Ad Nationes.

 Book I.

 In this case you actually conduct trials contrary to the usual form of judicial process against criminals for when culprits are brought up for trial,

 Since, therefore, you who are in other cases most scrupulous and persevering in investigating charges of far less serious import, relinquish your care

 But the sect, you say, is punished in the name of its founder. Now in the first place it is, no doubt, a fair and usual custom that a sect should be m

 As to your saying of us that we are a most shameful set, and utterly steeped in luxury, avarice, and depravity, we will not deny that this is true of

 Whenever these statements and answers of ours, which truth suggests of its own accord, press and restrain your conscience, which is the witness of its

 Whence comes it to pass, you will say to us, that such a character could have been attributed to you, as to have justified the lawmakers perhaps by it

 We are indeed said to be the “third race” of men. What, a dog-faced race? Or broadly shadow-footed? bread

 But why should I be astonished at your vain imputations?  Under the same natural form, malice and folly have always been associated in one body and gr

 Pour out now all your venom fling against this name of ours all your shafts of calumny: I shall stay no longer to refute them but they shall by and

 In this matter we are (said to be) guilty not merely of forsaking the religion of the community, but of introducing a monstrous superstition for some

 As for him who affirms that we are “the priesthood of a cross,” we shall claim him all cross

 Others, with greater regard to good manners, it must be confessed, suppose that the sun is the god of the Christians, because it is a well-known fact

 Report has introduced a new calumny respecting our God. Not so long ago, a most abandoned wretch in that city of yours, a man who had deserted indeed

 Since we are on a par in respect of the gods, it follows that there is no difference between us on the point of sacrifice, or even of worship, if I ma

 I am now come to the hour for extinguishing the lamps, and for using the dogs, and practising the deeds of darkness. And on this point I am afraid I m

 As to your charges of obstinacy and presumption, whatever you allege against us, even in these respects, there are not wanting points in which you wil

 The rest of your charge of obstinacy against us you sum up in this indictment, that we boldly refuse neither your swords, nor your crosses, nor your w

 Here end, I suppose, your tremendous charges of obstinacy against the Christians. Now, since we are amenable to them in common with yourselves, it onl

 Chapter XX.—Truth and Reality Pertain to Christians Alone. The Heathen Counselled to Examine and Embrace It.

 Book II

 Chapter I.—The Heathen Gods from Heathen Authorities. Varro Has Written a Work on the Subject. His Threefold Classification. The Changeable Character

 Chapter II.—Philosophers Had Not Succeeded in Discovering God. The Uncertainty and Confusion of Their Speculations.

 Chapter III.—The Physical Philosophers Maintained the Divinity of the Elements The Absurdity of the Tenet Exposed.

 Chapter IV.—Wrong Derivation of the Word Θεός. The Name Indicative of the True Deity. God Without Shape and Immaterial. Anecdote of Thales.

 Chapter V.—The Physical Theory Continued. Further Reasons Advanced Against the Divinity of the Elements.

 Chapter VI.—The Changes of the Heavenly Bodies, Proof that They are Not Divine.  Transition from the Physical to the Mythic Class of Gods.

 Chapter VII.—The Gods of the Mythic Class. The Poets a Very Poor Authority in Such Matters. Homer and the Mythic Poets. Why Irreligious.

 Chapter VIII.—The Gods of the Different Nations. Varro’s Gentile Class. Their Inferiority. A Good Deal of This Perverse Theology Taken from Scripture.

 Chapter IX.—The Power of Rome. Romanized Aspect of All the Heathen Mythology. Varro’s Threefold Distribution Criticised. Roman Heroes (Æneas Included,

 Chapter X.—A Disgraceful Feature of the Roman Mythology. It Honours Such Infamous Characters as Larentina.

 Chapter XI.—The Romans Provided Gods for Birth, Nay, Even Before Birth, to Death. Much Indelicacy in This System.

