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31. We wish, then, to
question you, and invite you to answer a short question, Whether you
think it a greater offence to sacrifice to them no victims, because you
think that so great a being neither wishes nor desires these; or, with
foul beliefs, to hold opinions about them so degrading, that they might
rouse any one’s spirit to a mad desire for revenge? If the
relative importance of the matters be weighed, you will find no judge
so prejudiced as not to believe it a greater crime to defame by
manifest insults any one’s reputation, than to treat it with
silent neglect. For this, perhaps, may be held and believed from
deference to reason; but the other course manifests an impious
spirit, and a blindness despaired of in fiction. If in your
ceremonies and rites neglected sacrifices and expiatory offerings may
be demanded, guilt is said to have been contracted; if by a momentary
forgetfulness4236
4236
Lit., “an error of inadvertence.” | any one has
erred either in speaking or in pouring wine; 4237
4237
Lit., “with the sacrificial bowl.” | or again, 4238
4238
So the ms., both Roman edd., Elm., Hild.,
and Oehler, reading rursus; the others in
cursu—“in the course.” | if at the solemn games and sacred
races the dancer has halted, or the musician suddenly become
silent,—you all cry out immediately that something has been done
contrary to the sacredness of the ceremonies; or if the boy termed
patrimus let go the thong in ignorance, 4239
4239
Patrimus, i.e., one whose father is alive, is probably used
loosely for patrimus et matrimus, to denote one both of whose
parents were alive, who was therefore eligible for certain religious
services. | or could not hold to the
earth: 4240
4240
So the ms. reading terram
tenere, for which Hild. would read tensam, denoting the car
on which were borne the images of the gods, the thongs or reins of
which were held by the patrimus et matrimus; Lipsius,
siserram, the sacrificial victim. The reading of the text
has been explained as meaning to touch the ground with one’s
hands; but the general meaning is clear enough,—that it was
unlucky if the boy made a slip, either with hands or feet. | and
yet do you dare to deny that the gods are ever being wronged by
you in sins so grievous, while you confess yourselves that, in less
matters, they are often angry, to the national ruin? E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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