SAINT AUGUSTINE
THE CITY OF GOD: BOOK THREE
TABLE OF CONTENTS
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IN THIS AS IN THE FOREGOING BOOK, AUGUSTIN HAS PROVED
REGARDING MORAL AND SPIRITUAL CALAMITIES, SO IN THIS BOOK HE PROVES REGARDING EXTERNAL AND
BODILY DISASTERS, THAT SINCE THE FOUNDATION OF THE CITY THE ROMANS HAVE BEEN CONTINUALLY
SUBJECT TO THEM; AND THAT EVEN WHEN THE FALSE GODS WERE WORSHIPPED WITHOUT A RIVAL, BEFORE
THE ADVENT OF CHRIST, THEY AFFORDED NO RELIEF FROM SUCH CALAMITIES.
CHAP. 1. -- OF THE ILLS
WHICH ALONE THE WICKED FEAR, AND WHICH THE WORLD CONTINUALLY SUFFERED, EVEN WHEN THE GODS
WERE WORSHIPPED.
OF moral and spiritual evils, which are above all
others to be deprecated, I think enough has already been said to show that the false gods
took no steps to prevent the people who worshipped them from being overwhelmed by such
calamities, but rather aggravated the ruin. I see I must now speak of those evils which
alone are dreaded by the heathen--famine, pestilence, war, pillage, captivity, massacre,
and the like calamities, already enumerated in the first book. For evil men account those
things alone evil which do not make men evil; neither do they blush to praise good things,
and yet to remain evil among the good things they praise. It grieves them more to own a
bad house than a bad life, as if it were man's greatest good to have everything good but
himself. But not even such evils as were alone dreaded by the heathen were warded off by
their gods, even when they were most unrestrictedly worshipped. For in various times and
places before the advent of our Redeemer, the human race was crushed with numberless and
sometimes incredible calamities; and at that time what gods but those did the world
worship, if you except the one nation of the Hebrews, and, beyond them, such individuals
as the most secret and most just judgment of God counted worthy of divine grace? But
that I may not be prolix, I will be silent regarding the heavy calamities that have been
suffered by any other nations, and will speak only of what happened to Rome and the Roman
empire, by which I mean Rome properly so called, and those lands which already, before the
coming of Christ, had by alliance or conquest become, as it were, members of the body of
the state.
CHAP. 2.--WHETHER THE
GODS, WHOM THE GREEKS AND ROMANS WORSHIPPED IN COMMON, WERE JUSTIFIED IN PERMITTING THE
DESTRUCTION Or ILIUM.
First, then, why was Troy or Ilium, the cradle of
the Roman people (for I must not overlook nor disguise what I touched upon in the first
book), conquered, taken and destroyed by the Greeks, though it esteemed and worshipped
the same gods as they? Priam, some answer, paid the penalty of the perjury of his father
Laomedon. Then it is true that Laomedon hired Apollo and Neptune as his workmen. For
the story goes that he promised them wages, and then broke his bargain. I wonder that
famous diviner Apollo toiled at so huge a work, and never suspected Laomedon was going to
cheat him of his pay. And Neptune too, his uncle, brother of Jupiter, king of the sea, it
really was not seemly that he should be ignorant of what was to happen. For he is
introduced by Homer (who lived and wrote before the building of Rome) as predicting
something great of the posterity of AEneas, who in fact founded Rome. And as Homer says,
Neptune also rescued AEneas in a cloud from the wrath of Achilles, though (according to
Virgil )
' All his will was to destroy
His own creation, perjured Troy."
Gods, then, so great as Apollo and Neptune, in
ignorance of the cheat that was to defraud them of their wages, built the walls of Troy
for nothing but thanks and thankless people. There may be some doubt whether it is not
a worse crime to believe such persons to be gods, than to cheat such gods. Even Homer
himself did not give full credence to the story for while he represents Neptune, indeed,
as hostile to the Trojans, he introduces Apollo as their champion, though the story
implies that both were offended by that fraud. If, therefore, they believe their fables,
let them blush to worship such gods; if they discredit the fables, let no more be said of
the "Trojan perjury;" or let them explain how the gods hated Trojan, but loved
Roman perjury. For how did the conspiracy of Catiline, even in so large and corrupt a
city, find so abundant a supply of men whose hands and tongues found them a living by
perjury and civic broils? What else but perjury corrupted the judgments pronounced by so
many of the senators? What else corrupted the people's votes and decisions of all causes
tried before them? For it seems that the ancient practice of taking oaths has been
preserved even in the midst of the greatest corruption, not for the sake of restraining
wickedness by religious fear, but to complete the tale of crimes by adding that of
perjury.
CHAP. 3.--THAT THE GODS
COULD NOT BE OFFENDED BY THE ADULTERY OF PARIS, THIS CRIME BEING SO COMMON AMONG
THEMSELVES.
There is no ground, then, for representing the
gods (by whom, as they say, that empire stood, though they are proved to have been
conquered by the Greeks) as being enraged at the Trojan perjury. Neither, as others again
plead in their defence, was it indignation at the adultery of Paris that caused them to
withdraw their protection from Troy. For their habit is to be instigators and instructors
in vice, not its avengers. "The city of Rome," says Sallust, "was first
built and inhabited, as I have heard, by the Trojans, who, flying their country, under the
conduct of AEneas, wandered about without making any settlement." If, then, the
gods were of opinion that the adultery of Paris should be punished, it was chiefly the
Romans, or at least the Romans also, who should have suffered; for the adultery was
brought about by AEneas' mother. But how could they hate in Paris a crime which they made
no objection to in their own sister Venus, who (not to mention any other instance)
committed adultery with Anchises, and so became the mother of AEneas? Is it because in the
one case Menelaus was aggrieved, while in the other Vulcan connived at the crime?
For the gods, I fancy, are so little jealous of their wives, that they make no scruple of
sharing them with men. But perhaps I may be suspected of turning the myths into ridicule,
and not handling so weighty a subject with sufficient gravity. Well, then, let us say that
AEneas is not the son of Venus. I am willing to admit it; but is Romulus any more the son
of Mars? For why not the one as well as the other? Or is it lawful for gods to have
intercourse with women, unlawful for men to have intercourse with goddesses? A hard, or
rather an incredible condition, that what was allowed to Mars by the law of Venus, should
not be allowed to Venus herself by her own law. However, both cases have the authority of
Rome; for Caesar in modern times believed no less that he was descended from Venus,
than the ancient Romulus believed himself the son of Mars.
CHAP. 4. -- OF VARRO'S
OPINION, THAT IT IS USEFUL FOR MEN TO FEIGN THEMSELVES THE OFFSPRING OF THE GODS.
Some one will say, But do you believe all this?
Not I indeed. For even Varro, a very learned heathen, all but admits that these stories
are false, though he does not boldly and confidently say so. But he maintains it is useful
for states that brave men believe, though falsely, that they are descended from the gods;
for that thus the human spirit, cherishing the belief of its divine descent, will both
more boldly venture into great enterprises, and will carry them out more energetically,
and will therefore by its very confidence secure more abundant success. You see how wide a
field is opened to falsehood by this opinion of Varro's, which I have expressed as well as
I could in my own words; and how comprehensible it is, that many of the religions and
sacred legends should be feigned in a community in which it was judged profitable for the
citizens that lies should be told even about the gods themselves.
CHAP. 5.--THAT IT IS NOT CREDIBLE THAT THE GODS
SHOULD HAVE PUNISHED THE ADULTERY OF PARIS, SEEING THEY SHOWED NO INDIGNATION AT THE
ADULTERY OF THE MOTHER OF ROMULUS.
But whether Venus could bear AEneas to a human
father Anchises, or Mars beget Romulus of the daughter of Numitor, we leave as unsettled
questions. For our own Scriptures suggest the very similar question, whether the fallen
angels had sexual intercourse with the daughters of men, by which the earth was at that
time filled with giants, that is, with enormously large and strong men. At present, then,
I will limit my discussion to this dilemma: If that which their books relate about the
mother of AEneas and the father of Romulus be true, how can the gods be displeased with
men for adulteries which, when committed by themselves, excite no displeasure? If it is
false, not even in this case can the gods be angry that men should really commit
adulteries, which, even when falsely attributed to the gods, they delight in. Moreover, if
the adultery of Mars be discredited, that Venus also may be freed from the imputation,
then the mother of Romulus is left unshielded by the pretext of a divine seduction. For
Sylvia was a vestal priestess, and the gods ought to avenge this sacrilege on the Romans
with greater severity than Paris' adultery on the Trojans. For even the Romans themselves
in primitive times used to go so far as to bury alive any vestal who was detected in
adultery, while women unconsecrated, though they were punished, were never punished with
death for that crime; and thus they more earnestly vindicated the purity of shrines they
esteemed divine, than of the human bed.
CHAP. 6.--THAT THE GODS
EXACTED NO PENALTY FOR THE FRATRICIDAL ACT OF ROMULUS.
I add another instance: If the sins of men so
greatly incensed those divinities, that they abandoned Troy to fire and sword to punish
the crime of Paris, the murder of Romulus' brother ought to have incensed them more
against the Romans than the cajoling of a Greek husband moved them against the Trojans:
fratricide in a newly-born city should have provoked them more than adultery in a city
already flourishing. It makes no difference to the question we now discuss, whether
Romulus ordered his brother to be slain, or slew him with his own hand; it is a crime
which many shamelessly deny, many through shame doubt, many in grief disguise. And we
shall not pause to examine and weigh the testimonies of historical writers on the subject.
All agree that the brother of Romulus was slain, not by enemies, not by strangers. If it
was Romulus who either commanded or perpetrated this crime; Romulus was more truly the
head of the Romans than Paris of the Trojans; why then did he who carried off another
man's wife bring down the anger of the gods on the Trojans, while he who took his
brother's life obtained the guardianship of those same gods? If, on the other hand, that
crime was not wrought either by the hand or will of Romulus, then the whole city is
chargeable with it, because it did not see to its punishment, and thus committed, not
fratricide, but parricide, which is worse. For both brothers were the founders of that
city, of which the one was by villainy prevented from being a ruler. So far as I see,
then, no evil can be ascribed to Troy which warranted the gods in abandoning it to
destruction, nor any good to Rome which accounts for the gods visiting it with prosperity;
unless the truth be, that they fled from Troy because they were vanquished, and betook
themselves to Rome to practise their characteristic deceptions there. Nevertheless they
kept a footing for themselves in Troy, that they might deceive future inhabitants who
re-peopled these lands: while at Rome, by a rider exercise of their malignant arts, they
exulted in more abundant honors.
