On the Pallium.

 Chapter I.—Time Changes Nations’ Dresses—and Fortunes.

 Chapter II.—The Law of Change, or Mutation, Universal.

 Chapter III.—Beasts Similarly Subject to the Law of Mutation.

 Chapter IV.—Change Not Always Improvement.

 Chapter V.—Virtues of the Mantle.  It Pleads in Its Own Defence.

 Chapter VI.—Further Distinctions, and Crowning Glory, of the Pallium.

Chapter V.—Virtues of the Mantle.  It Pleads in Its Own Defence.

“Still,” say you, “must we thus change from gown60    Toga. to Mantle?”  Why, what if from diadem and sceptre?  Did Anacharsis change otherwise, when to the royalty of Scythia he preferred philosophy?  Grant that there be no (miraculous) signs in proof of your transformation for the better:  there is somewhat which this your garb can do.  For, to begin with the simplicity of its uptaking:  it needs no tedious arrangement.  Accordingly, there is no necessity for any artist formally to dispose its wrinkled folds from the beginning a day beforehand, and then to reduce them to a more finished elegance, and to assign to the guardianship of the stretchers61    Or, “forcipes.” the whole figment of the massed boss; subsequently, at daybreak, first gathering up by the aid of a girdle the tunic which it were better to have woven of more moderate length (in the first instance), and, again scrutinizing the boss, and rearranging any disarrangement, to make one part prominent on the left, but (making now an end of the folds) to draw backwards from the shoulders the circuit of it whence the hollow is formed, and, leaving the right shoulder free, heap it still upon the left, with another similar set of folds reserved for the back, and thus clothe the man with a burden!  In short, I will persistently ask your own conscience, What is your first sensation in wearing your gown?  Do you feel yourself clad, or laded? wearing a garment, or carrying it?  If you shall answer negatively, I will follow you home; I win see what you hasten to do immediately after crossing your threshold.  There is really no garment the doffing whereof congratulates a man more than the gown’s does.62    Of course the meaning is, “on the doffing of which a man congratulates himself more,” etc.; but Tertullian as it were personifies the act of doffing, and represents it as congratulating the doffer; and I have scrupulously retained all his extravagances, believing them (in the present treatise at least) to be intentional.  Of shoes we say nothing—implements as they are of torture proper to the gown, most uncleanly protection to the feet, yes, and false too.  For who would not find it expedient, in cold and heat, to stiffen with feet bare rather than in a shoe with feet bound?  A mighty munition for the tread have the Venetian shoe-factories provided in the shape of effeminate boots!  Well, but, than the Mantle nothing is more expedite, even if it be double, like that of Crates.63    A Cynic philosopher.  Nowhere is there a compulsory waste of time in dressing yourself (in it), seeing that its whole art consists in loosely covering.  That can be effected by a single circumjection, and one in no case inelegant:64    “Inhumano;” or, perhaps, “involving superhuman effort.”  thus it wholly covers every part of the man at once.  The shoulder it either exposes or encloses:65    Oehler attempts to defend the common reading, “humerum velans exponit vel includit;” but the correction of Salmasius and Lud. de la Cerda which he quotes, “vel exponit,” is followed in preference.  If Oehler’s reading be retained, we may render:  “a covering for the shoulder, it exposes or encloses it at will.”  in other respects it adheres to the shoulder; it has no surrounding support; it has no surrounding tie; it has no anxiety as to the fidelity with which its folds keep their place; easily it manages, easily readjusts itself:  even in the doffing it is consigned to no cross until the morrow.  If any shirt is worn beneath it, the torment of a girdle is superfluous:  if anything in the way of shoeing is worn, it is a most cleanly work;66    i.e., the “shoeing” appropriate to the mantle will consist at most of sandals; “shoes” being (as has been said) suited to the gown. or else the feet are rather bare,—more manly, at all events, (if bare,) than in shoes.  These (pleas I advance) for the Mantle in the meantime, in so far as you have defamed it by name.  