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| The Origin of Female Ornamentation, Traced Back to the Angels Who Had Fallen. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter II.—The Origin
of Female Ornamentation, Traced Back to the Angels Who Had
Fallen.89
89 Comp. with this chapter,
de Idol., c. ix.; de Or., c. xxii.; de Cult. Fem.,
l. ii. c. x.; de Virg. Vel., c. vii. |
For they, withal, who instituted them are
assigned, under condemnation, to the penalty of death,—those
angels, to wit, who rushed from heaven on the daughters of men; so that
this ignominy also attaches to woman. For when to an age90 much more ignorant (than ours) they had
disclosed certain well-concealed material substances, and several not
well-revealed scientific arts—if it is true that they had laid
bare the operations of
metallurgy, and had divulged the natural properties of herbs, and had
promulgated the powers of enchantments, and had traced out every
curious art,91 even to the
interpretation of the stars—they conferred properly and as it
were peculiarly upon women that instrumental mean of womanly
ostentation, the radiances of jewels wherewith necklaces are
variegated, and the circlets of gold wherewith the arms are compressed,
and the medicaments of orchil with which wools are coloured, and that
black powder itself wherewith the eyelids and eyelashes are made
prominent.92
92 Quo oculorum exordia
producuntur. Comp. ii. 5. | What is the
quality of these things may be declared meantime, even at this
point,93
93 “Jam,” i.e.,
without going any farther. Comp. c. iv. et seqq. | from the quality and condition of their
teachers: in that sinners could never have either shown or
supplied anything conducive to integrity, unlawful lovers anything
conducive to chastity, renegade spirits anything conducive to the fear
of God. If (these things) are to be called teachings, ill
masters must of necessity have taught ill; if as wages of lust,
there is nothing base of which the wages are honourable. But why
was it of so much importance to show these things as well as94
94 Sicut. But Pam. and
Rig. read “sive.” | to confer them? Was it that women,
without material causes of splendour, and without ingenious
contrivances of grace, could not please men, who, while still
unadorned, and uncouth and—so to say—crude and rude, had
moved (the mind of) angels? or was it that the lovers95 would appear sordid and—through
gratuitous use—contumelious, if they had conferred no
(compensating) gift on the women who had been enticed into connubial
connection with them? But these questions admit of no
calculation. Women who possessed angels (as husbands) could
desire nothing more; they had, forsooth, made a grand match!
Assuredly they who, of course, did sometimes think whence they had
fallen,96 and, after the heated impulses of their lusts,
looked up toward heaven, thus requited that very excellence of women,
natural beauty, as (having proved) a cause of evil, in order that their
good fortune might profit them nothing; but that, being turned from
simplicity and sincerity, they, together with (the angels) themselves,
might become offensive to God. Sure they were that all
ostentation, and ambition, and love of pleasing by carnal means, was
displeasing to God. And these are the angels whom we are
destined to judge:97 these are the
angels whom in baptism we renounce:98
98 Comp. de Idol., c.
vi. | these, of
course, are the reasons why they have deserved to be judged by
man. What business, then, have their things with their
judges? What commerce have they who are to condemn with
them who are to be condemned? The same, I take it, as Christ has
with Belial.99 With what
consistency do we mount that (future) judgment-seat to pronounce
sentence against those whose gifts we (now) seek after? For you
too, (women as you are,) have the self-same angelic nature
promised100
100 See Matt. xxii. 30; Mark xii. 25; Luke xx. 35,
36; and comp. Gal. iii. 28. | as your reward, the
self-same sex as men: the self-same advancement to the dignity of
judging, does (the Lord) promise you. Unless, then, we begin even
here to pre-judge, by pre-condemning their things, which
we are hereafter to condemn in themselves, they will
rather judge and condemn us.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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