Book IV.
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1. We would
ask you, and you above all,
O Romans,
lords and
princes of the
world, whether you
think that
Piety,
Concord,
Safety,
Honour,
Virtue,
Happiness, and other such
names, to which we
see you
rear altars and
splendid temples, have
divine power, and
live in
heaven? or, as is
usual, have you
classed them with the
deities merely for
form's
sake, because we
desire and
wish these
blessings to
fall to our
lot? For if, while you
think them
empty names without any
substance, you yet
deify them with
divine honours, you will have to
consider whether that is a
childish frolic, or
tends to
bring your
deities into
contempt, when you make
equal, and
add to their
number vain and
feigned names. But if you have
loaded them with
temples and
couches,
holding with more
assurance that these, too, are
deities, we
pray you to
teach us in our
ignorance, by what
course, in what
way,
Victory,
Peace,
Equity, and the others
mentioned among the
gods, can be
understood to be
gods, to
belong to the
assembly of the
immortals?
2. For
we-but, perhaps, you
c rob and
deprive us of
common-sense-feel and
perceive that none of these has
divine power, or
possesses a
form of its own; but that, on the
contrary, they are the
excellence of
manhood, the
safety of the
safe, the
honour of the
respected, the
victory of the
conqueror, the
harmony of the
allied, the
piety of the
pious, the
recollection of the
observant, the
good fortune, indeed, of him who
lives happily and without
exciting any
ill-feeling. Now it is
easy to
perceive that, in
speaking thus, we
speak most
reasonably when we
observe the
contrary qualities opposed to them,
misfortune,
discord,
forgetfulness,
injustice,
impiety,
baseness of
spirit, and
unfortunate weakness of
body. For as these
things happen accidentally, and
depend on
human acts and
chance moods, so their
contraries,
named after more
agreeable qualities, must be found in others; and from these,
originating in this
wise, have
arisen those
invented names.
3. With
regard, indeed, to your
bringing forward to us other
bands of
unknown gods, we cannot
determine whether you do that
seriously, and from a
belief in its
certainty; or,
merely playing with
empty fictions,
abandon yourselves to an
unbridled imagination. The
goddess Luperca, you
tell us on the
authority of
Varro, was
named because the
fierce wolf spared the
exposed children· Was that
goddess, then,
disclosed, not by her own
power, but by the
course of
events? and was it only after the
wild beast restrained its
cruel teeth, that she both
began to be herself and was
marked by her
name? or if she was already a
goddess long before the
birth of
Romulus and his
brother,
show us what was her
name and
title.
Praestana was
named, according to you, because, in
throwing the
javelin,
Quirinus excelled all in
strength; and the
goddess Panda, or
Pantica, was
named because
Titus Tatius was
allowed to
open up and make
passable a
road, that he might
take the
Capitoline. Before these
events, then, had the
deities never
existed? and if
Romulus had not
held the first
place in
casting the
javelin, and if the
Sabine king had been
unable to
take the
Tarpeian rock, would there be no
Pantica, no
Praestana? And if you
say that they
existed before that which
gave rise to their
name, a
question which has been
discussed in a
preceding section,
tell us also what they were
called.
4.
Pellonia is a
goddess mighty to
drive back enemies. Whose
enemies,
say, if it is
convenient?
Opposing armies meet, and
fighting together,
hand to
hand,
decide the
battle; and to one this
side, to another that, is
hostile. Whom, then, will
Pellonia turn to
flight, since on both
sides there will be
fighting? or in
favour of whom will she
incline,
seeing that she should
afford to both
sides the might and
services of her
name? But if she indeed did so, that is, if she
gave her
good-will and
favour to both
sides, she would
destroy the
meaning of her
name, which was
formed with
regard to the
beating back of one
side. But you will perhaps
say, She is
goddess of the
Romans only, and,
being on the
side of the
Quirites alone, is ever
ready graciously to
help them. We
wish, indeed, that it were so, for we like the
name; but it is a very
doubtful matter. What! do the
Romans have
gods to themselves, who do not
help other
nations? and how can they be
gods, if they do not
exercise their
divine power impartially towards all
nations everywhere? and where, I
pray you, was this
goddess Pellonia long ago, when the
national honour was
brought under the
yoke at the
Caudine Forks? when at the
Trasimene lake the
streams ran with
blood? when the
plains of
Diomede were
heaped up with
dead Romans when a
thousand other
blows were
sustained in
countless disastrous battles? Was she
snoring and
sleeping; or, as the
base often do, had she
deserted to the
enemies'
camp?
5. The
sinister deities preside over the
regions on the
left hand only, and are
opposed to those on the
right. But with what
reason this is
said, or with what
meaning, we do not
understand ourselves; and we are
sure that you cannot in any
degree cause it to be
clearly and
generally understood. For in the first
place, indeed, the
world itself has in itself neither
right nor
left neither
upper nor under
regions, neither
fore nor after
parts. For whatever is
round, and
bounded on every
side by the
circumference of a
solid sphere, has no beginning, no end; where there is no end and beginning, no
part can have its own
name and
form the beginning. Therefore, when we
say, This is the
right, and that the
left side, we do not
refer to anything in the
world, which is everywhere very much the same, but to our own
place and
position, we
being so
formed that we
speak of some
things as on our
right hand, of others as on our
left; and yet these very
things which we
name left, and the others which we
name right, have in us no
continuance, no
fixedness, but
take their
forms from our
sides,
just as
chance, and the
accident of the
moment,
may have
placed us. If I
look towards the
rising sun, the
north pole and the
north are on my
left hand; and if I
turn my
face thither, the
west will be on my
left, for it will be
regarded as behind the
sun's
back. But, again, if I
turn my
eyes to the
region of the
west, the
wind and
country of the
south are now
said to be on my
left. And if I am
turned to this
side by the
necessary business of the
moment, the
result is, that the
east is
said to be on the
left,
owing to a further
change of
position, -from which it can be very
easily seen that nothing is either on our
right or on our
left by
nature, but from
position,
time, and according as our
bodily position with
regard to
surrounding objects has been
taken up. But in this
case, by what
means, in what
way, will there be
gods of the
regions of the
left, when it is
clear that the same
regions are at one
time on the
right, at another on the
left? or what have the
regions of the
right done to the
immortal gods, to
deserve that they should be without any to
care for them, while they have
ordained that these should be
fortunate, and ever
accompanied by
lucky omens?
6.
