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Outline:
I. Introduction: Out of the abundance of his experience the author
will advise young men as to the pagan literature, showing them what to
accept, and what to reject.
II. To the Christian the life eternal is the supreme goal, and the
guide to this life is the Holy Scriptures; but since young men cannot
appreciate the deep thoughts contained therein, they are to study the
profane writings, in which truth appears as in a mirror.
III. Profane learning should ornament the mind, as foliage graces
the fruit-bearing tree.
IV. In studying pagan lore one must discriminate between the
helpful and the injurious, accepting the one, but closing one's ears
to the siren song of the other.
V. Since the life to come is to be attained through virtue, chief
attention must be paid to those passages in which virtue is praised;
such may be found, for example, in Hesiod, Homer, Solon, Theognis, and
Prodicus.
VI. Indeed, almost all eminent philosophers have extolled virtue.
The words of such men should meet with more than mere theoretical
acceptance, for one must try to realize them in his life, remembering
that to seem to be good when one is not so is the height of injustice.
VII. But in the pagan literature virtue is lauded in deeds as well
as in words, wherefore one should study those acts of noble men which
coincide with the teachings of the Scriptures.
VIII. To return to the original thought, young men must distinguish
between helpful and injurious knowledge, keeping clearly in mind the
Christian's purpose in life. So, like the athlete or the musician,
they must bend every energy to one task, the winning of the heavenly
crown.
IX. This end is to be compassed by holding the body under, by
scorning riches and fame, and by subordinating all else to virtue.
X. While this ideal will be matured later by the study of the
Scriptures, it is at present to be fostered by the study of the pagan
writers; from them should be stored up knowledge for the future.
Conclusion: The above are some of the more important precepts; others
the writer will continue to explain from time to time, trusting that
no young man will make the fatal error of disregarding them.
I. There are many considerations which urge
me to counsel you, my children, on what things I judge to be best, and on
those which I am confident, if you accept them, will be to your advantage.
For the fact that I have reached this age, and have already been trained
through many experiences, and indeed also have shared sufficiently in the
all-teaching vicissitude of both good and evil fortune, has made me
conversant with human affairs, so that I can indicate the safest road, as
it were, to those who are just entering upon life. Moreover, I come
immediately after your parents in natural relationship to you, so that I
myself entertain for you no less good-will than do your fathers; and I am
sure, unless I am somewhat wrong in my judgment of you, that you do not
long for your parents when your eyes rest upon me. If, then, you should
receive my words with eagerness, you will belong to the second class of
those praised by Hesiod; but should you not do so, I indeed should not
like to say anything unpleasant, but do you of yourselves remember the
verses in which he says: "Best is the man who sees of himself at once what
must be done, and excellent is he too who follows what is well indicated
by others, but he who is suited for neither is useless in all respects."
Do not think it strange, then, if I say to you, who each day resort to
teachers and hold converse with the famous men of the ancients through the
words which they have left behind them, that I myself have discovered
something of especial advantage to you. This it is, and naught else, that
I have come to offer you as my counsel-that you should not surrender to
these men once for all the rudders of your mind, as if of a ship, and
follow them whithersoever they lead; rather, accepting from them only that
which is useful, you should know that which ought to be overlooked. What,
therefore, these things are, and how we shall distinguish between them, is
the lesson which I shall teach you from this point on.

