of them form in their minds a lofty ideal of
virtue, so as to wish to betake themselves to the desert to live a solitary
life, they do not venture to act on this desire except with the permission of the
Abbot. In fact, this is the first of virtues in their estimation,--to live in
obedience to the will of another. To those who betake themselves to the desert,
bread or some other kind of food is furnished by the command of that Abbot.
Now, it so happened that, in those days during which I had come thither, the
Abbot had sent bread to a certain person who had withdrawn to the desert, and had
erected a tent for himself not more than six miles from the monastery. This
bread was sent by the hands of two boys, the elder of whom was fifteen, and the
younger twelve years of age. As these boys were returning home, an asp of
remarkable size encountered them, but they were not the least afraid on meeting it; and
moving up to their very feet, as if charmed by some melody, it laid down its
dark-green neck before them. The younger of the boys laid hold of it with his
hand, and, wrapping it in his dress, went on his way with it. Then, entering the
monastery with the air of a conqueror, and meeting with the brethren, while alI
looked on, he opened out his dress, and set down the imprisoned beast, not
without some appearance of boastfulness. But while the rest of the spectators
extolled the faith and virtue of the children, the Abbot, with deeper insight, and
to prevent them at such a tender age from being puffed up with pride, subjected
both to punishment. This he did after blaming them much for having publicly
revealed what the Lord had wrought through their instrumentality. He declared
that that was not to be attributed to their faith, but to the Divine power; and
added that they should rather learn to serve God in humility, and not to glory in
signs and wonders; for that a sense of their own weakness was better than any
vainglorious exhibition of power.
CHAPTER XI.
"When the monk whom I have mentioned heard of this,--when he learned both
that the children had encountered danger through meeting the snake, and that
moreover, having got the better of the serpent, they had received a sound
beating,--he implored the Abbot that henceforth no bread or food of any kind should be
sent to him. And now the eighth day had passed since that man of Christ had
exposed himself to the danger of perishing from hunger; his limbs were growing
dry with fasting, but his mind fixed upon heaven could not fail; his body was
wearing away with abstinence, but his faith remained firm. In the meantime, the
Abbot was admonished by the Spirit to visit that disciple. Under the influence of
a pious solicitude, he was eager to learn by what means of preserving life
that faithful man was supported, since he had declined any human aid in
ministering to his necessities. Accordingly, he sets out in person to satisfy himself on
the subject. When the recluse saw from a distance the old man coming to him, he
ran to meet him: he thanks him for the visit, and conducts him to his cell. As
they enter the cell together, they behold a basket of palm branches, full of
hot bread, hanging fixed at the door-post. And first the smell of the hot bread
is perceived; but on touching it, it appears as if just a little before it had
been taken from the oven. At the same time, they do not recognize the bread as
being of the shape common in Egypt. Both are filled with amazement, and
acknowledge the gift as being from heaven. On the one side, the recluse declared that
this event was due to the arrival of the Abbot; while, on the other side, the
Abbot ascribed it rather to the faith and virtue of the recluse; but both
broke the heaven-sent bread with exceeding joy. And when, on his return to the
monastery, the old man reported to the brethren what had occurred, such
enthusiasm seized the minds of all of them, that they vied with each other in their
haste to betake themselves to the desert, and its sacred seclusion; while they
declared themselves miserable in having made their abode only too long amid a
multitude, where human fellowship had to be carried on and endured.
CHAPTER XII.
"In this monastery I saw two old men who were said to have already lived
there for forty years, and in fact never to have departed from it. I do not
think that I should pass by all mention of these men, since, indeed, I heard the
following statement made regarding their virtues on the testimony of the Abbot
himself, and all the brethren, that in the case of one of them, the sun never
beheld him feasting, and in the case of the other, the sun never saw him angry."
Upon this, the Gaul looking at me exclaims: "Would that a friend of
yours--I do not wish to mention his name--were now present; I should greatly like him
to hear of that example, since we have had too much experience of his bitter
anger in the persons of a great many people. Nevertheless, as I hear, he has
lately forgiven his enemies; and, in these circumstances, were he to hear of the
conduct of that man, he would be more and more strengthened in his forgiving
course by the example thus set before him, and would feel that it is an admirable
virtue not to fall under the influence of anger. I will not indeed deny that he
had just reasons for his wrath; but where the battle is hard, the crown of
victory is all the more glorious. For this reason, I think, if you will allow me
to say so, that a certain man was justly to be praised, because when an
ungrateful freedman abandoned him he rather pitied than inveighed against the fugitive.
And, indeed, he was not even angry with the man by whom he seems to have been
carried off."(1)
Upon this I remarked: "Unless Postumianus had given us that example of
overcoming anger, I would have been very angry on account of the departure of the
fugitive; but since it is not lawful to be angry, all remembrance of such
things, as it annoys us, ought to be blotted from our minds. Let us rather,
Postumianus, listen to what you have got to say."
"I will do," says he, "Sulpitius, what you request, as I see you are all
so desirous of hearing me. But remember that I do not address my speech to you
without hope of a larger recompense; I shall gladly perform what you require,
provided that, when ere long my turn comes, you do not refuse what I ask."
"We indeed," said I, "have nothing by means of which we can return the
obligation we shall lie under to you even without a larger return.(2) However,
command us as to anything you have thought about, provided you satisfy our
desires, as you have already begun to do, for your speech conveys to us true delight."
"I will stint nothing," said Postumianus, "of your desires; and inasmuch
as you have recognized the virtue of one recluse, I shall go on to relate to you
some few things about more such persons.
CHAPTER XIII.
"Well then, when I entered upon the nearest parts of the desert, about
twelve miles from the Nile, having as my guide one of the brethren who was well
acquainted with the localities, we arrived at the residence of a certain old
monk who dwelt at the foot of a mountain. In that place there was a well, which is
a very rare thing in these regions. The monk had one ox, the whole labor of
which consisted in drawing water by moving a machine worked with a wheel. This
was the only way of getting at the water, for the well was said to be a thousand
or more feet deep. There was also a garden there full of a variety of
vegetables. This, too, was contrary to what might have been expected in the desert
where, all things being dry and burnt up by the fierce rays of the sun produce not
even the slenderest root of any plant. But the labor which in common with his
ox, the monk performed, as well as his own special industry, produced such a
happy state of things to the holy man; for the frequent irrigation in which he
engaged imparted such a fertility to the sand that we saw the vegetables in his
garden flourishing and coming to maturity in a wonderful manner. On these, then,
the ox lived as well as its master; and from the abundance thus supplied, the
holy man provided us also with a dinner. There I saw what ye Gauls, perchance,
may not believe--a pot boiling without fire(1) with the vegetables which were
being got ready for our dinner: such is the power of the sun in that place that it
is sufficient for any cooks, even for preparing the dainties of the Gauls.
Then after dinner, when the evening was coming on, our host invites us to a
palm-tree, the fruit of which he was accustomed to use, and which was at a distance
of about two miles. For that is the only kind of tree found in the desert, and
even these are rare, though they do occur. I am not sure whether this is owing
to the wise foresight of former ages, or whether the soil naturally produces
them. It may indeed be that God, knowing beforehand that the desert was one day to
be inhabited by the saints, prepared these things for his servants. For those
who settle within these solitudes live for the most part on the fruit of such
trees, since no other kinds of plants thrive in these quarters. Well, when we
came up to that tree to which the kindness of our host conducted us, we there met
with a lion; and on seeing it, both my guide and myself began to tremble; but
the holy man went up to it without delay, while we, though in great terror,
followed him. As if commanded by God, the beast modestly withdrew and stood gazing
at us, while our friend, the monk, plucked some fruit hanging within easy
reach on the lower branches. And, on his holding out his hand filled with dates,
the monster ran up to him and received them as readily as any domestic animal
could have done; and having eaten them, it departed. We, beholding these things,
and being still under the influence of fear, could not but perceive how great
was the power of faith in his case, and how weak it was in ourselves.
CHAPTER XIV.
"We found another equally remarkable man living in a small hut, capable
only of containing a single person. Concerning him we were told that a she-wolf
was accustomed to stand near him at dinner; and that the beast could by no
means be easily deceived so as to fail to be with him at the regular hour when he
took refreshment. It was also said that the wolf waited at the door until he
offered her the bread which remained over his own humble dinner; that she was
accustomed to lick his hand, and then, her duty being, as it were, fulfilled, and
her respects paid to him, she took her departure. But it so happened that that
holy man, while he escorted a brother who had paid him a visit, on his way home,
was a pretty long time away, and only returned under night.(1) In the
meanwhile, the beast made its appearance at the usual dinner time. Having entered the
vacant cell and perceived that its benefactor was absent, it began to search
round the hut with some curiosity to discover, if possible, the inhabitant. Now it
so happened that a basket of palm-twigs was hanging close at hand with five
loaves of bread in it. Taking one of these, the beast devoured it, and then,
having committed this evil deed, went its way. The recluse on his return found the
basket in a state of disorder, and the number of loaves less than it should
have been. He is aware of the loss of his household goods, and observes near the
threshold some fragments of the loaf which had been stolen. Considering all
this, he had little doubt as to the author of the theft. Accordingly, when on the
following days the beast did not, in its usual way, make its appearance
(undoubtedly hesitating from a consciousness of its audacious deed to come to him on
whom it had inflicted injury), the recluse was deeply grieved at being deprived
of the happiness he had enjoyed in its society. At last, being brought back
through his prayers, it appeared to him as usual at dinner time, after the lapse of
seven days. But to make clear to every one the shame it felt, through regret
for what had been done, not daring to draw very near, and with its eyes, from
profound self-abasement, cast upon the earth, it seemed, as was plain to the
intelligence of every one, to beg in a sort of way, for pardon. The recluse,
pitying its confusion, bade it come close to him, and then, with a kindly hand,
stroked its head; while, by giving it two loaves instead of the usual one, he
restored the guilty creature to its former position; and, laying aside its misery on
thus having obtained forgiveness, it betook itself anew to its former habits.
Behold, I beg of you, even in this case, the power of Christ, to whom all is
wise that is irrational, and to whom all is mild that is by nature savage. A wolf
discharges duty; a wolf acknowledges the crime of theft; a wolf is confounded
with a sense of shame: when called for, it presents itself; it offers its head
to be stroked; and it has a perception of the pardon granted to it, just as if
it had a feeling of shame on account of its misconduct,--this is thy power, O
Christ--these, O Christ, are thy marvelous works. For in truth, whatever things
thy servants do in thy name are thy doings; and in this only we find cause for
deepest grief that, while wild beasts acknowledge thy majesty, intelligent
beings fail to do thee reverence.
CHAPTER XV.
"But lest this should perchance seem incredible to any one, I shall
mention still greater things. I call Christ(1) to witness that I invent nothing, nor
will I relate things published by uncertain authors, but will set forth facts
which have been vouched for to me by trustworthy men.
"Numbers of those persons live in the desert without any roofs over their
heads, whom people call anchorites.(2) They subsist on the roots of plants;
they settle nowhere in any fixed place, lest they should frequently have men
visiting them; wherever night compels them they choose their abode. Well, two monks
from Nitria directed their steps towards a certain man living in this style,
and under these conditions. They did so, although they were from a very different
quarter, because they had heard of his virtues, and because he had formerly
been their dear and intimate friend, while a member of the same monastery. They
sought after him long and much; and at length, in the seventh month, they found
him staying in that far-distant wilderness which borders upon Memphis. He was
said already to have dwelt in these solitudes for twelve years; but although he
shunned intercourse with all men, yet he did not shrink from meeting these
friends; on the contrary, he yielded himself to their affection for a period of
three days. On the fourth day, when he had gone some distance escorting them in
their return journey, they beheld a lioness of remarkable size coming towards
them. The animal, although meeting with three persons, showed no uncertainty as to
the one she made for, but threw herself down at the feet of the anchorite:
and, lying there with a kind of weeping and lamentation, she manifested mingled
feelings of sorrow and supplication. The sight affected all, and especially him
who perceived that he was sought for: he therefore sets out, and the others
follow him. For the beast stopping from time to time, and, from time to time
looking back, clearly wished it to be understood that the anchorite should follow
wherever she led. What need is there of many words? We arrived at the den of the
animal, where she, the unfortunate mother, was nourishing five whelps already
grown up, which, as they had come forth with closed eyes from the womb of their
dam, so they had continued in persistent blindness. Bringing them out, one by
one, from the hollow of the rock, shell aid them down at the feet of the
anchorite. Then at length the holy man perceived what the creature desired; and having
called upon the name of God, he touched with his hand the closed eyes of the
whelps; and immediately their blindness ceased, while light, so long denied
them, streamed upon the open eyes of the animals. Thus, those brethren, having
visited the anchorite whom they were desirous of seeing, returned with a very
precious reward for their labor, inasmuch as, having been permitted to be
eye-witnesses of such power, they had beheld the faith of the saint, and the glory of
Christ, to which they will in future bear testimony. But I have still more marvels
to tell: the lioness, after five days, returned to the man who had done her so
great a kindness, and brought him, as a gift, the skin of an uncommon animal.
