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Chapter
III.
Would indeed that some profit might come to myself from this effort! I
should have undertaken this labour with the greater readiness, if I
could have hope of sharing, according to the Scripture, in the fruits
of the plough and the threshing-floor; the toil would then have been a
pleasure. As it is, this my knowledge of the beauty of virginity is in
some sort vain and useless to me, just as the corn is to the muzzled ox
that treads1351
1351 ἐπιστρεφομένῳ
τὴν ἅλωνα. This word is used for “walking over,” in Hesiod,
Theogon. 753, γαῖαν
ἐπιστρέφεται | the floor, or the water that streams
from the precipice to a thirsty man when he cannot reach it. Happy they
who have still the power of choosing the better way, and have not
debarred themselves from it by engagements of the secular life, as we
have, whom a gulf now divides from glorious virginity: no one can climb
up to that who has once planted his foot upon the secular life. We are
but spectators of others’ blessings and witnesses to the
happiness of another1352
1352 ἑτέρων, following
Cod. Reg., for ἑκατέρων. | class. Even if we
strike out some fitting thoughts about virginity, we shall not be
better than the cooks and scullions who provide sweet luxuries for the
tables of the rich, without having any portion themselves in what they
prepare. What a blessing if it had been otherwise, if we had not to
learn the good by after-regrets! Now they are the enviable ones,
they succeed even beyond their prayers and their desires, who
have not put out of their power the enjoyment of these delights. We are
like those who have a wealthy society with which to compare their own
poverty, and so are all the more vexed and discontented with their
present lot. The more exactly we understand the riches of virginity,
the more we must bewail the other life; for we realize by this contrast
with better things, how poor it is. I do not speak only of the future
rewards in store for those who have lived thus excellently, but those
rewards also which they have while alive here; for if any one would
make up his mind to measure exactly the difference between the two
courses, he would find it well-nigh as great as that between heaven and
earth. The truth of this statement may be known by looking at actual
facts.
But in writing this sad tragedy
what will be a fit beginning? How shall we really bring to view the
evils common to life? All men know them by experience, but somehow
nature has contrived to blind the actual sufferers so that they
willingly ignore their condition. Shall we begin with its choicest
sweets? Well then, is not the sum total of all that is hoped for in
marriage to get delightful companionship? Grant this obtained; let us
sketch a marriage in every way most happy; illustrious birth, competent
means, suitable ages, the very flower of the prime of life, deep
affection, the very best that each can think of the other1353
1353 ὑπὲρ
τοῦ ἄλλου (a late use of ἄλλος). This was
Livineius’ conjecture for τῶν ἄλλων: the interchange of υ and ν is a common mistake. | , that sweet rivalry of each wishing to
surpass the other in loving; in addition, popularity, power, wide
reputation, and everything else. But observe that even beneath this
array of blessings the fire of an inevitable pain is smouldering. I do
not speak of the envy that is always springing up against those of
distinguished rank, and the liability to attack which hangs over those
who seem prosperous, and that natural hatred of superiors shown by
those who do not share equally in the good fortune, which make these
seemingly favoured ones pass an anxious time more full of pain than
pleasure. I omit that from the picture, and will suppose that envy
against them is asleep; although it would not be easy to find a single
life in which both these blessings were joined, i.e. happiness
above the common, and escape from envy. However, let us, if so it is to be,
suppose a married life free from all such trials; and let us see if it
is possible for those who live with such an amount of good fortune to
enjoy it. Why, what kind of vexation is left, you will ask, when even
envy of their happiness does not reach them? I affirm that this very
thing, this sweetness that surrounds their lives, is the spark which
kindles pain. They are human all the time, things weak and perishing;
they have to look upon the tombs of their progenitors; and so pain is
inseparably bound up with their existence, if they have the least power
of reflection. This continued expectancy of death, realized by no sure
tokens, but hanging over them the terrible uncertainty of the future,
disturbs their present joy, clouding it over with the fear of what is
coming. If only, before experience comes, the results of experience
could be learnt, or if, when one has entered on this course, it were
possible by some other means of conjecture to survey the reality, then
what a crowd of deserters would run from marriage into the virgin life;
what care and eagerness never to be entangled in that retentive snare,
where no one knows for certain how the net galls till they have
actually entered it! You would see there, if only you could do it
without danger, many contraries uniting; smiles melting into tears,
pain mingled with pleasure, death always hanging by expectation over
the children that are born, and putting a finger upon each of the
sweetest joys. Whenever the husband looks at the beloved face, that
moment the fear of separation accompanies the look. If he listens to
the sweet voice, the thought comes into his mind that some day he will
not hear it. Whenever he is glad with gazing on her beauty, then he
shudders most with the presentiment of mourning her loss. When he marks
all those charms which to youth are so precious and which the
thoughtless seek for, the bright eyes beneath the lids, the arching
eyebrows, the cheek with its sweet and dimpling smile, the natural red
that blooms upon the lips, the gold-bound hair shining in many-twisted
masses on the head, and all that transient grace, then, though he may
be little given to reflection, he must have this thought also in his
inmost soul that some day all this beauty will melt away and become as
nothing, turned after all this show into noisome and unsightly bones,
which wear no trace, no memorial, no remnant of that living bloom. Can
he live delighted when he thinks of that? Can he trust in these
treasures which he holds as if they would be always his? Nay, it is
plain that he will stagger as if he were mocked by a dream, and will
have his faith in life shaken, and will look upon what he sees as no
longer his. You will understand, if you have a comprehensive view of
things as they are, that nothing in this life looks that which it is.