Lateranus, as you
say, is the
god and
genius of
hearths, and
received this
name because
men build that
kind of
fireplace of
unbaked bricks. What then? if
hearths were made of
baked clay, or any other
material whatever, will they have no
genii? and will
Lateranus, whoever he is,
abandon his
duty as
guardian, because the
kingdom which he
possesses has not been
formed of
bricks of
clay? And for what
purpose, I
ask, has that
god received the
charge of
hearths? He
runs about the
kitchens of
men,
examining and
discovering with what
kinds of
wood the
heat in their
fires is
produced; he
gives strength to
earthen vessels that they
may not
fly in
pieces,
overcome by the
violence of the
flames; he
sees that the
flavour of
unspoilt dainties reaches the
taste of the
palate with their own
pleasantness, and
acts the
part of a
taster, and
tries whether the
sauces have been
rightly prepared. Is not this
unseemly,
nay-to speak with more
truth-disgraceful,
impious, to
introduce some
pretended deities for this only, not to do them
reverence with
fitting honours, but to
appoint them over
base things, and
disreputable actions?
7. Does
Venus Militaris, also,
preside over the
evil-doing of
camps, and the
debaucheries of
young men? Is there one
Perfica, also, of the
crowd of
deities, who
causes those
base and
filthy delights to
reach their end with
uninterrupted pleasure? Is there also
Pertunda, who
presides over the
marriage couch? Is there also
Tutunus, on whose
huge members and
horrent fascinum you
think it
auspicious, and
desire, that your
matrons should be
borne? But if
facts themselves have very
little effect in
suggesting to
volt a
right understanding of the
truth, are you not
able, even from the very
names, to
understand that these are the
inventions of a most
meaningless superstition, and the
false gods of
fancy?
Puta, you
say,
presides over the
pruning of
trees,
Peta over
prayers;
Nemestrinus is the
god of
groves;
Patellana is a
deity, and
Patella, of whom the one has been
set over
things brought to
light, the other over those yet to be
disclosed.
Nodutis is
spoken of as a
god, because he
brings that which has been
sown to the
knots: and she who
presides over the
treading out of
grain,
Noduterensis; the
goddess Upibilia delivers from
straying from the
right paths;
parents bereaved of their
children are under the
care of
Orbona,-those very
near to
death, under that of
Naenia. Again,
Ossilago herself is
mentioned as she who
gives firmness and
solidity to the
bones of
young children.
Mellonia is a
goddess,
strong and
powerful in
regard to
bees,
caring for and
guarding the
sweetness of their
honey.
8.
Say, I
pray you,-that
Peta,
Puta,
Patella may graciously favour you,-if there were no
bees at all on the
earth then, or if we
men were
born without
bones, like some
worms, would there be no
goddess Mellonia; or would
Ossilago, who
gives bones their
solidity, be without a
name of her own? I
ask truly, and
eagerly inquire whether you
think that
gods, or
men, or
bees,
fruits,
twigs, and the
rest, are the more
ancient in
nature,
time,
long duration? No
man will
doubt that you
say that the
gods precede all
things whatever by
countless ages and
generations. But if it is so, how, in the
nature of
things, can it be that, from
things produced afterwards, they
received those
names which are
earlier in
point of
time? or that the
gods were
charged with the
care of those
things which were not yet
produced, and
assigned to be of
use to
men? Or were the
gods long without
names; and was it only after
things began to
spring up, and be on the
earth, that you
thought it
right that they should be
called by these
names and
titles? And whence could you have
known what
name to
give to each, since you were
wholly ignorant of their
existence; or that they
possessed any
fixed powers,
seeing that you were
equally unaware which of them had any
power, and over what he should be
placed to
suit his
divine might?
9. What then? you
say; do you
declare that these
gods exist nowhere in the
world, and have been
created by
unreal fancies? Not we alone, but
truth itself, and
reason,
say so, and that
common-sense in which all
men share. For who there who
believes that there are
gods of
gain, and that they
preside over the
getting of it,
seeing that it
springs very often from the
basest employments, and is always at the
expense of others? Who
believes that
Libentina, who that
Burnus. is
set over those
lusts which
wisdom bills us
avoid, and which, in a
thousand ways,
vile and
filthy wretches attempt and
practise? Who that
Limentinus and
Lima have the
care of
thresholds, and do the
duties of their
keepers, when every
day we
see the
thresholds of
temples and
private houses destroyed and
overthrown, and that the
infamous approaches to
stews are not without them? Who
believes that the
Limi watch over
obliquities? who that
Saturnus presides over the
sown crops? who that
Montinus is the
guardian of
mountains;
Murcia, of the
slothful? Who,
finally, would
believe that
Money is a
goddess, whom your
writings declare, as though she were the
greatest deity, to
give golden rings, the
front seats at
games and
shows,
honours in the
greatest number, the
dignity of the
magistracy, and that which the
indolent love most of all,-an
undisturbed ease, by
means of
riches.
10. But if you
urge that
bones,
different kinds of
honey,
thresholds, and all the other
things which we have either
run over
rapidly, or, to
avoid prolixity,
passed by
altogether, have their own
peculiar guardians, we
may in like
manner introduce a
thousand other
gods, who should
care for and
guard innumerable things. For why should a
god have
charge of
honey only, and not of
gourds,
rape,
cunila,
cress,
figs,
beets,
cabbages? Why should the
bones alone have found
protection, and not the
nails,
hair, and all the other
things which are
placed in the
hidden parts and
members of which we
feel ashamed, and are
exposed to very many
accidents, and
stand more in
need of the
care and
attention of the
gods? Or if you
say that these
parts, too,
act under the
care of their own
tutelar deities, there will begin to be as many
gods as there are
things; nor will the
cause be
stated why the
divine care does not
protect all
things, if you
say that there are
certain things over which the
deities preside, and for which they
care.
11. What
say you,
O fathers of
new religions, and
powers? Do you
cry out, and
complain that these
gods are
dishonoured by us, and
neglected with
profane contempt,
viz.
Lateranus, the
genius of
hearths;
Limentinus, who
presides over
thresholds;
Pertunda,
Perfica,
Noduterensis: and do you
say that
things have
sunk into
ruin, and that the
world itself has
changed its
laws and
constitution, because we do not
bow humbly in
supplication to
Mutunus and
Tutunus? But now
look and
see,
lest while you
imagine such
monstrous things, and
form such
conceptions, you
may have
offended the
gods who most
assuredly exist, if only there are any who are
worthy to
bear and
hold that most
exalted title; and it be for no other
reason that those
evils, of which you
speak,
rage, and
increase by
accessions every
day. Why, then, some one of you will perhaps
say, do you
maintain that it is not
true that these
gods exist? And, when
invoked by the
diviners, do they
obey the
call, and
come when
summoned by their own
names, and
give answers which
may be
relied on, to those who
consult them? We can
show that what is
said is
false, either because in the whole
matter there is the
greatest room for
distrust, or because we, every
day,
see many of their
predictions either
prove untrue or
baffled expectation to
suit the
opposite issues.