CHAP. 7.--OF THE
DESTRUCTION OF ILIUM BY FIMBRIA, A LIEUTENANT OF MARIUS.
And surely we may ask what wrong poor Ilium had
done, that, in the first heat of the civil wars of Rome, it should suffer at the hand of
Fimbria, the veriest villain among Marius' partisans, a more fierce and cruel destruction
than the Grecian sack. For when the Greeks took it many escaped, and many who did not
escape were suffered to live, though in captivity. But Fimbria from the first gave orders
that not a life should be spared, and burnt up together the city and all its inhabitants.
Thus was Ilium requited, not by the Greeks, whom she had provoked by wrong-doing; but by
the Romans, who had been built out of her ruins; while the gods, adored alike of both
sides, did simply nothing, or, to speak more correctly, could do nothing. Is it then true,
that at this time also, after Troy had repaired the damage done by the Grecian fire, all
the gods by whose help the kingdom stood, "forsook each fane, each sacred shrine But
if so, I ask the reason; for in my judgment, the conduct of the gods was as much to be
reprobated as that of the townsmen to be applauded. For these closed their gates against
Fimbria, that they might preserve the city for Sylla, and were therefore burnt and
consumed by the enraged general. Now, up to this time, Sylla's cause was the more worthy
of the two; for till now he used arms to restore the republic, and as yet his good
intentions had met with no reverses. What better thing, then, could the Trojans have done?
What more honorable, what more faithful to Rome, or more worthy of her relationship, than
to preserve their city for the better part of the Romans, and to shut their gates against
a parricide of his country? It is for the defenders of the gods to consider the ruin which
this conduct brought on Troy. The gods deserted an adulterous people, and abandoned Troy
to the fires of the Greeks, that out of her ashes a chaster Rome might arise. But why did
they a second time abandon this same town, allied now to Rome, and not making war upon her
noble daughter, but preserving a most steadfast and pious fidelity to Rome's most
justifiable faction? Why did they give her up to be destroyed, not by the Greek heroes,
but by the basest of the Romans? Or, if the gods did not favor Sylla's cause, for which
the unhappy Trojans maintained their city, why did they themselves predict and promise
Sylla such successes? Must we call them flatterers of the fortunate, rather than helpers
of the wretched? Troy was not destroyed, then, because the gods deserted it. For the
demons, always watchful to deceive, did what they could. For, when all the statues were
overthrown and burnt together with the town, Livy tells us that only the image of Minerva
is said to have been found standing uninjured amidst the ruins of her temple; not that it
might be said in their praise, "The gods who made this realm divine," but that
it might not be said in their defence, They are "gone from each fane, each sacred
shrine:" for that marvel was permitted to them, not that they might be proved to be
powerful, but that they might be convicted of being present.
CHAP. 8.--WHETHER ROME
OUGHT TO HAVE BEEN ENTRUSTED TO THE TROJAN GODS?
Where, then, was the wisdom of entrusting Rome to
the Trojan gods, who had demonstrated their weakness in the loss of Troy? Will some one
say that, when Fimbria stormed Troy, the gods were already resident in Rome? How, then,
did the image of Minerva remain standing? Besides, if they were at Rome when Fimbria
destroyed Troy, perhaps they were at Troy when Rome itself was taken and set on fire by
the Gauls. But as they are very acute in hearing, and very swift in their movements, they
came quickly at the cackling of the goose to defend at least the Capitol, though to defend
the rest of the city they were too long in being warned.
CHAP. 9.--WHETHER IT IS
CREDIBLE THAT THE PEACE DURING THE REIGN OF NUMA WAS BROUGHT ABOUT BY THE GODS.
It is also believed that it was by the help of
the gods that the successor of Romulus, Numa Pompilius, enjoyed peace during his entire
reign, and shut the gates of Janus, which are customarily kept open during war. And it
is supposed he was thus requited for appointing many religious observances among the
Romans. Certainly that king would have commanded our congratulations for so rare a
leisure, had he been wise enough to spend it on wholesome pursuits, and, subduing a
pernicious curiosity, had sought out the true God with true piety. But as it was, the gods
were not the authors of his leisure; but possibly they would have deceived him less had
they found him busier. For the more disengaged they found him, the more they themselves
occupied his attention. Varro informs us of all his efforts, and of the arts he employed
to associate these gods with himself and the city; and in its own place, if God will, I
shall discuss these matters. Meanwhile, as we are speaking of the benefits conferred by
the gods, I readily admit that peace is a great benefit; but it is a benefit of the true
God, which, like the sun, the rain, and other supports of life, is frequently conferred on
the ungrateful and wicked. But if this great boon was conferred on Rome and Pompilius by
their gods, why did they never afterwards grant it to the Roman empire during even more
meritorious periods? Were the sacred rites more efficient at their first institution than
during their subsequent celebration? But they had no existence in Numa's time, until he
added them to the ritual; whereas afterwards they had already been celebrated and
preserved, that benefit might arise from them. How, then, is it that those forty-three, or
as others prefer it, thirty-nine years of Numa's reign, were passed in unbroken peace, and
yet that afterwards, when the worship was established, and the gods themselves, who were
invoked by it, were the recognized guardians and patrons of the city, we can with
difficulty find during the whole period, from the building of the city to the reign of
Augustus, one year--that, viz., which followed the close of the first Punic war--in which,
for a marvel, the mans were able to shut the gates of war?
CHAP. 10.--WHETHER IT
WAS DESIRABLE THAT THE ROMAN EMPIRE SHOULD BE INCREASED BY SUCH A FURIOUS SUCCESSION OF
WARS, WHEN IT MIGHT HAVE BEEN QUIET AND SAFE BY FOLLOWING IN THE PEACEFUL WAYS OF NUMA.
Do they reply that the Roman empire could never
have been so widely extended, nor so glorious, save by constant and unintermitting wars? A
fit argument, truly! Why must a kingdom be distracted in order to be great? In this little
world of man's body, is it not better to have a moderate stature, and health with it, than
to attain the huge dimensions of a giant by unnatural torments, and when you attain it to
find no rest, but to be pained the more in proportion to the size of your members? What
evil would have resulted, or rather what good would not have resulted, had those times
continued which Sallust sketched, when he says, "At first the kings (for that was the
first title of empire in the world) were divided in their sentiments: part cultivated the
mind, others the body: at that time the life of men was led without coveteousness; every
one was sufficiently satisfied with his own!" Was it requisite, then, for Rome's
prosperity, that the state of things which Virgil reprobates should succeed:
"At length stole on a baser age
And war's indomitable rage, And greedy lust of
gain?"
But obviously the Romans have a plausible defence
for undertaking and carrying on such disastrous wars,--to wit, that the pressure of their
enemies forced them to resist, so that they were compelled to fight, not by any greed of
human applause, but by the necessity of protecting life and liberty. Well, let that pass.
Here is Sallust's account of the matter: "For when their state, enriched with laws,
institutions, territory, seemed abundantly prosperous and sufficiently powerful, according
to the ordinary law of human nature, opulence gave birth to envy. Accordingly, the
neighboring kings and states took arms and assaulted them. A few allies lent assistance;
the rest, struck with fear, kept aloof from dangers. But the Romans, watchful at home and
in war, were active, made preparations, encouraged one another, marched to meet their
enemies,--protected by arms their liberty, country, parents. Afterwards, when they had
repelled the dangers by their bravery, they carried help to their allies and friends, and
procured alliances more by conferring than by receiving favors." This was to build
up Rome's greatness by honorable means. But, in Numa's reign, I would know whether the
long peace was maintained in spite of the incursions of wicked neighbors, or if these
incursions were discontinued that the peace might be maintained? For if even then Rome was
harassed by wars, and yet did not meet force with force, the same means she then used to
quiet her enemies without conquering them in war, or terrifying them with the onset of
battle, she might have used always, and have reigned in peace with the gates of Janus
shut. And if this was not in her power, then Rome enjoyed peace not at the will of her
gods, but at the will of her neighbors round about, and only so long as they cared to
provoke her with no war, unless perhaps these pitiful gods will dare to sell to one man as
their favor what lies not in their power to bestow, but in the will of another man. These
demons, indeed, in so far as they are permitted, can terrify or incite the minds of wicked
men by their own peculiar wickedness. But if they always had this power, and if no action
were taken against their efforts by a more secret and higher power, they would be supreme
to give peace or the victories of war, which almost always fall out through some human
emotion, and frequently in opposition to the will of the gods, as is proved not only by
lying legends, which scarcely hint or signify any grain of truth, but even by Roman
history itself.
CHAP. 11.--OF THE STATUE OF APOLLO AT CUMAE,
WHOSE TEARS ARE SUPPOSED TO HAVE PORTENDED DISASTER TO THE GREEKS, WHOM THE GOD WAS UNABLE
TO SUCCOR.
And it is still this weakness of the gods which
is confessed in the story of the Cuman Apollo, who is said to have wept for four days
during the war with the Achaeans and King Aristonicus. And when the augurs were alarmed at
the portent, and had determined to cast the statue into the sea, the old men of Cumae
interposed, and related that a similar prodigy had occurred to the same image during the
wars against Antiochus and against Perseus, and that by a decree of the senate, gifts had
been presented to Apollo, because the event had proved favorable to the Romans. Then
soothsayers were summoned who were supposed to have greater professional skill, and they
pronounced that the weeping of Apollo's image was propitious to the Romans, because Cumae
was a Greek colony, and that Apollo was bewailing (and thereby presaging) the grief and
calamity that was about to light upon his own land of Greece, from which he had been
brought. Shortly afterwards it was reported that King Aristonicus was defeated and made
prisoner,--a defeat certainly opposed to the will of Apollo; and this he indicated by even
shedding tears from his marble image. And this shows us that, though the verses of the
poets are mythical, they are not altogether devoid of truth, but describe the manners of
the demons in a sufficiently fit style. For in Virgil, Diana mourned for Camilla, and
Hercules wept for Pallas doomed to die. This is perhaps the reason why Numa Pompilius,
too, when, enjoying prolonged peace, but without knowing or inquiring from whom he
received it, he began in his leisure to consider to what gods he should entrust the safe
keeping and conduct of Rome, and not dreaming that the true, almighty, and most high God
cares for earthly affairs, but recollecting only that the Trojan gods which AEneas had
brought to Italy had been able to preserve neither the Trojan nor Lavinian kingdom rounded
by AEneas himself, concluded that he must provide other gods as guardians of fugitives and
helpers of the weak, and add them to those earlier divinities who had either come over to
Rome with Romulus, or when Alba was destroyed.