It shows to us by the illusions of our imagination one thing, instead
of something else. Men gaze open-mouthed at it, and it mocks them with
hopes; for a while it hides itself beneath this deceitful show; then
all of a sudden in the reverses of life it is revealed as something
different from that which men’s hopes, conceived by its fraud in
foolish hearts, had pictured. Will life’s sweetness seem worth
taking delight in to him who reflects on this? Will he ever be able
really to feel it, so as to have joy in the goods he holds? Will he
not, disturbed by the constant fear of some reverse, have the use
without the enjoyment? I will but mention the portents, dreams, omens,
and such-like things which by a foolish habit of thought are taken
notice of, and always make men fear the worst. But her time of labour
comes upon the young wife; and the occasion is regarded not as the
bringing of a child into the world, but as the approach of death; in
bearing it is expected that she will die; and, indeed, often this sad
presentiment is true, and before they spread the birthday feast, before
they taste any of their expected joys, they have to change their
rejoicing into lamentation. Still in love’s fever, still at the
height of their passionate affection, not yet having grasped
life’s sweetest gifts, as in the vision of a dream, they are
suddenly torn away from all they possessed. But what comes next?
Domestics, like conquering foes, dismantle the bridal chamber; they
deck it for the funeral, but it is death’s1354
1354 There
is a play on the words θάλαμος and θάνατος: “the one is changed into the other.” | room now; they make the useless wailings1355
1355 ἐτὶ
τούτων
ἀνακλήσεις: “amongst these”, i.e. the
domestics. Livineius reads τούτοις, and renders “Succedunt inutilis revocatio, inanis manuum
plausus,” i.e. as the last funeral act. | and beatings of the hands. Then there is the
memory of former days, curses on those who advised the marriage,
recriminations against friends who did not stop it; blame thrown on
parents whether they be alive or dead, bitter outbursts against human
destiny, arraigning of the whole course of nature, complaints and
accusations even against the Divine government; war within the man
himself, and fighting with those who would admonish; no repugnance to
the most shocking words and acts. In some this state of mind continues,
and their reason is more completely swallowed up by grief; and
their tragedy has a sadder ending, the victim not enduring to
survive the calamity.
But rather than this let us
suppose a happier case. The danger of childbirth is past; a child is
born to them, the very image of its parents’ beauty. Are the
occasions for grief at all lessened thereby? Rather they are
increased; for the
parents retain all their former fears, and feel in addition those on
behalf of the child, lest anything should happen to it in its bringing
up; for instance a bad accident, or by some turn of misfortunes a
sickness, a fever1356
1356 Reading πύρωσιν, with Galesinius: the Paris Editt. read πήρωσιν | , any dangerous
disease. Both parents share alike in these; but who could recount the
special anxieties of the wife? We omit the most obvious, which all can
understand, the weariness of pregnancy, the danger in childbirth, the
cares of nursing, the tearing of her heart in two for her offspring,
and, if she is the mother of many, the dividing of her soul into as
many parts as she has children; the tenderness with which she herself
feels all that is happening to them. That is well understood by every
one. But the oracle of God tells us that she is not her own mistress,
but finds her resources only in him whom wedlock has made her lord; and
so, if she be for ever so short a time left alone, she feels as if she
were separated from her head, and can ill bear it; she even takes this
short absence of her husband to be the prelude to her widowhood; her
fear makes her at once give up all hope; accordingly her eyes, filled
with terrified suspense, are always fixed upon the door; her ears are
always busied with what others are whispering; her heart, stung with
her fears, is well-nigh bursting even before any bad1357
1357 νεώτερον, in a bad sense. So Zosimus, lib. i. p. 658, πράγματα
῾Ρωμαίοις
νεώτερα
μηχανήσασθαι | news has arrived; a noise in the doorway,
whether fancied or real, acts as a messenger of ill, and on a sudden
shakes her very soul; most likely all outside is well, and there is no
cause to fear at all; but her fainting spirit is quicker than any
message, and turns her fancy from good tidings to despair. Thus even
the most favoured live, and they are not altogether to be envied; their
life is not to be compared to the freedom of virginity. Yet this hasty
sketch has omitted many of the more distressing details. Often this
young wife too, just wedded, still brilliant in bridal grace, still
perhaps blushing when her bridegroom enters, and shyly stealing furtive
glances at him, when passion is all the more intense because modesty
prevents it being shown, suddenly has to take the name of a poor lonely
widow and be called all that is pitiable. Death comes in an instant and
changes that bright creature in her white and rich attire into a
black-robed mourner. He takes off the bridal ornaments and clothes her
with the colours of bereavement. There is darkness in the once cheerful
room, and the waiting-women sing their long dirges. She hates her
friends when they try to soften her grief; she will not take food, she
wastes away, and in her soul’s deep dejection has a strong
longing only for her death, a longing which often lasts till it comes.