II. We, my children, in no wise conceive this human life of ours to
be an object of value in any respect, nor do we consider anything good at
all, or so designate it, which makes its contribution to this life of ours
only. Therefore neither renown of ancestry, nor strength of body, nor
beauty, nor stature, nor honors bestowed by all mankind, nor kingship
itself, nor other human attribute that one might mention, do we judge
great, nay, we do not even consider them worth praying for, nor do we look
with admiration upon those who possess them, but our hopes lead us forward
to a more distant time, and everything we do is by way of preparation for
the other life. Whatever, therefore, contributes to that life, we say must
be loved and pursued with all our strength; but what does not conduce to
that must be passed over as of no account. Now just what this life is, and
how and in what manner we shall live it, would take too long to discuss in
view of our present purpose, and would be for the more mature to hear than
for hearers of your age. After saying this much at least, I may perhaps be
able to show you that if one sums up all the happiness together from the
time men have first existed and collects it into one whole, he will find
that it is equivalent not even to a trivial part of those other goods, but
that the total of the goods of the present life is more removed in value
from the least among the former goods of the other life than shadows and
dreams fall short of reality. Nay, rather - that I may use a more suitable
illustration - to the degree that the soul is more precious than the body
in all respects, so great is the difference between the two lives. Now to
that other life of the Holy Scriptures lead the way, teaching us through
mysteries . Yet so long as, by reason of your age, it is impossible for
you to understand the depth of the meaning of these, in the meantime, by
means of other analogies which are not entirely different, we give, as it
were in shadows and reflections, a preliminary training to the eye of the
soul, imitating those who perform their drills in military tactics, who
after they have gained experience, by means of gymnastic exercises for the
arms and dance-steps for the feet, enjoy when it comes to the combat the
profit derived from what was done in sport. So we also must consider that
a contest, the greatest of all contests, lies before us, for which we must
do all things, and, in preparation for it, must strive to the best of our
power, and must associate with poets and writers of prose and orators and
with all men from whom there is any prospect of benefit with reference to
the care of our soul. Therefore, just as dyers prepare by certain
treatments whatever material is to receive the dye, and then apply the
color, whether it be purple or some other hue, so we also in the same
manner must first, if the glory of the good is to abide with us indelible
for all time, be instructed by these outside means, and then shall
understand the sacred and mystical teachings; and like those who have
become accustomed to seeing the reflection of the sun in water, so we
shall then direct our eyes to the light itself.
III. Now if there is some affinity between
the two bodies of teachings, knowledge of them should be useful to us; but
if not, at least the fact that by setting them side by side we can
discover the difference between them, is of no small importance for
strengthening the position of the better. And yet with what can you
compare the two systems of education and hit upon the true similitude?
Perhaps, just as it is the proper virtue of a tree to be laden with
beautiful fruit, although it also wears like a fair raiment leaves that
wave about its branches, so likewise the fruit of the soul, the truth is
primarily its fruitage, yet it is clad in the certainly not unlovely
raiment even of the wisdom drawn from the outside, which we may liken to
foliage that furnishes both protection to the fruit and an aspect not
devoid of beauty. Now it is said that even Moses, that illustrious man
whose name for wisdom is greatest among all mankind, first trained his
mind in the learning of the Egyptians, and then proceeded to the
contemplation of Him who is. And like him, although in later times, they
say that the wise Daniel at Babylon first learned the wisdom of the
Chaldaeans and then applied himself to the divine teachings.

IV. But that this pagan learning is not without usefulness for the
soul has been sufficiently affirmed; yet just how you should participate
in it would be the next topic to be discussed.
First, then, as to the learning to be derived from the poets, that I may
begin with them, inasmuch as the subjects they deal with are of every
kind, you ought not to give to your attention to all they write without
exception; but whenever they recount for you the deeds or words of good
men, you ought to cherish and emulate these and try to be as far as
possible like them; but when they treat of wicked men, you ought to avoid
such imitation, stopping your ears no less than Odysseus did, according to
what those same poets say, when he avoided the songs of the Sirens. For
familiarity with evil words is, as it were, a road leading to evil deeds.
On this account, then, the soul must be watched over with all vigilance,
lest through the pleasure the poets' words give we may unwittingly accept
something of the more evil sort, like those who take poisons along with
honey. We shall not, therefore, praise the poets when they revile or mock,
or when they depict men engaged in amours or drunken, or when they define
happiness in terms of an over-abundant table or dissolute songs. But least
of all shall we give attention to them when they narrate anything about
the gods, and especially when they speak of them as being many, and these
too not even in accord with one another. For in their poems brother is at
feud with brother, and father with children, and the latter in turn are
engaged in truceless war with their parents. But the adulteries of gods
and their amours and their sexual acts in public, and especially those of
Zeus, the chief and highest of all, as they themselves describe him,
actions which one would blush to mention of even brute beasts-all these we
shall leave to the stage-folk.
