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