Frequently clad in this, as if it were a cloak. that holy man did not disdain
to receive that gift through the instrumentality of the beast; while, all the
time, he rather regarded Another as being the giver.
CHAPTER XVI.
"There was also an illustrious name of another anchorite in those regions,
a man who dwelt in that part of the desert which is about Syene. This man,
when first he betook himself to the wilderness, intended to live on the roots of
plants which the sand here and there produces, of a very sweet and delicious
flavor; but being ignorant of the nature of the herbs, he often gathered those
which were of a deadly character. And, indeed, it was not easy to discriminate
between the kind of the roots by the mere taste, since all were equally sweet, but
many of them, of a less known nature, contained within them a deadly poison.
When, therefore, the poison within tormented him on eating these, and all his
vitals were tortured with terrific pains, while frequent vomitings, attended by
excruciating agonies, were shattering the very citadel of life, his stomach
being completely exhausted, he was in utter terror of all that had to be eaten for
sustaining existence. Having thus fasted for seven days, he was almost at the
point of death when a wild animal called an Ibex came up to him. To this
creature standing by him, he offered a bundle of plants which he had collected on the
previous day, yet had not ventured to touch; but the beast, casting aside with
its mouth those which were poisonous, picked out such as it knew to be
harmless. In this way, that holy man, taught by its conduct what he ought to eat, and
what to reject, both escaped the danger of dying of hunger and of being poisoned
by the plants. But it would be tedious to relate all the facts which we have
either had personal knowledge of, or have heard from others, respecting those
who inhabit the desert. I spent a whole year, and nearly seven months more, of
set purpose, within these solitudes, being, however, rather an admirer of the
virtues of others, than myself making any attempt to manifest the extraordinary
endurance which they displayed. For the greater part of the time I lived with the
old man whom I have mentioned, who possessed the well and the ox.
CHAPTER XVII.
" I visited two monasteries of St. Anthony, which are at the present day
occupied by his disciples. I also went to that place in which the most blessed
Paul, the first of the eremites, had his abode. I saw the Red Sea and the ridges
of Mount Sinai, the top of which almost touches heaven, and cannot, by any
human effort, be reached. An anchorite was said to live somewhere within its
recesses: and I sought long and much to see him, but was unable to do so. He had for
nearly fifty years been removed from all human fellowship, and used no
clothes, but was covered with bristles growing on his own body, while, by Divine gift,
he knew not of his own nakedness. As often as any pious men desired to visit
him, making hastily for the pathless wilderness, he shunned all meeting with his
kind. To one man only, about five years before my visit, he was said to have
granted an interview; and I believe that man obtained the favor through the
power of his faith. Amid much talk which the two had together, the recluse is said
to have replied to the question why he shunned so assiduously all human beings,
that the man who was frequently visited by mortals like himself, could not
often be visited by angels. From this, not without reason, the report had spread,
and was accepted by multitudes, that that holy man enjoyed angelic fellowship.
Be this as it may, I, for my part, departed from Mount Sinai, and returned to
the river Nile, the banks of which, on both sides, I beheld dotted over with
numerous monasteries. I saw that, for the most part, as I have already said, the
monks resided together in companies of a hundred; but it was well known that so
many as two or three thousand sometimes had their abode in the same villages.
Nor indeed would one have any reason to think that the virtue of the monks there
dwelling together in great numbers, was less than that of those was known to
be, who kept themselves apart from human fellowship. The chief and foremost
virtue in these places, as I have already said, is obedience. In fact, any one
applying for admission is not received by the Abbot of the monastery on any other
condition than that he be first tried and proved; it being understood that he
will never afterwards decline to submit to any injunction of the Abbot, however
arduous and difficult, and though it may seem something unworthy to be endured.
CHAPTER XVIII.
"I will relate two wonderful examples of almost incredible obedience, and
two only, although many present themselves to my recollection; but if, in any
case, a few instances do not suffice to rouse readers to an imitation of the
like virtues, many would be of no advantage. Well then, when a certain man having
laid aside all worldly business, and having entered a monastery of very(1)
strict discipline, begged that he might be accepted as a member, the Abbot began to
place many considerations before him,--that the toils of that order were
severe; that his own requirements were heavy, and such as no one's endurance could
easily comply with; that he should rather enquire after another monastery where
life was carried on under easier conditions; and that he should not try to
attempt that which he was unable to accomplish. But he was in no degree moved by
these terrors; on the contrary, he all the more promised obedience, saying that
if the Abbot should order him to walk into the fire, he would not refuse to
enter it. The Master then, having accepted that profession of his, did not delay
putting it to the test. It so happened that an iron vessel was close at hand,
very hot, as it was being got ready by a powerful fire for cooking some loaves of
bread: the flames were bursting forth from the oven broken open, and fire raged
without restraint within the hollows of that furnace. The Master, at this
stage of affairs, ordered the stranger to enter it, nor did he hesitate to obey the
command. Without a moment's delay he entered into the midst of the flames,
which, conquered at once by so bold a display of faith, subsided at his approach,
as happened of old to the well-known Hebrew children. Nature was overcome, and
the fire gave way; so that he, of whom it was thought that he would be burned
to death, had reason to marvel at himself, besprinkled, as it were, with a
cooling dew. But what wonder is it, O Christ, that that fire did not touch thy
youthful soldier? The result was that, neither did the Abbot regret having issued
such harsh commands, nor did the disciple repent having obeyed the orders
received. He, indeed, on the very day on which he came, being tried in his weakness,
was found perfect; deservedly happy, deservedly glorious, having been tested in
obedience, he was glorified through suffering.
CHAPTER XIX.
"In the same monastery, the fact which I am about to narrate was said to
have occurred within recent memory. A certain man had come to the same Abbot in
like manner with the former, in order to obtain admission. When the first law
of obedience was placed before him, and he promised an unfailing patience for
the endurance of all things however extreme, it so happened that the Abbot was
holding in his hand a twig of storax already withered. This the Abbot fixed in
the ground, and imposed this work upon the visitor, that he should continue to
water the twig, until (what was against every natural result) that dry piece of
wood should grow green in the sandy soil. Well, the stranger, being placed
under the authority of unbending law, conveyed water every day on his own
shoulders--water which had to be taken from the river Nile, at almost two miles'
distance. And now, after a year had run its course, the labor of that workman had not
yet ceased, but there could be no hope of the good success of his undertaking.
However, the grace of obedience continued to be shown in his labor. The
following year also mocked the vain labor of the (by this time) weakened brother. At
length, as the third annual circle was gliding by, while the workman ceased
not, night or day, his labor in watering, the twig began to show signs of life. I
have myself seen a small tree sprung from that little rod, which, standing at
the present day with green branches in the court of the monastery, as if for a
witness of what has been stated, shows what a reward obedience received, and
what a power faith can exert. But the day would fail me before I could fully
enumerate the many different miracles which have become known to me in connection
with the virtues of the saints.
CHAPTER XX.
"I will, however, still further give you an account of two extraordinary
marvels. The one of these will be a notable warning against the inflation of
wretched vanity, and the other will serve as no mean guard against the display of
a spurious righteousness.
"A certain saint, then, endowed with almost incredible power in casting
out demons from the bodies of those possessed by them, was, day by day,
performing unheard-of miracles. For, not only when present, and not merely by his word,
but while absent also, he, from time to time, cured possessed bodies, by some
threads taken from his garment, or by letters which he sent. He, therefore, was
to a wonderful degree visited by people who came to him from every part of the
world. I say nothing about those of humbler rank; but prefects, courtiers, and
judges of various ranks often lay at his doors. Most holy bishops also, laying
aside their priestly dignity, and humbly imploring him to touch and bless them,
believed with good reason that they were sanctified, and illumined with a
divine gift, as often as they touched his hand and garment. He was reported to
abstain always and utterly from every kind of drink, and for food (I will whisper
this, Sulpitius, into your ear lest our friend the Gaul hear it), to subsist
upon only six dried figs. But in the meantime, just as honor accrued to the holy
man from his excellence,(1) so vanity began to steal upon him from the honor
which was paid him. When first he perceived that this evil was growing upon him,
he struggled long and earnestly to shake it off, but it could not be thoroughly
got rid of by all his efforts, since he still had a secret consciousness of
being under the influence of vanity. Everywhere did the demons acknowledge his
name, while he was not able to exclude from his presence the number of people who
flocked to him. The hidden poison was, in the meantime, working in his breast,
and he, at whose beck demons were expelled from the bodies of others, was
quite unable to cleanse himself from the hidden thoughts of vanity. Betaking
himself, therefore, with fervent supplication to God, he is said to have prayed that,
power being given to the devil over him for five months, he might become like
to those whom he himself had cured. Why should I delay with many words? That
most powerful man,--he, renowned for his miracles and virtues through all the
East, he, to whose threshold multitudes had gathered, and at whose door the
highest dignitaries of that age had prostrated themselves--laid hold of by a demon,
was kept fast in chains. It was only after having suffered all those things
which the possessed are wont to endure, that at length in the fifth month he was
delivered, not only from the demon, but (what was to him more useful and
desirable) from the vanity which had dwelt within him.
CHAPTER XXI.
"But to me reflecting on these things, there occurs the thought of our own
unhappiness and our own infirmity. For who is there of us, whom if one
despicable creature of a man has humbly saluted, or one woman has praised with foolish
and flattering words, is not at once elated with pride and puffed up with
vanity? This will bring it about that even though one does not possess a
consciousness of sanctity, yet, because through the flattery, or, it may be, the mistake
of fools, he is said to be a holy man, he will, in fact, deem himself most holy
! And then, if frequent gifts are sent to him, he will maintain that he is so
honored by the munificence of God, inasmuch as all necessary things are
bestowed upon him when sleeping and at rest. But further, if some signs of any kind of
power fall to him even in a low degree, he will think himself no less than an
angel And even if he is not marked out from others either by acts or
excellence, but is simply made a cleric, he instantly enlarges the fringes of his dress,
delights in salutations, is puffed up by people visiting him, and himself gads
about everywhere. Nay, the man who had been previously accustomed to travel on
foot, or at most to ride on the back of an ass, must needs now ride proudly on
frothing steeds; formerly content to dwell in a small and humble cell, he now
builds a lofty fretted ceiling; he constructs many rooms ; he cuts and carves
doors; be paints wardrobes; he rejects the coarser kind of clothing, and demands
soft garments; and he gives such orders as the following to dear widows and
friendly virgins, that the one class weave for him an embroidered cloak, and the
other a flowing robe. But let us leave all these things to be described more
pungently by that blessed man Hieronymus; and let us return to the object more
immediately in view."
"Well," says our Gallic friend upon this, "I know not indeed what you have
left to be said by Hieronymus; you have within such brief compass comprehended
all our practices, that I think these few words of yours, if they are taken in
good part, and patiently considered, will greatly benefit those in question,
so that they will not require in future to be kept in order by the books of
Hieronymus. But do thou rather go on with what you had begun, and bring forward an
example, as you said you would do, against spurious righteousness; for to tell
you the truth, we are subject to no more destructive evil than this within the
wide boundaries of Gaul."
"I will do so," replied Postumianus, "nor will I any longer keep you in a
state of expectation.
CHAPTER XXII.
"A certain young man from Asia, exceedingly wealthy, of distinguished
family, and having a wife and little son, happening to have been a tribune in
Egypt, and in frequent campaigns against the Blembi to have touched on some parts of
the desert, and having also seen several tents of the saints, heard the word
of salvation from the blessed John. And he did not then delay to show his
contempt for an unprofitable military life with its vain honor. Bravely entering into
the wilderness, he in a short time became distinguished as being perfect in
every kind of virtue. Capable of lengthened fasting, conspicuous for humility,
and steadfast in faith, he had easily obtained a reputation in the pursuit of
virtue equal to that of the monks of old. But by and by, the thought (proceeding
from the devil) entered his mind that it would be more proper for him to return
to his native land and be the means of saving his only son and his family
along with his wife; which surely would be more acceptable to God than if he,
content with only rescuing himself from the world, should, not without impiety,
neglect the salvation of his friends. Overcome by the plausible appearance of that
kind of spurious righteousness, the recluse, after a period of nearly four
years, forsook his cell and the end to which he had devoted his life. But on
arriving at the nearest monastery, which was inhabited by many brethren, he made
known to them, in reply to their questionings, the reason of his departure and the
object he had in view. All of them, and especially the Abbot of that place,
sought to keep him back; but the intention he had unfortunately formed could not
be rooted out of his mind. Accordingly with an unhappy obstinacy he went forth,
and, to the grief of all, departed from the brethren. But scarcely had he
vanished from their sight, when he was taken possession of by a demon, and vomiting
bloody froth from his mouth, he began to lacerate himself with his own teeth.