Even supposing that time puts an end to this sorrow, still another
comes, whether she has children or not. If she has, they are
fatherless, and, as objects of pity themselves, renew the memory of her
loss. If she is childless, then the name of her lost husband is rooted
up, and this grief is greater than the seeming consolation. I will say
little of the other special sorrows of widowhood; for who could
enumerate them all exactly? She finds her enemies in her relatives.
Some actually take advantage of her affliction. Others exult over her
loss, and see with malignant joy the home falling to pieces, the
insolence of the servants, and the other distresses visible in such a
case, of which there are plenty. In consequence of these, many women
are compelled to risk once more the trial of the same things, not being
able to endure this bitter derision. As if they could revenge insults
by increasing their own sufferings! Others, remembering the past, will
put up with anything rather than plunge a second time into the like
troubles. If you wish to learn all the trials of this married life,
listen to those women who actually know it. How they congratulate those
who have chosen from the first the virgin life, and have not had to
learn by experience about the better way, that virginity is fortified
against all these ills, that it has no orphan state, no widowhood to
mourn; it is always in the presence of the undying Bridegroom; it has
the offspring of devotion always to rejoice in; it sees continually a
home that is truly its own, furnished with every treasure because the
Master always dwells there; in this case death does not bring
separation, but union with Him Who is longed for; for when (a soul)
departs1358
1358 ἀναλύσῃ: Philip. i. 23. Tertullian (De
Patient. 9) translates, “Cupis recipi (i.e. to flit,
depart) jam et esse cum Domino.” Beza, however, says that the
metaphor is taken from unharnessing after a race. Chrysostom and Jerome
seem to take it of loosing off the cable. | , then it is with Christ, as the
Apostle says. But it is time, now that we have examined on the one side
the feelings of those whose lot is happy, to make a revelation of other
lives, where poverty and adversity and all the other evils which men
have to suffer are a fixed condition; deformities, I mean, and
diseases, and all other lifelong afflictions. He whose life is
contained in himself either escapes them altogether or can bear them
easily, possessing a collected mind which is not distracted from
itself; while he who shares himself with wife and child often has not a
moment to bestow even upon regrets for his own condition, because
anxiety for his dear ones fills his heart. But it is superfluous to
dwell upon that which every one knows. If to what seems
prosperity such pain and weariness is bound, what may we not expect of the
opposite condition? Every description which attempts to represent it to
our view will fall short of the reality. Yet perhaps we may in a very
few words declare the depths of its misery. Those whose lot is contrary
to that which passes as prosperous receive their sorrows as well from
causes contrary to that. Prosperous lives are marred by the expectancy,
or the presence, of death; but the misery of these is that death delays
his coming. These lives then are widely divided by opposite feelings;
although equally without hope, they converge to the same end. So
many-sided, then, so strangely different are the ills with which
marriage supplies the world. There is pain always, whether children are
born, or can never be expected, whether they live, or die. One abounds
in them but has not enough means for their support; another feels the
want of an heir to the great fortune he has toiled for, and regards as
a blessing the other’s misfortune; each of them, in fact, wishes
for that very thing which he sees the other regretting. Again, one man
loses by death a much-loved1359
1359 ἠγαπημένος
παῖς. Cod. Reg. has
ὁ καταθύμιος, a favorite word with Gregory. Livineius reads
ὁκαθήμενος, which he renders “nanus” (i.e. of low
stature), and cites Pollux Onomast. lib. 3, c. 24 (where ἀποκαθήμενος
= iners); it might also bear the meaning of
“stay-at-home,” in contrast to the prodigal in the next
sentence. | son; another has a
reprobate son alive; both equally to be pitied, though the one mourns
over the death, the other over the life, of his boy. Neither will I do
more than mention how sadly and disastrously family jealousies and
quarrels, arising from real or fancied causes, end. Who could go
completely into all those details? If you would know what a network of
these evils human life is, you need not go back again to those old
stories which have furnished subjects to dramatic poets. They
are regarded as myths on account of their shocking extravagance; there
are in them murders and eating of children, husband-murders, murders of
mothers and brothers, incestuous unions, and every sort of disturbance
of nature; and yet the old chronicler begins the story which ends in
such horrors with marriage. But turning from all that, gaze only upon
the tragedies that are being enacted on this life’s stage; it is
marriage that supplies mankind with actors there. Go to the law-courts
and read through the laws there; then you will know the shameful
secrets of marriage. Just as when you hear a physician explaining
various diseases, you understand the misery of the human frame by
learning the number and the kind of sufferings it is liable to, so when
you peruse the laws and read there the strange variety of crimes in
marriage to which their penalties are attached, you will have a pretty
accurate idea of its properties; for the law does not provide remedies
for evils which do not exist, any more than a physician has a treatment
for diseases which are never known.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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