45. But let this monstrous
and impious fancy be put3718
far from us, that
Almighty
God, the creator and framer, the
author3719
3719 By
Hildebrand and Oehler, procreator is with reason regarded as a
gloss. |
of things great and
invisible, should
be believed to have begotten
souls so
fickle, with no seriousness,
firmness, and steadiness, prone to vice, inclining to all kinds of
sins; and while He knew that they were such and of this character, to
have bid
3720
3720
The ms., both Roman edd., and Hildebrand
read jussisset; but this would throw the sentence into
confusion, and the other edd. therefore drop t. |
them enter into
bodies,
imprisoned in which,
3721
3721
LB., Hildebrand, and Oehler read quorum indu-c-tæ
carceribus—“led into the prisons of which,” all
other edd. omitting c as above. According to Oehler,
the ms. has the former reading. |
they should
live exposed to the
storms
and tempests of fortune every day, and now do mean things, now submit
to
lewd treatment; that they might
perish by
shipwreck, accidents,
destructive conflagrations; that
poverty might
oppress some, beggary,
others; that some might be torn in pieces by
wild beasts, others
perish
by the venom of
flies;
3722
3722
The ms. and both Roman edd. read
in-f-ernarum paterentut aliæ laniatus muscularum, which has
no meaning, and is little improved by Galenius changing ut into
ur, as no one knows what “infernal flies” are.
LB. and Orelli, adopting a reading in the margin of Ursinus, change
intern. into ferarum, and join musc. with the
words which follow as above. Another reading, also suggested by
Ursinus, seems preferable, however,
internorum…musculorum—“suffer rendings (i.e.,
spasms) of the inner muscles.” |
that some might limp in walking,
others lose their sight, others be stiff with cramped
3723
joints; in fine, that they should be
exposed to all the
diseases which the
wretched and
pitiable human race
endures with
agony caused by
3724
3724
Lit., “dilaceration of.” |
different sufferings; then that,
forgetting that they have one origin, one
father and head, they should
shake to their
foundations and violate the rights of kinship, should
overthrow their cities, lay waste their
lands as
enemies,
enslave the
free, do
violence to maidens and to other men’s
wives, hate each
other, envy the joys and good fortune of others; and further, all
malign, carp at, and tear each other to pieces with fiercely biting
teeth.
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