Then, having been carried back to the same monastery on the shoulders of the
brethren, when the unclean spirit could not be restrained within its walls, he
was, from dire necessity, loaded with iron fetters, being bound both in hands and
feet--a punishment not undeserved by a fugitive, inasmuch as chains now
restrained him whom faith had not restrained. At length, after two years, having been
set free from the unclean spirit by the prayers of the saints, he immediately
returned to the desert from which he had departed. In this way he was both
himself corrected and was rendered a warning to others, that the shadow of a
spurious righteousness might neither delude any one, nor a shifting fickleness of
character induce any one, with unprofitable inconstancy, to forsake the course on
which he has once entered. And now let it suffice for you to learn these things
respecting the various operations of the Lord which he has carried on in the
persons of his servants; with the view either of stimulating others to a like
kind of conduct, or of deterring them from particular actions. But since I have by
this time fully satisfied your ears--have, in fact, been more lengthy than I
ought to have been--do you now (upon this he addressed himself to me)--pay me
the recompense you owe, by letting us hear you, after your usual fashion,
discoursing about your friend Martin, for my longings after this have already for a
long time been strongly excited."
CHAPTER XXIII.
"What," replied I, "is there not enough about my friend Martin in that
book of mine which you know that I published respecting his life and virtues?"
"I own it," said Postumianus, "and that book of yours is never far from my
right hand. For if you recognize it, look here--(and so saying he displayed
the book which was concealed in his dress)--here it is. This book," added he, "is
my companion both by land and sea: it has been my friend and comforter in all
my wanderings. But I will relate to you to what places that book has
penetrated, and how there is almost no spot upon earth in which the subject of so happy a
history is not possessed as a well-known narrative. Paulinus, a man who has
the strongest regard for you, was the first to bring it to the city of Rome; and
then, as it was greedily laid hold of by the whole city, I saw the booksellers
rejoicing over it, inasmuch as nothing was a source of greater gain to them,
for nothing commanded a readier sale, or fetched a higher price. This same book,
having got a long way before me in the course of my traveling, was already
generally read through all Carthage, when I came into Africa. Only that presbyter
of Cyrene whom I mentioned did not possess it; but he wrote down its contents
from my description. And why should I speak about Alexandria? for there it is
almost better known to all than it is to yourself. It has passed through Egypt,
Nitria, the Thebaid, and the whole of the regions of Memphis. I found it being
read by a certain old man in the desert; and, after I told him that I was your
intimate friend, this commission was given me both by him and many other
brethren, that, if I should ever again visit this country, and find you well, I should
constrain you to supply those particulars which you stated in your book you had
passed over respecting the virtues of the sainted man. Come then, as I do not
desire you to repeat to me those things which are already sufficiently known
from what you have written, let those other points, at my request and that of
many others, be fully set forth, which at the time of your writing you passed
over, to prevent, as I believe, any feeling of weariness on the part of your
readers."
CHAPTER XXIV.
"Indeed, Postumianus," replied I, "while I was listening attentively, all
this time, to you talking about the excellences of the saints, in my secret
thoughts I had my mind turned to my friend Martin, observing on the best of
grounds that all those things which different individuals had done separately, were
easily and entirely accomplished by that one man alone. For, although you
certainly related lofty deeds, I really heard nothing from your lips (may I say it,
without offence to these holy men), in which Martin was inferior to any one of
them. And while I hold that the excellence of no one of these is ever to be
compared with the merits of that man, still this point ought to be attended to,
that it is unfair he should be compared, on the same terms, with the recluses of
the desert, or even with the anchorites. For they, at freedom from every
hindrance, with heaven only and the angels as witnesses, were clearly instructed to
perform admirable deeds; he, on the other hand, in the midst of crowds and
intercourse with human beings--among quarrelsome clerics, and among furious bishops,
while he was harassed with almost daily scandals on all sides, nevertheless
stood absolutely firm with unconquerable virtue against all these things, and
performed such wonders as not even those accomplished of whom we have heard that
they are, or at one time were, in the wilderness. But even had they done things
equal to his, what judge would be so unjust as not, on good grounds, to decide
that he was the more powerful? For put the case that he was a soldier who fought
on unfavorable ground, and yet turned out a conqueror, and compare them, in
like manner, to soldiers, who however, contended on equal terms, or even on
favorable terms, with the enemy. What then? Although the victory of all is one and
the same the glory of all certainly cannot be equal. And even though you have
narrated marvelous things, still you have not stated that a dead man was recalled
to life by any one. In this one particular undoubtedly, it must be owned that
no one is to be compared with Martin.
CHAPTER XXV.
"For, if it is worthy of admiration that the flames did not touch that
Egyptian of whom you have spoken, Martin also not infrequently proved his power
over fire. If you remind us that the savagery of wild beasts was conquered by,
and yielded to, the anchorites, Martin, for his part, was accustomed to keep in
check both the fury of wild beasts and the poison of serpents. But, if you
bring forward for comparison him who cured those possessed of unclean spirits, by
the authority of his word, or even through the instrumentality of threads from
his dress, there are many proofs that Martin was not, even in this respect,
inferior. Nay, should you have recourse to him, who, covered with his own hair
instead of a garment, was thought to be visited by angels, with Martin angels were
wont to hold daily discourse. Moreover, he bore so unconquerable a spirit
against vanity and boastfulness, that no one more determinedly disdained these
vices, and that, although he often, while absent, cured those who were filled with
unclean spirits, and issued his commands not only to courtiers or prefects, but
also to kings themselves. This was indeed a very small thing amid his other
virtues, but I should wish you to believe that no one ever contended more
earnestly than he did against not only vanity, but also the causes and the occasions of
vanity. I shall also mention what is indeed a small point, but should not be
passed over, because it is to the credit of a man who, being possessed of the
highest power, manifested such a pious desire to show his regard for the blessed
Martin. I remember, then, that Vincentius the prefect, an illustrious man, and
one of the most eminent in all Gaul for every kind of virtue, when he had
occasion to be in the vicinity of Tours, often begged of Martin that he would allow
him to stay with him in the monastery. In making this request, he brought
forward the example of Saint Ambrose, the bishop, who was generally spoken of at
that time as being in the habit of entertaining both consuls and prefects. But
Martin, with deeper judgment, refused so to act, lest by so doing some vanity and
inflation of spirit might steal upon him. You, therefore, must acknowledge that
there existed in Martin the virtues of all those men whom you have mentioned,
but there were not found in all of them the virtues by which Martin was
distinguished."
CHAPTER XXVI.
"Why do you," here exclaimed Postumianus, "speak to me in such a manner?
As if I did not hold the same opinion as yourself, and had not always been of
the same mind. I, indeed, as long as I live, and retain my senses, will ever
celebrate the monks of Egypt: I will praise the anchorites; I will admire the
eremites; but I will place Martin in a position of his own: I do not venture to
compare to him any one of the monks, far less any of the bishops. Egypt owns this:
Syria and AEthiopia have discovered this: India has heard this; Parthia and
Persia have known this; not even Armenia is ignorant of it; the remote Bosphorus
is aware of it; and in a word, those are acquainted with it who visit the
Fortunate Islands or the Arctic Ocean. All the more wretched on this account is this
country of ours, which has not been found worthy to be acquainted with so great
a man, although he was in its immediate vicinity. However, I will not include
the people at large in this censure: only the clerics, only the priests know
nothing of him; and not without reason were they, in their ill-will, disinclined
to know him, inasmuch as, had they become acquainted with his virtues they must
have recognized their own vices. I shudder to state what I have lately heard,
that a miserable man (I know him not), has said that you have told many lies in
that book of yours. This is not the voice of a man, but of the devil; and it
is not Martin who is, in this way, injured, but faith is taken from the Gospels
themselves. For, since the Lord himself testified of works of the kind which
Martin accomplished, that they were to be performed by all the faithful, he who
does not believe that Martin accomplished such deeds, simply does not believe
that Christ uttered such words. But the miserable, the degenerate, the somnolent,
are put to shame, that the things which they themselves cannot do, were done
by him, and prefer rather to deny his virtues than to confess their own
inertness. But let us, as we hasten on to other matters, let go all remembrance of such
persons: and do you rather, as I have for a long time desired, proceed to
narrate the still untold deeds of Martin."
"Well," said I, "I think that your request would more properly be directed
to our friend the Gaul, since he is acquainted with more of Martin's doings
than I am--for a disciple could not be ignorant of the deeds of his master--and
who certainly owes a return of kindness, not only to Martin, but to both of us,
inasmuch as I have already published my book, and you have, so far, related to
us the doings of our brethren in the East. Let then, our friend the Gaul
commence that detailed account which is due from him: because, as I have said, he
both owes us a return in the way of speaking, and will, I believe, do this much
for his friend Martin--that he shall, not unwillingly, give a narrative of his
deeds."
CHAPTER XXVII.
"Well," said the Gaul, "I, for my part, though I am unequal to so great a
task, feel constrained by those examples of obedience which have been related
above by Postumianus, not to refuse that duty which you impose upon me. But when
I reflect that I, a man of Gaul,(1) am about to speak in the presence of
natives of Aquitania, I fear lest my somewhat rude form of speech should offend your
too delicate ears. However, you will listen to me as a foolish sort(2) of man,
who says nothing in an affected or stilted fashion. For if you have conceded
to me that I was a disciple of Martin, grant me this also that I be allowed,
under the shelter of his example, to despise the vain trappings of speech and
ornaments of words."
"Certainly," replied Postumianus, "speak either in Celtic, or in Gaulish,
if you prefer it, provided only you speak of Martin. But for my part, I
believe, that, even though you were dumb, words would not be wanting to you, in which
you might speak of Martin with eloquent lips, just as the tongue of Zacharias
was loosed at the naming of John. But as you are, in fact, an orator,(3) you
craftily, like an orator, begin by begging us to excuse your unskillfulness,
because you really excel in eloquence. But it is not fitting either that a monk
should show such cunning, or that a Gaul should be so artful. But to work rather,
and set forth what you have still got to say, for we have wasted too much time
already in dealing with other matters; and the lengthening shadow of the
declining sun warns us that no long portion of day remains till night be upon us.
Then, after we had all kept silence for a little, the Gaul thus begins--" I think I
must take care in the first place not to repeat those particulars about the
virtues of Martin, which our friend Sulpitius there has related in his book. For
this reason, I shall pass over his early achievements, when he was a soldier;
nor will I touch on those things which he did as a layman and a monk. At the
same time, I shall relate nothing which I simply heard from others, but only
events of which I myself was an eye-witness."
DIALOGUE II.
CONCERNING THE VIRTUES OF ST. MARTIN.
CHAPTER I.
" Well then, when first, having left the schools, I attached myself to the
blessed man, a few days after doing so, we followed him on his way to the
church. In the way, a poor man, half-naked in these winter-months, met him, and
begged that some clothing might be given him. Then Martin, calling for the
chief-deacon, gave orders that the shivering creature should be clothed without delay.
After that, entering a private apartment, and sitting down by himself, as his
custom was--for he secured for himself this retirement even in the church,
liberty being granted to the clerics, since indeed the presbyters were seated in
another apartment, either spending their time in mutual(1) courtesies, or
occupied in listening to affairs of business. But Martin kept himself in his own
seclusion up to the hour at which custom required that the sacred rites should be
dispensed to the people. And I will not pass by this point that; when sitting in
his retirement, he never used a chair; and, as to the church, no one ever saw
him sitting there, as I recently saw a certain man (God is my witness), not
without a feeling of shame at the spectacle, seated on a lofty throne, yea, in its
elevation, a kind of royal tribunal; but Martin might be seen sitting on a
rude little stool, such as those in use by the lowest of servants, which we Gallic
country-people call tripets,(2) and which you men of learning, or those at
least who are from Greece, call tripods. Well, that poor man who had been chanced
upon, as the chief-deacon delayed to give him the garment, rushed into this
private apartment of the blessed man, complaining that he had not been attended to
by the cleric, and bitterly mourning over the cold he suffered. No delay took
place: the holy man, while the other did not observe, secretly drew off his
tunic which was below his outer(3) garment, and clothing the poor man with this,
told him to go on his way. Then, a little after, the chief-deacon coming in
informs him, according to custom, that the people were waiting in the church, and
that it was incumbent on him to proceed to the performance of the sacred rites.
Martin said to him in reply that it was necessary that the poor man--referring
to himself--should be clothed, and that he could not possibly proceed to the
church, unless the poor man received a garment. But the deacon, not understanding
the true state of the case-that Martin, while outwardly clad with a cloak, was
not seen by him to be naked underneath, at last begins to complain that the
poor man does not make his appearance. ' Let the garment which has been got
ready,' said Martin, 'be brought to me; there will not be wanting the poor man
requiring to be clothed.' Then, at length, the cleric, constrained by necessity, and
now in not the sweetest temper, hurriedly procures a rough(4) garment out of
the nearest shop, short and shaggy, and costing only five pieces of silver, and
lays it, in wrath at the feet of Martin. ' See,' cries he, 'there is the
garment, but the poor man is not here.' Martin, nothing moved, bids him go to the
door for a little, thus obtaining secrecy, while, in his nakedness, he clothes
himself with the garment, striving with all his might to keep secret what he had
done. But when do such things remain concealed in the case of the saints
desiring that they should be so? Whether they will or not, all are brought to light.