12. But let them be
true, as you
maintain, yet will you have us also
believe that
Mellonia, for
example,
introduces herself into the
entrails, or
Limentinus, and that they
set themselves to make
known what you
seek to
learn? Did you ever
see their
face their
deportment, their
countenance? or can even these be
seen in
lungs or
livers?
May it not
happen,
may it not
come to
pass, although you
craftily conceal it, that the one should
take the other's
place,
deluding,
mocking,
deceiving, and
presenting the
appearance of the
deity invoked? If the
magi, who are so much
akin to
soothsayers,
relate that, in their
incantations,
pretended gods steal in
frequently instead of those
invoked; that some of these, moreover, are
spirits of
grosser substance, who
pretend that they are
gods, and
delude the
ignorant by their
lies and
deceit,-why should we not
similarly believe that here, too, others
substitute themselves for those who are not, that they
may both
strengthen your
superstitious beliefs, and
rejoice that
victims are
slain in
sacrifice to them under
names not their own?
13. Or, if you
refuse to
believe this on
account of its
novelty, how can you
know whether there is not some one, who
comes in
place of all whom
yon invoke, and
substituting himself in all
parts of the
world,
shows to you what
appear to be many
gods and
powers? Who is that one? some one will
ask. We
may perhaps,
being instructed by
truthful authors, be
able to
say; but,
lest you should be
unwilling to
believe us, let my
opponent ask the
Egyptians,
Persians,
Indians,
Chaldeans,
Armenians, and all the others who have
seen and become
acquainted with these
things in the more
recondite arts. Then, indeed, you will
learn who is the one
God, or who the very many under Him are, who
pretend to be
gods, and make
sport of
men's
ignorance.
Even now we are
ashamed to
come to the
point at which not only
boys,
young and
pert, but
grave men also, cannot
restrain their
laughter, and
men who have been
hardened into a
strict and
stern humour. For while we have all
heard it
inculcated and
taught by our
teachers, that in
declining the
names of the
gods there was no
plural number, because the
gods were
individuals, and the
ownership of each
name could not be
common to a
great many; you in
fogetfulness, and
putting away the
memory of your
early lessons, both
give to several
gods the same
names, and, although you are elsewhere more
moderate as to their
number, have
multiplied them, again, by
community of
names; which
subject, indeed,
men of
keen discernment and
acute intellect have before now
treated both in
Latin and
Greek. And that might have
lessened our
labour, if it were not that at the same
time we
see that some
know nothing of these
books; and, also, that the
discussion which we have
begun,
compels us to
bring forward something on these
subjects, although it has been already
laid hold of, and
related by those
writers.
14. Your
theologians, then, and
authors on
unknown antiquity,
say that in the
universe there are
three Joves, one of whom has
Aether for his
father; another,
Coelus; the
third,
Saturn,
born and
buried in the
island of
Crete. They
speak of
five Suns and
vie Mercuries,-of whom, as they
relate, the first
Sun is
called the
son of
Jupiter, and is
regarded as
grandson of
Aether; the
second is also
Jupiter's
son, and the
mother who
bore him
Hyperiona; the
third the
son of
Vulcan, not
Vulcan of
Lemnos, but the
son of the
Nile; the
fourth, whom
Acantho bore at
Rhodes in the
heroic age, was the
father of
Ialysus; while the
fifth is
regarded as the
son of a
Scythian king and
subtle Circe. Again, the first
Mercury, who is
said to have
lusted after
Proserpina, is
son of
Coelus, who is above all. Under the
earth is the
second, who
boasts that he is
Trophonius. The
third was
born of
Maia, his
mother, and the
third Jove; the
fourth is the
offspring of the
Nile, whose
name the
people of
Egypt dread and
fear to
utter. The
fifth is the
slayer of
Argus, a
fugitive and
exile. and the
inventor of
letters in
Egypt. But there are
five Minervas also, they
say,
just as there are
five Suns and
Mercuries; the first of whom is no
virgin but the
mother of
Apollo by
Vulcan; the
second, the
offspring of the
Nile, who is
asserted to be the
Egyptian Sais; the
third is
descended from
Saturn, and is the one who
devised the
use of
arms; the
fourth is
sprung from
Jove, and the
Messenians name her
Coryphasia; and the
fifth is she who
slew her
lustful father,
Pallas.
15. And
lest it should seem
tedious and
prolix to
wish to
consider each
person singly, the same
theologians say that there are
four Vulcans and
three Dianas, as many
Aesculapii and
five Dionysi,
six Hercules and
four Venuses,
threesets of
Castors and the same
number of
Muses,
three winged Cupids, and
four named Apollo; whose
fathers they
mention in like
manner, in like
manner their
mothers, and the
places where they were
born, and
point out the
origin andfamily of each. But if it is
true and
certain, and is
told in
earnest as a
well-known matter, either they are not all
gods,
inasmuch as there cannot be several under the same
name, as we have been
taught; or if there is one of them, he will not be
known and
recognised, because he is
obscured by the
confusion of very
similar names. And thus it
results from your own
action, however
unwilling you
may be that it should be so, that
religion is
brought into
difficulty and
confusion, and has no
fixed end to which it can
turn itself, without
being made the
sport of
equivocal illusions.
16. For
suppose that it had
occurred to us,
moved either by
suitable influence or
violent fear of you, to
worship Minerva, for
example, with the
rights you
deem sacred, and the
usual ceremony: if, when we
prepare sacrifices, and
approach to make the
offerings appointed for her on the
flaming altars, all the
Minervas shall
fly thither, and
striving for the
right to that
name, each
demand that the
offerings prepared be
given to herself; what
drawn-out animal shall we
place among them, or to whom shall we
direct the
sacred offices which are our
duty? For the first one of whom we
spoke will perhaps
say: "The
name Minerva is
mine,
mine the
divine majesty, who
bore Apollo and
Diana, and by the
fruit of my
womb enriched heaven with
deities, and
multiplied the
number of the
gods." "
Nay,
Minerva," the
fifth will
say, "are you
speaking, who,
being a
wife, and so often a
mother, have
lost the
sanctity of
spotless purity? Do you not
see that in all
temples the
images of
Minervas are those of
virgins, and that all
artists refrain from
giving to them the
figures of
matrons?
Cease, therefore, to
appropriate to yourself a
name not
rightfully yours. For that I am
Minerva,
begotten of
father Pallas, the whole
band of
poets bear witness, who
call me
Pallas, the
surname being derived from my
father." The
second will
cry on
hearing this: "What
say you? Do you, then,
bear the
name of
Minerva, an
impudent parricide, and one
defiled by the
pollution of
lewd lust, who,
decking yourself with
rouge and a
harlot's
arts,
roused upon yourself even your
father's
passions,
full of
maddening desires?