These same observations I must make concerning the writers of prose also,
and especially when they fabricate tales for the entertainment of their
hearers. And we shall certainly not imitate the orators in their art of
lying. For neither in courts of law nor in other affairs is lying
befitting to us, who have chosen the right and true way of life, and to
whom refraining from litigation has been ordained in commandment. But we
shall take rather those passages of theirs in which they have praised
virtue or condemned vice. For just as in the case of other beings
enjoyment of flowers is limited to their fragrance and color, but the
bees, as we see, possess the power to get honey from them as well, so it
possible here also for those who are pursuing not merely what is sweet and
pleasant in such writings to store away from them some benefit also for
their souls. It is, therefore, in accordance of the whole similitude of
the bees, that we should participate in the pagan literature. For these
neither approach all flowers equally, nor in truth do they attempt to
carry off entire those upon which they alight, but taking only so much of
them as is suitable for their work, they suffer the rest to go untouched.
We ourselves too, if we are wise, having appropriated from this literature
what is suitable to us and akin to the truth, will pass over the
remainder. And just as in plucking the blooms of a rose-bed we avoid the
thorns, so also in garnering from such writings whatever is useful, let us
guard ourselves against what is harmful. At the very outset, therefore, we
should examine each of the branches of knowledge and adapt it to our end,
according to the Doric proverb, "bringing the stone to the line."
V. And since it is through virtue that we
must enter upon this life of ours, and since much has been uttered in
praise of virtue by the poets, much by historians, and much more still by
philosophers, we ought especially to apply ourselves to such literature.
For it is no small advantage that a certain intimacy and familiarity with
virtue should be engendered in the minds of the young, seeing that the
lessons learned by such are likely, in the nature of the case, to be
indelible, having been deeply impressed on them by reason of the
tenderness of their souls. Or what else are we to suppose Hesiod had in
mind when he composed these verses which are on everybody's lips, if he
were not exhorting young men to virtue? -- that "rough at first and hard
to travel, and full of abundant sweat and toil, is the road which leads to
virtue, and steep withal." Therefore it is not given to everyone to climb
this road, so steep it is, nor, if one essays to climb it, easily to reach
the summit. But when once one has come to the top he is able to see how
smooth and beautiful, how easy and pleasant to travel it is, and more
agreeable than that other road which leads to vice, which it is possible
to take all at once from near at hand, as this same poet has said. For to
me it seems that he has narrated these things for no other reason than to
urge us on to virtue and to exhort all men to be good, and to keep us from
becoming weak and cowardly in the face of the toils and desisting before
reaching the end. And assuredly, if anyone else has sung the praise of
virtue in terms like Hesiod's, let us welcome his words as leading to the
same end as our own.
Moreover, as I myself have heard a man say who is clever at understanding
a poet's mind, all Homer's poetry is an encomium of virtue, and all he
wrote, save what is accessory, bears to this end, and not least in those
verses in which he has portrayed the leader of the Cephallenians, after
being saved from shipwreck, as naked, and the princess as having first
shown him reverence at the mere sight of him (so far was he from incurring
shame through merely being seen naked, since the poet has portrayed him as
clothed with virtue in place of garments), and then, furthermore, Odysseus
has having been considered worthy of such high honor by the rest of the
Phaeacians likewise that, disregarding the luxury in which they lived,
they one and all admired and envied the hero, and none of the Phaeacians
at the moment would have desired anything else more than to become
Odysseus, and that too just saved from a shipwreck. For in these passages,
the interpreter of the poet's mind was wont to declare that Homer says in
a voice that all but shouts: "You must give heed unto virtue, O men, which
swims forth even with a man who has suffered shipwreck, and, on his coming
naked to land, will render him more honored than the happy Phaeacians."