CHAPTER II.
"Martin, then, clothed in this garment, proceeds to offer the sacrifice(1)
to God. And then on that very day--I am about to narrate something
wonderful--when he was engaged in blessing the altar, as is usual, we beheld a globe of
fire dart from his head, so that, as it rose on high, the flame produced a hair
of extraordinary length. And, although we saw this take place on a very famous
day in the midst of a great multitude of people, only one of the virgins, one
of the presbyters, and only three of the monks, witnessed the sight: but why the
others did not behold it is a matter not to be decided by our judgment.
"About the same time, when my uncle Evanthius, a highly Christian man,
although occupied in the affairs of this world, had begun to be afflicted with a
very serious illness, to the extreme danger of his life, he sent for Martin.
And, without any delay, Martin hastened towards him ; but, before the blessed man
had completed the half of the distance between them, the sick man experienced
the power of him that was coming; and, being immediately restored to health, he
himself met us as we were approaching. With many entreaties, he detained
Martin, who wished to return home on the following day; for, in the meantime, a
serpent had struck with a deadly blow a boy belonging to my uncle's family; and
Evanthius himself, on his own shoulders, carried him all but lifeless through the
force of the poison, and laid him at the feet of the holy man, believing that
nothing was impossible to him. By this time, the serpent had diffused its poison
through all the members of the boy: one could see his skin swollen in all his
veins, and his vitals strung up like a leather-bottle. Martin stretched forth
his hand, felt all the limbs of the boy, and placed his finger close to the
little wound, at which the animal had instilled the poison. Then in truth--I am
going to tell things wonderful--we saw the whole poison, drawn from every part of
the body, gather quickly together to Martin's finger; and next, we beheld the
poison mixed with blood press through the small puncture of the wound, just as a
long line of abundant milk is wont to flow forth from the teats of goats or
sheep, when these are squeezed by the hand of shepherds. The boy rose up quite
well. We were amazed by so striking a miracle; and we acknowledged--as, indeed,
truth compelled us to do--that there was no one under heaven who could equal the
deeds of Martin.
CHAPTER III.
"In the same way, some time afterwards, we made a journey with him while
he visited the various parishes in his diocese. He had gone forward a little by
himself, some necessity or other, I know not what, compelling us to keep
behind. In the meantime, a state-conveyance, full of military men, was coming along
the public highway. But when the animals near the side beheld Martin in his
shaggy garment, with a long black cloak over it, being alarmed, they swerved a
little in the opposite direction. Then, the reins getting entangled, they threw
into confusion those extended lines in which, as you have often seen, those
wretched creatures are held together; and as they were with difficulty rearranged,
delay, of course, was caused to those people hastening forward. Enraged by this
injury, the soldiers, with hasty leaps, made for the ground. And then they began
to belabor Martin with whips and staves; and as he, in silence and with
incredible patience, submitted his back to them smiting him, this roused the greater
fury in these wretches, for they became all the more violent from the fact,
that he, as if he did not feel the blows showered upon him, seemed to despise
them. He fell almost lifeless to the earth; and we, ere long, found him covered
with blood, and wounded in every part of his body. Lifting him up without delay,
and placing him upon his own ass, while we execrated the place of that cruel
bloodshed, we hastened, off as speedily as possible. In the meantime, the
soldiers having returned to their conveyance, after their fury was satisfied, urge
the beasts to proceed in the direction in which they had been going. But they all
remained fixed to the spot, as stiff as if they had been brazen statues, and
although their masters shouted at them, and the sound of their whips echoed on
every side, still the animals never moved. These men next all fall to with
lashes; in fact, while punishing the mules, they waste all the Gallic whips they
had. The whole of the neighboring wood is laid hold of, and the beasts are beaten
with enormous cudgels; but these cruel hands still effected nothing: the
animals continued to stand in one and the same place like fixed effigies. The
wretched men knew not what to do, and they could no longer conceal from themselves
that, in some way or other, there was a higher power at work in the bosoms of
these brutes, so that they were, in fact, restrained by the interposition of a
deity. At length, therefore, returning to themselves, they began to enquire who he
was whom but a little before they had scourged at the same place; and when, on
pursuing the investigation, they ascertained from those on the way that it was
Martin who had been so cruelly beaten by them, then, indeed, the cause of their
misfortune appeared manifest to all; and they could no longer doubt that they
were kept back on account of the injury done to that man. Accordingly, they all
rush after us at full speed, and, conscious of what they had done and
deserved, overwhelmed with shame, weeping, and having their heads and faces smeared
with the dust with which they themselves had besprinkled their bodies, they cast
themselves at Martin's feet, imploring his pardon, and begging that he would
allow them to proceed. They added that they had been sufficiently punished by
their conscience alone, and that they deeply felt that the earth might swallow them
alive in that very spot, or that rather, they, losing all sense, might justly
be stiffened into immovable rocks, just as they had seen their beasts of burden
fixed to the places in which they stood; 'but they begged and entreated him to
extend to them pardon for their crime, and to allow them to go on their way.
The blessed man had been aware, before they came up to us, that they were in a
state of detention, and had already informed us of the fact; however, he kindly
granted them forgiveness; and, restoring-their animals, permitted them to
pursue their journey.
CHAPTER IV.
"I have often noticed this, Sulpitius, that Martin was accustomed to say
to you, that such an abundance(1) of power was by no means granted him while he
was a bishop, as he remembered to have possessed before he obtained that
office. Now, if this be true, or rather since it is true, we may imagine how great
those things were which, while still a monk, he accomplished, and which, without
any witness, he effected apart by himself; since we have seen that, while a
bishop, he performed so great wonders before the eyes of all. Many, no doubt, of
his former achievements were known to the world, and could not be hid, but those
are said to have been innumerable which, while he avoided boastfulness, he
kept concealed and did not allow to come to the knowledge of mankind; for,
inasmuch as he transcended the capabilities of mere man, in a consciousness of his own
eminence, and trampling upon worldly glory, he was content simply to have
heaven as a witness of his deeds. That this is true we can judge even from these
things which are well known to us, and could not be hid; since e.g. before he
became a bishop he restored two dead men to life, facts of which your book has
treated pretty fully, but, while he was bishop, he raised up only one, a point
which I am surprised you have not noticed. I myself am a witness to this latter
occurrence; but, probably, you have no doubts about the matter being duly
testified. At any rate, I will set before you the affair as it happened. For some
reason, I know not what, we were on our way to the town of the Carnutes.(2) In the
meantime, as we pass by a certain village most populous in inhabitants, an
enormous crowd went forth to meet us, consisting entirely of heathen; for no one in
that village was acquainted with a Christian. Nevertheless, owing to the
report of the approach of so great a man, a multitude of those streaming to one
point had filled all the widely spreading plains. Martin felt that some work was to
be performed; and as the spirit within him was thus moving him, he was deeply
excited. He at once began to preach to the heathen the word of God, so utterly
different from that of man, often groaning that so great a crowd should be
ignorant of the Lord the Saviour. In the meantime, while an incredible multitude
had surrounded us, a certain woman, whose son had recently died, began to
present, with outstretched hands, the lifeless body to the blessed man, saying, "We
know that you are a friend of God: restore me my son, who is my only one." The
rest of the multitude joined her, and added their entreaties to those of the
mother. Martin perceiving, as he afterwards told us, that he could manifest power,
in order to the salvation of those waiting for its display, received the body
of the deceased into his own hands; and when, in the sight of all, he had fallen
on his knees, and then arose, after his prayer was finished, he restored to
its mother the child brought back to life. Then, truly, the whole multitude,
raising a shout to heaven, acknowledged Christ as God, and finally began to rush in
crowds to the knees of the blessed man, sincerely imploring that he would make
them Christians. Nor did he delay to do so. As they were in the middle of the
plain, he made them all catechumens, by placing his hand upon the whole of
them; while, at the same time, turning to us, he said that, not without reason,
were these made catechumens in that plain where the martyrs were wont to be
consecrated."
CHAPTER V.
"You have conquered, O Gaul," said Postumianus, "you have conquered,
although certainly not me, who am, on the contrary, an upholder of Martin, and who
have always known and believed all these things about that man ; but you have
conquered all the eremites and anchorites. For no one of them, like young friend,
or rather our friend, Martin, ruled over deaths of all(1) kinds. And Sulpitius
there justly compared him to the apostles and prophets, in as much as the
power of his faith, and the works accomplished by his power, bear witness that he
was, in all points, like them. But go on, I beg of you, although we can hear
nothing more striking than we have heard--still, go on, O Gaul, to set forth what
still remains of what you have to say concerning Martin. For the mind is eager
to know even the least and commonest of his doings, since there is no doubt
that the least of his actions surpass the greatest deeds of others."
"I will do so," replies the Gaul, "but I did not myself witness what I am
about to relate, for it took place before I became an associate of Martin's;
still, the fact is well known, having been spread through the world by the
accounts given by faithful brethren, who were present on the occasion. Well, just
about the time when he first became a bishop, a necessity arose for his visiting
the imperial(2) court. Valentinian, the eider, then was at the head of affairs.
When he came to know that Martin was asking for things which he did not incline
to grant, he ordered him to be kept from entering the doors of the palace.
Besides his own unkind and haughty temper, his wife Arriana had urged him to this
course, and had wholly alienated him from the holy man, so that he should not
show him the regard which was due to him. Martin, accordingly, when he had once
and again endeavored to procure an interview with the haughty prince, had
recourse to his well-known weapons--he clothes himself in sackcloth, scatters ashes
upon his person, abstains from food and drink, and gives himself, night and
day, to continuous prayer. On the seventh day, an angel appeared to him, and tells
him to go with confidence to the palace, for that the royal doors, although
closed against him, would open of their own accord, and that the haughty spirit
of the emperor would be softened. Martin, therefore, being encouraged by the
address of the angel who thus appeared to him, and trusting to his assistance,
went to the palace. The doors stood open, and no one opposed his entrance; so
that, going in, he came at last into the presence of the king, without any one
seeking to hinder him. The king, however, seeing him at a distance as he
approached, and gnashing his teeth that he had been admitted, did not, by any means,
condescend to rise up as Martin advanced, until fire covered the royal seat, and
until the flames seized on a part of the royal person. In this way the haughty
monarch is driven from his throne, and, much against his will, rises up to
receive Martin. He even gave many embraces to the man whom he had formerly determined
to despise, and, coming to a better frame of mind, he confessed that he
perceived the exercise of Divine power; without waiting even to listen to the
requests of Martin, he granted all he desired before being asked. Afterwards the king
often invited the holy man both to conferences and entertainments; and, in the
end, when he was about to depart, offered him many presents, which, however,
the blessed man, jealously maintaining his own poverty, totally refused, as he
did on all similar occasions.
CHAPTER VI.
" And as we have, once for all, entered the palace, I shall string
together events which there took place, although they happened at different times.
And, indeed, it does not seem to me right that I should pass unmentioned the
example of admiration for Martin which was shown by a faithful queen. Maximus then
ruled the state, a man worthy of being extolled in(1) his whole life, if only he
had been permitted to reject a crown thrust upon him by the soldiery in an
illegal tumult, or had been able to keep out of civil war. But the fact is, that a
great empire can neither be refused without danger, nor can be preserved
without war. He frequently sent for Martin, received him into the palace, and
treated him with honor; his whole speech with him was concerning things present,
things to come, the glory of the faithful, and the immortality of the saints;
while, in the meantime, the queen hung upon the lips of Martin, and not inferior to
her mentioned in the Gospel, washed the feet of the holy man with tears and
wiped them with the hairs of her head. Martin, though no woman had hitherto
touched him, could not escape her assiduity, or rather her servile attentions. She
did not think of the wealth of the kingdom, the dignity of the empire, the crown,
or the purple; only stretched upon the ground, she could not be torn away from
the feet of Martin. At last she begs of her husband (saying that both of them
should constrain Martin to agree) that all other attendants should be removed
from the holy man, and that she alone should wait upon him at meals. Nor could
the blessed man refuse too obstinately. His modest entertainment is got up by
the hands of the queen; she herself arranges his seat for him; places his table;
furnishes him with water for his hands; and serves up the food which she had
herself cooked. While he was eating, she, with her eyes fixed on the ground,
stood motionless at a distance, after the fashion of servants, displaying in all
points the modesty and humility of a ministering servant. She herself mixed for
him his drink and presented it. When the meal was over, she collected the
fragments and crumbs of the bread that had been used, preferring with true
faithfulness these remains to imperial banquets. Blessed woman! worthy, by the display of
so great piety, of being compared to her who came from the ends of the earth
to hear Solomon, if we merely regard the plain letter of the history. But the
faith of the two queens is to be compared (and let it be granted me to say this,
setting aside the majesty of the secret(2) truth implied): the one obtained her
desire to hear a wise man; the other was thought worthy not only to hear a
wise man, but to wait upon him."
CHAPTER VII.