Go further, then,
seek for yourself another
name for this
belongs to me, whom the
Nile,
greatest of
rivers,
begot from among his
flowing waters, and
brought to a
maiden's
estate from the
condensing of
moisture. But if you
inquire into the
credibility of the
matter, I too will
bring as
witnesses the
Egyptians, in whose
language I am
called Neith, as
Plato's
Timaeus attests." What, then, do we
suppose will be the
result? Will she indeed
cease to
say that she is
Minerva, who is
named Coryphasia, either to
mark her
mother, or because she
sprung forth from the
top of
Jove's
head,
bearing a
shield, and
girt with the
terror of
arms? Or are we to
suppose that she who is
third will
quietly surrender the
name? and not
argue and
resist the
assumption of the first
two with such
words as these: "Do you thus
dare to
assume the
honour of my
name,
O Sais,
sprung from the
mud and
eddies of a
stream, and
formed in
miry places? Or do you
usurp another's
rank, who
falsely say that you were
born a
goddess from the
head of
Jupiter, and
persuade very
silly men that you are
reason? Does he
conceive and
bring forth children from
ms head? That the
arms you
bear might be
forged and
formed, was there even in the
hollow of his
head a
smith's
workshop? were there
anvils,
hammers,
furnaces,
bellows,
coals, and
pincers? Or if, as you
maintain, it is
true that you are
reason,
cease to
claim for yourself the
name which is
mine; for
reason, of which you
speak, is not a
certain form of
deity, but the
understanding of
difficult questions." If, then, as we have
said,
five Minervas should
meet us when we
essay to
sacrifice, and
contending as to whose this
name is, each
demand that either
fumigations of
incense be
offered to her, or
sacrificial wines poured out from
golden cups; by what
arbiter, by what
judge, shall we
dispose of so
great a
dispute? or what
examiner will there be, what
umpire of so
great boldness as to
attempt, with such
personages, either to
give a
just decision, or to
declare their
causes not
founded on
right? Will he not rather
go home, and,
keeping himself
apart from such
matters,
think it
safer to have nothing to do with them,
test he should either make
enemies of the
rest, by
giving to one what
belongs to all, or be
charged with
folly for
yielding to all what should be the
property of one?
17. We
may say the very same
things of the
Mercuries, the
Suns,-indeed of all the others whose
numbers you
increase and
multiply. But it is
sufficient to
know from one
case that the same
principle applies to the
rest; and,
lest our
prolixity should
chance to
weary our
audience, we shall
cease to
deal with
individuals,
lest, while we
accuse you of
excess, we also should ourselves be
exposed to the
charge of
excessive loquacity. What do you
say, you who, by the
fear of
bodily tortures,
urge us to
worship the
gods, and
constrain us to
undertake the
service of your
deities? We can be
easily won, if only something
befitting the
conception of so
great a
race be
shown to us.
Show us
Mercury, but only, one;
give us
Bacchus, but only one; one
Venus, and in like
manner one
Diana. For you will never make us
believe that there are
four Apollos, or
three Jupiters, not even if you were to
call Jove himself as
witness, or make the
Pythian god your
authority.
18. But some one on the
opposite side says, How do we
know whether the
theologians have
written what is
certain and well
known, or
set forth a
wanton fiction, as they
thought and
judged? That has nothing to do with the
matter; nor does the
reasonableness of your
argument depend upon this,-whether the
facts are as the
writings of the
theologians state, or are otherwise and
markedly different. For to us it is enough to
speak of
things which
come before the
public; and we
need not
inquire what is
true, but only
confute and
disprove that which
lies open to all, and which
men's
thoughts have
generally received. But if they are
liars,
declare yourselves what is the
truth, and
disclose the
unassailable mystery. And how can it be done when the
services of
men of
letters are
set aside? For what is there which can be
said about. the
immortal gods that has not
reached men's
thoughts from what has been
written by
men on these
subjects? Or can you
relate anything yourselves about their
rights and
ceremonies, which has not been
recorded in
books, and made
known by what
authors have
written? Or if you
think these of no
importance, let all the
books be
destroyed which have been
composed about the
gods for you by
theologians,
pontiffs, and even some
devoted to the
study of
philosophy;
nay, let us rather
suppose that from the
foundation of the
world no
man ever
wrote anything about the
gods: we
wish to
find out, and
desire to
know, whether you can
mutter or
murmur in
mentioning the
gods, or
conceive those in
thought to whom no
idea from any
book gave shape in your
minds. But when it is
clear that you have been
informed of their
names and
powers by the
suggestions of
books, it is
unjust to
deny the
reliableness of these
books by whose
testimony and
authority you
establish what you
say.
19. But perhaps these
things will
turn out to be
false, and what you
say to be
true. By what
proof, by what
evidence, will it be
shown? For since both
parties are
men, both those who have
said the one
thing and those who have
said the other, and on both
sides the
discussion was of
doubtful matters, it is
arrogant to
say that that is
true which seems so to you, but that that which
offends your
feelings manifests wantonness and
falsehood. By the
laws of the
human race, and the
associations of
mortality itself, when you
read and
hear, That
god was
born of this
father and of that
mother, do you not
feel in your
mind that something is
said which
belongs to
man, and
relates to the
meanness of our
earthly race? Or, while you
think that it is so, do you
conceive no
anxiety lest you should in something
offend the
gods themselves, whoever they are, because you
believe that it is
owing to
filthy intercourse ... that they have
reached the
light they
knew not of,
thanks to
lewdness? For we,
lest any one should
chance to
think that we are
ignorant of, do not
know, what
befits the
majesty of that
name,
assuredly think that the
gods should not
know birth; or if they are
born at all, we
hold and
esteem that the
Lord and
Prince of the
universe, by
ways which He
knew Himself,
sent them
forth spotless, most
pure,
undefiled,
ignorant of
sexual pollution, and
brought to the
full perfection of their
natures as
soon as they were
begotten?
20. But you, on the
contrary,
forgetting how
great their
dignity and
grandeur are,
associate with them a
birth, and
impute to them a
descent, which
men of at all
refined feelings regard as at once
execrable and
terrible. From
Ops, you
say, his
mother, and from his
father Saturn,
Diespiter was
born with his
brothers. Do the
gods, then, have
wives; and, the
matches having been
previously planned, do they become
subject to the
bonds of
marriage? Do they
take upon themselves the
engagements of the
bridal couch by
prescription, by the
cake of
spelt, and by a
pretended sale? Have they their
mistresses, their
promised wives, their
betrothed brides, on
settled conditions? And what do we
say about their
marriages, too, when indeed you
say that some
celebrated their
nuptials, and
entertained joyous throngs, and that the
goddesses sported at these; and that some
threw all
things into
utter confusion with
dissensions because they had no
share in
singing the
Fescennine verses, and
occasioned danger and
destruction to the next
generation of
men?