Now, however, it challenges you on the score of its function withal.  “I,” it says, “owe no duty to the forum, the election-ground, or the senate-house; I keep no obsequious vigil, preoccupy no platforms, hover about no prætorian residences; I am not odorant of the canals, am not odorant of the lattices, am no constant wearer out of benches, no wholesale router of laws, no barking pleader, no judge, no soldier, no king:  I have withdrawn from the populace.  My only business is with myself:  except that other care I have none, save not to care.  The better life you would more enjoy in seclusion than in publicity.  But you will decry me as indolent.  Forsooth, ‘we are to live for our country, and empire, and estate.’  Such used,67    “Erat.”—Oehler, who refers to “errat” as the general reading, and (if adopted) renders:  “This sentiment errs (or wanders) in all directions;” making olim = passim. of old, to be the sentiment.  None is born for another, being destined to die for himself.  At all events, when we come to the Epicuri and Zenones, you give the epithet of ‘sages’ to the whole teacherhood of Quietude, who have consecrated that Quietude with the name of ‘supreme’ and ‘unique’ pleasure.  Still, to some extent it will be allowed, even to me, to confer benefit on the public.  From any and every boundary-stone or altar it is my wont to prescribe medicines to morals—medicines which will be more felicitous in conferring good health upon public affairs, and states, and empires, than your works are.  Indeed, if I proceed to encounter you with naked foils, gowns have done the commonwealth more hurt than cuirasses.  Moreover, I flatter no vices; I give quarter to no lethargy, no slothful encrustation.  I apply the cauterizing iron to the ambition which led M. Tullius to buy a circular table of citron-wood for more than £4000,68    Reckoning the 1000 sesterces at their pre-Augustan value, £8, 17s. 1d. and Asinius Gallus to pay twice as much for an ordinary table of the same Moorish wood (Hem! at what fortunes did they value woody dapplings!), or, again, Sulla to frame dishes of an hundred pounds’ weight.  I fear lest that balance be small, when a Drusillanus (and he withal a slave of Claudius!) constructs a tray69    “Promulsis”—a tray on which the first course (“promulsis” or “antecœna”) was served, otherwise called “promulsidare.” of the weight of 500 lbs.!—a tray indispensable, perchance, to the aforesaid tables, for which, if a workshop was erected,70    As Pliny (quoted by Oehler) tells us was the case. there ought to have been erected a dining-room too.  Equally do I plunge the scalpel into the inhumanity which led Vedius Pollio to expose slaves to fill the bellies of sea-eels.  Delighted, forsooth, with his novel savagery, he kept land-monsters, toothless, clawless, hornless:  it was his pleasure to turn perforce into wild beasts his fish, which (of course) were to be forthwith cooked, that in their entrails he himself withal might taste some savour of the bodies of his own slaves.  I will forelop the gluttony which led Hortensius the orator to be the first to have the heart to slay a peacock for the sake of food; which led Aufidius Lurco to be the first to vitiate meat with stuffing, and by the aid of forcemeats to raise them to an adulterous71    Or, “adulterated.” flavour; which led Asinius Celer to purchase the viand of a single mullet at nearly £50;72    Reckoning the 1000 sesterces at the post-Augustan value, £7, 16s. 3d. which led Æsopus the actor to preserve in his pantry a dish of the value of nearly £800, made up of birds of the selfsame costliness (as the mullet aforesaid), consisting of all the songsters and talkers; which led his son, after such a titbit, to have the hardihood to hunger after somewhat yet more sumptuous:  for he swallowed down pearls—costly even on the ground of their name—I suppose for fear he should have supped more beggarly than his father.  I am silent as to the Neros and Apicii and Rufi.  I will give a cathartic to the impurity of a Scaurus, and the gambling of a Curius, and the intemperance of an Antony.  And remember that these, out of the many (whom I have named), were men of the toga—such as among the men of the pallium you would not easily find.  These purulencies of a state who will eliminate and exsuppurate, save a bemantled speech?