To these sayings Postumianus replies: " While listening to you, O Gaul, I
have for a long time been admiring the faith of the queen; but to what does
that statement of yours lead, that no woman was ever said to have stood more close
to Martin? For let us consider that that queen not only stood near him, but
even ministered unto him. I really fear lest those persons who freely mingle
among women should to some extent defend themselves by that example."
Then said the Gaul: "Why do you not notice, as grammarians are wont to
teach us, the place, the time, and the person? For only set before your eyes the
picture of one kept in the palace of the emperor importuned by prayers,
constrained by the faith of the queen, and bound by the necessities of the time, to do
his utmost that he might set free those shut up in prison, might restore those
who had been sent into exile, and might recover goods that had been taken
away,--of how much importance do you think that these things should have appeared to
a bishop, so as to lead him, in order to the accomplishment of them all, to
abate not a little of the rigor of his general scheme of life? However, as you
think that some will make a bad use of the example thus furnished them, I shall
only say that those will be truly happy if they do not fall short of the
excellence of the example in question. For let them consider that the facts of the
case are these: once in his life only, and that when in his seventieth year, was
Martin served and waited upon at his meals, not by a free sort of widow, nor by
a wanton virgin, but by a queen, who lived under the authority of a husband,
and who was supported in her conduct by the entreaties of her husband, that she
might be allowed so to act. It is further to be observed that she did not
recline with Martin at the entertainment, nor did she venture even to partake in the
feast, but simply gave her services in waiting upon him. Learn, therefore, the
proper course; let a matron serve thee, and not rule thee; and let her serve,
but not recline along with thee; just as Martha, of whom we read, waited upon
the Lord without being called to partake in the feast: nay, she who chose rather
simply to hear the word was preferred to her that served. But in the case of
Martin, the queen spoken of fulfilled both parts: she both served like Martha and
listened like Mary. If any one, then, desires to make use of this example, let
him keep to it in all particulars; let the cause be the same, the person the
same, the service the same, and the entertainment the same,--and let the thing
occur once only in one's whole life."
CHAPTER VIII.
"Admirably," exclaimed Postumianus, "does your speech bind those friends
of ours from going beyond the example of Martin; but I own to you my belief that
these remarks of yours will fall upon deaf ears. For if we were to follow the
ways of Martin, we should never need to defend ourselves in the case of
kissing, and we should be free from all the reproaches of sinister opinion. But as you
are wont to say, when you are accused of being too fond of eating, 'We are
Gauls,' so we, for our part, who dwell in this district, will never be reformed
either by the example of Martin, or by your dissertations. But while we have been
discussing these points at so great length, why do you, Sulpitius, preserve
such an obstinate silence?"
"Well, for my part," replied I, "I not only keep silence, but for a long
time past I have determined to be silent upon such points. For, because I
rebuked a certain spruce gadding-about widow, who dressed expensively, and lived in a
somewhat loose manner, and also a virgin, who was following somewhat
indecently a certain young man who was dear to me,--although, to be sure, I had often
heard her blaming others who acted in such a manner,--I raised up against me such
a degree of hatred on the part of all the women and all the monks, that both
bands entered upon sworn war against me. Wherefore, be quiet, I beg of you, lest
even what we are saying should tend to increase their animosity towards me.
Let us entirely blot out these people from our memory, and let us rather return
to Martin. Do thou, friend Gaul, as you have begun, carry out the work you have
taken in hand."
Then says he: "I have really related already so many things to you, that
my speech ought to have satisfied your desires; but, because I am not at liberty
to refuse compliance with your wishes, I shall continue to speak as long as
the day lasts. For, in truth, when I glance at that straw, which is being
prepared for our beds, there comes into my mind a recollection respecting the straw on
which Martin had lain, that a miracle was wrought in connection with it. The
affair took place as follows. Claudiomagus is a village on the confines of the
Bituriges and the Turoni. The church there is celebrated for the piety of the
saints, and is not less illustrious for the multitude of the holy virgins. Well,
Martin, being in the habit of passing that way, had an apartment in the
private part of the church. After he left, all the virgins used to rush into that
retirement: they kiss(1) every place where the blessed man had either sat or
stood, and distribute among themselves the very straw on which he had lain. One of
them, a few days afterwards, took a part of the straw which she had collected
for a blessing to herself, and hung it from the neck of a possessed person, whom
a spirit of error was troubling. There was no delay; but sooner than one could
speak the demon was cast out, and the person was cured.
CHAPTER IX.
"About the same time, a cow which a demon harassed met Martin as he was
returning from Treves. That cow, leaving its proper herd, was accustomed to
attack human beings, and had already seriously gored many with its horns. Now, when
she was coming near us, those who followed her from a distance began to warn
us, with a loud voice, to beware of her. But after she had in great fury come
pretty near to us, with rage in her eyes, Martin, lifting up his hand, ordered the
animal to halt, and she immediately stood stock-still at his word. Upon this,
Martin perceived a demon sitting upon her back, and reproving it, he exclaimed,
'Begone, thou deadly being; leave the innocent beast, and cease any longer to
torment it.' The evil spirit obeyed and departed. And the heifer had sense,
enough to understand that she was set free; for, peace being restored to her, she
fell at the feet of the holy man; and on Martin directing her, she made for her
own herd, and, quieter than any sheep, she joined the rest of the band. This
also was the time at which he had no sensation of being burnt, although placed
in the midst of the flames; but I do not think it necessary for me to give an
account of this, because Sulpitius there, though passing over it in his book, has
nevertheless pretty fully narrated it in the epistle which he sent to
Eusebius, who was then a presbyter, and is now a bishop. I believe, Postumianus, you
have either read this letter, or, if it is still unknown to you, you may easily
obtain it, when you please, from the bookcase. I shall simply narrate
particulars which he has omitted.
"Well, on a certain occasion, when he was going round the various
parishes, we came upon a band of huntsmen. The dogs were pursuing a hare, and the
little animal was already much exhausted by the long run it had bad. When it
perceived no means of escape in the plains spreading far on every side, and was
several times just on the point of being captured, it tried to delay the threatened
death by frequent doublings. Now the blessed man pitied the danger of the
creature with pious feelings, and commanded the dogs to give up following it, and to
permit it to get safe away. Instantly, at the first command they heard, they
stood quite still: one might have thought them bound, or rather arrested, so as
to stand immovable in their own footprints. In this way, through her pursuers
being stopped as if tied together, the hare got safe away.
CHAPTER X.
"Moreover, it will be worth while to relate also some of his familiar
sayings, since they were all salted with spiritual instruction. He happened to see
a sheep(1) that had recently been sheared; and, ' See,' says he, ' she has
fulfilled the precept of the Gospel: she had two coats, and one of them she has
given to him who had none: thus, therefore, ye ought also to do.' Also, when he
perceived a swineherd in a garment of skin, cold and, in fact, all but naked, he
exclaimed: ' Look at Adam, cast out of Paradise, how he feeds his swine in a
garment of skin; but let us, laying aside that old Adam, who still remains in
that man, rather put on the new Adam.' Oxen had, in one part, eaten up the grass
of the meadows; pigs also had dug up some portions of them with their snouts;
while the remaining portion, which continued uninjured, flourished, as if painted
with variously tinted flowers. 'That part,' said he, 'which has been eaten
down by cattle, although it has not altogether lost the beauty of grass, yet
retains no grandeur of flowers, conveys to us a representation of marriage; that
part, again, which the pigs, unclean animals, had dug up, presents a loathsome
picture of fornication; while the remaining portion, which had sustained no
injury, sets forth the glory of virginity;--it flourishes with abundance of grass;
the fruits of the field abound in it; and, decked with flowers to the very
extreme of beauty, it shines as if adorned with glittering gems. Blessed is such
beauty and worthy of God; for nothing is to be compared with virginity. Thus, then,
those who set marriage side by side with fornication grievously err; and those
who think that marriage is to be placed on an equal footing with virginity are
utterly wretched and foolish. But this distinction must be maintained by wise
people, that marriage belongs to those things which may be excused, while
virginity points to glory, and fornication must incur punishment unless its guilt is
purged away through atonement.'
CHAPTER XI.
"A certain soldier had renounced the military(1) life in the Church,
having professed himself a monk, and had erected a cell for himself at a distance in
the desert, as if with the purpose of leading the life of an eremite. But m
course of time the crafty adversary harassed his unspiritual(2) nature with
various thoughts, to the effect that, changing his mind, he should express a desire
that his wife, whom Martin had ordered to have a place in the nunnery(3) of the
young women, should rather dwell along with him. The courageous eremite,
therefore, visits Martin, and makes known to him what he had in his mind. But Martin
denied very strongly that a woman could, in inconsistent fashion, be joined
again to a man who was now a monk, and not a husband. At last, when the soldier
was insisting on the point in question; asserting that no evil would follow from
carrying out his purpose; that he simply desired to possess the solace of his
wife's company; and that there was no fear of his again returning to his own
pursuits; adding that he was a soldier of Christ, and that she also had taken the
oath of allegiance in the same service; and that the bishop therefore should
allow to serve as soldiers together people who were saints, and who, in virtue
of their faith, totally ignored the question of sex,--then Martin (I am going to
repeat his very words to you) exclaimed: ' Tell me if you have ever been in
war, and if you have ever stood in the line of battle?' In answer he said, '
Frequently; I have often stood in line of battle, and been present in war.' On this
Martin replies: 'Well, then, tell me, did you ever in a line which was
prepared with arms for battle, or, having already advanced near, was fighting against
a hostile army with drawn sword--did you ever see any woman standing there, or
fighting?' Then at length the soldier became confused and blushed, while he
gave thanks that he had not been permitted to follow his own evil counsel, and at
the same time had not been put right by the use of any harsh language, but by a
true and rational analogy, connected with the person of a soldier. Martin,
for his part, turning to us (for a great crowd of brethren had surrounded him),
said: ' Let not a woman enter the camp of men, but let the line of soldiers
remain separate, and let the females, dwelling in their own tent, be remote from
that of men. For this renders an army ridiculous, if a female crowd is mixed with
the regiments of men. Let the soldier occupy the line, let the soldier fight
in the plain, but let the woman keep herself within the protection of the walls.
She, too, certainly has her own glory, if, when her husband is absent, she
maintains her chastity; and the first excellence, as well as completed victory of
that, is, that she should not be seen.'
CHAPTER XII.
"I believe, my dear Sulpitius, that you remember with what emphasis he
extolled to us (when you too were present) that virgin who had so completely
withdrawn herself from the eyes of all men, that she did not admit to her presence
Martin himself, when he wished to visit her in the discharge of duty. For when
he was passing by the little property, within which for several years she had
chastely confined herself, having heard of her faith and excellence, he turned
out of his way that, as a bishop, he might honor, with pious respect, a gift of
such eminent merit. We who journeyed with him thought that that virgin would
rejoice, inasmuch as she was to obtain such a testimony to her virtue, while a
priest of so great reputation, departing from his usual rigor of conduct, paid her
a visit. But she did not relax those bonds of a most severe method of life,
which she had imposed upon herself, even by allowing herself to see Martin. And
thus the blessed man, having received, through another woman, her praiseworthy
apology, joyfully departed from the doors of her who had not permitted herself
to be seen or saluted. O glorious virgin, who did not allow herself to be looked
upon even by Martin ! O blessed Martin, who did not regard that repulse as
being any insult to himself, but, extolling with exultant heart her excellence,
rejoiced in an example only too rare in that locality ! Well, when approaching
night had compelled us to stay at no great distance from her humble dwelling,
that same virgin sent a present to the blessed man; and Martin did what he had
never done before (for he accepted a present or gift from nobody), he refused none
of those things which the estimable virgin had sent him, declaring that her
blessing was by no means to be rejected by a priest, since she was indeed to be
placed before many priests. Let, I beg, virgins listen to that example, so that
they shall, if they desire to close their doors to the wicked, even shut them
against the good ; and that the ill-disposed may have no free access to them,
they shall not fear even to exclude priests from their society. Let the whole
world listen attentively to this: a virgin did not permit herself to be looked
upon by Martin. And it was no common(1) priest whom she repulsed, but the girl
refused to come under the eyes of a man whom it was the salvation of onlookers to
behold. But what priest, besides Martin, would not have regarded this as doing
an injury to him? What irritation and fury would he have conceived in his mind
against that virgin? He would have deemed her a heretic; and would have
resolved that she should be laid under an anathema. And how surely would such a man
have preferred to that blessed soul those virgins who are always throwing
themselves in the way of the priest, who get up sumptuous entertainments, and who
recline at table with the rest ! But whither is my speech carrying me? That
somewhat too free manner of speaking must be checked, lest perchance it may give
offense to some; for words of reproach will not profit the unfaithful, while the
example quoted will be enough for the faithful. At the same time, I wish so to
extol the virtue of this virgin, as nevertheless to think that no deduction is to
be made from the excellence of those others, who often came from remote
regions for the purpose of seeing Martin, since indeed, with the same object in view,
even angels ofttimes visited the blessed man.