21. But perhaps this
foul pollution may be less
apparent in the
rest. Did, then, the
ruler of the
heavens, the
father of
gods and
men, who, by the
motion of his
eyebrow, and by his
nod,
shakes the whole
heavens and makes them
tremble,-did he
find his
origin in
man and
woman? And unless both
sexes abandoned themselves to
degrading pleasures in
sensual embraces, would there be no
Jupiter,
greatest of all; and even to this
time would the
divinities have no
king, and
heaven stand without its
lord? And why do we
marvel that you
say Jove sprang from a
woman's
womb,
seeing that your
authors relate that he both had a
nurse, and in the next
place maintained the
life given to him by
nourishment drawn from a
foreign breast? What
say you,
O men? Did, then, shall I
repeat, the
god who makes the
thunder crash,
lightens and
hurls the
thunderbolt, and
draws together
terrible clouds,
drink in the
streams of the
breast,
wail as an
infant,
creep about, and, that he might be
persuaded to
cease his
crying most
foolishly protracted, was he made
silent by the
noise of
rattles, and
put to
sleep lying in a very
soft cradle, and
lulled with
broken words?
O devout assertion of the
existence of
gods,
pointing out and
declaring the
venerable majesty of their
awful grandeur! Is it thus in your
opinion,
ask, that the
exalted powers of
heaven are
produced? do your
gods come forth to the
light by
modes of
birth such as these, by which
asses,
pigs.
dogs, by which the whole of this
unclean herd of
earthly beasts is
conceived and
begotten?
22. And, not
content to have
ascribed these
carnal unions to the
venerable Saturn, you
affirm that the
king of the
world himself
begot children even more
shamefully than he was himself
born and
begotten. Of
Hyperiona, as his
mother, you
say, and
Jupiter, who
wields the
thunderbolt, was
born the
golden and
blazing Sun; of
Latona and the same, the
Delian archer, and
Diana, who
rouses the
woods; of
Leda and the same, those
named in
Greek Dioscori; of
Aclmena and the same, the
Theban Hercules, whom his
club and
hide defended; of him and
Semele,
Liber, who is
named Bromius, and was
born a
second time from his
father's
thigh; of him, again, and
Main,
Mercury,
eloquent in
speech, and
bearer of the
harmless snakes. Can any
greater insult be
put upon your
Jupiter, or is there anything else which will
destroy and
ruin the
reputation of the
chief of the
gods, further than that you
believe him to have been at
times overcome by
vicious pleasures, and to have
glowed with the
passion of a
heart roused to
lust after
women? And what had the
Saturnian king to do with
strange nuptials? Did
Juno not
suffice him; and could he not
stay the
force of his
desires on the
queen of the
deities, although so
great excellence graced her, such
beauty,
majesty of
countenance, and
snowy and
marble whiteness of
arms? Or did he, not
content with one
wife, taking
pleasure in
concubines,
mistresses, and
courtezans, a
lustful god,
show his
incontinence in all
directions, as is the
custom with
dissolute youths; and in
old age, after
intercourse with
numberless persons, did he
renew his
eagerness for
pleasures now
losing their
zest? What
say you,
profane ones; or what
vile thoughts do you
fashion about your
love? Do you not, then,
observe do you not
see with what
disgrace you
brand him? of what
wrong-doing you make him the
author? or what
stains of
vice, how
great infamy you
heap upon him?
23.
Men, though
prone to
lust, and
inclined, through
weakness of
character, to
yield to the
allurements of
sensual pleasures, still
punish adultery by the
laws, and
visit with the
penalty of
death those whom they
find to have
possessed themselves of others
rights by
forcing the
marriage-bed. The
greatest of
kings, however, you
tell us, did not
know how
vile, how
infamous the
person of the
seducer and
adulterer was; and he who, as is
said,
examines our
merits and
demerits, did not,
owing to the
reasonings of his
abandoned heart,
see what was the
fitting course for him to
resolve on. But this
misconduct might perhaps be
endured, if you were to
conjoin him with
persons at least his
equals, and if he were made by you the
paramour of the
immortal goddesses. But what
beauty, what
grace was there, I
ask you, in
human bodies, which could
move, which could
turn to it the
eyes of
Jupiter?
Skin,
entrails,
phlegm, and all that
filthy mass placed under the
coverings of the
intestines, which not
Lynceus only with his
searching gaze can
shudder at, but any other also can be made to
turn from even by
merely thinking.
24. If you will
open your
minds'
eyes, and
see the
real truth without
gratifying any
private end, you will
find that the
causes of all the
miseries by which, as you
say, the
human race has
long been
afflicted,
flow from such
beliefs which you
held in former
times about your
gods; and which you have
refused to
amend, although the
truth was
placed before your
eyes. For what about them,
pray, have we indeed ever either
imagined which was
unbecoming, or
put forth in
shameful writings that the
troubles which
assail men and the
loss of the
blessings of
life should be used to
excite a
prejudice against us? Do we
say that
certain gods were
produced from
eggs, like
storks and
pigeons? Do we
say that the
radiant Cytherean Venus grew up,
having taken form from the
sea's
foam and the
severed genitals of
Coelus? that
Saturn was
thrown into
chains for
parricide, and
relieved from their
weight only on his own
days? that
Jupiter was
saved from
death by the
services of the
Curetes? that he
drove his
father from the
seat of
power, and by
force and
fraud possessed a
sovereignty not his own? Do we
say that his
aged sire, when
driven out,
concealed himself in the
territories of the
Itali, and
gave his
name as a
gift to
Latium, because he had been there
protected from his
son? Do we
say that
Jupiter himself
incestuously married his
sister? or, instead of
pork,
breakfasted in
ignorance upon the
son of
Lycaon, when
invited to his
table? that
Vulcan,
limping on one
foot,
wrought as a
smith in the
island of
Lemnos? that
Aeculapius was
transfixed by a
thunderbolt because of his
greed and
avarice, as the
Boeotian Pindar sings? that
Apollo,
having become
rich, by his
ambiguous responses,
deceived the very
kings by whose
treasures and
gifts he had been
enriched? Did we
declare that
Mercury was a
thief? that
Laverna is so also, and along with him
presides over
secret frauds? Is the
writer Myrtilus one of us, who
declares that the
Muses were the
handmaids of
Megalcon,
daughter of
Macarus?