 Now, how much further need I go in recounting your gods—because I want to descant on the character of such as you have adopted? It is quite uncertain

 Manifest cases, indeed, like these have a force peculiarly their own.  Men like Varro and his fellow-dreamers admit into the ranks of the divinity tho

 Chapter XIV.—Gods, Those Which Were Confessedly Elevated to the Divine Condition, What Pre-Eminent Right Had They to Such Honour? Hercules an Inferior

 Chapter XV.—The Constellations and the Genii Very Indifferent Gods. The Roman Monopoly of Gods Unsatisfactory. Other Nations Require Deities Quite as

 Chapter XVI.—Inventors of Useful Arts Unworthy of Deification. They Would Be the First to Acknowledge a Creator. The Arts Changeable from Time to Time

 In conclusion, without denying all those whom antiquity willed and posterity has believed to be gods, to be the guardians of your religion, there yet

Chapter X.146    Comp. The Apology, cc. xii. xiii. xiv. xv.—The Christians are Not the Only Contemners of the Gods. Contempt of Them Often Displayed by Heathen Official Persons. Homer Made the Gods Contemptible.

Pour out now all your venom; fling against this name of ours all your shafts of calumny: I shall stay no longer to refute them; but they shall by and by be blunted, when we come to explain our entire discipline.147    See The Apology (passim), especially cc. xvi.–xxiv., xxx.–xxxvi., and xxxix. I shall content myself now indeed with plucking these shafts out of our own body, and hurling them back on yourselves. The same wounds which you have inflicted on us by your charges I shall show to be imprinted on yourselves, that you may fall by your own swords and javelins.148    Admentationibus. Now, first, when you direct against us the general charge of divorcing ourselves from the institutions of our forefathers, consider again and again whether you are not yourselves open to that accusation in common with us. For when I look through your life and customs, lo, what do I discover but the old order of things corrupted, nay, destroyed by you?  Of the laws I have already said, that you are daily supplanting them with novel decrees and statutes. As to everything else in your manner of life, how great are the changes you have made from your ancestors—in your style, your dress, your equipage, your very food, and even in your speech; for the old-fashioned you banish, as if it were offensive to you! Everywhere, in your public pursuits and private duties, antiquity is repealed; all the authority of your forefathers your own authority has superseded. To be sure,149    Plane. you are for ever praising old customs; but this is only to your greater discredit, for you nevertheless persistently reject them. How great must your perverseness have been, to have bestowed approbation on your ancestors’ institutions, which were too inefficient to be lasting, all the while that you were rejecting the very objects of your approbation! But even that very heir-loom150    Traditum. of your forefathers, which you seem to guard and defend with greatest fidelity, in which you actually151    Vel. find your strongest grounds for impeaching us as violators of the law, and from which your hatred of the Christian name derives all its life—I mean the worship of the gods—I shall prove to be undergoing ruin and contempt from yourselves no less than152    Perinde a vobis. (from us),—unless it be that there is no reason for our being regarded as despisers of the gods like yourselves, on the ground that nobody despises what he knows has absolutely no existence.  What certainly exists can be despised.  That which is nothing, suffers nothing. From those, therefore, to whom it is an existing thing,153    Quibus est. must necessarily proceed the suffering which affects it. All the heavier, then, is the accusation which burdens you who believe that there are gods and (at the same time) despise them, who worship and also reject them, who honour and also assail them. One may also gather the same conclusion from this consideration, above all:  since you worship various gods, some one and some another, you of course despise those which you do not worship.  A preference for the one is not possible without slighting the other, and no choice can be made without a rejection.  He who selects some one out of many, has already slighted the other which he does not select. But it is impossible that so many and so great gods can be worshipped by all.  Then you must have exercised your contempt (in this matter) even at the beginning, since indeed you were not then afraid of so ordering things, that all the gods could not become objects of worship to all. For those very wise and prudent ancestors of yours, whose institutions you know not how to repeal, especially in respect of your gods, are themselves found to have been impious. I am much mistaken, if they did not sometimes decree that no general should dedicate a temple, which he may have vowed in battle, before the senate gave its sanction; as in the case of Marcus Æmilius, who had made a vow to the god Alburnus. Now is it not confessedly the greatest impiety, nay, the greatest insult, to place the honour of the Deity at the will and pleasure of human judgment, so that there cannot be a god except the senate permit him? Many times have the censors destroyed154    Adsolaverunt, “thrown to the ground;” “floored.” (a god) without consulting the people.  Father Bacchus, with all his ritual, was certainly by the consuls, on the senate’s authority, cast not only out of the city, but out of all Italy; whilst Varro informs us that Serapis also, and Isis, and Arpocrates, and Anubis, were excluded from the Capitol, and that their altars which the senate had thrown down were only restored by the popular violence. The Consul Gabinius, however, on the first day of the ensuing January, although he gave a tardy consent to some sacrifices, in deference to the crowd which assembled, because he had failed to decide about Serapis and Isis, yet held the judgment of the senate to be more potent than the clamour of the multitude, and forbade the altars to be built. Here, then, you have amongst your own forefathers, if not the name, at all events the procedure,155    Sectam. [Rather—“A Christian secession.”] of the Christians, which despises the gods.  If, however, you were even innocent of the charge of treason against them in the honour you pay them, I still find that you have made a consistent advance in superstition as well as impiety.  For how much more irreligious are you found to be! There are your household gods, the Lares and the Penates, which you possess156    Perhibetis. by a family consecration:157    Domestica consecratione, i.e., “for family worship.” you even tread them profanely under foot, you and your domestics, by hawking and pawning them for your wants or your whims. Such insolent sacrilege might be excusable, if it were not practised against your humbler deities; as it is, the case is only the more insolent. There is, however, some consolation for your private household gods under these affronts, that you treat your public deities with still greater indignity and insolence. First of all, you advertise them for auction, submit them to public sale, knock them down to the highest bidder, when you every five years bring them to the hammer among your revenues. For this purpose you frequent the temple of Serapis or the Capitol, hold your sales there,158    Addicitur. conclude your contracts,159    Conducitur. as if they were markets, with the well-known160    Eadem. voice of the crier, (and) the self-same levy161    Exactione, “as excise duty for the treasury.” of the quæstor. Now lands become cheaper when burdened with tribute, and men by the capitation tax diminish in value (these are the well-known marks of slavery).  But the gods, the more tribute they pay, become more holy; or rather,162    Immo. the more holy they are, the more tribute do they pay. Their majesty is converted into an article of traffic; men drive a business with their religion; the sanctity of the gods is beggared with sales and contracts. You make merchandise of the ground of your temples, of the approach to your altars, of your offerings,163    “In money,” stipibus. of your sacrifices.164    “ Victims. ” You sell the whole divinity (of your gods). You will not permit their gratuitous worship. The auctioneers necessitate more repairs165    Plus refigitur. than the priests.