CHAPTER XIII.
"But in what I am now about to narrate, I possess you, Sulpitius" (here
he looked at me). "as a fellow-witness. One day, I and Sulpitius there were
watching before Martin's door, and had already sat in silence for several hours. We
did so with deep reverence and awe, as if we were carrying out a watch
prescribed to us before the tent of an angel; while, all the time, the door of his
cell being closed, he did not know that we were there. Meanwhile, we heard the
sound of people conversing, and by and by we were filled with a kind of awe and
amazement, for we could not help perceiving that something divine was going on.
After nearly two hours, Martin comes out to us; and then our friend Sulpitius
(for no one was accustomed to speak to him more familiarly) began to entreat him
to make known to us, piously enquiring on the subject, what meant that sort of
Divine awe which we confessed we had birth felt, and with whom he had been
conversing in his cell. We added that, as we stood before the door, we had
undoubtedly heard a feeble sound of people talking, but had scarcely understood it.
Then he after a long delay (but there was really nothing which Sulpitius could
not extort from him even against his will: I am about to relate things somewhat
difficult of belief, but, as Christ is my witness, I lie not, unless any one is
so impious as to think that Martin himself lied) said: ' I will tell you, but
I beg you will not speak of it to any one else. Agnes, Thecla, and Mary were
there with me.' He proceeded to describe to us the face and general aspect of
each. And he acknowledged that, not merely on that day, but frequently, he
received visits from them. Nor did he deny that Peter also and Paul, the Apostles,
were pretty frequently seen by him. Moreover, he was in the habit of rebuking the
demons by their special names, according as they severally came to him. He
found Mercury a cause of special annoyance, while he said that Jupiter was stupid
and doltish. I am aware that these things seemed incredible even to many who
dwelt in the same monastery; and far less can I expect that all who simply hear
of them will believe them. For unless Martin had lived such an inestimable life,
and displayed such excellence, he would by no means be regarded among us as
having been endowed with so great glory. And yet it is not at all wonderful that
human infirmity doubted concerning the works of Martin, when we see that many
at the present day do not even believe the Gospels. But we have ourselves had
personal knowledge and experience, that angels often appeared and spoke
familiarly with Martin. As bearing upon this, I am to narrate a matter, of small
importance indeed, but still I will state it. A synod, composed of bishops, was held
at Nemausus, and while he had refused to attend it, he was nevertheless desirous
of knowing what was done at it. It so happened that our friend Sulpitius was
then on board ship with him, but, as was his custom, he kept his place at a
distance from the rest, in a retired part of the vessel. There an angel announced
to him what had taken place in the synod. And when, afterwards, we carefully
enquired into the time at which the council was held, we found, beyond all doubt,
that that was the very day of the council, and that those things were there
decreed by the bishops which the angel had announced to Martin.
CHAPTER XIV.
"But when we questioned him concerning the end of the world, he said to
us that Nero and Antichrist have first to come ; that Nero will rule in the
Western portion of the world, after having subdued ten kings; and that a
persecution will be carried on by him, with the view of compelling men to worship the
idols of the Gentiles. He also said that Antichrist, on the other hand, would
first seize upon the empire of the East, having his seat and the capital of his
kingdom at Jerusalem; while both the city and the temple would be restored by him.
He added that his persecution would have for its object to compel men to deny
Christ as God, m while he maintained rather that he himself was Christ, and
ordered all men to be circumcised, according to the law. He further said that Nero
was to be destroyed by Antichrist, and that the whole world, and all nations,
were to be reduced under the power of Antichrist, until that impious one should
be overthrown by the coming of Christ. He told us, too, that there was no
doubt but that Antichrist, having been conceived by an evil spirit, was already
born, and had, by this time, reached the years of boyhood, while he would assume
power as soon as he reached the proper age. Now, this is the eighth year since
we heard these words from his lips: you may conjecture, then, how nearly about
to happen are those things which are feared in the future."
As our friend the Gaul was emphatically speaking thus, and had not yet
finished what he intended to relate, a boy of the family entered with the
announcement that the presbyter Refrigerius was standing at the door. We began to doubt
whether it would be better to hear the Gaul further, or to go and welcome that
man whom we so greatly loved, and who had come to pay his respects to us, when
our friend the Gaul remarked: "Even although this most holy priest had not
arrived, this talk of ours would have had to be cut short, for the approach of
night was itself urging us to finish the discourse which has been so far
continued. But inasmuch as all things beating upon the excellences of Martin have by no
means yet been mentioned, let what you have heard suffice for to-day: to-morrow
we shall proceed to what remains." This promise of our Gallic friend being
equally acceptable to us all, we rose up.
DIALOGUE III.
THE VIRTUES OF MARTIN CONTINUED.
CHAPTER I.
"It is daylight, our Gallic friend, and you must get up. For, as you see,
both Postumianus is urgent, and this presbyter, who was yesterday admitted to
hear what was going on, expects that what you put off narrating with regard to
our beloved Martin till to-day, you should now, in fulfillment of your promise,
proceed to tell. He is not, indeed, ignorant of all the things which are to be
related, but knowledge is sweet and pleasant even to one who goes over again
things already known to him; since, indeed, it has been so arranged by nature
that one rejoices with a better conscience in his knowledge of things which he is
sure, through the testimony borne to them by many, are not in any degree
uncertain. For this man, too, having been a follower of Martin from his early youth,
has indeed been acquainted with all his doings; but he gladly hears over again
things already known. And I will confess to thee, O Gaul, that the virtues of
Martin have often been heard of by me, since, in fact, I have committed to
writing many things regarding him; but through the admiration I feel for his deeds,
those things are always new to me which, although I have already heard them,
are, over and over again, repeated concerning him. Wherefore, we congratulate you
that Refrigerius has been added to us as a hearer, all the(1) more earnestly
that Postumianus is manifesting such eagerness, because he hastens, as it were,
to convey a knowledge of these things to the East, and is now to hear the truth
from you confirmed, so to speak, by witnesses."
As I was saying these words, and as the Gaul was now ready to resume his
narrative, there rushes in upon us a crowd of monks, Evagrius the presbyter,
Aper, Sabbatius, Agricola; and, a little after, there enters the presbyter
AEtherius, with Calupio the deacon, and Amator the sub deacon; lastly, Aurelius the
presbyter, a very dear friend of mine, who came from a longer distance, rushes up
out of breath. "Why," I enquire, "do you so suddenly and unexpectedly run
together to us from so many different quarters, and at so early an hour in the
morning?" "We," they reply, "heard yesterday that your friend the Gaul spent the
whole day in narrating the virtues of Martin, and, as night overtook him, put off
the rest until to-day: wherefore, we have made haste to furnish him with a
crowded audience, as he speaks about such interesting matters." In the meantime,
we are informed that a multitude of lay people are standing at the door, not
venturing to enter, but begging, nevertheless, that they might be admitted. Then
Aper declares, "It is by no means proper that these people should be mixed up
with us, for they have come to hear, rather from curiosity than piety." I was
grieved for the sake of those who ought not, as he thought, to be admitted, but
all that I could obtain, and with difficulty, was that they should admit
Eucherius from among the lieutenants,(2) and Celsus, a man of consular rank, while the
rest were kept back. We then place the Gaul in the middle seat; and he, after
long keeping silence, in harmony with his well-known modesty, at length began
as follows.
CHAPTER II.
"You have assembled, my pious and eloquent friends, to hear me; but, as I
presume, you have brought to the task religious rather than learned ears; for
you are to listen to me simply as a witness to the faith, and not as speaking
with the fluency of an orator. Now, I shall not repeat the things which were
spoken yesterday: those who did not hear them can become acquainted with them by
means of the written records. Postumianus expects something new, intending to
make known what he hears to the East, that it may not, when Martin is brought into
comparison, esteem itself above the West. And first, my mind inclines to set
forth an incident respecting which Refrigerius has just whispered in my ear: the
affair took place in the city of Carnutes. A certain father of a family
ventured to bring to Martin his daughter of twelve years old, who had been dumb from
her birth, begging that the blessed man would loose, by his pious merits, her
tongue, which was thus tied. He, giving way to the bishops Valentinus and
Victricius, who then happened to be by his side, declared that he was unequal to so
great an undertaking, but that nothing was impossible to them, as if holier than
himself. But they, adding their pious entreaties, with suppliant voices, to
those of the father, begged Martin to accomplish what was hoped for. He made no
further delay,--being admirable in both respects, in the display, first of all,
of humility, and then in not putting off a pious duty,--but orders the crowd of
people standing round to be removed; and while the bishops only, and the
father of the girl, were present, he prostrates himself in prayer, after his usual
fashion. He then blesses a little oil, while he utters the formula of exorcism;
and holding the tongue of the girl with his fingers, he thus pours the
consecrated liquid into her mouth. Nor did the result of the power thus exerted
disappoint the holy man. He asks her the name of her father, and she instantly
replied. The father cries out, embracing the knees of Martin, with a mixture of joy
and tears; and while all around are amazed, he confesses that then for the first
time he listened to the voice of his daughter. And that this may not appear
incredible to any one, let Evagrius, who is here, furnish you with a testimony of
its truth; for the thing took place in his very presence.
CHAPTER III.
"The following is a small matter which I learned lately from the narration
of Arpagius the presbyter, but I do not think it ought to be passed over. The
wife of the courtier Avitianus had sent some oil to Martin, that he might
bless it (such is the custom) so as to be ready when needful to meet different
causes of disease. It was contained in a glass jar of a shape which, round
throughout, gradually bulges(1) out towards the middle, with a long neck; but the
hollow of the extended neck was not filled, because it is the custom to fill vessels
of the kind in such a, way that the top may be left free for the knobs which
stop up the jar. The presbyter testified that he saw the oil increase under the
blessing of Martin, so much that, the abundance of it overflowing the jar, it
ran down from the top in every direction. He added that it bubbled up with the
same(2) effect, while the vessel was being carried back to the mistress of the
household; for the oil so steadily flowed over in the hands of the boy carrying
it, that the abundance of the liquid, thus pouring down, covered all his
garment. He said, moreover, that the lady received the vessel so full even to the
brim, that (as the same presbyter tells(3) us at the present day) there was no
room in that jar for inserting the stopper by which people are accustomed to close
those vessels, the contents of which are to be preserved with special care.
That, too, was a remarkable thing that happened to this man," Here he looked at
me. "He had set down a glass vessel containing oil blessed by Martin in a pretty
high window; and a boy of the family, not knowing that a jar was there, drew
towards him the cloth covering it, with rather much violence. The vessel, in
consequence, fell down on the marble pavement. Upon this, all were filled with
dread lest the blessing of God, bestowed on the vessel by Martin, had been lost;
but the jar was found as safe as ever, just as if it had fallen on the softest
feathers. Now, this result should be ascribed, not so much to chance, as to the
power of Martin, whose blessing could not possibly perish.
"There is this, too, which was effected by a certain person, whose name,
because he is present, and has forbidden it to be mentioned, shall be
suppressed: Saturninus too, who is now with us, was present on the occasion referred to.
A dog was barking at us in a somewhat disagreeable manner. ' I command thee,'
said the person in question, ' in the name of Martin, to be quiet.' The dog--his
barking seemed to stick in his throat, and one might have thought that his
tongue had been cut out--was silent. Thus it is really a small matter that Martin
himself performed miracles: believe me that other people also have accomplished
many things in his name.
CHAPTER IV.
"You knew the too barbarous and, beyond measure, bloody ferocity of
Avitianus, a former courtier. He enters the city of the Turones with a furious
spirit, while rows of people, laden with chains, followed him with melancholy looks,
orders various kinds of punishments to be got ready for slaying them; and to
the grave amazement of the city, he arranges them for the sad work on the
following day. When this became known to Martin, he set out all alone, a little before
midnight, for the palace of that beast. But when, in the silence of the depths
of the night, and as all were at rest, no entrance was possible through the
bolted doors, he lays himself down before that cruel threshold. In the meantime,
Avitianus, buried in deep sleep, is smitten by an assailing angel, who says to
him, ' Does the servant of God lie at your threshold, and do you continue
sleeping?' He, on listening to these words, rises, in much disturbance, from his
bed; and calling his servants, he exclaims in terror, 'Martin is at the door: go
immediately, and undo the bolts, that the servant of God may suffer no harm.'
But they, in accordance with the tendency of all servants, having scarcely
stepped beyond the first threshold, and laughing at their master as having been
mocked by a dream, affirm that there was no one at the door. This they did as simply
inferring from their own disposition, that no one could be keeping watch
through the night, while fat less did they believe that a priest was lying at the
threshold of another man during the horror of that night. Well, they easily
persuaded Avitianus of the truth of their story. He again sinks into sleep; but,
being ere long struck with greater violence than before, he exclaimed that Martin
was standing at the door, and that, therefore, no rest either of mind or body
was allowed him. As the servants delayed, he himself went forward to the outer
threshold; and there he found Martin, as he had thought he would. The wretched
man, struck by the display of so great excellence, exclaimed, ' Why, sir, have
you done this to me? There is no need for you to speak: I know what you wish: I
see what you require: depart as quickly as possible, lest the anger of heaven
consume me on account of the injury done you: I have already suffered sufficient
punishment. Believe me, that I have firmly determined in my own mind how I
should now proceed.' So then, after the departure of the holy man, he calls for
his officials and orders all the prisoners to be set free, while presently he
himself went his way. Thus Avitianus being put to flight, the city rejoiced, and
felt at liberty.