25. Did we
say that
Venus was a
courtezan,
deified by a
Cyprian king named Cinyras? Who
reported that the
palladium was
formed from the
remains of
Pelops? Was it not you? Who that
Mars was
Spartanus? was it not your
writer Epicharmus? Who that he was
born within the
confines of
Thrace? was it not
Sophocles the
Athenian, with the
assent of all his
spectators? Who that he was
born in
Arcadia? was it not you? Who that he was
kept a
prisoner for
thirteen months? was it not the
son of the
river Meles? Who
said that
dogs were
sacrificed to him by the
Carians,
asses by the
Scythians? was it not
Apollodorus especially, along with the
rest? Who that in
wronging another's
marriage couch, he was
caught entangled in
snares? was it not your
writings, your
tragedies? Did we ever
write that the
gods for
hire endured slavery, as
Hercules at
Sardis for
lust and
wantonness; as the
Delian Apollo, who
served Admetus, as
Jove's
brother, who
served the
Trojan Laomedon, whom the
Pythian also
served, but with his
uncle; as
Minerva, who
gives light, and
trims the
lamps to
secret lovers? Is not he one of your
poets, who
re resented Mars and
Venus as
wounded by
men's
hands? Is not
Panyassis one of you, who
relates that
father Dis and
queenly Juno were
wounded by
Hercules? Do not the
writings of your
Polemo say that
Pallas was
slain,
covered with her own
blood,
overwhelmed by
Ornytus? Does not
Sosibius declare that
Hercules himself was
afflicted by the
wound and
pain he
suffered at the
hands of
Hipocoon's
children? Is it
related at our
instance that
Jupiter was
committed to the
grave in the
island of
Crete? Do we
say that the
brothers, who were
united in their
cradle, were
buried in the
territories of
Sparta and
Lacedaemon? Is the
author of our
number, who is
termed Patrocles the
Thurian in the
titles of his
writings, who
relates that the
tomb and
remains of
Saturn are found in
Sicily? Is
Plutarch of
Chaeronea esteemed one of us, who
said that
Hercules was
reduced to
ashes on the
top of
Mount Oeta, after his
loss of
strength through
epilepsy?
26. But what shall I
say of the
desires with which it is
written in your
books, and
contained in your
writers, that the
holy immortals lusted after
women? For is it by us that the
king of the
sea is
asserted in the
heat of
maddened passion to have
robbed of their
virgin purity Amphitrite,
Hippothoe,
Amymone,
Menalippe,
Alope? that the
spotless Apollo,
Latona's
son, most
chaste and
pure, with the
passions of a
breast not
governed by
reason,
desired Arsinoe,
Aethusa,
Hypsipyle,
Marpessa,
Zeuxippe, and
Prothoe,
Daphne, and
Sterope? Is it
shown in our
poems that the
aged Saturn, already
long covered with
grey hair, and now
cooled by
weight of
years,
being taken by his
wife in
adultery,
put on the
form of one of the
lower animals, and
neighing loudly,
escaped in the
shape of a
beast? Do you not
accuse Jupiter himself of
having assumed countless forms, and
concealed by
mean deceptions the
ardour of his
wanton lust? Have we ever
written that he
obtained his
desires by
deceit, at one
time changing into
gold, at another into a
sportive satyr; into a
serpent, a
bird, a
bull; and, to
pass beyond all
limits of
disgrace, into a
little ant, that he might,
forsooth, make
Clitor's
daughter the
mother of
Myrmidon, in
Thessaly? Who
represented him as
having watched over
Alcmena for nine
nights without
ceasing? was it not you?-that he
indolently abandoned himself to his
lusts,
forsaking his
post in
heaven? was it not you? And, indeed, you
ascribe to him no
mean favours; since, in your
opinion, the
god Hercules was
born to
exceed and
surpass in such
matters his
father's
powers. He in nine
nights begot with
difficulty one
son; but
Hercules, a
holy god, in one
night taught the
fifty daughters of
Thestius at once to
lay aside their
virginal title, and to
bear a
mother's
burden. Moreover, not
content to have
ascribed to the
gods love of
women, do you also
say that they
lusted after
men? Some one
loves Hylas; another is
engaged with
Hyacinthus; that one
burns with
desire for
Pelops; this one
sighs more
ardently for
Chrysippus;
Catamitus is
carried off to be a
favourite and
cup-bearer; and
Fabius, that he
may be
called Jove's
darling, is
branded on the
soft parts, and
marked in the
hinder.
27. But among you, is it only the
males who
lust; and has the
female sex preserved its
purity? Is it not
proved in your
books that
Tithonus was
loved by
Aurora; that
Luna lusted after
Endymion; the
Nereid after
Aeacus;
Thetis after
Achilles'
father;
Proserpina after
Adonis; her
mother,
Ceres, after some
rustic Jasion, and afterwards
Vulcan,
Phaeton,
Mars;
Venus herself, the
mother of
Aeneas, and
founder of the
Roman power, to
marry Anchises? While, therefore, you
accuse, without
making any
exception, not one only by
name, but the whole of the
gods alike, in whose
existence you
believe, of such
acts of
extraordinary shamefulness and
baseness, do you
dare, without
violation of
modesty, to
say either that we are
impious, or that you are
pious, although they
receive from you much
greater occasion for
offence on
account of all the
shameful acts which you
heap up to their
reproach, than in
connection with the
service and
duties required by their
majesty,
honour, and
worship? For either all these
things are
false which you
bring forward about them
individually,
lessening their
credit and
reputation; and it is in that
case a
matter quite deserving, that the
gods should
utterly destroy the
race of
men; or if they are
true and
certain, and
perceived without any
reasons for
doubt, it
comes to this
issue, that, however
unwilling you
may be, we
believe them to be not of
heavenly, but of
earthly birth.
28. For where there are
weddings,
marriages,
births,
nurses,
arts, and
weaknesses; where there are
liberty and
slavery; where there are
wounds,
slaughter, and
shedding of
blood; where there are
lusts,
desires,
sensual pleasures; where there is every
mental passion arising from
disgusting emotions,-there must of
necessity be nothing
godlike there; nor can that
cleave to a
superior nature which
belongs to a
fleeting race, and to the
frailty of
earth. For who, if only he
recognises and
perceives what the
nature of that
power is, can
believe either that a
deity had the
generative members, and was
deprived of them by a very
base operation; or that he at one
time cut off the
children sprung from himself, and was
punished by
suffering imprisonment; or that he, in a
way, made
civil war upon his
father, and
deprived him of the
right of
governing; or that he,
filled with
fear of one
younger when
overcome,
turned to
flight, and
hid in
remote solitudes, like a
fugitive and
exile? Who, I
say, can
believe that the
deity reclined at
men's
tables, was
troubled on
account of his
avarice,
deceived his
suppliants by an
ambiguous reply,
excelled in the
tricks of
thieves,
committed adultery,
acted as a
slave, was
wounded, and in
love, and
submitted to the
seduction of
impure desires in all the
forms of
lust? But yet you
declare all these
things both were, and are, in your
gods; and you
pass by no
form of
vice,
wickedness,
error, without
bringing it
forward, in the
wantonness of your
fancies, to the
reproach of the
gods. You must, therefore, either
seek out other
gods, to whom all these
reproaches shall not
apply, for they are a
human and
earthly race to whom they
apply; or if there are only these whose
names and
character you have
declared, by your
beliefs you do away with them: for all the
things of which you
speak relate to
men.