It was not enough that you had insolently made a profit of your gods, if we would test the amount of your contempt; and you are not content to have withheld honour from them, you must also depreciate the little you do render to them by some indignity or other. What, indeed, do you do by way of honouring your gods, which you do not equally offer to your dead? You build temples for the gods, you erect temples also to the dead; you build altars for the gods, you build them also for the dead; you inscribe the same superscription over both; you sketch out the same lineaments for their statues—as best suits their genius, or profession, or age; you make an old man of Saturn, a beardless youth of Apollo; you form a virgin from Diana; in Mars you consecrate a soldier, a blacksmith in Vulcan. No wonder, therefore, if you slay the same victims and burn the same odours for your dead as you do for your gods. What excuse can be found for that insolence which classes the dead of whatever sort166    Utut mortuos. as equal with the gods? Even to your princes there are assigned the services of priests and sacred ceremonies, and chariots,167    Tensæ. and cars, and the honours of the solisternia and the lectisternia, holidays and games. Rightly enough,168    Plane. since heaven is open to them; still it is none the less contumelious to the gods: in the first place, because it could not possibly be decent that other beings should be numbered with them, even if it has been given to them to become divine after their birth; in the second place, because the witness who beheld the man caught up into heaven169    Rigaltius has the name Proculus in his text; but Tertullian refers not merely to that case but to a usual functionary, necessary in all cases of deification. would not forswear himself so freely and palpably before the people, if it were not for the contempt felt about the objects sworn to both by himself and those170    Oehler reads “ei” (of course for “ii”); Rigalt. reads “ii.” who allow the perjury. For these feel of themselves, that what is sworn to is nothing; and more than that, they go so far as to fee the witness, because he had the courage to publicly despise the avengers of perjury. Now, as to that, who among you is pure of the charge of perjury?  By this time, indeed, there is an end to all danger in swearing by the gods, since the oath by Cæsar carries with it more influential scruples, which very circumstance indeed tends to the degradation of your gods; for those who perjure themselves when swearing by Cæsar are more readily punished than those who violate an oath to a Jupiter. But, of the two kindred feelings of contempt and derision, contempt is the more honourable, having a certain glory in its arrogance; for it sometimes proceeds from confidence, or the security of consciousness, or a natural loftiness of mind. Derision, however, is a more wanton feeling, and so far it points more directly171    Denotatior ad. to a carping insolence. Now only consider what great deriders of your gods you show yourselves to be! I say nothing of your indulgence of this feeling during your sacrificial acts, how you offer for your victims the poorest and most emaciated creatures; or else of the sound and healthy animals only the portions which are useless for food, such as the heads and hoofs, or the plucked feathers and hair, and whatever at home you would have thrown away. I pass over whatever may seem to the taste172    Gulæ, “Depraved taste.” of the vulgar and profane to have constituted the religion173    Prope religionem convenire, “to have approximated to.” of your forefathers; but then the most learned and serious classes (for seriousness and wisdom to some extent174    Quatenus. profess175    Credunt, one would expect “creduntur” (“are supposed”), which is actually read by Gothofredus. to be derived from learning) are always, in fact, the most irreverent towards your gods; and if their learning ever halts, it is only to make up for the remissness by a more shameful invention of follies and falsehoods about their gods. I will begin with that enthusiastic fondness which you show for him from whom every depraved writer gets his dreams, to whom you ascribe as much honour as you derogate from your gods, by magnifying him who has made such sport of them. I mean Homer by this description. He it is, in my opinion, who has treated the majesty of the Divine Being on the low level of human condition, imbuing the gods with the falls176    Or, “circumstances” (casibus). and the passions of men; who has pitted them against each other with varying success, like pairs of gladiators: he wounds Venus with an arrow from a human hand; he keeps Mars a prisoner in chains for thirteen months, with the prospect of perishing;177    Fortasse periturum. he parades178    Traducit, perhaps “degrades.” Jupiter as suffering a like indignity from a crowd of celestial (rebels;) or he draws from him tears for Sarpedon; or he represents him wantoning with Juno in the most disgraceful way, advocating his incestuous passion for her by a description and enumeration of his various amours. Since then, which of the poets has not, on the authority of their great prince, calumniated the gods, by either betraying truth or feigning falsehood? Have the dramatists also, whether in tragedy or comedy, refrained from making the gods the authors179    Ut dei præfarentur. Oehler explains the verb “præfari” to mean “auctorem esse et tanquam caput.” of the calamities and retributions (of their plays)? I say nothing of your philosophers, whom a certain inspiration of truth itself elevates against the gods, and secures from all fear in their proud severity and stern discipline. Take, for example,180    Denique. Socrates. In contempt of your gods, he swears by an oak, and a dog, and a goat.  