CHAP. 12.--THAT THE
ROMANS ADDED A VAST NUMBER OF GODS TO THOSE INTRODUCED BY NUMA, AND THAT THEIR NUMBERS
HELPED THEM NOT AT ALL.
But though Pompilius introduced so ample a
ritual, yet did not Rome see fit to be content with it. For as yet Jupiter himself had not
his chief temple,--it being King Tarquin who built the Capitol. And AEsculapius left
Epidaurus for Rome, that in this foremost city he might have a finer field for the
exercise of his great medical skill. The mother of the gods, too, came I know not
whence from Pessinuns; it being unseemly that, while her son presided on the Capitoline
hill, she herself should lie hid in obscurity. But if she is the mother of all the gods,
she not only followed some of her children to Rome, but left others to follow her. I
wonder, indeed, if she were the mother of Cynocephalus, who a long while afterwards came
from Egypt. Whether also the goddess Fever was her offspring, is a matter for her grandson
AEsculapius to decide. But of whatever breed she be, the foreign gods will not presume,
I trust, to call a goddess base-born who is a Roman citizen. Who can number the deities to
whom the guardianship of Rome was entrusted? Indigenous and imported, both of heaven,
earth, hell, seas, fountains, rivers; and, as Varro says, gods certain and uncertain, male
and female: for, as among animals, so among all kinds of gods are there these
distinctions. Rome, then, enjoying the protection of such a cloud of deities, might surely
have been preserved from some of those great and horrible calamities, of which I can
mention but a few. For by the great smoke of her altars she summoned to her protection, as
by a beacon-fire, a host of gods, for whom she appointed and maintained temples, altars,
sacrifices, priests, and thus offended the true and most high God, to whom alone all this
ceremonial is lawfully due. And, indeed, she was more prosperous when she had fewer gods;
but the greater she became, the more gods she thought she should have, as the larger ship
needs to be manned by a larger crew. I suppose she despaired of the smaller number, under
whose protection she had spent comparatively happy days, being able to defend her
greatness. For even under the kings (with the exception of Numa Pompilius, of whom I have
already spoken), how wicked a contentiousness must have existed to occasion the death of
Romulus' brother!
CHAP. 13.--BY WHAT RIGHT
OR AGREEMENT THE ROMANS OBTAINED THEIR FIRST WIVES.
How is it that neither Juno, who with her husband
Jupiter even then cherished
"Rome's sons, the nation of the
gown,"
nor Venus herself, could assist the children of
the loved AEneas to find wives by some right and equitable means? For the lack of this
entailed upon the Romans the lamentable necessity of stealing their wives, and then waging
war with their fathers-in-law; so that the wretched women, before they had recovered from
the wrong done them by their husbands, were dowried with the blood of their fathers.
"But the Romans conquered their neighbors." Yes; but with what wounds on both
sides, and with what sad slaughter of relatives and neighbors! The war of Caesar and
Pompey was the contest of only one father-in-law with one son-in-law; and before it began,
the daughter of Caesar, Pompey's wife, was already dead. But with how keen and just an
accent of grief does Lucan exclaim: "I sing that worse than civil war waged in the
plains of Emathia, and in which the crime was justified by the victory!"
The Romans, then, conquered that they might, with
hands stained in the blood of their fathers-in-law, wrench the miserable girls from their
embrace,--girls who dared not weep for their slain parents, for fear of offending their
victorious husbands; and while yet the battle was raging, stood with their prayers on
their lips, and knew not for whom to utter them. Such nuptials were certainly prepared for
the Roman people not by Venus, but Bellona; or possibly that infernal fury Alecto had more
liberty to injure them now that Juno was aiding them, than when the prayers of that
goddess had excited her against AEneas. Andromache in captivity was happier than these
Roman brides. For though she was a slave, yet, after she had become the wife of Pyrrhus,
no more Trojans fell by his hand but the Romans slew in battle the very fathers of the
brides they fondled. Andromache, the victor's captive, could only mourn, not fear, the
death of her people. The Sabine women, related to men still combatants, feared the death
of their fathers when their husbands went out to battle, and mourned their death as they
returned, while neither their grief nor their fear could be freely expressed. For the
victories of their husbands, involving the destruction of fellow-townsmen, relatives,
brothers, fathers, caused either pious agony or cruel exultation. Moreover, as the fortune
of war is capricious, some of them lost their husbands by the sword of their parents,
while others lost husband and father together in mutual destruction. For the Romans by no
means escaped with impunity, but they were driven back within their walls, and defended
themselves behind closed gates; and when the gates were opened by guile, and the enemy
admitted into the town, the Forum itself was the field of a hateful and fierce engagement
of fathers-in-law and sons-in-law. The ravishers were indeed quite defeated, and, flying
on all sides to their houses, sullied with new shame their original shameful and
lamentable triumph. It was at this juncture that Romulus, hoping no more from the valor of
his citizens, prayed Jupiter that they might stand their ground; and from this occasion
the god gained the name of Stator. But not even thus would the mischief have been
finished, had not the ravished women themselves flashed out with dishevelled hair, and
cast themselves before their parents, and thus disarmed their just rage, not with the arms
of victory, but with the supplications of filial affection. Then Romulus, who could not
brook his own brother as a colleague, was compelled to accept Titus Tatius, king of the
Sabines, as his partner on the throne. But how long would he who misliked the fellowship
of his own twin-brother endure a stranger? So, Tatius being slain, Romulus remained sole
king, that he might be the greater god. See what rights of marriage these were that
fomented unnatural wars. These were the Roman leagues of kindred, relationship, alliance,
religion. This was the life of the city so abundantly protected by the gods. You see how
many severe things might be said on this theme; but our purpose carries us past them, and
requires our discourse for other matters.
CHAP. 14.--OF THE
WICKEDNESS OF THE WAR WAGED BY THE ROMANS AGAINST THE ALBANS, AND OF THE VICTORIES WON BY
THE LUST OF POWER.
But what happened after Numa's reign, and under
the other kings, when the Albans were provoked into war, with sad results not to
themselves alone, but also to the Romans? The long peace of Numa had become tedious; and
with what endless slaughter and detriment of both states did the Roman and Alban armies
bring it to an end! For Alba, which had been rounded by Ascanius, son of AEneas, and which
was more properly the mother of Rome than Troy herself, was provoked to battle by Tullus
Hostilius, king of Rome, and in the conflict both inflicted and received such damage, that
at length both parties wearied of the struggle. It was then devised that the war should be
decided by the combat of three twin-brothers from each army: from the Romans the three
Horatii stood forward, from the Albans the three Curiatii. Two of the Horatii were
overcome and disposed of by the Curiatii; but by the remaining Horatius the three Curiatii
were slain. Thus Rome remained victorious, but with such a sacrifice that only one
survivor returned to his home. Whose was the loss on both sides? Whose the grief, but of
the offspring of AEneas, the descendants of Ascanius, the progeny of Venus, the grandsons
of Jupiter? For this, too, was a "worse than civil" war, in which the
belligerent states were mother and daughter. And to this combat of the three twin-brothers
there was added another atrocious and horrible catastrophe. For as the two nations had
formerly been friendly (being related and neighbors), the sister of the Horatii had been
betrothed to one of the Curiatii; and she, when she saw her brother wearing the spoils of
her betrothed, burst into tears, and was slain by her own brother in his anger. To me,
this one girl seems to have been more humane than the Whole Roman people. I cannot think
her to blame for lamenting the man to whom already she had plighted her troth, or, as
perhaps she was doing, for grieving that her brother should have slain him to whom he had
promised his sister. For why do we praise the grief of AEneas (in Virgil) over the
enemy cut down even by his own hand? Why did Marcellus shed tears over the city of
Syracuse, when he recollected, just before he destroyed, its magnificence and meridian
glory, and thought upon the common lot of all things? I demand, in the name of humanity,
that if men are praised for tears shed over enemies conquered by themselves, a weak girl
should not be counted criminal for bewailing her lover slaughtered by the hand of her
brother. While, then, that maiden was weeping for the death of her betrothed inflicted by
her brother's hand, Rome was rejoicing that such devastation had been wrought on her
mother state, and that she had purchased a victory with such an expenditure of the common
blood of herself and the Albans.
Why allege to me the mere names and words of
"glory" and "victory?" Tear off the disguise of wild delusion, and
look at the naked deeds: weigh them naked, judge them naked. Let the charge be brought
against Alba, as Troy was charged with adultery. There is no such charge, none like it
found: the war was kindled only in order that there
"Might sound in languid ears the cry Of
Tullus and of victory."
This vice of restless ambition was the sole
motive to that social and parricidal war,--a vice which Sallust brands in passing; for
when he has spoken with brief but hearty commendation of those primitive times in which
life was spent without covetousness, and every one was sufficiently satisfied with what he
had, he goes on: "But after Cyrus in Asia, and the Lacedemonians and Athenians in
Greece, began to subdue cities and nations, and to account the lust of sovereignty a
sufficient ground for war, and to reckon that the greatest glory consisted in the greatest
empire;" and so on, as I need not now quote. This lust of sovereignty disturbs and
consumes the human race with frightful ills. By this lust Rome was overcome when she
triumphed over Alba, and praising her own crime, called it glory. For, as our Scriptures
say, "the wicked boasteth of his heart's desire, and blesseth the covetous, whom the
Lord abhorreth." Away, then, with these deceitful masks, these deluding
whitewashes, that things may be truthfully seen and scrutinized. Let no man tell me that
this and the other was a "great" man, because he fought and conquered so and so.