And truly this is so. Other possessions, in fact, no more belong to their
possessors than to any chance comer whatever, quickly shifting now here,
now there, as in a game of dice; but virtue alone of possessions cannot be
taken away, as it remains with a man whether he be living or dead. It was
for this reason indeed, as it seems to me, that Solon said this with
respect to the rich: "But we will not exchange with them our virtue for
their wealth, since the one abides always, while riches change their
owners every day." And similar to these words are those of Theognis also
in which he says that God, whomsoever he means indeed by this term,
inclines the scale for men at one time this way, at another that way, now
to be rich, but now to have nothing.
And furthermore, the sophist from Ceos, Prodicus, somewhere in his
writings uttered a doctrine kindred to these others regarding virtue and
vice; therefore we must apply our minds to him also, for he is not a man
to be rejected. His narrative run something like this, so far as I recall
the man's thought, since I do not know the exact words, but only that he
spoke in general to the following effect, not employing metre. When
Heracles was quite a young man and was nearly of the age at which you
yourselves are now, while he was deliberating which of the two roads he
should take, the one leading through toils to virtue, or the easiest, two
women approached him, and these were Virtue and Vice. Now at once,
although they were silent, the difference between them was evident from
their appearance. For the one had been decked out for beauty through the
art of toiletry, and was overflowing with voluptuousness, and she was
leading a whole swarm of pleasures in her train; now these things she
displayed, and promising still more than these she tried to draw Heracles
to her. But the other was withered and squalid, and had an intense look,
and spoke quite differently; for she promised nothing dissolute or
pleasant, but countless sweating toils and labors and dangers through
every land and sea. But the prize to be won by these was to become a god,
as the narrative of Prodicus expressed it; and it was this second woman
that Heracles in the end followed.

VI. And almost all the writers who have some reputation for wisdom have,
to a greater or less degree, each to the best of his power, discoursed in
their works the praise of virtue. To these men we must hearken and we must
try to show forth their words in our lives; for he in truth who confirms
by act his devotion to wisdom, which among others is confined to words,
"He alone has understanding, but the others flit about as shadows."
It seems to me that such harmony between profession and life is very much
as if a painter had made a likeness of a man of quite wondrous beauty, and
this same man should be such in reality as the painter had portrayed him
on his panels. For brilliantly to praise virtue in public, and to make
long speeches about it, but in private to rate pleasure before temperance,
and self-interest before justice, resembles, as I would assert, those
stage-folk who bring out plays and often appear as kings and potentates,
although they are neither kings nor potentates, and perhaps not even free
men at all. Again, a musician would not willingly consent that his lyre
should be out of tune, nor a leader of a chorus that his chorus should not
sing in the strictest possible harmony; but shall each individual person
be at variance with himself, and shall he exhibit a life not at all in
agreement with his words? But one will say, quoting Euripides, "the tongue
has sworn, but the mind is unsworn," If we are to hearken to the words of
Plato - "to appear to be just without being so."
VII. As to the passages in literature, then,
which contain admonitions of excellent things, let us accept this
procedure. And since the virtuous deeds, likewise, of the men of old have
been preserved for us, either through an unbroken oral tradition or
through being preserved in the words of poets or writers of prose, let us
not fail to derive advantage from this source also. For example, a certain
fellow, a market-lounger, kept railing at Pericles, but he paid no
attention; and he kept it up all day long, he giving Pericles a merciless
dressing of abuse, but he taking no heed of it. Then when it was already
evening and dark, though the man was scarcely desisting, Pericles escorted
him home with a light, lest his own schooling in philosophy be utterly
brought to naught . Again a certain man, having become enraged against
Eucleides of Megara, threatened him with death and took oath upon it; but
Eucleides took a counter-oath, to the effect that verily he would appease
the man and make him put aside his wrath against him. How very valuable it
is that an example of this kind should be recalled to memory by a man who
is on the point of being held in the grip of a fit of passion! For one
must not put a simple-minded trust in the tragedy when it says "Against
enemies anger arms the hand," but, on the contrary, we should not permit
ourselves to be aroused to anger at all; but if this is not easy to
achieve, we should at least apply reason to our anger as a sort of curb
and not allow it to be carried too far beyond the bounds.
