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| His peculiar caricature of the bishops, Eustathius of Armenia and Basil of Galatia, is not well drawn. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
§5. His peculiar
caricature of the bishops, Eustathius of Armenia and Basil of Galatia,
is not well drawn.
But, not to linger longer on
these absurdities in the very act of declining to mention them, and not
to soil this book by forcing my subject through all his written
reminiscences, like one who urges his horse through a slough and so
gets covered with its filth, I think it is best to leap over the mass
of his rubbish with as high and as speedy a jump as my thoughts are
capable of, seeing that a quick retreat from what is disgusting is a
considerable advantage; and let us hasten on68
68 Reading πρός τε τὸ
πέρας. | to the
finale of his story, lest the bitterness of his own words should
trickle into my book. Let Eunomius have the monopoly of the bad taste
in such words as these, spoken of God’s priests69
69 This must
be the ‘caricature’ of the (Greek) Summary above.
Eustathius of Sebasteia, the capital of Armenia, and the Galatian
Basil, of Ancyra (Angora), are certainly mentioned, c. 6 (end). Twice
did these two, once Semi-Arians, oppose Aetius and Eunomius, before
Constantius, at Byzantium. On the second occasion, however (Sozomen,
H. E. iv. 23, Ursacius and Valens arrived with the proscription
of the Homoousion from Ariminum: it was then that “the world
groaned to find itself Arian” (Jerome). The ‘accursed
saint’ ‘pale with fast,’ i.e. Eustathius, in his
Armenian monastery, gave Basil the Great a model for his
own. | ,
“curmudgeon squires, and beadles, and satellites, rummaging
about, and not suffering the fugitive to carry on his
concealment,” and all the other things which he is not ashamed to
write of grey-haired priests. Just as in the schools for secular
learning70 , in order to exercise the boys to be ready in
word and wit, they propose themes for declamation, in which the person
who is the subject of them is nameless, so does Eunomius make an onset
at once upon the facts suggested, and lets loose the tongue of
invective, and without saying one word as to any actual villainies, he
merely works up against them all the hackneyed phrases of contempt, and
every imaginable term of abuse: in which, besides, incongruous ideas
are brought together, such as a ‘dilettante soldier,’
‘an accursed saint,’ ‘pale with fast, and murderous
with hate,’ and many such like scurrilities; and just like a
reveller in the secular processions shouts his ribaldry, when he would
carry his insolence to the highest pitch, without his mask on, so does
Eunomius, without an attempt to veil his malignity, shout with brazen
throat the language of the waggon. Then he reveals the cause why he is
so enraged; ‘these priests took every precaution that many should
not’ be perverted to the error of these heretics; accordingly he
is angry that they could not stay at their convenience in the places
they liked, but that a residence was assigned them by order of the then
governor of Phrygia, so that most might be secured from such wicked
neighbours; his indignation at this bursts out in these words;
‘the excessive severity of our trials,’ ‘our grievous
sufferings,’ ‘our noble endurance of them,’
‘the exile from our native country into Phrygia.’ Quite so:
this Oltiserian71
71 Oltiseris
was probably the district, as Corniaspa was the village, in which
Eunomius was born. It is a Celtic word: and probably suggests his
half-Galatian extraction. | might well be proud of what occurred,
putting an end as it did to all his family pride, and casting such a
slur upon his race that that far-renowned Priscus, his grandfather,
from whom he gets those brilliant and most remarkable heirlooms,
“the mill, and the leather, and the slaves’
stores,” and the rest of his inheritance in Chanaan72
72 This can
be no other than the district Chammanene, on the east bank of the
Halys, where Galatia and Cappadocia join. | , would never have chosen this lot, which now
makes him so angry. It was to be expected that he would revile those
who were the agents of this exile. I quite understand his feeling.
Truly the authors of these misfortunes, if such there be or ever have
been, deserve the censures of these men, in that the renown of their
former lives is thereby obscured, and they are deprived of the
opportunity of mentioning and making much of their more impressive
antecedents; the great distinctions with which each started in life;
the professions they inherited from their fathers; the greater or the
smaller marks of gentility of which each was conscious, even before
they became so widely known and valued that even emperors numbered them
amongst their acquaintance, as he now boasts in his book, and that all
the higher governments were roused about them and the world was filled
with their doings.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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