CAPUT V.

Tamen, inquis, ita a toga, ad pallium? quid enim si a diademate et a sceptro? an aliter mutavit Anacharsis, cum regno Scythiae philosophiam praevertit? Nulla in melius transgressi sint signa, est habitus iste quod faciat. Prius etiam ad simplicem 1046A captatelam ejus, nullo taedio constat: adeo nec artificem necesse est, qui pridie rugas ab exordio formet, et inde deducat in talias , totumque contracti umbonis figmentum custodibus forcipibus assignet, dehinc diluculo tunica prius cingulo correpta, quam praestabat moderationem texuisse, recognito rursus umbone, et si quid exorbitavit reformato, partem quidem de laevo promittat, ambitum vero ejus ex quo sinus nascitur jam deficientibus tabulis, retrahat a scapulis, et exclusa dextra in laevam adhuc congerat cum alio pari tabulo in terga devoto, atque ita hominem sarcina vestiat. Conscientiam denique tuam perrogabo, quid te prius in toga sentias indutum, anne onustum? Si negabis, domum consequar, videbo quid statim a limine properes. Nullius profecto alterius indumenti 1046B expositio quam togae gratulatur. Calceos nihil dicimus, proprium togae tormentum, immundissimam pedum tutelam, verum et falsam, quem enim non expediat in algore et ardore rigere nudipedem, quam in calceo vincipedem ? magnum incessui munimentum sutrinae venetiae prospexere, perones effoeminatos. At enim pallio nihil expeditius, etiam si duplex, quod Cratetis mora nusquam vestiendo cum ponitur : quippe tota molitio ejus operire 1047A est solutim. Id ex uno circumjectu licet equidem nusquam inhumano, ita omnia hominis simul contegit. Humerum velans exponit vel includit, caeteroquin humerum adhaeret; nihil circumfulcit, nihil circumstringit, nihil de tabularum fide laborat, facile sese regit, facile reficit: etiam cum exponitur , nulli cruci in crastinum demandatur. Si quid interulae subter est , vacat zonae tormentum: si quid calceatus inducitur, mundissimum opus est; aut pedes nudi magis, certe viriles magis quam in calceis. Haec pro pallio interim, quantum nomine comitiasti . Jam vero et de negotio provocat. Ego, inquit, nihil foro, nihil campo, nihil curiae debeo: nulli officio advigilo, nulla rostra praeoccupo, nulla praetoria observo: canales non 1047B odoro, cancellos non adoro, subsellia non contundo, jura non conturbo, caussas non elatro, non judico, non milito, secessi de populo, in me unicum negotium mihi est, nisi aliud non curo quam ne curem. Vita meliore magis in successu fruare quam in promptu, sed ignavam infamabis . Scilicet patriae et imperio, reique vivendum est. Erat olim ista sententia. Nemo alii nascitur moriturus sibi. Certe cum ad Epicuros et Zenonas ventum esset, sapientes vocas, totum quietis magisterium, qui eam summae atque unicae voluptatis nomine consecravere. Tamen propemodum nihil quoque licebit in 1048A publicum prodesse. Soleo de qualibet margine vel ara medicinas moribus dicere, quae felicius publicis rebus, et civitatibus et imperiis bonas valetudines conferent, quam tuae operae. Quippe si pergam ad acuta tecum, plus togae laesere rempublicam, quam loricae. Atquin nullis vitiis adulor, nullis veternis parco, nulli impetigini. Adigo cauterem ambitioni qua M. Tullius quingentis millibus nummum orbem citri emit: quas bis tantum Asinius Gallus pro mensa ejusdem Mauritianae numerat. Hem quantis facultatibus aestimavere ligneas maculas! item qua lances centenarii ponderis Sulla molitur! Vereor sane ne parva sit ista trutina, cum Drusillanus, equidem servus Claudii, quingenariam promulsidem aedificat, suprascriptis fortasse mensis necessariam, cui si officina 1048B extructa est, debuit et triclinium. Immergo aeque scapellum acerbitati ei qua Vedius Pollio servos muraenis invadendos objectabat. Nova scilicet saevitia delectato terrenae bestiae, et edentulae, et exunguis, et excornis, de piscibus placuit feras cogere, utique statim coquendis, ut in visceribus earum, aliquid de servorum suorum corporibus et ipse gustaret. Praecidam gulam, qua Hortensius orator primus pavum cibi caussa potuit occidere: qua Ausidius Lurco primus sagina corpora vitiavit, et coactis alimentis in adulterinum provexit saporem: qua Asinius Celer mulli unius obsonium sex sestertiis 1049A detulit: qua Aesopus histrio ex avibus ejusdem pretiositatis, ut canoris et loquacibus quibusque, centum millium patinam confiscavit. Filius ejus post tale pulpamentum potuit sumptuosius esurire: margarita namque vel ipso nomine pretiosa dehausit, credo ne mendicius patre coenasset. Taceo Nerones et Apicios et Rufos: dabo catharticum impuritati Scauri, et aleae Curii, et vinolentiae Antonii: et memento istos interim ex multis togatos fuisse. Quales apud pallium? Haud facile has purulentias civitatis quis eliciet, et exsuppurabit , ni sermo palliatus.