But let us bring our discussion back again to the examples of virtuous
deeds. A certain man kept striking Socrates, son of Sophroniscus, full in
the face, falling upon him unmercifully; yet he did not oppose, but
permitted the wine-mad fellow to satiate his rage, so that his face was
presently swollen and bruised from the blows. Now when the man ceased
striking him, Socrates, it is said, did nothing except inscribe on his own
forehead, like the name of a sculptor on a statue, "So-and-so (naming the
man) made this," and only to that extent avenged himself. Since these
examples tend to nearly the same end as our own precepts, I maintain that
it is of great value for those of your age to imitate them. For this
example of Socrates is akin to that precept of ours - that to him who
strikes us on the cheek, so far from avenging ourselves upon him we should
offer the other cheek also. And the example of Pericles or Eucleides is
akin to the precept that we should submit to those who persecute us and
gently suffer their anger; and this other one - that we should pray for
blessings for our enemies instead of cursing them. For whoever has been
instructed in these examples beforehand cannot after that distrust those
precepts as utterly impossible to obey . I should not pass over the
example of Alexander, who, when he had taken prisoner the daughters of
Darius, although it had been testified to him that they possessed a
marvelous beauty, did not think it fitting even to look upon them, judging
it to be disgraceful for one who had captured men to be vanquished by
women. Indeed, this example tends to the same purport as that well-known
precept of ours - that he who looks upon a woman to enjoy her, although he
does not commit adultery in act, yet in truth, because he has received the
desire into his soul, is not free of the guilt. But as for the action of
Cleinias, one of the disciples of Pythagoras, it is difficult to believe
that it is by mere chance that it coincides with our own principles, and
not through its imitating them designedly. What was it, then, that
Cleinias did? Although it was possible by taking oath to escape a fine of
three talents, he paid rather than swear, and that too though it would
have been a true oath that he would have taken. He must have heard, it
seems to me, our commandment forbidding the taking of an oath.
VIII. But let us return again to the same
subject of which we were speaking at the beginning: we ought not to take
everything without exception, but only such matter as is useful. For it is
disgraceful to reject foods that are harmful, yet for the teachings which
nourish our souls to have no concern, but to charge onward like a mountain
torrent, carrying along everything it chances upon. And further, what
sense or reason is there that a pilot does not heedlessly give over his
ship to the winds, but steers it to harbor, or that a bowman shoots at a
mark, or indeed, that any bronzesmith or worker in wood strives for the
end proper to his craft, but that we should fall behind even such
artisans, in respect at least to the ability to perceive our own
interests? For can it be that handicraftsmen have some end in view in
their work, but that there is no goal for the life of man, keeping his eye
upon which that man at least, who does not intend to be wholly similar to
the brute beasts, ought to do and say whatever he does or says? In that
case we should really be like ships without ballast, if we had no
intellect sitting at the steering-oars of our soul, being tossed up and
down aimlessly through life. On the contrary, it is just as in the
athletic contests, or if you prefer, the competitions in music: there are
practice exercises in preparation for those contests in which the prize
offered is a crown, and no one who is training for the wrestling-match or
the pancratium takes to practicing on the lyre or the flute. Certainly
Polydamas did no such thing, but before the contest at Olympia he
practiced bringing speeding chariots to a stop, and by this means was wont
to enhance his strength. And Milo could not be pushed away from his
greased shield, but held out against the pushing no less firmly than those
statues hold which are fastened to their bases with lead. And, in a word,
their exercises were a preparation for the games. But if they had wasted
their time on the airs of Marsyas or Olympus the Phrygians, abandoning the
dust and the exercises of the gymnasia, would they soon have obtained
crowns or glory, or would they have escaped incurring ridicule for their
physical condition? Neither, on the other hand, did Timotheus neglect his
composition of chorals and spend his time in the wrestling-schools. For
had he done so it would not have been possible for him so far to excel all
men in the musical art that he could arouse the passions through his
vehement and severe harmony and yet, on the other hand, through his
relaxed and sensuous strains, mollify and allay them again, whenever he
willed. It was by such art that once, when he was playing the Phrygian
mode to Alexander on his flute, he caused the prince, as it is said, to
leap up and rush to his arms in the midst of a banquet, and then, by
relaxing the harmony, brought him back again to his boon companions. So
great is the power, in both music and the athletic contests, produced by
practice directed towards the attainment of the end in view.