CHAPTER V.
"Wrote these are certain facts, since Avitianus related them to many
persons, they are further confirmed on this ground that Refrigerius the presbyter,
whom you see here present, lately had them narrated to him, under an appeal to
the Divine majesty, by Dagridus, a faithful man among the tribunes, who swore
that the account was given him by Avitianus himself. But I do not wish you to
wonder that I do to-day what I did not do yesterday; viz. that I subjoin to the
mention of every individual wonder the names of witnesses, and mention persons to
whom, if any one is inclined to disbelieve, he may have recourse, because they
are still in the body. The unbelief of very many has compelled that; for they
are said to hesitate about some things which were related yesterday. Let these
people, then, accept as witnesses persons who are still alive and well, and let
them give more credit to such, inasmuch as they doubt our good faith. But
really, if they are so unbelieving, I give it as my opinion that they will not
believe even the witnesses named. And yet I am surprised that any one, who has even
the least sense of religion, can venture on such wickedness as to think that
any one could tell lies concerning Martin. Be that far from every one who lives
in obedience to God; for, indeed, Martin does not require to be defended by
falsehoods. But, O Christ, we lay the truth of our whole discourse before thee, to
the effect that we neither have said, nor will say, anything else than what
either we ourselves have witnessed, or have learned from undoubted authorities,
and, indeed, very frequently from Martin himself. But although we have adopted
the form of a dialogue, in order that the style might be varied to prevent
weariness, still we affirm that we are really setting forth(1) a true history in a
dutiful spirit. The unbelief of some has compelled me, to my great regret, to
insert in my narrative these remarks which are apart from the subject in hand.
But let the discourse now return to our assembly; in which since I saw that I was
listened to so eagerly, I found it necessary to acknowledge that Aper acted
properly in keeping back the unbelieving, under the conviction he had that those
only ought to be allowed to hear who were of a believing spirit.
CHAPTER VI.
"I am enraged in heart, believe me, and, through vexation, I seem to lose
my senses: do Christian men not believe in the miraculous powers of Martin,
which the demons acknowledged?
"The monastery of the blessed man was at two miles' distance from the
city; but if, as often as he was to come to the church, he only had set his foot
outside the threshold of his cell, one could perceive the possessed roaring
through the whole church, and the bands of guilty(1) ones trembling as if their
judge were coming, so that the groanings of the demons announced the approach of
the bishop to the clerics, who were not previously aware that he was coming. I
saw a certain man snatched up into the air on the approach of Martin, and
suspended there with his hands stretched upwards, so that he could in no way touch the
ground with his feet. But if at any time Martin undertook the duty of
exorcising the demons, he touched no one with his hands, and reproached no one in
words, as a multitude of expressions is generally rolled forth by the clerics; but
the possessed, being brought up to him, he ordered all others to depart, and the
doors being bolted, clothed in sackcloth and sprinkled with ashes, he
stretched himself on the ground in the midst of the church, and turned to prayer. Then
truly might one behold the wretched beings tortured with various results--some
hanging, as it were, from a cloud, with their feet turned upwards, and yet
their garments did not fall down over their faces, lest the part of their body
which was exposed should give rise to shame; while in another part of the church
one could see them tortured without any question being addressed to them, and
confessing their crimes. They revealed their names, too, of their own accord; one
acknowledged that he was Jupiter, and another that he was Mercury. Finally, one
could see all the servants of the devil suffering agony, along with their
master, so that we could not help acknowledging that in Martin there was fulfilled
that which is written that 'the saints shall judge angels.'
CHAPTER VII.
"There was a certain village in the country of the Senones which was every
year annoyed with hail. The inhabitants, constrained by an extreme of
suffering, sought help from Martin. A highly respectable embassy was sent to him by
Auspicius, a man of the rank of prefect, whose fields the storm had been wont to
smite more severely than it did those of others. But Martin, having there
offered up prayer, so completely freed the whole district from the prevailing plague,
that for twenty years, in which he afterwards remained in the body, no one in
those places suffered from hail. And that this may not be thought to be
accidental, but rather effected by Martin, the tempest, returning afresh, once more
fell upon the district in the year in which he died. The world thus felt the
departure of a believing man to such a degree, that, as it justly rejoiced in his
life, so it also bewailed his death. But if any hearer, weak in faith, demands
also witnesses to prove those things which we have said, I will bring forward,
not one man, but many thousands, and will even summon the whole region of the
Senones to bear witness to the power which was experienced. But not to speak of
this, you, presbyter Refrigerius, remember, I believe, that we lately had a
conversation, concerning the matter referred to, with Romulus, the son of that
Auspicius I mentioned, an honored and religious man. He related the points in
question to us, as if they had not been previously known; and as he was afraid of
constant losses in future harvests, he did, as you yourself beheld, regret, with
much lamentation, that Martin was not preserved up to this time.
CHAPTER VIII.
"But to return to Avitianus: while at every other place, and in all other
cities, he displayed marks of horrible cruelty, at Tours alone he did no harm.
Yes, that beast, which was nourished by human blood, and by the slaughter of
unfortunate creatures, showed himself meek and peaceable in the presence of the
blessed man. I remember that Martin one day came to him, and having entered his
private apartment, he saw a demon of marvelous size sitting behind his back.
Blowing upon him from a distance (if I may, as a matter of necessity, make use of
a word which is hardly Latin(1), Avitianus thought that he was blowing at him,
and exclaimed, 'Why, thou holy man, dost thou treat me thus?' But then Martin
said, ' It is not at you, but at him who, in all his terribleness, leans over
your neck.' The devil gave way, and left his familiar seat; and it is well known
that, ever after that day, Avitianus was milder, whether because he now
understood that he had always been doing the will of the devil sitting by him, or
because the unclean spirit, driven from his seat by Martin, was deprived of the
power of attacking him ; while the servant was ashamed of his master, and the
master did not force on his servant.
"In a village of the Ambatienses, that is in an old stronghold, which is
now largely inhabited by brethren, you know there is a great idol-temple built
up with labor. The building had been constructed of the most polished stones and
furnished with turrets; and, rising on high in the form of a cone, it
preserved the superstition of the place by the majesty of the work. The blessed man had
often enjoined its destruction on Marcellus, who was there settled as
presbyter. Returning after the lapse of some time, he reproved the presbyter, became
the edifice of the idol-temple was still standing. He pleaded in excuse that such
an immense structure could with difficulty be thrown down by a band of
soldiers, or by the strength of a large body of the public, and far less should Martin
think it easy for that to be effected by means of weak clerics or helpless
monks. Then Martin, having recourse to his well-known auxiliaries, spent the whole
night in watching and prayer-with the result that, in the morning, a storm
arose. and cast down even to its foundations the idol-temple. Now let this
narrative rest on the testimony of Marcellus.
CHAPTER IX.
"I will make use of another not dissimilar marvel in a like kind of work,
having the concurrence of Refrigerius in doing so. Martin was prepared to
throw down a pillar of immense size, on the top of which an idol stood, but there
was no means by which effect could be given to his design. Well, according to
his usual practice, he betakes himself to prayer. It is undoubted that then a
column, to a certain degree like the other, rushed down from heaven, and falling
upon the idol, it crushed to powder the whole of the seemingly indestructible
mass this would have been a small matter, had he only in an invisible way made
use of the powers of heaven, but these very powers were beheld by human eyes
serving Martin in a visible manner.
"Again, the same Refrigerius is my witness that a woman, suffering from an
issue of blood, when she had touched the garment of Martin, after the example
of the woman mentioned in the Gospel, was cured in a moment of time.
"A serpent, cutting its way through a river, was swimming towards the
bank on which we had taken our stand. ' In the name of the Lord,' said Martin, ' I
command thee to return.' Instantly, at the word of the holy man, the venomous
beast turned round, and while we looked on, swam across to the farther bank. As
we all perceived that this had not happened without a miracle; he groaned
deeply, and exclaimed, 'Serpents hear me, but men will not hear. '
CHAPTER X.
"Being accustomed to eat fish at the time of Easter, he enquired a little
before the hour for refreshment, whether it was in readiness. Then Cato, the
deacon, to whom the outward management of the monastery belonged, and who was
himself a skillful fisher, tells him that no capture had fallen to his lot the
whole day, and that other fishers, who used to sell what they caught, had also
been able to do nothing. 'Go,' said he, ' let down your line, and a capture will
follow.' As Sulpitius there has already described, we had our dwelling close to
the river. We all went, then, as these were holidays, to see our friend
fishing, with the hopes of all on the stretch, that the efforts would not be in vain
by which, under the advice of Martin himself, it was sought to obtain fish for
his use. At the first throw the deacon drew out, in a very small net, an
enormous pike, and ran joyfully back to the monastery, with the feeling undoubtedly to
which some poet gave utterance (for we use a learned verse, inasmuch as we are
conversing with learned people)--
' And brought his captive boar(1) to wondering Argos.'
"Truly that disciple of Christ, imitating the miracles performed by the
Saviour, and which he, by way of example, set before the view of his saints,
showed Christ also working in him, who, glorifying his own holy follower
everywhere, conferred upon that one man the gifts of various graces. Arborius, of the
imperial bodyguard, testifies that he saw the hand of Martin as he was offering
sacrifice, clothed, as it seemed, with the noblest gems, while it glittered with
a purple light; and that, when his right hand was moved, he heard the clash of
the gems, as they struck together.
CHAPTER XI.
"I will now come to an event which he always concealed, owing to the
character of the times, but which he could not conceal from us. In the matter
referred to, there is this of a miraculous nature, that an angel conversed, face to
face, with him. The Emperor Maximus, while in other respects doubtless a good
man, was led astray by the advices of some priests after Priscillian had been
put to death. He, therefore, protected by his royal power Ithacius the bishop,
who had been the accuser of Priscillian, and others of his confederates, whom it
is not necessary to name. The emperor thus prevented every one from bringing it
as a charge against Ithacius, that, by his instrumentality, a man of any sort
had been condemned to death. Now Martin, constrained to go to the court by many
serious causes of people involved in suffering, incurred the whole force of
the storm which was there raging. The bishops who had assembled at Treves were
retained in that city, and daily communicating with Ithacius, they had made
common cause with him. When it was announced to them expecting no such information,
that Martin was coming, completely losing courage, they began to mutter and
tremble among themselves. And it so happened that already, under their influence,
the emperor had determined to send some tribunes armed with absolute power into
the two Spains, to search out heretics, and, when found, to deprive them of
their life or goods. Now there was no doubt that that tempest would also make
havoc of multitudes of the real saints, little distinction being made between the
various classes of individuals. For in such circumstances, a judgment was
formed simply by appearances, so that one was deemed a heretic rather on his turning
pale from fear, or wearing a particular garment, than by the faith which he
professed. And the bishops were well aware that such proceedings would by no
means please Martin; but, conscious of evil as they were, this was a subject of
deep anxiety to them, lest when he came, he should keep from communion with them;
knowing well as they did, that others would not be wanting who, with his
example to guide them, would follow the bold course adopted by so great a man. They
therefore form a plan with the emperor, to this effect, that, officials of the
court being sent on to meet him, Martin should be forbidden to come any nearer
to that city, unless he should declare that he would maintain peace with the
bishops who were living there. But he skillfully frustrated their object, by
declaring that he would come among them with the peace of Christ. And at last,
having entered during the night, he went to the church, simply for the purpose of
prayer. On the following day he betakes himself to the palace. Besides many other
petitions which he had to present, and which it would be tedious to describe,
the following were the principal: entreaties in behalf of the courtier Nurses,
and the president Leucadius, both of whom had belonged to the party of
Gratianus, and that, with more than ordinary zeal, upon which this is not the time to
dilate, and who had thus incurred the anger of the conqueror; but his chief
request was, that tribunes, with the power of life and death, should not be sent
into the Spains. For Martin felt a pious solicitude not only to save from danger
the true Christians in these regions, who were to be persecuted in connection
with that expedition, but to protect even heretics themselves. But on the first
and second day the wily emperor kept the holy man in suspense, whether that he
might impress on him the importance of the affair, or because, being obnoxious
to the bishops, he could not be reconciled to them, or because, as most people
thought at the time, the emperor opposed his wishes from avarice, having cast a
longing eye on the property of the persons in question. For we are told that
he was really a man distinguished by many excellent actions, but that he was not
successful in contending against avarice. This may, however, have been due to
the necessities of the empire at the time, for the treasury of the state had
been exhausted by former rulers; and he, being almost constantly in the
expectation of civil wars, or in a state of preparation for them, may easily be excused
for having, by all sorts of expedients, sought resources for. the defense of
the empire.
