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| Of Regulus, in Whom We Have an Example of the Voluntary Endurance of Captivity for the Sake of Religion; Which Yet Did Not Profit Him, Though He Was a Worshipper of the Gods. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter 15.—Of Regulus, in Whom
We Have an Example of the Voluntary Endurance of Captivity for the
Sake of Religion; Which Yet Did Not Profit Him, Though He Was a
Worshipper of the Gods.
But among their own famous men they
have
a very noble example of the voluntary endurance of
captivity in obedience to a religious scruple. Marcus Attilius
Regulus, a Roman general, was a prisoner in the hands of the
Carthaginians. But they, being more anxious to exchange their
prisoners with the Romans than to keep them, sent Regulus as a
special envoy with their own embassadors to negotiate this
exchange, but bound him first with an oath, that if he failed to
accomplish their wish, he would return to Carthage. He went and
persuaded the senate to the opposite course, because he believed it
was not for the advantage of the Roman republic to make an exchange
of prisoners. After he had thus exerted his influence, the Romans
did not compel him to return to the enemy; but what he had sworn he
voluntarily performed. But the Carthaginians put him to death
with refined, elaborate, and horrible tortures. They shut him up
in a narrow box, in which he was compelled to stand, and in which
finely sharpened nails were fixed all round about him, so that he
could not lean upon any part of it without intense pain; and so
they killed him by depriving him of sleep.76
76
Augustin here uses the words of Cicero
(“vigilando peremerunt”), who refers to Regulus, in
Pisonem. c 19. Aulus Gellius, quoting Tubero and Tuditanus
(vi. 4), adds some further particulars regarding these
tortures. | With justice, indeed, do they
applaud the virtue which rose superior to so frightful a fate.
However, the gods he swore by were those who are now supposed to
avenge the prohibition of their worship, by inflicting these
present calamities on the human race. But if these gods, who were
worshipped specially in this behalf, that they might confer
happiness in this life, either willed or permitted these
punishments to be inflicted on one who kept his oath to them, what
more cruel punishment could they in their anger have inflicted on a
perjured person? But why may I not draw from my reasoning a
double inference? Regulus certainly had such reverence for the
gods, that for his oath’s sake he would neither remain in his own
land nor go elsewhere, but without hesitation returned to his
bitterest enemies. If he thought that this course would be
advantageous with respect to this present life, he was certainly
much deceived, for it brought his life to a frightful
termination. By his own example, in fact, he taught that the gods
do not secure the temporal happiness of their worshippers; since he
himself, who was devoted to their worship, as both conquered in
battle and taken prisoner, and then, because he refused to act in
violation of the oath he had sworn by them, was tortured and put to
death by a new, and hitherto unheard of, and all too horrible kind
of punishment. And on the supposition that the worshippers of the
gods are rewarded by felicity in the life to come, why, then, do
they calumniate the influence of Christianity? why do they assert
that this disaster has overtaken the city because it has ceased to
worship its gods, since, worship them as assiduously as it may, it
may yet be as unfortunate as Regulus was? Or will some one carry
so wonderful a blindness to the extent of wildly attempting, in the
face of the evident truth, to contend that though one man might be
unfortunate, though a worshipper of the gods, yet a whole city
could not be so? That is to say, the power of their gods is
better adapted to preserve multitudes than individuals,—as if a
multitude were not composed of individuals.
But if they say that M. Regulus,
even while a prisoner and enduring these bodily torments, might yet
enjoy the blessedness of a virtuous soul,77
77
As the Stoics generally would affirm. | then let them recognize that true
virtue by which a city also may be blessed. For the blessedness
of a community and of an individual flow from the same source; for
a community is nothing else than a harmonious collection of
individuals. So that I am not concerned meantime to discuss what
kind of virtue Regulus possessed; enough, that by his very noble
example they are forced to own that the gods are to be worshipped
not for the sake of bodily comforts or external advantages; for he
preferred to lose all such things rather than offend the gods by
whom he had sworn. But what can we make of men who glory in
having such a citizen, but dread having a city like him? If they
do not dread this, then let them acknowledge that some such
calamity as befell Regulus may also befall a community, though they
be worshipping their gods as diligently as he; and let them no
longer throw the blame of their misfortunes on Christianity. But
as our present concern is with those Christians who were taken
prisoners, let those who take occasion from this calamity to revile
our most wholesome religion in a fashion not less imprudent than
impudent, consider this and hold their peace; for if it was no
reproach to their gods that a most punctilious worshipper of theirs
should, for the sake of keeping his oath to them, be deprived of
his native land without hope of finding another, and fall into the
hands of his enemies, and be put to death by a long-drawn and
exquisite torture, much less ought the Christian name to be charged
with the captivity of those who believe in its power, since they,
in confident expectation of a heavenly country, know that they are
pilgrims even in their own homes.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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