And since I have made mention of crowns and athletes, let me add that
these men, after enduring toils by the thousand, and after increasing
their strength by every possible means, after shedding much sweat in
the labors of the gymnasium, and taking many blows at the school of
the physical trainer, and choosing, not the pleasantest fare, but that
which the gymnastic masters had prescribed, and in all other ways
(that I may not waste time by enumerating them) so passing their days
that their life before the contest might be a preparation for the
contest, then, when all the moment comes, they strip for the race,
undergo all hardships and run all risks, so as to receive a crown of
wild olive or of parsley or of some such thing, all that they may win
the victory and have their name proclaimed by the herald. But as for
us, before whom are set for the life we lead prizes so marvelous in
multitude and in grandeur that they cannot be described in words, if
we sleep on both ears and lead lives of abundant licence, will it be
possible for us to reach out and seize them with one hand? In that
event slothfulness would be of great value for living, and the
Sardanapalus would carry off the highest prizes of all as regards
happiness, or even Margites, who was neither a ploughman nor a digger
nor anything else useful in life , as Homer said-if indeed this work
is really Homer's. Yet is not rather the saying of Pittacus true, that
"it is hard to be good"? For though we pass through many toils that
are really toils, we can scarcely succeed in obtaining those goods of
which, as we have already said above, no human goods can serve as an
example. Therefore we ought not to idle away our time, nor for an ease
that can last but a short while give up in exchange glorious
hopes-that is, if we are not to be reproached and to incur
retributions; I do not mean any that are inflicted here among men,
although even that is no slight matter to a man of sense, but in the
places of punishment, whether spend one's time beyond what is
necessary, on the care of the hair or on dress, is, according to the
saying of Diogenes, the mark of men who are either unfortunate or
doing wrong. Hence, to be a dandy and get the name of being one ought,
I maintain, to be considered by persons so inclined just as
disgraceful as to keep company with harlots or to seduce other men's
wives. For what difference should it make, at least to a man of sense,
whether he is clothed in a costly robe or wears a cheap workman's
cloak, so long as what he has on gives adequate protection against the
cold of winter and the heat of summer? And in all other matters
likewise, one ought not to be furnished out more elaborately than need
requires, nor to be more solicitous for the body than is good for the
soul. For it is no less a reproach to a man, who is truly worthy of
that appellation, to be a dandy and a pamperer of the body than to be
ignoble in his attitude towards any other vice. For to take all manner
of pains that his body may be as beautiful as possible is not the mark
of a man who either knows himself or understands that wise precept:
"That which is seen is not the man, but there is a need of a certain
higher wisdom which will enable each of us, whoever he is, to
recognize himself." But unless we have purified our minds this is more
impossible for us than for a blear-eyed man to gaze at the sun.