Now, although he was condemned to die for this very reason, the Athenians afterwards repented of that condemnation, and even put to death his accusers. By this conduct of theirs the testimony of Socrates is replaced at its full value, and I am enabled to meet you with this retort, that in his case you have approbation bestowed on that which is now-a-days reprobated in us.  But besides this instance there is Diogenes, who, I know not to what extent, made sport of Hercules; whilst Varro, that Diogenes of the Roman cut,181    Stili. introduces to our view some three hundred Joves, or, as they ought to be called, Jupiters,182    Tertullian gives the comic plural “Juppiteres.” (and all) without heads. Your other wanton wits183    Ingenia. likewise minister to your pleasures by disgracing the gods. Examine carefully the sacrilegious184    Because appropriating to themselves the admiration which was due to the gods. beauties of your Lentuli and Hostii; now, is it the players or your gods who become the objects of your mirth in their tricks and jokes? Then, again, with what pleasure do you take up the literature of the stage, which describes all the foul conduct of the gods! Their majesty is defiled in your presence in some unchaste body. The mask of some deity, at your will,185    Cujuslibet dei. covers some infamous paltry head. The Sun mourns for the death of his son by a lightning-flash amid your rude rejoicing. Cybele sighs for a shepherd who disdains her, without raising a blush on your cheek; and you quietly endure songs which celebrate186    Sustinetis modulari. the gallantries of Jove. You are, of course, possessed of a more religious spirit in the show of your gladiators, when your gods dance, with equal zest, over the spilling of human blood, (and) over those filthy penalties which are at once their proof and plot for executing your criminals, or else (when) your criminals are punished personating the gods themselves.187    It is best to add the original of this almost unintelligible passage:  “Plane religiosiores estis in gladiatorum cavea, ubi super sanguinem humanum, supra inquinamenta pœnarum proinde saltant dei vestri argumenta et historias nocentibus erogandis, aut in ipsis deis nocentes puniuntur.” Some little light may be derived from the parallel passage of the Apology (c. xv.), which is expressed somewhat less obscurely. Instead of the words in italics, Tertullian there substitutes these: “Argumenta et historias noxiis ministrantes, nisi quod et ipsos deos vestros sæpe noxii induunt”—“whilst furnishing the proofs and the plots for (executing) criminals, only that the said criminals often act the part of your gods themselves.”  Oehler refers, in illustration of the last clause, to the instance of the notorious robber Laureolus, who personated Prometheus; others, again, personated Laureolus himself: some criminals had to play the part of Orpheus; others of Mutius Scævola. It will be observed that these executions were with infamous perverseness set off with scenic show, wherein the criminal enacted some violent death in yielding up his own life. The indignant irony of the whole passage, led off by the “plane religiosiores estis,” is evident. We have often witnessed in a mutilated criminal your god of Pessinum, Attis; a wretch burnt alive has personated Hercules. We have laughed at the sport of your mid-day game of the gods, when Father Pluto, Jove’s own brother, drags away, hammer in hand, the remains of the gladiators; when Mercury, with his winged cap and heated wand, tests with his cautery whether the bodies were really lifeless, or only feigning death.  Who now can investigate every particular of this sort although so destructive of the honour of the Divine Being, and so humiliating to His majesty? They all, indeed, have their origin188    Censentur. in a contempt (of the gods), on the part both of those who practise189    Factitant. these personations, as well as of those190    i.e., the gods themselves. who are susceptible of being so represented.191    Redimitis. I hardly know, therefore, whether your gods have more reason to complain of yourselves or of us. After despising them on the one hand, you flatter them on the other; if you fail in any duty towards them, you appease them with a fee;192    Redimitis. in short, you allow yourselves to act towards them in any way you please. We, however, live in a consistent and entire aversion to them.