Gladiators fight and conquer, and this barbarism has its meed of praise; but I think it
were better to take the consequences of any sloth, than to seek the glory won by such
arms. And if two gladiators entered the arena to fight, one being father, the other his
son, who would endure such a spectacle? who would not be revolted by it? How, then, could
that be a glorious war which a daughter-state waged against its mother? Or did it
constitute a difference, that the battlefield was not an arena, and that the wide plains
were filled with the carcasses not of two gladiators, but of many of the flower of two
nations; and that those contests were viewed not by the amphitheatre, but by the whole
world, and furnished a profane spectacle both to those alive at the time, and to their
posterity, so long as the fame of it is handed down?
Yet those gods, guardians of the Roman empire,
and, as it were, theatric spectators of such contests as these, were not satisfied until
the sister of the Horatii was added by her brother's sword as a third victim from the
Roman side, so that Rome herself, though she won the day, should have as many deaths to
mourn. Afterwards, as a fruit of the victory, Alba was destroyed, though it was there the
Trojan gods had formed a third asylum after Ilium had been sacked by the Greeks, and after
they had left Lavinium, where AEneas had founded a kingdom in a land of banishment. But
probably Alba was destroyed because from it too the gods had migrated, in their usual
fashion, as Virgil says:
"Gone from each fane, each sacred shrine,
Are those who made this realm divine."
Gone, indeed, and from now their third asylum,
that Rome might seem all the wiser m committing herself to them after they had deserted
three other cities. Alba, whose king Amulius had banished his brother, displeased them;
Rome, whose king Romulus had slain his brother, pleased them. But before Alba was
destroyed, its population, they say, was amalgamated with the inhabitants of Rome so that
the two cities were one. Well, admitting it was so, yet the fact remains that the city of
Ascanius, the third retreat of the Trojan gods, was destroyed by the daughter-city.
Besides, to effect this pitiful conglomerate of the war's leavings, much blood was spilt
on both sides. And how shall I speak in detail of the same wars, so often renewed in
subsequent reigns, though they seemed to have been finished by great victories; and of
wars that time after time were brought to an end by great slaughters, and which yet time
after time were renewed by the posterity of those who had made peace and struck treaties?
Of this calamitous history we have no small proof, in the fact that no subsequent king
closed the gates of war; and therefore with all their tutelar gods, no one of them reigned
in peace.
CHAP. 15.--WHAT MANNER
OF LIFE AND DEATH THE ROMAN KINGS HAD.
And what was the end of the kings themselves? Of
Romulus, a flattering legend tells us that he was assumed into heaven. But certain Roman
historians relate that he was torn in pieces by the senate for his ferocity, and that a
man, Julius Proculus, was suborned to give out that Romulus had appeared to him, and
through him commanded the Roman people to worship him as a god; and that in this way the
people, who were beginning to resent the action of the senate, were quieted and pacified.
For an eclipse of the sun had also happened; and this was attributed to the divine power
of Romulus by the ignorant multitude, who did not know that it was brought about by the
fixed laws of the sun's course: though this grief of the sun might rather have been
considered proof that Romulus had been slain, and that the crime was indicated by this
deprivation of the sun's light; as, in truth, was the case when the Lord was crucified
through the cruelty and impiety of the Jews. For it is sufficiently demonstrated that this
latter obscuration of the sun did not occur by the natural laws of the heavenly bodies,
because it was then the Jewish Passover, which is held only at full moon, whereas natural
eclipses of the sun happen only at the last quarter of the moon. Cicero, too, shows
plainly enough that the apotheosis of Romulus was imaginary rather than real, when, even
while he is praising him in one of Scipio's remarks in the De Republica, he says:
"Such a reputation had he acquired, that when he suddenly disappeared during an
eclipse of the sun, he was supposed to have been assumed into the number of the gods,
which could be supposed of no mortal who had not the highest reputation for
virtue." By these words, "he suddenly disappeared," we are to understand
that he was mysteriously made away with by the violence either of the tempest or of a
murderous assault. For their other writers speak not only of an eclipse, but of a sudden
storm also, which certainly either afforded opportunity for the crime, or itself made an
end of Romulus. And of Tullus Hostilius, who was the third king of Rome, and who was
himself destroyed by lightning, Cicero in the same book says, that "he was not
supposed to have been deified by this death, possibly because the Romans were unwilling W
vulgarize the promotion they were assured or persuaded of in the case of Romulus, lest
they should bring it into contempt by gratuitously assigning it to all and sundry."
In one of his invectives, too, he says, in round terms, "The founder of this city,
Romulus, we have raised to immortality and divinity by kindly celebrating his
services;" implying that his deification was not real, but reputed, and called so by
courtesy on account of his virtues. In the dialogue Hortensius. too, while speaking of the
regular eclipses of the sun, he says that they "produce the same darkness as covered
the death of Romulus, which happened during an eclipse of the sun." Here you see he
does not at all shrink from speaking of his "death," for Cicero was more of a
reasoner than an eulogist.
The other kings of Rome, too, with the exception
of Numa Pompilius and Ancus Marcius, who died natural deaths, what horrible ends they had!
Tullus Hostilius, the conqueror and destroyer of Alba, was, as I said, himself and all his
house consumed by lightning. Priscus Tarquinius was slain by his predecessor's sons.
Servius Tullius was foully murdered by his son-in-law Tarquinius Super-bus, who succeeded
him on the throne. Nor did so flagrant a parricide committed against Rome's best king
drive from their altars and shrines those gods who were said to have been moved by Paris'
adultery to treat poor Troy in this style, and abandon it to the fire and sword of the
Greeks. Nay, the very Tarquin who had murdered, was allowed to succeed his father-in-law.
And this infamous parricide, during the reign he had secured by murder, was allowed to
triumph in many victorious wars, and to build the Capitol from their spoils; the gods
meanwhile not departing, but abiding, and abetting, and suffering their king Jupiter to
preside and reign over them in that very splendid Capitol, the work of a parricide. For he
did not build the Capitol in the days of his innocence, and then suffer banishment for
subsequent crimes; but to that reign during which he built the Capitol, he won his way by
unnatural crime. And when he was afterwards banished by the Romans, and forbidden the
city, it was not for his own but his son's wickedness in the affair of Lucretia,--a crime
perpetrated not only without his cognizance, but in his absence. For at that time he was
besieging Ardea, and fighting Rome's battles; and we cannot say what he would have done
had he been aware of his son's crime. Notwithstanding, though his opinion was neither
inquired into nor ascertained, the people stripped him of royalty; and when he returned to
Rome with his army, it was admitted, but he was excluded, abandoned by his troops, and the
gates shut in his face. And yet, after he had appealed to the neighboring states, and
tormented the Romans with calamitous but unsuccessful wars, and when he was deserted by
the ally on whom he most depended, despairing of regaining the kingdom, he lived a retired
and quiet life for fourteen years, as it is reported, in Tusculum, a Roman town, where he
grew old in his wife's company, and at last terminated his days in a much more desirable
fashion than his father-in-law, who had perished by the hand of his son-in-law; his own
daughter abetting, if report be true. And this Tarquin the Romans called, not the Cruel,
nor the Infamous, but the Proud; their own pride perhaps resenting his tyrannical airs. So
little did they make of his murdering their best king, his own father-in-law, that they
elected him their own king. I wonder if it was not even more criminal in them to reward so
bountifully so great a criminal. And yet there was no word of the gods abandoning the
altars; unless, perhaps, some one will say in defence of the gods, that they remained at
Rome for the purpose of punishing the Romans, rather than of aiding and profiting them,
seducing them by empty victories, and wearing them out by severe wars. Such was the life
of the Romans under the kings during the much-praised epoch of the state which extends to
the expulsion of Tarquinius Superbus in the 243d year, during which all those victories,
which were bought with so much blood and such disasters, hardly pushed Rome's dominion
twenty miles from the city; a territory which would by no means bear comparison with that
of any petty Gaetulian state.
CHAP. 16.--OF THE FIRST
ROMAN CONSULS THE ONE OF WHOM DROVE THE OTHER FROM THE COUNTRY, AND SHORTLY AFTER PERISHED
AT ROME BY THE HAND OF A WOUNDED ENEMY, AND SO ENDED A CAREER OF UNNATURAL MURDERS.
To this epoch let us add also that of which
Sallust says, that it was ordered with justice and moderation, while the fear of Tarquin
and of a war with Etruria was impending. For so long as the Etrurians aided the efforts of
Tarquin to regain the throne, Rome was convulsed with distressing war. And therefore he
says that the state was ordered with justice and moderation, through the pressure of fear,
not through the influence of equity. And in this very brief period, how calamitous a year
was that in which consuls were first created, when the kingly power was abolished! They
did not fulfill their term of office. For Junius Brutus deprived his colleague Lucius
Tarquinius Collatinus, and banished him from the city; and shortly after he himself fell
in battle, at once slaying and slain, having formerly put to death his own sons and his
brothers-in-law, because he had discovered that they were conspiring to restore Tarquin.
It is this deed that Virgil shudders to record, even while he seems to praise it; for when
he says:
"And call his own rebellious seed For
menaced liberty to bleed,"
he immediately exclaims,
"Unhappy father! howsoe'er
The deed be judged by after days;"
that is to say, let posterity judge the deed as
they please, let them praise and extol the father who slew his sons, he is unhappy. And
then he adds,as if to console so unhappy a man:
"His country's love shall all o'erbear,
And unextinguished thirst of praise."
In the tragic end of Brutus, who slew his own
sons, and though he slew his enemy, Tarquin's son, yet could not survive him, but was
survived by Tarquin the elder, does not the innocence of his colleague Collatinus seem to
be vindicated, who, though a good citizen, suffered the same punishment as Tarquin
himself, when that tyrant was banished? For Brutus himself is said to have been a
relative of Tarquin. But Collatinus had the misfortune to bear not only the blood, but
the name of Tarquin. To change his name, then, not his country, would have been his fit
penalty: to abridge his name by this word, and be called simply L. Collatinus. But he was
not compelled to lose what he could lose without detriment, but was stripped of the honor
of the first consulship, and was banished from the land he loved. Is this, then, the glory
of Brutus--this injustice, alike detestable and profitless to the republic? Was it to this
he was driven by "his country's love, and unextinguished thirst of praise?"
When Tarquin the tyrant was expelled, L.
Tarquinius Collatinus, the husband of Lucretia, was created consul along with Brutus. How
justly the people acted, in looking more to the character than the name of a citizen! How
unjustly Brutus acted, in depriving of honor and country his colleague in that new office,
whom he might have deprived of his name, if it were so offensive to him! Such were the
ills, such the disasters, which fell out when the government was "ordered with
justice and moderation." Lucretius, too, who succeeded Brutus, was carried off by
disease before the end of that same year. So P. Valerius, who succeeded Collatinus, and M.