Now purification of the soul--that I may speak in general terms and in an
manner sufficient for your understanding-consists in scorning the
pleasures that arise through the senses, in not feasting the eyes on the
silly exhibitions of jugglers or on the sight of bodies which gives the
spur to sensual pleasure, in not permitting licentious songs to enter
through the ears and drench your souls. For passions sprung of lack of
breeding and baseness are naturally engendered by this kind of music. But
we should cultivate that other kind, which is better and leads to the
better, through his use of which, as they say, David, the poet of the
Sacred Songs, freed the king from his madness. And it is related that
Pythagoras too, chancing upon some drunken revelers, commanded the
flute-player who led the revel to change his harmony and play to them the
Doric mode; and that thus the company came back to its senses under the
influence of the strain, so that, tearing off their garlands, they went
home ashamed. Yet others at the sound of the flute act like Corybantes and
are excited to Bacchic frenzy. Such is the difference between giving full
ear to wholesome and to licentious music. Hence, since this latter is now
in vogue, you should participate in it less than the very basest of
things. Furthermore, the mixing with the air of all manner of vapours that
bring pleasure to the sense of smell, or the smearing of the body with
perfumes, I am ashamed even to forbid. And what can one say about the
importance of not cultivating the pleasures associated with the senses of
touch and taste than that these compel those who are devoted to their
pursuit to live, like animals, with all their attention centered on the
belly and the members below it?
But, in a single word, the body in every part should be despised by
everyone who does not care to be buried in its pleasures, as it were in
slime; or we ought to cleave to it only in so far as we obtain from it
service for the pursuit of wisdom, as Plato advises, speaking in a manner
somewhat similar to Paul's when he admonishes us to make no provision for
the body unto the arousing of concupiscences. Or in what way do those
differ, who are solicitous how the body may be as well off as possible,
but overlook the soul, which is to make use of it, as utterly worthless,
from those who are much concerned about their implements but neglect the
art which uses them for its work? Hence we must do quite the opposite -
chastise the body and hold it in check, as we do the violent chargings of
a wild beast, and by smiting with reason, as with a whip, the disturbances
engendered by it in the soul, calm them to sleep; instead of relaxing
every curb upon pleasure and suffering the mind to be swept headlong, like
a charioteer by unmanageable horses riotously running at large. And we
ought to recall Pythagoras, who, on perceiving that one of his followers
was putting on superfluous flesh by exercises and heavy eating, said to
him, "Pray cease making your prison-house more wretched for you to live
in!" It was for this reason, in fact, that Plato also as we are told,
providing against the harmful influence of the body, deliberately occupied
the pestilential region in Attica, the Academy, in order that he might
prune away, as one prunes the vine of its excessive growth, the too great
well-being of the body. And I myself have heard physicians say that
extreme good health is even dangerous.

IX. Since, then such excessive concern for
the body is not only unprofitable to the body itself but also a hindrance
to the soul, that it should be subject to the body and be its servant is
sheer madness. Yet surely, if we should make it a practice to despise the
body, we should be slow, methinks, to feel admiration for any other thing
that man may possess. For to what end shall we go on employing wealth if
we scorn the pleasures arising through the body? As for me, I do not see,
except that it might furnish us with a sort of pleasure to keep awake at
night guarding, like the dragons of mythology, buried treasures!
Assuredly, however, that man who has been trained to regard such goods as
a freeman should would be quite unlikely ever to choose anything base or
shameful in word or deed. For that which is in excess of any need, even if
it be the gold-dust of Lydia or the wealth of the gold-gathering ants, he
will despise all the more the less he needs it; and "need" itself he will,
of course, define in terms of the requirements of nature and not in terms
of pleasure. For those who go beyond the bounds of necessity are like men
who rush headlong down a slope and, being unable to bring up against any
firm object, find it impossible to halt at any point their onward impetus;
nay, the more they gather in to themselves the more they require that
much, or even a greater amount for the fulfillment of their desires,
according to Solon son of Execestides, who declares: "Of wealth no limit
lies revealed to men ." And we ought to use Theognis as a teacher in these
matters, when he says: "I am not eager to be rich, nor do I pray for this,
but may it be mine to live on little, suffering no evil."