10. Pudeat igitur deos ab homine defendi. Effundite jam omnia venena, omnia calumniae tela infligite huic nomini, non cessabo ultra repellere; at postmodum obtundentur expositione totius nostrae disciplinae; nunc vero eadem ipsa de nostro corpore vulsa in vos retorquebo, eadem vulnera criminum in vobis defossa monstrabo, quo machaeris vestris admentationibusque cadatis. Jam primo, quod in nos generali accusatione dirigitis, divortium ab institutis majorum, 0572B considerate etiam atque etiam, ne vobiscum communicemus crimen istud. Ecce enim per omnia vitae ac disciplinae corruptam, imo delatam in vobis antiquitatem recognosco. De legibus quidem jam supra dictum est, quod eas novis de die consultis constitutisque obruistis. De reliqua vero conversationis humanae dispositione palam subjacet, quanto a majoribus mutaveritis, cultu, habitu, apparatu, ipsoque victu, ipsoque sermone. Nam pristinum ut rancidum relegatis, exclusa ubique antiquitas in negotiis, in officiis; totam auctoritatem majorum vestra auctoritas dejecit. Sane, quod vobis magis probro est, laudatis semper vetustates, et nihilominus recusatis. Qua perversitate tant . . . . . . majorum apud vos permanere probari debuerunt, cum ea quae probatis recusetis? Sed et 0572C ipsum quod videmini a majoribus traditum fidelissime custodire et defendere, vel quo maxime reos non transgressionis postulatis, de quo totum odium christiani nominis animatur, deorum dico culturam, perinde a vobis destrui ac despici ostendam, nisi quod non perinde; nos enim contemptores deorum haberi nulla ratio est, quia nemo contemnit quod sciat omnino non esse. Quod omnino est, id contemni potest, quod nihil est, nihil patitur. Igitur quibus est, ab eis patiatur necesse esse, Quo magis oneramini, credentes esse et contemnentes, colentes et despuentes, honorantes et lacessentes! Licet etiam hinc recognoscere, inprimis, cum alii alios deos colitis, eos quos non colitis, 0573A utique contemnitis; praelatio alterius sine alterius contumelia esse non potest, nec ulla electio non reprobatione componitur. Qui de pluribus suscipit aliquem, eum quem non suscipit despexit. Sed tot ac tanti ab omnibus coli non possunt. Jam ergo tunc primo contempsistis, non veriti scilicet ita instituere, ut omnes coli non possent. At enim illi sapientissimi ac prudentissimi majores, quorum institutis renuntiare non nostis, maxime in persona deorum vestrorum, ipsi quoque impii deprehenduntur. Mentior, si nunquam censuerant, ne qui imperator fanum, quod in proelio vovisset, prius dedicasset quam senatus probasset, ut contigit M. Aemilio, qui voverat Alburno deo. Utique enim impiisimum, imo contumeliosissimum admissum est, in arbitrio et libidine sententiae humanae 0573B locare honorem divinitatis, ut deus non sit, nisi cui esse permiserit senatus. Saepe censores inconsulto populo adsolaverunt; certe Liberum patrem cum sacro suo consules senatus auctoritate urbe non solummodo, verum tota Italia eliminaverunt. Caeterum Serapem et Isidem et Harpocratem et Anubem prohibitos Capitolio Varro commemorat, eorumque statuas a senatu dejectas, nonnisi per vim popularium restructas. Sed tamen et Gabinius consul Kalendis Januariis, cum vix hostias probaret, prae popularium coetu, quia nihil de Serape et Iside constituisset, potiorem habuit senatus censuram, quam impetum vulgi, et aras institui prohibuit. Habetis igitur in majoribus vestris, etsi non nomen, attamen sectam christianam, quae deos negligit. Horum, si vos