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| The Inferior Gods, Whose Names are Not Associated with Infamy, Have Been Better Dealt with Than the Select Gods, Whose Infamies are Celebrated. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter 4.—The Inferior Gods,
Whose Names are Not Associated with Infamy, Have Been Better Dealt
with Than the Select Gods, Whose Infamies are
Celebrated.
However, any one who eagerly seeks
for celebrity and renown, might congratulate those select gods, and
call them fortunate, were it not that he saw that they have been
selected more to their injury than to their honor. For that low
crowd of gods have been protected by their very meanness and
obscurity from being overwhelmed with infamy. We laugh, indeed,
when we see them distributed by the mere fiction of human opinions,
according to the special works assigned to them, like those who
farm small portions of the public revenue, or like workmen in the
street of the silversmiths,259 where one vessel, in order that it
may go out perfect, passes through the hands of many, when it might
have been finished by one perfect workman. But the only reason
why the combined skill of many workmen was thought necessary, was,
that it is better that each part of an art should be learned by a
special workman, which can be done speedily and easily, than that
they should all be compelled to be perfect in one art throughout
all its parts, which they could only attain slowly and with
difficulty. Nevertheless there is scarcely to be found one of the
non-select gods who has brought infamy on himself by any crime,
whilst there is scarce any one of the select gods who has not
received upon himself the brand of notable infamy. These latter
have descended to the humble works of the others, whilst the others
have not come up to their sublime crimes. Concerning Janus, there
does not readily occur to my recollection anything infamous; and
perhaps he was such an one as lived more innocently than the rest,
and further removed from misdeeds and crimes. He kindly received
and entertained Saturn when he was fleeing; he divided his kingdom
with his guest, so that each of them had a city for himself,260
260 Virgil, Æneid, viii. 357,
358. | the one
Janiculum, and the other Saturnia. But those seekers after every
kind of unseemliness in the worship of the gods have disgraced him,
whose life they found to be less disgracful than that of the other
gods, with an image of monstrous deformity, making it sometimes
with two faces, and sometimes, as it were, double, with four
faces.261 Did they
wish that, as the most of the select gods had lost shame262 through the
perpetration of shameful crimes, his greater innocence should be
marked by a greater number of faces?263
263 Quanto iste innocentior esset,
tanto frontosior appareret; being used
for the shamelessness of innocence, as we use “face” for the
shamelessness of impudence. | E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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