Horatius, who filled the vacancy occasioned by the death of Lucretius, completed that
disastrous and funereal year, which had five consuls. Such was the year in which the Roman
republic inaugurated the new honor and office of the consulship.
CHAP. 17.--OF THE DISASTERS WHICH VEXED THE ROMAN
REPUBLIC AFTER THE INAUGURATION OF THE CONSULSHIP, AND OF THE NON-INTERVENTION OF THE GODS
OF ROME.
After this, when their fears were gradually
diminished,--not because the wars ceased, but because they were not so furious,--that
period in which things were "ordered with justice and moderation" drew to an
end, and there followed that state of matters which Sallust thus briefly sketches:
"Then began the patricians to oppress the people as slaves, to condemn them to death
or scourging, as the kings had done, to drive them from their holdings, and to tyrannize
over those who had no property to lose. The people, overwhelmed by these oppressive
measures, and most of all by usury, and obliged to contribute both money and personal
service to the constant wars, at length took arms and seceded to Mount Aventine and Mount
Sacer, and thus secured for themselves tribunes and protective laws. But it was only the
second Punic war that put an end on both sides to discord and strife." But why
should I spend time in writing such things, or make others spend it in reading them? Let
the terse summary of Sallust suffice to intimate the misery of the republic through all
that long period till the second Punic war,--how it was distracted from without by
unceasing wars, and tom with civil broils and dissensions. So that those victories they
boast were not the substantial joys of the happy, but the empty comforts of wretched men,
and seductive incitements to turbulent men to concoct disasters upon disasters. And let
not the good and prudent Romans be angry at our saying this; and indeed we need neither
deprecate nor denounce their anger, for we know they will harbor none. For we speak no
more severely than their own authors, and much less elaborately and strikingly; yet they
diligently read these authors, and compel their children to learn them. But they who are
angry, what would they do to me were I to say what Sallust says? "Frequent mobs,
seditions, and at last civil wars, became common, while a few leading men on whom the
masses were dependent, affected supreme power under the seemly pretence of seeking the
good of senate and people; citizens were judged good or bad without reference to their
loyalty to the republic (for all were equally corrupt); but the wealthy and dangerously
powerful were esteemed good citizens, because they maintained the existing state of
things." Now, if those historians judged that an honorable freedom of speech required
that they should not be silent regarding the blemishes of their own state, which they have
in many places loudly applauded in their ignorance of that other and true city in which
citizenship is an everlasting dignity; what does it become us to do, whose liberty ought
to be so much greater, as our hope in God is better and more assured, when they impute to
our Christ the calamities of this age, in order that men of the less instructed and weaker
sort may be alienated from that city in which alone eternal and blessed life can be
enjoyed? Nor do we utter against their gods anything more horrible than their own authors
do, whom they read and circulate. For, indeed, all that we have said we have derived from
them, and there is much more to say of a worse kind which we are unable to say.
Where, then, were those gods who are supposed to
be justly worshipped for the slender and delusive prosperity of this world, when the
Romans, who were seduced to their service by lying wiles, were harassed by such
calamities? Where were they when Valerius the consul was killed while defending the
Capitol, that had been fired by exiles and slaves? He was himself better able to defend
the temple of Jupiter, than that crowd of divinities with their most high and mighty king,
whose temple he came to the rescue of were able to defend him. Where were they when the
city, worn out with unceasing seditions, was waiting in some kind of calm for the return
of the ambassadors who had been sent to Athens to borrow laws, and was desolated by
dreadful famine and pestilence? Where were they when the people, again distressed with
famine, created for the first time a prefect of the market; and when Spurius Melius, who,
as the famine increased, distributed corn to the furnishing masses, was accused of
aspiring to royalty, and at the instance of this same prefect, and on the authority of the
superannuated dictator L. Quintius, was put to death by Quintus Servilius, master of the
horse,--an event which occasioned a serious and dangerous riot? Where were they when that
very severe pestilence visited Rome, on account of which the people, after long and
wearisome and useless supplications of the helpless gods, conceived the idea of
celebrating Lectisternia, which had never been done before; that is to say, they set
couches in honor of the gods, which accounts for the name of this sacred rite, or rather
sacrilege? Where were they when, during ten successive years of reverses, the Roman
army suffered frequent and great losses among the Veians and would have been destroyed but
for the succor of Furius Camillus, who was afterwards banished by an ungrateful country?
Where were they when the Gauls took sacked, burned, and desolated Rome? Where were they
when that memorable pestilence wrought such destruction, in which Furius Camillus too
perished, who first defended the ungrateful republic from the Veians, and afterwards saved
it from the Gauls? Nay, during this plague, they introduced a new pestilence of scenic
entertainments, which spread its more fatal contagion, not to the bodies, but the morals
of the Romans? Where were they when another frightful pestilence visited the city--I mean
the poisonings imputed to an incredible number of noble Roman matrons, whose characters
were infected with a disease more fatal than any plague? Or when both consuls at the head
of the army were beset by the Samnites in the Caudine Forks, and forced to strike a
shameful treaty, 600 Roman knights being kept as hostages; while the troops, having laid
down their arms, and being stripped of everything, were made to pass under the yoke with
one garment each? Or when, in the midst of a serious pestilence, lightning struck the
Roman camp and killed many? Or when Rome was driven, by the violence of another
intolerable plague, to send to Epidaurus for AEsculapius as a god of medicine; since the
frequent adulteries of Jupiter in his youth had not perhaps left this king of all who so
long reigned in the Capitol, any leisure for the study of medicine? Or when, at one time,
the Lucanians, Brutians, Samnites, Tuscans, and Senonian Gauls conspired against Rome, and
first slew her ambassadors, then overthrew an army under the praetor, putting to the sword
13,000 men, besides the commander and seven tribunes? Or when the people, after the
serious and long-continued disturbances at Rome, at last plundered the city and withdrew
to Janiculus; a danger so grave, that Hortensius was created dictator,--an office which
they had recourse to only in extreme emergencies; and he, having brought back the people,
died while yet he retained his office,--an event without precedent in the case of any
dictator, and which was a shame to those gods who had now AEsculapius among them?
At that time, indeed, so many wars were
everywhere engaged in, that through scarcity of soldiers they enrolled for military
service the proletarii, who received this name, because, being too poor to equip for
military service, they had leisure to beget offspring. Pyrrhus, king of Greece, and at
that time of widespread renown, was invited by the Tarentines to enlist himself against
Rome. It was to him that Apollo, when consulted regarding the issue of his enterprise,
uttered with some pleasantry so ambiguous an oracle, that whichever alternative happened,
the god himself should be counted divine. For he so worded the oracle that whether
Pyrrhus was conquered by the Romans, or the Romans by Pyrrhus,the soothsaying god would
securely await the issue. And then what frightful massacres of both armies ensued! Yet
Pyrrhus remained conqueror, and would have been able now to proclaim Apollo a true
diviner, as he understood the oracle, had not the Romans been the conquerors in the next
engagement. And while such disastrous wars were being waged, a terrible disease broke out
among the women. For the pregnant women died before delivery. And AEsculapius, I fancy,
excused himself in this matter on the ground that he professed to be arch-physician, not
midwife. Cattle, too, similarly perished; so that it was believed that the whole race of
animals was destined to become extinct. Then what shall I say of that memorable winter in
which the weather was so incredibly severe, that in the Forum frightfully deep snow lay
for forty days together, and the Tiber was frozen? Had such things happened in our time,
what accusations we should have heard from our enemies ! And that other great pestilence,
which raged so long and carried off so many; what shall I say of it? Spite of all the
drugs of AEsculapius, it only grew worse in its second year, till at last recourse was had
to the Sibylline books,--a kind of oracle which, as Cicero says in his De Divinatione,
owes significance to its interpreters, who make doubtful conjectures as they can or as
they wish. In this instance, the cause of the plague was said to be that so many temples
had been used as private residences. And thus AEsculapius for the present escaped the
charge of either ignominious negligence or want of skill. But why were so many allowed to
occupy sacred tenements without interference, unless because supplication had long been
addressed in vain to such a crowd of gods, and so by degrees the sacred places were
deserted of worshippers, and being thus vacant, could without offence be put at least to
some human uses? And the temples, which were at that time laboriously recognized and
restored that the plague might be stayed, fell afterwards into disuse, and were again
devoted to the same human uses. Had they not thus lapsed into obscurity, it could not have
been pointed to as proof of Varro's great erudition, that in his work on sacred places he
cites so many that were unknown. Meanwhile, the restoration of the temples procured no
cure of the plague, but only a fine excuse for the gods.
CHAP. 18.--THE DISASTERS
SUFFERED BY THE ROMANS IN THE PUNIC WARS, WHICH WERE NOT MITIGATED BY THE PROTECTION OF
THE GODS.
In the Punic wars, again, when victory hung so
long in the balance between the two kingdoms, when two powerful nations were straining
every nerve and using all their resources against one another, how many smaller kingdoms
were crushed, how many large and flourishing cities were demolished, how many states were
overwhelmed and ruined, how many districts and lands far and near were desolated! How
often were the victors on either side vanquished ! What multitudes of men, both of those
actually in arms and of others, were destroyed ! What huge navies, too, were crippled in
engagements, or were sunk by every kind of marine disaster ! Were we to attempt to recount
or mention these calamities, we should become writers of history. At that period Rome was
mightily perturbed, and resorted to vain and ludicrous expedients. On the authority of the
Sibylline books, the secular games were re-appointed, which had been inaugurated a century
before, but had faded into oblivion in happier times. The games consecrated to the
infernal gods were also renewed by the pontiffs; for they, too, had sunk into disuse in
the better times. And no wonder; for when they were renewed, the great abundance of dying
men made all hell rejoice at its riches, and give itself up to sport: for certainly the
ferocious wars, and disastrous quarrels, and bloody victories--now on one side, and now on
the other--though most calamitous to men, afforded great sport and a rich banquet to the
devils. But in the first Punic war there was no more disastrous event than the Roman
defeat in which Regulus was taken. We made mention of him in the two former books as an
incontestably great man, who had before conquered and subdued the Carthaginians, and who
would have put an end to the first Punic war, had not an inordinate appetite for praise
and glory prompted him to impose on the worn-out Carthagians harder conditions than they
could bear. If the unlooked-for captivity and unseemly bondage of this man, his fidelity
to his oath, and his surpassingly cruel death, do not bring a blush to the face of the
gods, it is true that they are brazen and bloodless.