29. And here, indeed, we can
show that all those whom you
represent to us as and
call gods, were but
men, by
quoting either
Euhemerus of
Acragas, whose
books were
translated by
Ennius into
Latin that all might be
thoroughly acquainted with them; or
Nicanor the
Cyprian; or the
Pellaean Leon; or
Theodorus of
Cyrene; or
Hippo and
Diagoras of
Melos; or a
thousand other
writers, who have
minutely,
industriously, and
carefully brought secret things to
light with
noble candour. We
may, I
repeat, at
pleasure,
declare both the
acts of
Jupiter, and the
wars of
Minerva and the
virgin Diana; by what
stratagems Liber strove to make himself
master of the
Indian empire; what was the
condition, the
duty, the
gain of
Venus; to whom the
great mother was
bound in
marriage; what
hope, what
joy was
aroused in her by the
comely Attis; whence
came the
Egyptian Serapis and
Isis, or for what
reasons their very
names were
formed.
30. But in the
discussion which we at
present maintain, we do not
undertake this
trouble or
service, to
show and
declare who all these were. But this is what we
proposed to ourselves, that as you
call us
impious and
irreligious, and, on the other
hand,
maintain that you are
pious and
serve the
gods, we should
prove and make
manifest that by no
men are they
treated with less
respect than by you. But if it is
proved by the very
insults that it is so, it must, as a
consequence, be
understood that it is
yon who
rouse the
gods to
fierce and
terrible rage, because you either
listen to or
believe, or yourselves
invent about them,
stories so
degrading. For it is not he who is
anxiously thinking of
religious rites, and
slays spotless victims, who
gives piles of
incense to be
burned with
fire, not he must be
thought to
worship the
deities, or alone
discharge the
duties of
religion.
True worship is in the
heart, and a
belief worthy of the
gods; nor does it at all
avail to
bring blood and
gore, if you
believe about them
things which are not only
far remote from and unlike their
nature, but even to some
extent stain and
disgrace both their
dignity and
virtue.
31. We
wish, then, to
question you, and
invite you to
answer a
short question, Whether you
think it a
greater offence to
sacrifice to them
being neither
wishes nor
desires these; or, with
foul beliefs, to
hold opinions about them so
degrading, that they might
rouse any one's
spirit to a
mad desire for
revenge? If the
relative importance of the
matters be
weighed, you will
find no
judge so
prejudiced as not to
believe it a
greater crime to
defame by
manifest insults any one's
reputation, than to
treat it with
silent neglect. For this, perhaps,
may be
held and
believed from
deference to
reason; but the other
course manifests an
impious spirit, and a
blindness despaired of in
fiction. If in your
ceremonies and
rites neglected sacrifices and
expiatory offerings may be
demanded,
guilt is
said to have been
contracted; if by a
momentary forgetfulness any one has
erred either in
speaking or in
pouring wine; or again, if at the
solemn games and
sacred races the
dancer has
halted, or the
musician suddenly become
silent,-you all
cry out
immediately that something has been done
contrary to the
sacredness of the
ceremonies; or if the
boy termed patrimus let
go the
thong in
ignorance, or could not
hold to the
earth: and yet do you
dare to
deny that the
gods are ever
being wronged by you in
sins so
grievous, while you
confess yourselves that, in less
matters, they are often
angry, to the
national ruin?
32. But all these
things, they
say, are the
fictions of
poets, and
games arranged for
pleasure. It is not
credible, indeed, that
men by no
means thoughtless, who
sought to
trace out the
character of the
remotest antiquity, either did not
insert in their
poems the
fables which
survived in
men's
minds and
common conversation; or that they would have
assumed to themselves so
great licence as to
foolishly feign what was almost
sheer madness, and might
give them
reason to be
afraid of the
gods, and
bring them into
danger with
men. But let us
grant that the
poets are, as
yon say, the
inventors and
authors of
tales so
disgraceful; you are not, however, even thus
free from the
guilt of
dishonouring the
gods, who either are
remiss in
punishing such
offences, or have not, by
passing laws, and by
severity of
punishments,
opposed such
indiscretion, and
determined that no
man should
henceforth say that which
tended to the
dishonour, or was
unworthy of the
glory of the
gods. For whoever
allows the
wrongdoer to
sin,
strengthens his
audacity; and it is more
insulting to
brand and
mark any one with
false accusations, than to
bring forward and
upbraid their
real offences. For to be
called what you are, and what you
feel yourself to be, is less
offensive, because your
resentment is
checked by the
evidence supplied against you on
privately reviewing your
life; but that
wounds very
keenly which
brands the
innocent, and
defames a
man's
honourable name and
reputation.
33. Your
gods, it is
recorded,
dine on
celestial couches, and in
golden chambers,
drink, and are at last
soothed by the
music of the
lyre, and
singing. You
fit them with
ears not
easily wearied; and do not
think it
unseemly to
assign to the
gods the
pleasures by which
earthly bodies are
supported, and which are
sought after by
ears enervated by the
frivolity of an
unmanly spirit. Some of them are
brought forward in the
character of
lovers,
destroyers of
purity, to
commit shameful and
degrading deeds not only with
women, but with
men also. You
take no
care as to what is
said about
matters of so much
importance, nor do you
check, by any
fear of
chastisement at least, the
recklessness of your
wanton literature; others, through
madness and
frenzy,
bereave themselves, and by the
slaughter of their own
relatives cover themselves with
blood,
just as though it were that of an
enemy. You
wonder at these
loftily expressed impieties; and that which it was
fitting should be
subjected to all
punishments, you
extol with
praise that
spurs them on, so as to
rouse their
recklessness to
greater vehemence. They
mourn over the
wounds of their
bereavement, and with
unseemly wailings accuse the
cruel fates; you are
astonished at the
force of their
eloquence,
carefully study and
commit to
memory that which should have been
wholly put away from
human society, and are
solicitous that it should not
perish through any
forgetfulness. They are
spoken of as
being wounded,
maltreated,
making war upon each other with
hot and
furious contests; you
enjoy the
description; and, to
enable you to
defend so
great daring in the
writers,
pretend that these
things are
allegories, and
contain the
principles of
natural science.
