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| My departure from Rome for the East had nothing blameable in it as you insinuate. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
22. If any one wishes to
hear the arrangements for my journey from Rome, they were these. In the
month of August,3182 when the
etesian winds were blowing, accompanied by the reverend presbyter
Vincentius and my young brother, and other monks who are now living at
Jerusalem, I went on board ship at the port of Rome, choosing my own
time, and with a very large body of the saints attending me, I arrived
at Rhegium. I stood for a while on the shore of Scylla, and heard the
old stories of the rapid voyage of the versatile Ulysses, of the songs
of the sirens and the insatiable whirlpool of Charybdis. The
inhabitants of that spot told me many tales, and gave me the advice
that I should sail not for the columns of Proteus but for the port
where Jonah landed, because the former of those was the course suited
for men who were hurried and flying, but the latter was best for a man
who was imprisoned; but I preferred to take the course by Malea and the
Cyclades to Cyprus. There I was received by the venerable bishop
Epiphanius, of whose testimony to you you boast. I came to Antioch,
where I enjoyed the communion of Paulinius the pontiff and confessor
and was set forward by him on my journey to Jerusalem, which I entered
in the middle of winter and in severe cold. I saw there many wonderful
things, and verified by the judgment of my own eyes things which had
before come to my ears by report. Thence I made my way to Egypt. I saw
the monasteries of Nitria, and perceived the snakes3183
3183 He means Origenistic heresies; but there is no trace in his early
works of this detection of heresy. | which lurked among the choirs of the
monks. Then making haste I at once returned to Bethlehem, which is now
my home, and there poured my perfume upon the manger and cradle of the
Saviour. I saw also the lake of ill-omen. Nor did I give myself to ease
and inertness, but I learned many things which I did not know before.
As to what judgment was formed of me at Rome, or what was written
afterwards, you are quite welcome to speak out, especially since you
have writings to trust to; for I am not to be tried by your words which
you at your will either veil in enigma or blurt out with open
falsehood, but by the documents of the church. You may see how little I
am afraid of you. If you can produce against me a single record of the
Bishop of Rome or of any other church, I will confess myself to be
chargeable with all the iniquities which I find assigned to you. It
would be easy for me to tell of the circumstances of your departure,
your age, the date of sailing, the places in which you lived, the
company you kept. But far be it from me to do what I blame you for
doing, and in a discussion between churchmen, to make up a story worthy
of the ravings of quarrelling hags. Let this word be enough for your
wisdom to remember. Do not adopt a method with another which can at
once be retorted on yourself.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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