Nor were there wanting at that time very heavy
disasters within the city itself. For the Tiber was extraordinarily flooded, and destroyed
almost all the lower parts of the city; some buildings being carried away by the violence
of the torrent, while others were soaked to rottenness by the water that stood round them
even after the flood was gone. This visitation was followed by a fire which was still more
destructive, for it consumed some of the loftier buildings round the Forum, and spared not
even its own proper temple, that of Vesta, in which virgins chosen for this honor, or
rather for this punishment, had been employed in conferring, as it were, everlasting life
on fire, by ceaselessly feeding it with fresh fuel. But at the time we speak of, the fire
in the temple was not content with being kept alive: it raged. And when the virgins,
scared by its vehemence, were unable to save those fatal images which had already brought
destruction on three cities in which they had been received, Metellus the priest,
forgetful of his own safety, rushed in and rescued the sacred things, though he was half
roasted in doing so. For either the fire did not recognize even him, or else the goddess
of fire was there,--a goddess who would not have fled from the fire supposing she had been
there. But here you see how a man could be of greater service to Vesta than she could be
to him. Now if these gods could not avert the fire from themselves, what help against
flames or flood could they bring to the state of which they were the reputed guardians?
Facts have shown that they were useless. These objections of ours would be idle if our
adversaries maintained that their idols are consecrated rather as symbols of things
eternal, than to secure the blessings of time; and that thus, though the symbols, like all
material and visible things, might perish, no damage thereby resulted to the things for
the sake of which they had been consecrated, while, as for the images themselves, they
could be renewed again for the same purposes they had formerly served. But with lamentable
blindness, they suppose that, through the intervention of perishable gods, the earthly
well-being and temporal prosperity of the state can be preserved from perishing. And so,
when they are reminded that even when the gods remained among them this well-being and
prosperity were blighted, they blush to change the opinion they are unable to defend
CHAP. 19.--OF THE
CALAMITY OF THE SECOND PUNIC WAR, WHICH CONSUMED THE STRENGTH OF BOTH PARTIES.
As to the second Punic war, it were tedious to
recount the disasters it brought on both the nations engaged in so protracted and shifting
a war, that (by the acknowledgment even of those writers who have made it their object not
so much to narrate the wars as to eulogize the dominion of Rome) the people who remained
victorious were less like conquerors than conquered. For, when Hannibal poured out of
Spain over the Pyrenees, and overran Gaul, and burst through the Alps, and during his
whole course gathered strength by plundering and subduing as he went, and inundated Italy
like a torrent, how bloody were the wars, and how continuous the engagements, that were
fought ! How often were the Romans vanquished ! How many towns went over to the enemy, and
how many were taken and subdued ! What fearful battles there were, and how often did the
defeat of the Romans shed lustre on the arms of Hannibal ! And what shall I say of the
wonderfully crushing defeat at Cannae, where even Hannibal, cruel as he was, was yet sated
with the blood of his bitterest enemies, and gave orders that they be spared? From this
field of battle he sent to Carthage three bushels of gold rings, signifying that so much
of the rank of Rome had that day fallen, that it was easier to give an idea of it by
measure than by numbers and that the frightful slaughter of the common rank and file whose
bodies lay undistinguished by the ring, and who were numerous in proportion to their
meanness, was rather to be conjectured than accurately reported. In fact, such was the
scarcity of soldiers after this, that the Romans impressed their criminals on the promise
of impunity, and their slaves by the bribe of liberty, and out of these infamous classes
did not so much recruit as create an army. But these slaves, or, to give them all their
titles, these freed-men who were enlisted to do battle for the republic of Rome, lacked
arms. And so they took arms from the temples, as if the Romans were saying to their gods:
Lay down those arms you have held so long in vain, if by chance our slaves may be able to
use to purpose what you, our gods, have been impotent to use. At that time, too, the
public treasury was too low to pay the soldiers, and private resources were used for
public purposes; and so generously did individuals contribute of their property, that,
saving the gold ring and bulla which each wore, the pitiful mark of his rank, no senator,
and much less any of the other orders and tribes, reserved any gold for his own use. But
if in our day they were reduced to this poverty, who would be able to endure their
reproaches, barely endurable as they are now, when more money is spent on actors for the
sake of a superfluous gratification, than was then disbursed to the legions?
CHAP. 20.--OF THE
DESTRUCTION OF THE SAGUNTINES, WHO RECEIVED NO HELP FROM THE ROMAN GODS, THOUGH PERISHING
ON ACCOUNT OF THEIR FIDELITY TO ROME.
But among all the disasters of the second Punic
war, there occurred none more lamentable, or calculated to excite deeper complaint, than
the fate of the Saguntines. This city of Spain, eminently friendly to Rome, was destroyed
by its fidelity to the Roman people. For when Hannibal had broken treaty with the Romans,
he sought occasion for provoking them to war, and accordingly made a fierce assault upon
Saguntum. When this was reported at Rome, ambassadors were sent to Hannibal, urging him to
raise the siege; and when this remonstrance was neglected, they proceeded to Carthage,
lodged complaint against the breaking of the treaty,and returned to Rome without
accomplishing their object. Meanwhile the siege went on; and in the eighth or ninth month,
this opulent but ill-fated city, dear as it was to its own state and to Rome, was taken,
and subjected to treatment which one cannot read, much less narrate, without horror. And
yet, because it bears directly on the matter in hand, I will briefly touch upon it. First,
then, famine wasted the Saguntines, so that even human corpses were eaten by some: so at
least it is recorded. Subsequently, when thoroughly worn out, that they might at least
escape the ignominy of falling into the hands of Hannibal, they publicly erected a huge
funeral pile, and cast themselves into its flames, while at the same time they slew their
children and themselves with the sword. Could these gods, these debauchees and gourmands,
whose mouths water for fat sacrifices, and whose lips utter lying divinations,--could they
not do anything in a case like this? Could they not interfere for the preservation of a
city closely allied to the Roman people, or prevent it perishing for its fidelity to that
alliance of which they themselves had been the mediators? Saguntum, faithfully keeping the
treaty it had entered into before these gods, and to which it had firmly bound itself by
an oath, was besieged, taken, and destroyed by a perjured person. If afterwards, when
Hannibal was close to the walls of Rome, it was the gods who terrified him with lightning
and tempest, and drove him to a distance, why, I ask, did they not thus interfere before?
For I make bold to say, that this demonstration with the tempest would have been more
honorably made in defence of the allies of Rome--who were in danger on account of their
reluctance to break faith with the Romans, and had no resources of their own--than in
defence of the Romans themselves, who were fighting in their own cause, and had abundant
resources to oppose Hannibal. If, then, they had been the guardians of Roman prosperity
and glory, they would have preserved that glory from the stain of this Saguntine disaster;
and how silly it is to believe that Rome was preserved from destruction at the hands of
Hannibal by the guardian care of those gods who were unable to rescue the city of Saguntum
from perishing through its fidelity to the alliance of Rome. If the population of Saguntum
had been Christian, and had suffered as it did for the Christian faith (though, of course,
Christians would not have used fire and sword against their own persons), they would have
suffered with that hope which springs from faith in Christ--the hope not of a brief
temporal reward, but of unending and eternal bliss. What, then, will the advocates and
apologists of these gods say in their defence, when charged with the blood of these
Saguntines; for they are professedly worshipped and invoked for this very purpose of
securing prosperity in this fleeting and transitory life? Can anything be said but what
was alleged in the case of Regulus' death? For though there is a difference between the
two cases, the one being an individual, the other a whole community, yet the cause of
destruction was in both cases the keeping of their plighted troth. For it was this which
made Regulus willing to return to his enemies, and this which made the Saguntines
unwilling to revolt to their enemies. Does, then, the keeping of faith provoke the gods to
anger? Or is it possible that not only individuals, but even entire communities, perish
while the gods are propitious to them? Let our adversaries choose which alternative they
will. If, on the one hand, those gods are enraged at the keeping of faith, let them enlist
perjured persons as their worshippers. If, on the other hand, men and states can suffer
great and terrible calamities, and at last perish while favored by the gods, then does
their worship not produce happiness as its fruit. Let those, therefore, who suppose that
they have fallen into distress because their religious worship has been abolished, lay
aside their anger; for it were quite possible that did the gods not only remain with them,
but regard them with favor, they might yet be left to mourn an unhappy lot, or might, even
like Regulus and the Saguntines, be horribly tormented, and at last perish miserably.
CHAP. 21.--OF THE
INGRATITUDE OF ROME TO SCIPIO, ITS DELIVERER, AND OF ITS MANNERS DURING THE PERIOD WHICH
SALLUST DESCRIBES AS THE BEST.