I admire also the scorn of Diogenes for all human goods without exception,
who declared himself richer than the Great King by reason of the fact that
he needed less for living than the King. But for us of today, it would
seem, nothing will suffice except all the talents of Pythias the Mysian,
and so-and-so many acres of land, and herds of cattle past numbering. But,
in my opinion, we ought not to long for wealth if it be lacking, and, if
we have it, we should not pride ourselves so much on its possession as on
the knowledge that it is being put to good uses. For the saying of
Socrates is well put. He, when a wealthy man was manifesting great pride
in his riches, said that he would not admire him before he had found out
by trial that he also knew how to use them. Would not Pheidias and
Polycleitus, one of whom made the Zeus for the Elians and the other the
Hera for the Argives, if they had prided themselves greatly on the gold
and the ivory in them, have been objects of derision for glorying in a
wealth not their own, passing over the art which enabled them to render
the gold both more pleasing and more precious; but if we suppose that
human virtue is not sufficient to itself for an adornment, do we imagine
that what we are doing merits a lesser shame than would have been theirs?
But, forsooth, are we to despise wealth and have contempt for the
pleasures of the senses, and yet go seeking for flattery and adulation,
and imitate the shiftiness and cunning of the fox of Archilochus? On the
contrary, there is nothing which a prudent man must shun more carefully
than living with a view to popularity and giving serious thought to the
things esteemed by the multitude, instead of making sound reason his guide
of life, so that, even if he must gainsay all men and fall into disrepute
and incur danger for the sake of what is honourable, he will in no wise
choose to swerve from what has been recognized as right. Or in what
respect shall we say that a person of so unstable a character differs from
the Egyptian mountebank who, whenever he wished, became a plant, or a wild
beast, or fire or water or anything else, if in sooth he himself is at one
time to praise justice when in the presence of those who esteem that, but
will at another time take quite the opposite position whenever he
perceives that injustice is held in honour-as is the way of flatterers?
And just as the polyp, they say, changes its colour to match the ground on
which it lies, so will he change his mind according to the opinions of
those about him.

X. But although we Christians shall doubtless learn all these
things more thoroughly in our own literature, yet for the present, at
least, let us trace out a kind of rough sketch, as it were, of what virtue
is according to the teaching of the pagans . For by those who make it
their business to gather the benefit to be derived from each source many
accretions from many sides are wont to be received, as happens to mighty
rivers. Indeed we are entitled to consider that the poet's saying about
"adding little to little" holds good no more for increment in respect of
knowledge of any kind whatever. Bias, for instance, when he was asked by
his son, who was about to depart for Egypt, what he could do that would
gratify him most, replied: "By acquiring travel-supplies for your old
age," meaning by "travel-supplies" virtue, no doubt, though the terms in
which he defined it were to narrow, seeing that he limited to human life
the benefit to be derived from virtue. But as for me, if anyone should
mention the old age of Tithonus, or that of Arganthonius, or of Mathusala,
whose life was the longest of any man's (for he is said to have lived a
thousand years lacking thirty), or if anyone reckons up all the time which
has elapsed since men have existed, I shall laugh thereat as at a childish
idea when I gaze towards that long and ageless eternity whose limit the
mind can in no wise grasp any more than it can conceive an end for the
immortal soul. It is for this eternity that I would exhort you to acquire
travel-supplies, leaving no stone unturned, as the proverb has it,
wherever any benefit towards that end is likely to accrue to you. And
because this is difficult and calls for toil, let us not on this account
draw back, but recalling the words of him who urged that every man should
choose the life which is in itself best, in the expectation that through
habit it will prove agreeable, we should attempt the best things. For it
would be disgraceful that we, having thrown away the present opportunity,
should at some later time attempt to summon back the past when all our
vexation will gain us nothing.
Accordingly, of the things which in my judgment are best, some I have told
you at this time, while others I shall continue to recommend to you
throughout my whole life: but as for you, remembering that there are three
infirmities, pray do not seem to resemble the one which is incurable, nor
to exhibit the disease of the mind, which resembles that which those
endure who are afflicted in body. For whereas those who suffer from the
slight ailments go of themselves to physicians, and those who are attacked
by more serious diseases summon to their homes those who will treat them;
yet those who have reached the stage of melancholy that is absolutely
beyond remedy do not even admit physicians when they call. Pray do you not
become afflicted in this last-named manner, characteristic of the men of
the present time, by avoiding those whose reasoning faculties are sound. |