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13. Meantime, however, O you
who wonder and are astonished at the doctrines of the learned, and of
philosophy, do you not then think it most unjust to scoff, to jeer at
us as though we say foolish and senseless things, when you too are
found to say either these or just such things which you laugh at when
said and uttered by us? Nor do I address those who, scattered
through various bypaths of the schools, have formed this and that
insignificant party through diversity of opinion. You, you
I address, who zealously follow Mercury,3490
3490
Hermes Trismegistus. See index. | Plato, and Pythagoras, and the rest of
you who are of one mind, and walk in unity in the same paths of
doctrine. Do you dare to laugh at us because we 3491
3491
So the ms., Elmenh., LB., Hildebrand, and
Oehler, reading quod, for which the other edd. read
qui—“who.” | revere and worship the Creator and
Lord3492
3492
This seems to be the reading intended by the ms., which according to Hild. gives dom,
i.e., probably dominum, which Oehler adopts, but all other edd.
read deum—“god.” | of the
universe, and because we commit and entrust our hopes to Him?
What does your Plato say in the Theætetus, to
mention him especially? Does he not exhort the soul to flee from
the earth, and, as much as in it lies, to be continually engaged in
thought and meditation about Him? 3493
3493
Arnobius rather exaggerates the force of the passage referred to (st.
p. 173), which occurs in the beautiful digression on
philosophers. Plato there says that only the philosopher’s
body is here on earth, while his mind, holding politics and the
ordinary business and amusements of life unworthy of attention, is
occupied with what is above and beneath the earth, just as Thales, when
he fell into a ditch, was looking at the stars, and not at his
steps. | Do you dare to laugh at us,
because we say that there will be a resurrection of the dead? And
this indeed we confess that we say, but maintain that it is
understood by you otherwise than we hold it. What says the
same Plato in the Politicus? Does he not say that, when
the world has begun to rise out of the west and tend towards the
east, 3494
3494
In cardinem vergere qui orientis est solis seems to be the
reading of all edd.; but according to Crusius the ms. reads vertere—“to
turn.” Hildebrand, on the contrary, affirms that instead of
t, the ms. gives
c. | men will again
burst forth from the bosom of the earth, aged, grey-haired, bowed down
with years; and that when the remoter 3495
3495
i.e., originally earlier. | years begin to draw near, they will
gradually sink down 3496
3496 So
most edd., reading desituros, for which Stewechius suggests
desulturos—“leap down;” LB.
exituros—“go out.” | to the cradles of their infancy,
through the same steps by which they now grow to manhood? 3497
3497
Reference is here made to one of the most extraordinary of the
Platonic myths (Pol., 269–274), in which the world is
represented as not merely material, but as being further possessed of
intelligence. It is ever in motion, but not always in the same
way. For at one time its motion is directed by a divine governor
(τοῦ
παντὸς ὁ μὲν
κυβερνήτης); but this does not continue, for he withdraws from his task, and
thereupon the world loses, or rather gives up its previous bias, and
begins to revolve in the opposite direction, causing among other
results a reverse development of the phenomena which occurred before,
such as Arnobius describes. Arnobius, however, gives too much
weight to the myth, as in the introduction it is more than hinted that
it may be addressed to the young Socrates, as boys like such stories,
and he is not much more than a boy. With it should be contrasted
the “great year” of the Stoics, in which the universe
fulfilled its course, and then began afresh to pass through the same
experience as before (Nemesius, de Nat. Hom., c. 38). | Do you
dare to laugh at us because we see to the salvation of our
souls?—that is, ourselves care for ourselves: for
what are we men, but souls shut up in bodies?—You, indeed, do not
take every pains for their safety, 3498
3498
LB. makes these words interrogative, but the above arrangement is
clearly vindicated by the tenor of the argument: You laugh at our
care for our souls’ salvation; and truly you do not see to their
safety by such precautions as a virtuous life, but do you not seek that
which you think salvation by mystic rites? | in that you do not refrain from all
vice and passion; about this you are anxious, that you may cleave to
your bodies as though inseparably bound to them. 3499
3499
Lit., “fastened with beam” (i.e., large and strong)
“nails.” | —What
mean those mystic rites, 3500
3500 Cf. on
the intercessory prayers of the Magi, c. 62, infra. | in
which you beseech some unknown powers to be favourable to you,
and not put any hindrance in your way to impede you when returning to
your native seats? E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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