Omitting many things, that I may not exceed the
limits of the work I have proposed to myself, I come to the epoch between the second and
last Punic wars, during which, according to Sallust, the Romans lived with the greatest
virtue and concord. Now, in this period of virtue and harmony, the great Scipio, the
liberator of Rome and Italy, who had with surprising ability brought to a close the second
Punic war--that horrible, destructive, dangerous contest--who had defeated Hannibal and
subdued Carthage, and whose whole life is said to have been dedicated to the gods, and
cherished in their temples,--this Scipio, after such a triumph, was obliged to yield to
the accusations of his enemies, and to leave his country, which his valor had saved and
liberated, to spend the remainder of his days in the town of Liternum, so indifferent to a
recall from exile, that he is said to have given orders that not even his remains should
lie in his ungrateful country. It was at that time also that the pro-consul Cn. Manlius,
after subduing the Galatians, introduced into Rome the luxury of Asia, more destructive
than all hostile armies. It was then that iron bedsteads and expensive carpets were first
used; then, too, that female singers were admitted at banquets, and other licentious
abominations were introduced. But at present I meant to speak, not of the evils men
voluntarily practise, but of those they suffer in spite of themselves. So that the case of
Scipio, who succumbed to his enemies, and died in exile from the country he had rescued,
was mentioned by me as being pertinent to the present discussion; for this was the reward
he received from those Roman gods whose temples he saved from Hannibal, and who are
worshipped only for the sake of securing temporal happiness. But since Sallust, as we have
seen, declares that the manners of Rome were never better than at that time, I therefore
judged it right to mention the Asiatic luxury then introduced, that it might be seen that
what he says is true, only when that period is compared with the others during which the
morals were certainly worse, and the factions more violent. For at that time--I mean
between the second and third Punic war--that notorious Lex Voconia was passed, which
prohibited a man from making a woman, even an only daughter, his heir; than which law I am
at a loss to conceive what could be more unjust. It is true that in the interval between
these two Punic wars the misery of Rome was somewhat less. Abroad, indeed, their forces
were consumed by wars, yet also consoled by victories; while at home there were not such
disturbances as at other times. But when the last Punic war had terminated in the utter
destruction of Rome's rival, which quickly succumbed to the other Scipio, who thus earned
for himself the, surname of Africanus, then the Roman republic was overwhelmed with such a
host of ills, which sprang from the corrupt manners induced by prosperity and security,
that the sudden overthrow of Carthage is seen to have injured Rome more seriously than her
long-continued hostility. During the whole subsequent period down to the time of Caesar
Augustus, who seems to have entirely deprived the Romans of liberty,--a liberty, indeed,
which in their own judgment was no longer glorious, but full of broils and dangers, and
which now was quite enervated and languishing,--and who submitted all things again to the
will of a monarch, and infused as it were a new life into the sickly old age of the
republic, and inaugurated a fresh rÈgime;--during this whole period, I say, many military
disasters were sustained on a variety of occasions, all of which I here pass by. There was
specially the treaty of Numantia, blotted as it was with extreme disgrace; for the sacred
chickens, they say, flew out of the coop, and thus augured disaster to Mancinus the
consul; just as if, during all these years in which that little city of Numantia had
withstood the besieging army of Rome, and had become a terror to the republic, the other
generals had all marched against it under unfavorable auspices.
CHAP. 22.--OF THE EDICT
OF MITHRIDATES, COMMANDING THAT ALL ROMAN CITIZENS FOUND IN ASIA SHOULD BE SLAIN.
These things, I say, I pass in silence; but I can
by no means be silent regarding the order given by Mithridates, king of Asia, that on one
day all Roman citizens residing anywhere in Asia (where great numbers of them were
following their private business) should be put to death: and this order was executed. How
miserable a spectacle was then presented, when each man was suddenly and treacherously
murdered wherever he happened to be, in the field or on the road, in the town, in his own
home, or in the street, in market or temple, in bed or at table ! Think of the groans of
the dying, the tears of the spectators, and even of the executioners themselves. For how
cruel a necessity was it that compelled the hosts of these victims, not only to see these
abominable butcheries in their own houses, but even to perpetrate them: to change their
countenance suddenly from the bland kindliness of friendship, and in the midst of peace
set about the business of war; and, shall I say, give and receive wounds, the slain being
pierced in body, the slayer in spirit ! Had all these murdered persons, then, despised
auguries? Had they neither public nor household gods to consult when they left their homes
and set out on that fatal journey? If they had not, our adversaries have no reason to
complain of these Christian times in this particular, since long ago the Romans despised
auguries as idle. If, on the other hand, they did consult omens, let them tell us what
good they got thereby, even when such things were not prohibited, but authorized, by
human, if not by divine law.
CHAP. 23.--OF THE INTERNAL DISASTERS WHICH VEXED
THE ROMAN REPUBLIC, AND FOLLOWED A PORTENTOUS MADNESS WHICH SEIZED ALL THE DOMESTIC
ANIMALS.
But let us now mention, as succinctly as
possible, those disasters which were still more vexing, because nearer home; I mean those
discords which are erroneously called civil, since they destroy civil interests. The
seditions had now become urban wars, in which blood was freely shed, and in which parties
raged against one another, not with wrangling and verbal contention, but with physical
force and arms. What a sea of Roman blood was shed, what desolations and devastations were
occasioned in Italy by wars social, wars servile wars civil! Before the Latins began the
social war against Rome, all the animals used in the service of man--dogs, horses, asses,
oxen, and all the rest that are subject to man--suddenly grew wild, and forgot their
domesticated tameness, forsook their stalls and wandered at large, and could not be
closely approached either by strangers or their own masters without danger. If this was a
portent, how serious a calamity must have been portended by a plague which, whether
portent or no, was in itself a serious calamity! Had it happened in our day, the heathen
would have been more rabid against us than their animals were against them.
CHAP. 24.--OF THE CIVIL
DISSENSION OCCASIONED BY THE SEDITION OF THE GRACCHI.
The civil wars originated in the seditions which
the Gracchi excited regarding the agrarian laws; for they were minded to divide among the
people the lands which were wrongfully possessed by the nobility. But to reform an abuse
of so long standing was an enterprise full of peril, or rather, as the event proved, of
destruction. For what disasters accompanied the death of the older Gracchus ! what
slaughter ensued when, shortly after, the younger brother met the same fate! For noble and
ignoble were indiscriminately massacred; and this not by legal authority and procedure,
but by mobs and armed rioters. After the death of the younger Gracchus, the consul Lucius
Opimius, who had given battle to him within the city, and had defeated and put to the
sword both himself and his confederates, and had massacred many of the citizens,
instituted a judicial examination of others, and is reported to have put to death as many
as 3000 men. From this it may be gathered how many fell in the riotous encounters, when
the result even of a judicial investigation was so bloody. The assassin of Gracchus
himself sold his head to the consul for its weight in gold, such being the previous
agreement. In this massacre, too, Marcus Fulvius, a man of consular rank, with all his
children, was put to death.
CHAP. 25.--OF THE TEMPLE
OF CONCORD, WHICH WAS ERECTED BY A DECREE OF THE SENATE ON THE SCENE OF THESE SEDITIONS
AND MASSACRES.
A pretty decree of the senate it was, truly, by
which the temple of Concord was built on the spot where that disastrous rising had taken
place, and where so many citizens of every rank had fallen. I suppose it was that the
monument of the Gracchi's punishment might strike the eye and affect the memory of the
pleaders. But what was this but to deride the gods, by building a temple to that goddess
who, had she been in the city, would not have suffered herself to be torn by such
dissensions? Or was it that Concord was chargeable with that bloodshed because she had
deserted the minds of the citizens, and was therefore incarcerated in that temple? For if
they had any regard to consistency, why did they not rather erect on that site a temple of
Discord? Or is there a reason for Concord being a goddess while Discord is none? Does the
distinction of Labeo hold here, who would have made the one a good, the other an evil
deity?--a distinction which seems to have been suggested to him by the mere fact of his
observing at Rome a temple to Fever as well as one to Health. But, on the same ground,
Discord as well as Concord ought to be deified. A hazardous venture the Romans made in
provoking so wicked a goddess, and in forgetting that the destruction of Troy had been
occasioned by her taking offence. For, being indignant that she was not invited with the
other gods [to the nuptials of Peleus and Thetis], she created dissension among the three
goddesses by sending in the golden apple, which occasioned strife in heaven, victory to
Venus, the rape of Helen, and the destruction of Troy. Wherefore, if she was perhaps
offended that the Romans had not thought her worthy of a temple among the other gods in
their city, and therefore disturbed the state with such tumults, to how much fiercer
passion would she be roused when she saw the temple of her adversary erected on the scene
of that massacre, or, in other words, on the scene of her own handiwork Those wise and
learned men are enraged at our laughing at these follies; and yet, being worshippers of
good and bad divinities alike, they cannot escape this dilemma about Concord and Discord:
either they have neglected the worship of these goddesses, and preferred Fever and War, to
whom there are shrines erected of great antiquity, or they have worshipped them, and after
all Concord has abandoned them, and Discord has tempestuously hurled them into civil wars.
CHAP. 26.--OF THE
VARIOUS KINDS OF WARS WHICH FOLLOWED THE BUILDING OF THE TEMPLE OF CONCORD.
But they supposed that, in erecting the temple of
Concord within the view of the orators, as a memorial of the punishment and death of the
Gracchi, they were raising an effectual obstacle to sedition. How much
effect it had, is indicated by the still more
deplorable wars that followed. For after this the orators endeavored not to avoid the
example of the Gracchi, but to surpass their projects; as did Lucius Saturninus, a tribune
of the people, and Caius Servilius the praetor, and some time after Marcus Drusus, all of
whom stirred seditions which first of all occasioned bloodshed, and then the social wars
by which Italy was grievously injured, and reduced to a piteously desolate and wasted
condition. Then followed the servile war and the civil wars; and in them what battles were
fought, and what blood was shed, so that almost all the peoples of Italy, which formed the
main strength of the Roman empire, were conquered as if they were barbarians ! Then even
historians themselves find it difficult to explain how the servile war was begun by a very
few, certainly less than seventy gladiators, what numbers of fierce and cruel men attached
themselves to these, how many of the Roman generals this band defeated, and how it laid
waste many districts and cities. And that was not the only servile war: the province of
Macedonia, and subsequently Sicily and the sea-coast, were also depopulated by bands of
slaves. And who can adequately describe either the horrible atrocities which the pirates
first committed, or the wars they afterwards maintained against Rome?
CHAP. 27.--OF THE CIVIL
WAR BETWEEN MARIUS AND SYLLA.
But when Marius, stained with the blood of his
fellow-citizens, whom the rage of party had sacrificed, was in his turn vanquished and
driven from the city, it had scarcely time to breathe freely, when, to use the words of
Cicero, "Cinna and Marius together returned and took possession of it. Then, indeed,
the foremost men in the state were put to death, its lights quenched. Sylla afterwards
avenged this cruel victory; but we need not say with what loss of life, and with what ruin
to the republic." For of this vengeance, which was more destructive than if the
crimes which it punished had been committed with impunity, Lucan says: "The cure was
excessive, and too closely resembled the disease. The guilty perished, but when none but
the guilty survived: and then private hatred and anger, unbridled by law, were allowed
free indulgence." In that war between Marius and Sylla, besides those who fell in
the field of battle, the city, too, was filled with corpses in its streets, squares,
markets, theatres, and temples; so that it is not easy to reckon whether the victors slew
more before or after victory, that they might be, or because they were, victors. As soon
as Marius triumphed, and returned from exile, besides the butcheries everywhere
perpetrated, the head of the consul Octavius was exposed on the rostrum: Caesar and
Fimbria were assassinated in their own houses; the two Crassi, father and son, were
murdered in one another's sight; Bebius and Numitorius were disembowelled by being dragged
with hooks; Catulus escaped the hands of his enemies by drinking poison; Merula, the
flamen of Jupiter, cut his veins and made a libation of his own blood to his god.