saltem 0573C integrum honoribus vestris rei esse laesae religionis: sed invenio conspirasse a vobis tam superstitionis quam impietatis profectum. Quanto enim irreligiosiores deprehendimini? Privatos enim deos, quos Lares et Penates domestica consecratione perhibetis, domestica licentia inculcatis, venditando, pignerando pro necessitate ac voluntate. Essent quidem tolerabiliora ejusmodi contumaciae sacrilegia, nisi quod eo jam contumeliosiora, quod modica. Sed aliquo solatio privatorum et domesticorum deorum querelae juvantur, quod publicos turpius contumeliosiusque tractetis. Jam primum, quos in hastarium regessistis, 0574A publicanis subd . . . tis , omni quinquennio inter vectigalia vestra proscriptos addicitis. Sic Serapeum, sic Capitolium petitur, addicitur, conducitur . . . . . sub eadem voce praeconis, eadem exactione quaestoris. Sed enim agri tributo onusti viliores, hominum capita stipendio censa ignobiliora; nam hae sunt captivitatis notae et poenae . Dei vero, qui magis tributarii, magis sancti, imo qui magis sancti magis tributarii. Majestas constituitur in quaestum, negotiatio religione proscribitur, sanctitas locationem mendicat; exigitis mercedem pro solo templi, pro aditu sacri, pro stipitibus, pro ostiis; venditis totam divinitatem, non licet eam gratis coli; plus denique publicanis reficitur, quam sacerdotibus. Non suffecerat vectigalium deorum contumelia, de contemptu scilicet 0574B aestimanda, nec contenti estis deis honorem non habuisse, nisi etiam, quemcumque habetis, depretietis aliqua indignitate. Quid enim omnino ad honorandos eos facitis, quod etiam non mortuis vestris ex aequo praebeatis? Exstruitis deis templa, aeque mortuis templa; exstruitis aras deis, aeque mortuis aras, eisdem titulis superscribitis litteras , easdem statuis inducitis formas, ut cuique ars aut negotium aut aetas fuit: senex de Saturno, imberbis de Apolline, virgo de Diana figuratur, et miles in Marte, et Vulcano faber ferri consecratur. Nihil itaque mirum, si hostias easdem mortuis, quas et deis caeditis, eosdemque odores crematis. Quis istam contumeliam excuset, quae ut aut mortuos cum deis deputet? Regibus quidem etiam sacerdotia adscripta sunt, sacrique apparatus, 0574C ut tensae et currus et solisternia et lectisternia . . . . tie et ludi . Plane, quoniam illis coelum patet, hoc quoque non sine contumelia deorum: primo quidem, quod non decuerit alios eis annumerari, quibus datum sit post mortem deos fieri; secundum, quod tam libere atque manifeste coram populo pejeraret contemplator Proculus in coelum recepti, nisi contemneret quos dejeraret, quam ipse, quam ii, qui ei pejerare permittant; consentiunt enim ipsi nihil esse quod dejerant, imo insuper et praemio afficiunt, quia publice contempserit perjurii vindices; quanquam perjurii apud vos unusquisque purus 0575A est . Imo jam per deos dejerandi periculum evanuit , potiore habita religione per Caesarem dejerandi, quod et ipsum ad offuscationem pertinet deorum vestrorum; facilius enim per Caesarem pejerantes punirentur, quam per ullum Jovem . Sed contemptus honestior est, habens quamdam superbiae gloriam: venit enim aliquando etiam de fiducia vel conscientiae securitate vel naturali sublimitate animi. Derisus vero quanto lascivior, tanto denotatior ad contumeliae morsum. Recognoscite igitur, quam derisores inveniamini numinum vestrorum, non dico quales sitis in sacrificando, quod enecta et tabida quaeque mactatis; de opimis autem et integris supervacua