34. But why do I
complain that you have
disregarded the
insults offered to the other
deities? That very
Jupiter, whose
name you should not have
spoken without
fear and
trembling over your whole
body, is
described as
confessing his
faults when
overcome by
lust of his
wife, and,
hardened in
shamelessness,
making known, as if he were
mad and
ignorant, the
mistresses he
preferred to his
spouse, the
concubines he
preferred to his
wife; you
say that those who have
uttered so
marvellous things are
chiefs and
kings among
poets endowed with
godlike genius, that they are
persons most
holy; and so
utterly have you
lost sight of your
duty in the
matters of
religion which you
bring forward, that
words are of more
importance, in your
opinion, than the
profaned majesty of the
immortals. So then, if only you
felt any
fear of the
gods, or
believed with
confident and
unhesitating assurance that they
existed at all, should you not, by
bills, by
popular votes, by
fear of the
senate's
decrees, have
hindered,
prevented, and
forbidden any one to
speak at
random of the
gods otherwise than in a
pious manner? Nor have they
obtained this
honour even at your
hands, that you should
repel insults offered to them by the same
laws by which you
ward them off from yourselves. They are
accused of
treason among you who have
whispered any
evil about your
kings. To
degrade a
magistrate, or
use insulting language to a
senator, you have made by
decree a
crime,
followed by the
severest punishment. To
write a
satirical poem, by which a
slur is
cast upon the
reputation and
character of another, you
determined, by the
decrees of the
decemvirs, should not
go unpunished; and that no one might
assail your
ears with too
wanton abuse, you
established formulae for
severe affronts. With you only the
gods are
unhonoured,
contemptible,
vile; against whom you
allow any one
liberty to
say what he will, to
accuse them of the
deeds of
baseness which his
lust has
invented and
devised. And yet you do not
blush to
raise against us the
charge of
want of
regard for
deities so
infamous, although it is much
better to
disbelieve the
existence of the
gods than to
think they are such, and of such
repute.
35. But is it only
poets whom you have
thought proper to
allow to
invent unseemly tales about the
gods, and to
turn them
shamefully into
sport? What do your
pantomimists, the
actors, that
crowd of
mimics and
adulterers? Do they not
abuse your
gods to make to themselves
gain, and do not the others
find enticing pleasures in the
wrongs and
insults offered to the
gods? At the
public games, too, the
colleges of all the
priests and
magistrates take their
places, the
chief Pontiffs, and the
chief priests of the
curiae; the
Quindecemviri take their
places,
crowned with
wreaths of
laurel, and the
flamines diales with their
mitres; the
augurs take their
places, who
disclose the
divine mind and will; and the
chaste maidens also, who
cherish and
guard the
ever-burning fire; the whole
people and the
senate take their
places; the
fathers who have done
service as
consuls,
princes next to the
gods, and most
worthy of
reverence; and,
shameful to
say,
Venus, the
mother of the
race of
Mars, and
parent of the
imperial people, is
represented by
gestures as in
love, and is
delineated with
shameless mimicry as
raving like a
Bacchanal, with all the
passions of a
vile harlot. The
Great Mother, too,
adorned with her
sacred fillets, is
represented by
dancing; and that
Pessinuntic Dindymene is, to the
dishonour of her
age,
represented as with
shameful desire using
passionate gestures in the
embrace of a
herdsman; and also in the
Trachiniae of
Sophocles, that
son of
Jupiter,
Hercules,
entangled in the
toils of a
death-fraught garment, is
exhibited uttering piteous cries,
overcome by his
violent suffering, and at last
wasting away and
being consumed, as his
intestines soften and are
dissolved. But in these
tales even the
Supreme Ruler of the
heavens Himself is
brought forward, without any
reverence for His
name and
majesty, as
acting the
part of an
adulterer, and
changing His
countenance for
purposes of
seduction, in
order that He might by
guile rob of their
chastity matrons, who were the
wives of others, and
putting on the
appearance of their
husbands, by
assuming the
form of another.
36. But this
crime is not enough: the
persons of the most
sacred gods are
mixed up with
farces also, and
scurrilous plays. And that the
idle onlookers may be
excited to
laughter and
jollity, the
deities are
hit at in
jocular quips, the
spectators shout and
rise up, the whole
pit resounds with the
clapping of
hands and
applause. And to the
debauched scoffers at the
gods gifts and
presents are
ordained,
ease,
freedom from
public burdens,
exemption and
relief, together with
triumphal garlands,-a
crime for which no
amends can be made by any
apologies. And after this do you
dare to
wonder whence these
ills come with which the
human race is
deluged and
overwhelmed without any
interval, while you
daily both
repeat and
learn by
heart all these
things, with which are
mixed up
libels upon the
gods and
slanderous sayings; and when you
wish your
inactive minds to be
occupied with
useless dreamings,
demand that
days be
given to you, and
exhibition made without any
interval? But if you
felt any
real indignation on
behalf of your
religious beliefs, you should rather
long ago have
burned these
writings,
destroyed those
books of yours, and
overthrown these
theatres, in which
evil reports of your
deities are
daily made
public in
shameful tales. For why, indeed, have our
writings deserved to be
given to the
flames? our
meetings to be
cruelly broken up, in which
prayer is made to the
Supreme God,
peace and
pardon are
asked for all in
authority, for
soldiers,
kings,
friends,
enemies, for those still in
life, and those
freed from the
bondage of the
flesh; in which all that is
said is such as to make
men humane,
gentle,
modest,
virtuous,
chaste,
generous in
dealing with their
substance, and
inseparably united to all
embraced in our
brotherhood?
37. But this is the
state of the
case, that as you are
exceedingly strong in
war and in
military power, you
think you
excel in
knowledge of the
truth also, and are
pious before the
gods, whose might you have been the first to
besmirch with
foul imaginings. Here, if your
fierceness allows. and
madness suffers, we
ask you to
answer us this: Whether you
think that
anger finds a
place in the
divine nature, or that the
divine blessedness is
far removed from such
passions? For if they are
subject to
passions so
furious, and are
excited by
feelings of
rage as your
imaginings suggest.-for you
say that they have often
shaken the
earth with their
roaring, and
bringing woful misery on
men,
corrupted with
pestilential contagion the
character of the
times, both because their
games had been
celebrated with too
little care, and because their
priests were not
received with
favour, and because some
small spaces were
desecrated, and because their
rites were not
duly performed,-it must
consequently be
understood that they
feel no
little wrath on
account of the
opinions which have been
mentioned. But if, as
follows of
necessity, it is
admitted that all these
miseries with which
men have
long been
overwhelmed flow from such
fictions, if the
anger of the
deities is
excited by these
causes, you are the
occasion of so
terrible misfortunes, because you never
cease to
jar upon the
feelings of the
gods, and
excite them to a
fierce desire for
vengeance. But if, on the other
hand, the
gods are not
subject to such
passions, and do not
know at all what it is to be
enraged, then indeed there is no
ground for
saying that they who
know not what
anger is are
angry with us, * and they are
free from its
presence, and the
disorder it
causes. For it cannot be, in the
nature of
things, that what is one should become
two; and that
unity, which is
naturally uncompounded, should
divide and
go apart into
separate things.