CHAPTER XII.
"In the meantime, those bishops with whom Martin would not hold communion
went in terror to the king, complaining that they had been condemned
beforehand; that it was all over with them as respected the status of every one of them,
if the authority of Martin was now to uphold the pertinacity of Theognitus,
who alone had as yet condemned them by a sentence publicly pronounced; that the
man ought not to have been received within the walls; that he was now not merely
the defender of heretics, but their vindicator; and that nothing had really
been accomplished by the death of Priscillian, if Martin were to act the part of
his avenger. Finally, prostrating themselves with weeping and lamentation, they
implored the emperor(1) to put forth his power against this one man. And the
emperor was not far from being compelled to assign to Martin, too, the doom of
heretics. But after all, although he was disposed to look upon the bishops with
too great favor, he was not ignorant that Martin excelled all other mortals in
faith, sanctity, and excellence: he therefore tries another way of getting the
better of the holy man. And first he sends for him privately, and addresses him
in the kindest fashion, assuring him that the heretics were condemned in the
regular course of public trials, rather than by the persecutions of the priests;
and that there was no reason why he should think that communion with Ithacius
and the rest of that party was a thing to be condemned. He added that
Theognitus had created disunion, rather by personal hatred, than by the cause he
supported; and that, in fact, he was the only person who, in the meantime, had
separated himself from communion: while no innovation had been made by the rest. He
remarked further that a synod, held a few days previously, had decreed that
Ithacius was not chargeable with any fault. When Martin was but little impressed by
these statements, the king then became inflamed with anger, and hurried out of
his presence; while, without delay, executioners are appointed for those in
whose behalf Martin had made supplication.
CHAPTER XIII.
"When this became known to Martin, he rushed to the palace, though it was
now night. He pledges himself that, if these people were spared, he would
communicate; only let the tribunes, who had already been sent to the Spains for the
destruction of the churches, be recalled. There is no delay: Maximus grants all
his requests. On the following day, the ordination of Felix as bishop was
being arranged, a man undoubtedly of great sanctity, and truly worthy of being made
a priest in happier times. Martin took part in the communion of that day,
judging it better to yield for the moment, than to disregard the safety of those
over whose heads a sword was hanging. Nevertheless, although the bishops strove
to the uttermost to get him to confirm the fact of his communicating by signing
his name, he could not be induced to do so. On the following day, hurrying away
from that place, as he was on the way returning, he was filled with mourning
and lamentation that he had even for an hour been mixed up with the evil
communion, and, not far, from a village named Andethanna, where remote woods
stretch(1) far and wide with profound solitude, he sat down while his companions went on
a little before him. There he became involved in deep thought, alternately
accusing and defending the cause of his grief and conduct. Suddenly, an angel
stood by him and said, 'Justly, O Martin, do you feel compunction, but you could
not otherwise get out of your difficulty. Renew your virtue, resume your courage,
lest you not only now expose your fame, but your very salvation, to danger.'
Therefore, from that time forward, he carefully guarded against being mixed up
in communion with the party of Ithacius. But when it happened that he cured some
of the possessed more slowly and with less grace than usual, he at once
confessed to us with tears that he felt a diminution of his power on account of the
evil of that communion in which he had taken part for a moment through
necessity, and not with a cordial spirit. He lived sixteen years after this, but never
again did he attend a synod, and kept carefully aloof from all assemblies of
bishops.
CHAPTER XIV.
"But clearly, as we experienced, he repaired, with manifold interest, his
grace, which had been diminished for a time. I saw afterwards a possessed
person brought to him at the gate(1) of the monastery; and that, before the man
touched the threshold, he was cured.
"I lately heard one testifying that, when he was sailing on the Tuscan
Sea, following that course which leads to Rome, whirlwinds having suddenly
arisen, all on board were in extreme peril of their lives. In these circumstances, a
certain Egyptian merchant, who was not yet a Christian, cried out, ' Save us, O
God of Martin,' upon which the tempest was immediately stilled, and they held
their desired course, while the pacified ocean continued in perfect
tranquillity.
"Lycontius, a believing man belonging to the lieutenants, when a violent
disease was afflicting his family, and sick bodies were lying all through his
house in sad proof of unheard-of calamity, implored the help of Martin by a
letter. At this time the blessed man declared that the thing asked was difficult to
be obtained, for he knew in his spirit that that house was then being scourged
by Divine appointment. Yet he did not give up an unbroken course of prayer and
fasting for seven whole days and as many nights, so that he at last obtained
that which he aimed at in his supplications. Speedily, Lycontius, having
experienced the Divine kindness, flew to him, at once reporting the fact and giving
thanks, that his house had been delivered from all danger. He also offered a
hundred pounds of silver, which the blessed man neither rejected nor accepted; but
before the amount of money touched the threshold of the monastery, he had,
without hesitation, destined it for the redemption of captives. And when it was
suggested to him by the brethren, that some portion of it should be reserved for
the expenses of the monastery, since it was difficult for all of them to obtain
necessary food, while many of them were sorely in need of clothing, he replied,
' Let the church both feed and clothe us, as long as we do not appear to have
provided, in any way, for our own wants.'
"There occur to my mind at this point many miracles of that illustrious
man, which it is more easy for us to admire than to narrate. You all doubtless
recognize the truth of what I say: there are many doings of his which cannot be
set forth in words. For instance, there is the following, which I rather think
cannot be related by us just as it took place. A certain one of the brethren
(you are not ignorant of his name, but his person must be concealed, lest we
should cause shame to a godly man),--a certain one, I say, having found abundance
of coals for his stove, drew a stool to himself, and was sitting, with outspread
legs and exposed person, beside that fire, when Martin at once perceived that
an improper thing was done under the sacred roof, and cried out with a loud
voice, 'Who, by exposing his person, is dishonoring our habitation?' When our
brother heard this, and felt from his own conscience, that it was he who was
rebuked, he immediately ran to us almost in a fainting condition, and acknowledged
his shame; which was done, however, only through the forth-putting of the power
of Martin.
CHAPTER XV.
"Again, on a certain day, after he had sat down on that wooden seat of his
(which you all know), placed in the small open court which surrounded his
abode, he perceived two demons sitting on the lofty rock which overhangs the
monastery. He then heard them, in eager and gladsome tones, utter the following
invitation, 'Come hither, Brictio, come hither, Brictio.' I believe they perceived
the miser: able man approaching from a distance, being conscious how great
frenzy of spirit they had excited within him. Nor is there any delay: Brictio rushes
in in absolute fury; and there, full of madness, he vomits forth a thousand
reproaches against Martin. For he had been reproved by him on the previous day,
because he who had possessed nothing before he entered the clerical office,
having, in fact, been brought up in the monastery by Martin himself, was now
keeping horses and purchasing slaves. For at that time, he was accused by many of not
only having bought boys belonging to barbarous nations, but girls also of a
comely appearance. The miserable man, moved with bitter rage on account of these
things, and, as I believe, chiefly instigated by the impulse received from
those demons, made such an onset upon Martin as scarcely to refrain from laying
hands upon him. The holy man, on his part, with a placid countenance and a
tranquil mind, endeavored by gentle words to restrain the madness of the unhappy
wretch. But the spirit of wickedness so prevailed within him, that not even his own
mind, at best a very vain one, was under his control. With trembling lips, and
a changing countenance, pale with rage, he rolled forth the words of sin,
asserting that he was a holier man than Martin who had brought him up, inasmuch as
from his earliest years he had grown up in the monastery amid the sacred
institutions of the Church, while Martin had at first, as he could not deny, been
tarnished with the life of a soldier, and had now entirely sunk into dotage by
means of his baseless superstitions, and ridiculous fancies about visions. After
he had uttered many things like these, and others of a still mort bitter nature,
which it is better not to mention going out, at length, when his rage was
satisfied he seemed to feel as if he had completely vindicated his conduct. But
with rapid steps he rushed back by the way he had .gone out, the demons having, I
believe, been, in the meantime, driven from his heart by the prayers of Martin,
and he was now brought back to repentance. Speedily, then, he returns, and
throws himself at the feet of Martin, begging for pardon and confessing his error,
while, at length restored to a better mind, he acknowledges that he had been
under the influence of a demon. It was no difficult business for Martin to
forgive the suppliant. And then the holy man explained both to him and to us all,
how he had seen him driven on by demons, and declared that he was not moved by
the reproaches which had been heaped upon him; for they had, in fact, rather
injured the man who uttered them. And subsequently, when this same Brictio was
often accused before him of many and great crimes, Martin could not be induced to
remove him from the presbyterate, lest he should be suspected of revenging the
injury done to himself, while he often repeated this saying: ' If Christ bore
with Judas, why should not I bear with Brictio?"'
CHAPTER XVI.
Upon this, Postumianus exclaims, "Let that well-known man in our immediate
neighborhood, listen to that example, who, when he is wise, takes no notice
either of things present or future, but if he has been offended, falls into utter
fury, having no control over himself. He then rages against the clerics, and
makes bitter attacks upon the laity, while he stirs up the whole world for his
own revenge. He will continue in this state of contention for three years
without intermission, and refuse to be mollified either by time or reason. The
condition of the man is to be lamented and pitied, even if this were the only
incurable evil by which he is afflicted. But you ought, my Gallic friend, to have
frequently recalled to his mind such examples of patience and tranquillity, that he
might know both how to be angry and how to forgive. And if he happens to hear
of this speech of mine which has bean briefly interpolated into our discourse,
and. directed against himself, let him know that I spoke, not more with the
lips of an enemy than the mind of a friend; because I should wish, if the thing
were possible, that he should be spoken of rather as being like the bishop
Martin, than the tyrant Phalaris. But let us pass away from him, since the mention of
him is far from pleasant, and let us return, O Gaul, to our friend Martin."
CHAPTER XVII.
Then said I, since I perceived by the setting sun that evening was at
hand: "The day is gone, Postumianus; we must rise up; and at the same time some
refreshment is due to these so zealous listeners. And as to Martin, you ought not
to expect that there is any limit to one talking about him: he extends too far
to be comprised fully in any conversation. In the meantime, you will convey to
the East the things you have now heard about that famous man; and as you
retrace your steps to your former haunts, and pass along by various coasts, places,
harbors, islands, and seas, see that you spread among the peoples the name and
glory of Martin. Especially remember that you do not omit Campania; and
although your route will take you far off the beaten track, still any expenditure from
delay will not be to you of so much importance as to keep you from visiting in
that quarter Paulinus, a man renowned and praised throughout the whole world.
I beg you first to unroll to him the volume of discourse which we either
completed yesterday, or have said to-day. You will relate all to him; you will repeat
all to him; that in due time, by his means, Rome may learn the sacred merits
of this man, just as he spread that first little book of ours not only through
Italy, but even through the whole of Illyria. He, not jealous of the glories of
Martin, and being a most pious admirer of his saintly excellences in Christ,
will not refuse to compare our leading man with his own friend Felix. Next, if
you happen to cross over to Africa, you will relate what you have heard to
Carthage; and, although, as you yourself have said, it already knows the man, yet now
pre-eminently it will learn more respecting him, that it may not admire its
own martyr Cyprian alone, although consecrated by his sacred blood. And then, if
carried down a little to the left, you enter the gulf of Achaia, let Corinth
know, and let Athens know, that Plato in the academy was not wiser, and that
Socrates in the prison was not braver, than Martin. You will say to them that
Greece was indeed happy which was thought worthy to listen to an apostle pleading,
but that Christ has by no means forsaken Gaul, since he has granted it to
possess such a man as Martin. But when you have come as far as Egypt, although it is
justly proud of the numbers and virtues of its own saints, yet let it not
disdain to hear how Europe will not yield to it, or to all Asia, in having only
Martin.
CHAPTER XVIII.
"But when you have again set sail from that place with the view of making
for Jerusalem, I enjoin upon you a duty connected with our grief, that, if you
ever come to the shore of renowned Ptolemais, you enquire most carefully where
Pomponius, that friend of ours, is buried, and that you do not refuse to visit
his remains on that foreign soil. There shed many tears, as much from the
working of your own feelings, as from our tender affection; and although it is but a
worthless gift, scatter the ground there with purple flowers and
sweet-smelling grass. And you will say to him, but not roughly, and not harshly,--with the
address of one who sympathizes, and not with the tone of one who
reproaches,--that if he had only been willing to listen to you at one time, or to me
constantly, and if he had invited Martin rather than that man whom I am unwilling to
name, he would never have been so cruelly separated froth me, or covered by a heap
of unknown dust, having suffered death in the midst of the sea with the lot of
a ship-wrecked pirate, and with difficulty securing burial on a far-distant
shore. Let those behold this as their own work, who, in seeking to revenge him,
have wished to injure me, let them behold their own glory, and being avenged,
let them henceforth cease to make any attacks upon me."
Having uttered these sad words in a very mournful voice, and while the
tears of all the others were drawn forth by our laments, we at length departed,
certainly with a profound admiration for Martin, but with no less sorrow from our
own lamentations.