Moreover, every one whose salutation Marius did not answer by giving his hand, was at once
cut down before his face.
CHAP. 28.--OF THE
VICTORY OF SYLLA, THE AVENGER OF THE CRUELTIES OF MARIUS.
Then followed the victory of Sylla, the so-called
avenger of the cruelties of Marius. But not only was his victory purchased with great
bloodshed; but when hostilities were finished, hostility survived, and the subsequent
peace was bloody as the war. To the former and still recent massacres of the elder Marius,
the younger Marius and Carbo, who belonged to the same party, added greater atrocities.
For when Sylla approached, and they despaired not only of victory, but of life itself,
they made a promiscuous massacre of friends and foes. And, not satisfied with staining
every corner of Rome with blood, they besieged the senate, and led forth the senators to
death from the curia as from a prison. Mucius Scaevola the pontiff was slain at the altar
of Vesta, which he had clung to because no spot in Rome was more sacred than her temple;
and his blood well-nigh extinguished the fire which was kept alive by the constant care of
the virgins. Then Sylla entered the city victorious, after having slaughtered in the Villa
Publica, not by combat, but by an order, 7000 men who had surrendered, and were therefore
unarmed; so fierce was the rage of peace itself, even after the rage of war was extinct.
Moreover, throughout the whole city every partisan of Sylla slew whom he pleased, so that
the number of deaths went beyond computation, till it was suggested to Sylla that he
should allow some to survive, that the victors might not be destitute of subjects. Then
this furious and promiscuous licence to murder was checked, and much relief was expressed
at the publication of the proscription list, containing though it did the death-warrant of
two thousand men of the highest ranks, the senatorial and equestrian. The large number was
indeed saddening, but it was consolatory that a limit was fixed; nor was the grief at the
numbers slain so great as the joy that the rest were secure. But this very security,
hard-hearted as it was, could not but bemoan the exquisite torture applied to some of
those who had been doomed to die. For one was torn to pieces by the unarmed hands of the
executioners; men treating a living man more savagely than wild beasts are used to tear an
abandoned corpse. Another had his eyes dug out, and his limbs cut away bit by bit, and was
forced to live a long while, or rather to die a long while, in such torture. Some
celebrated cities were put up to auction, like farms; and one was collectively condemned
to slaughter, just as an individual criminal would be condemned to death. These things
were done in peace when the war was over, not that victory might be more speedily
obtained, but that, after being obtained, it might not be thought lightly of. Peace Pied
with war in cruelty, and surpassed it: for while war overthrew armed hosts, peace slew the
defenceless. War gave liberty to him who was attacked, to strike if he could; peace
granted to the survivors not life, but an unresisting death.
CHAP. 29.--A COMPARISON OF THE DISASTERS WHICH
ROME EXPERIENCED DURING THE GOTHIC AND GALLIC INVASIONS, WITH THOSE OCCASIONED BY THE
AUTHORS OF THE CIVIL WARS.
What fury of foreign nations, what barbarian
ferocity, can compare with this victory of citizens over citizens? Which was more
disastrous, more hideous, more bitter to Rome: the recent Gothic and the old Gallic
invasion, or the cruelty displayed by Marius and Sylla and their partisans against men who
were members of the same body as themselves? The Gauls, indeed, massacred all the senators
they found in any part of the city except the Capitol, which alone was defended; but they
at least sold life to those who were in the Capitol, though they might have starved them
out if they could not have stormed it. The Goths, again, spared so many senators, that it
is the more surprising that they killed any. But Sylla, while Marius was still living,
established himself as conqueror in the Capitol, which the Gauls had not violated, and
thence issued his death-warrants; and when Marius had escaped by flight, though destined
to return more fierce and bloodthirsty than ever, Sylla issued from the Capitol even
decrees of the senate for the slaughter and confiscation of the property of many citizens.
Then, when Sylla left, what did the Marian faction hold sacred or spare, when they gave no
quarter even to Mucius, a citizen, a senator, a pontiff, and though clasping in piteous
embrace the very altar in which, they say, reside the destinies of Rome? And that final
proscription list of Sylla's, not to mention countless other massacres, despatched more
senators than the Goths could even plunder.
CHAP. 30.--OF THE
CONNECTION OF THE WARS WHICH WITH GREAT SEVERITY AND FREQUENCY FOLLOWED ONE ANOTHER BEFORE
THE ADVENT OF CHRIST.
With what effrontery, then, with what assurance,
with what impudence, with what folly, or rather insanity, do they refuse to impute these
disasters to their own gods, and impute the present to our Christ! These bloody civil
wars, more distressing, by the avowal of their own historians, than any foreign wars, and
which were pronounced to be not merely calamitous, but absolutely ruinous to the republic,
began long before the coming of Christ, and gave birth to one another; so that a
concatenation of unjustifiable causes led from the wars of Marius and Sylla to those of
Sertorius and Cataline, of whom the one was proscribed, the other brought up by Sylla;
from this to the war of Lepidus and Catulus, of whom the one wished to rescind, the other
to defend the acts of Sylla; from this to the war of Pompey and Caesar, of whom Pompey had
been a partisan of Sylla, whose power he equalled or even surpassed, while Caesar
condemned Pompey's power because it was not his own, and yet exceeded it when Pompey was
defeated and slain. From him the chain of civil wars extended to the second Caesar,
afterwards called Augustus, and in whose reign Christ was born. For even Augustus himself
waged many civil wars; and in these wars many of the foremost men perished, among them
that skilful manipulator of the republic, Cicero. Caius [Julius] Caesar, when he had
conquered Pompey, though he used his victory with clemency, and granted to men of the
opposite faction both life and honors, was suspected of aiming at royalty, and was
assassinated in the curia by a party of noble senators, who had conspired to defend the
liberty of the republic. His power was then coveted by Antony, a man of very different
character, polluted and debased by every kind of vice, who was strenuously resisted by
Cicero on the same plea of defending the liberty of the republic. At this juncture that
other Caesar, the adopted son of Caius, and afterwards, as I said, known by the name of
Augustus, had made his dÈbut as a young man of remarkable genius. This youthful Caesar
was favored by Cicero, in order that his influence might counteract that of Antony; for he
hoped that Caesar would overthrow and blast the power of Antony, and establish a free
state,--so blind and unaware of the future was he: for that very young man, whose
advancement and influence he was fostering, allowed Cicero to be killed as the seal of an
alliance with Antony, and subjected to his own rule the very liberty of the republic in
defence of which he had made so many orations.
CHAP. 31.--THAT IT IS
EFFRONTERY TO IMPUTE THE PRESENT TROUBLES TO CHRIST AND THE PROHIBITION OF POLYTHEISTIC
WORSHIP SINCE EVEN WHEN THE GODS WERE WORSHIPPED SUCH CALAMITIES BEFELL THE PEOPLE.
Let those who have no gratitude to Christ for His
great benefits, blame their own gods for these heavy disasters. For certainly when these
occurred the altars of the gods were kept blazing, and there rose the mingled fragrance of
"Sabaean incense and fresh garlands;" the priests were clothed with honor,
the shrines were maintained in splendor; sacrifices, games, sacred ecstasies, were common
in the temples; while the blood of the citizens was being so freely shed, not only in
remote places, but among the very altars of the gods. Cicero did not choose to seek
sanctuary in a temple, because Mucius had sought it there in vain. But they who most
unpardonably calumniate this Christian era, are the very men who either themselves fled
for asylum to the places specially dedicated to Christ, or were led there by the
barbarians that they might be safe. In short, not to recapitulate the many instances I
have cited, and not to add to their number others which it were tedious to enumerate, this
one thing I am persuaded of, and this every impartial judgment will readily acknowledge,
that if the human race had received Christianity before the Punic wars, and if the same
desolating calamities which these wars brought upon Europe and Africa had followed the
introduction of Christianity, there is no one of those who now accuse us who would not
have attributed them to our religion. How intolerable would their accusations have been,
at least so far as the Romans are concerned, if the Christian religion had been received
and diffused prior to the invasion of the Gauls, or to the ruinous floods and fires which
desolated Rome, or to those most calamitous of all events, the civil wars! And those other
disasters, which were of so strange a nature that they were reckoned prodigies, had they
happened since the Christian era, to whom but to the Christians would they have imputed
these as crimes? I do not speak of those things which were rather surprising than
hurtful,--oxen speaking, unborn infants articulating some words in their mothers' wombs,
serpents flying, hens and women being changed into the other sex; and other similar
prodigies which, whether true or false, are recorded not in their imaginative, but in
their historical works, and which do not injure, but only astonish men. But when it rained
earth, when it rained chalk, when it rained stones--not hailstones, but real stones--this
certainly was calculated to do serious damage. We have read in their books that the fires
of Etna, pouring down from the top of the mountain to the neighboring shore, caused the
sea to boil, so that rocks were burnt up, and the pitch of ships began to run,--a
phenomenon incredibly surprising, but at the same time no less hurtful. By the same
violent heat, they relate that on another occasion Sicily was filled with cinders, so that
the houses of the city Catina were destroyed and buried under them,--a calamity which
moved the Romans to pity them, and remit their tribute for that year. One may also read
that Africa, which had by that time become a province of Rome, was visited by a prodigious
multitude of locusts, which, after consuming the fruit and foliage of the trees, were
driven into the sea in one vast and measureless cloud; so that when they were drowned and
cast upon the shore the air was polluted, and so serious a pestilence produced that in the
kingdom of Masinissa alone they say there perished 800,000 persons, besides a much greater
number in the neighboring districts. At Utica they assure us that, of 30,000 soldiers then
garrisoning it, there survived only ten. Yet which of these disasters, suppose they
happened now, would not be attributed to the Christian religion by those who thus
thoughtlessly accuse us, and whom we are compelled to answer? And yet to their own gods
they attribute none of these things, though they worship them for the sake of escaping
lesser calamities of the same kind, and do not reflect that they who formerly worshipped
them were not preserved from these serious disasters.
BOOK FOUR
TABLE OF CONTENTS
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