esui capitula et ungulas et plumarum setarumque praevulsa, et si quid domi quoque habituri 0575B non fuissetis. Omitto quae vulgae aut sacrilegae gulae videbuntur majorum prope religionem convenire; atquin doctissimi gravissimi, quatenus gravitas atque prudentia de doctrina proficere credunt, et irreverentissimi erga deos vestros semper existunt, nec eis cessit litteratura, quam ut aut turpia aut vana aut falsa de deis inferat. Ab ipso exordiar Homero vestro, ejus unda omnis et omne aequor , cui quantum honorem additis, tantum deis vestris derogastis, magnificando qui de eis lusit. Adhuc meminimus Homeri; ille, opinor, est, qui divinam majestatem humana conditione tractavit, casibus et passionibus humanis deos imbuens, qui de illis favore diversis gladiatoria quodammodo paria commisit: Venerem sauciat sagitta humana, Martem tredecim mensibus 0575C in vinculis detinet fortasse periturum, eadem Jovem poene perpessum a coelitum plebe traducit, aut lacrymas ejus super Sarpedonem excutit, aut luxuriantem cum Junone foendissime inducit, commendato libidinis desiderio per commemorationem amicarum. Exinde quis non poetarum ex auctoritate principis 0576A sui in deos insolens, aut vera prodendo aut falsa fingendo? Et tragici quidem aut comici pepercerunt, ut non aerumnas ac poenas dei praefarentur? Taceo de philosophis, quos superbia severitatis et duritia disciplinae ab omni timore securos, nonnullus etiam afflatus veritatis adversus deos erigit: denique et Socrates in contumeliam eorum quercum et canem et hircum jurat. Nam et si idcirco damnatus est, cum poenituerit Athenienses damnationis, discriminatores quoque impenderit, restituitur testimonium Socrati, et possum retorquere, probatum esse in illo, quod nunc reprobatur in nobis. Sed et Diogenes nescio quid in Herculem lusit, et Romani stili Diogenes, Varro trecentos Joves, seu Jupiteres dicendum est, sine capitibus inducit. Caetera lasciviae 0576B ingenia etiam voluptates vestras per dedecus deorum administrant. Dispicite apud vos Lentulorum et Hostiorum sacrilegas venustates, utrum mimos an deos vestros in strophis et jocis rideatis; sed et histrionicas litteras magna cum voluptate suscipitis, quae omnem faeditatem designant deorum. Constuprantur coram vobis majestates in corpore impuro. Famosum et diminutum caput imago cujuslibet dei vestit. Luget Sol filium fulmine extinctum laetantibus vobis, Cybela pastorem suspirat fastidiosum non erubescentibus vobis, et sustinetis Jovis elogia modulari. Plane religiosiores estis in gladiatorum cavea, ubi super sanguinem humanum, super inquinamenta poenarum, proinde saltant dei vestri, argumenta et historias nocentibus erogandis, aut in ipsis dei nocentes 0576C puniuntur. Vidimus saepe castratum Attin deum a Pessinunte, et qui vivus cremabatur Herculem induerat. Risimus et meridiani ludi de deis lusum, quo Dis Pater, Jovis frater, gladiatorum exsequias cum malleo deducit, quo Mercurius, in calvitio pennatulus , in caduceo ignitulus , corpora exanimata 0577A jam mortemve simulantia e cauterio probat. Singula ista quaeque adhuc investigare quis possit? Si honorem inquietant divinitatis, si majestatis fastigium adsolant, de contemptu utique censentur, quam eorum qui ejusmodi factitant, quam eorum qui ita suscipiunt. Quare nescio, ne plus de vobis dei vestri quam de nobis querantur . . . . . ex alia parte adulamini, redimitis si qua delinquitis, et postremo licet vobis in eos quos esse voluistis; nos vero in totum aversamur.