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Letter
CXXVIII. To Gaudentius.
Gaudentius had written from Rome to ask Jerome’s
advice as to the bringing up of his infant daughter; whom after the
religious fashion of the day he had dedicated to a life of virginity.
Jerome’s reply may be compared with his advice to Laeta (Letter
CVII.) which it closely resembles. It is noticeable also for the vivid
account which it gives of the sack of Rome by Alaric in a.d. 410. The date of the letter is a.d. 413.
1. It is hard to write to a little girl who cannot
understand what you say, of whose mind you know nothing, and of whose
inclinations it would be rash to prophesy. In the words of a famous
orator “she is to be praised more for what she will be than for
what she is.”3585
3585 Spes in ea magis
laudanda est quam res. Cic. de Rep. Jerome again quotes the words in
Letter CXXX. § 1. | For how can
you speak of self-control to a child who is eager for cakes, who
babbles on her mother’s knee, and to whom honey is sweeter than
any words? Will she hear the deep things of the apostle when all her
delight is in nursery tales? Will she heed the dark sayings of the
prophets when her nurse can frighten her by a frowning face? Or will
she comprehend the majesty of the gospel, when its splendour dazzles
the keenest intellect? Shall I urge her to obey her parents when with
her chubby hand she beats her smiling mother? For such reasons as these
my dear Pacatula must read some other time the letter that I send her
now. Meanwhile let her learn the alphabet, spelling, grammar, and
syntax. To induce her to repeat her lessons with her little shrill
voice, hold out to her as rewards cakes and mead and sweetmeats.3586
3586 cf. Hor.
1 S. i. 25, 26. | She will make haste to perform her
task if she hopes afterwards to get some bright bunch of flowers, some
glittering bauble, some enchanting doll. She must also learn to spin,
shaping the yarn with her tender thumb; for, even if she constantly
breaks the threads, a day will come when she will no longer break them.
Then when she has finished her lessons she ought to have some
recreation. At such times she may hang round her mother’s neck,
or snatch kisses from her relations. Reward her for singing psalms that
she may love what she has to learn. Her task will then become a
pleasure to her and no compulsion will be necessary.
2. Some mothers when they have vowed a daughter to
virginity clothe her in sombre garments, wrap her up in a dark cloak,
and let her have neither linen nor gold ornaments. They wisely refuse
to accustom her to what she will afterwards have to lay aside. Others
act on the opposite principle. “What is the use,” say they,
“of keeping such things from her? Will she not see them with
others? Women are fond of finery and many whose chastity is beyond
question dress not for men but for themselves. Give her what she asks
for, but shew her that those are most praised who ask for nothing. It
is better that she should enjoy things to the full and so learn to
despise them than that from not having them she should wish to have
them.” “This,” they continue, “was the plan
which the Lord adopted with the children of Israel. When they longed
for the fleshpots of Egypt He sent them flights of quails and allowed
them to gorge themselves until they were sick.3587
3587 Numb. xi. 4, 20, 31. | Those who have once lived worldly
lives more readily forego the pleasures of sense than such as from
their youth up have known nothing of desire.” For while the
former—so they argue—trample on what they know, the latter
are attracted by what is to them unknown. While the former penitently
shun the insidious advances which pleasure makes, the latter coquet
with the allurements of sense and fancying them to be as sweet as honey
find them to be deadly poison. They quote the passage which says that
“the lips of a strange woman drop as an honeycomb;”3588 which is sweet indeed in the
eater’s mouth but is afterwards found more bitter than gall.3589 This they argue, is the reason that
neither honey nor wax is offered in the sacrifices of the Lord,3590 and that oil the product of the bitter
olive is burned in His temple.3591 Moreover it is
with bitter herbs that the passover is eaten,3592 and “with the unleavened bread of
sincerity and truth.”3593 He that
receives these shall suffer persecution in the world. Wherefore the
prophet symbolically sings: “I sat alone because I was filled
with bitterness.”3594
3. What then, I reply? Is youth to run riot that
self-indulgence may afterwards be more resolutely rejected? Far from
it, they rejoin: “let every man, wherein he is called, therein
abide.3595 Is any called being
circumcised,”—that is,
as a virgin?—“let him not become uncircumcised”3596 —that is, let him not seek the coat
of marriage given to Adam on his expulsion from the paradise of
virginity.3597 “Is any called in
uncircumcision,”—that is, having a wife and enveloped in
the skin of matrimony? let him not seek the nakedness of virginity3598 and of that eternal chastity which he
has lost once for all. No, let him “possess his vessel in
sanctification and honour,”3599 let him
drink of his own wells not out of the dissolute cisterns3600 of the harlots which cannot hold within
them the pure waters of chastity.3601 The same
Paul also in the same chapter, when discussing the subjects of
virginity and marriage, calls those who are married slaves of the
flesh, but those not under the yoke of wedlock freemen who serve the
Lord in all freedom.3602
What I say I do not say as universally applicable; my
treatment of the subject is only partial. I speak of some only, not of
all. However my words are addressed to those of both sexes, and not
only to “the weaker vessel.”3603 Are you a virgin? Why then do you find
pleasure in the society of a woman? Why do you commit to the high seas
your frail patched boat, why do you so confidently face the great peril
of a dangerous voyage? You know not what you desire, and yet you cling
to her as though you had either desired her before or, to put it as
leniently as possible, as though you would hereafter desire her. Women,
you will say, make better servants than men. In that case choose a
misshapen old woman, choose one whose continence is approved in the
Lord. Why should you find pleasure in a young girl, pretty, and
voluptuous? You frequent the baths, walk abroad sleek and ruddy, eat
flesh, abound in riches, and wear the most expensive clothes; and yet
you fancy that you can sleep safely beside a death-dealing serpent. You
tell me perhaps that you do not live in the same house with her. This
is only true at night. But you spend whole days in conversing with her.
Why do you sit alone with her? Why do you dispense with witnesses? By
so doing if you do not actually sin you appear to do so, and (so
important is your influence) you embolden unhappy men by your example
to do what is wrong. You too, whether virgin or widow, why do you allow
a man to detain you in conversation so long? Why are you not afraid to
be left alone with him? At least go out of doors to satisfy the wants
of nature, and for this at any rate leave the man with whom you have
given yourself more liberty than you would with your brother, and have
behaved more immodestly than you would with your husband. You have some
question, you say, to ask concerning the holy scriptures. If so, ask it
publicly; let your maids and your attendants hear it. “Everything
that is made manifest is light.”3604
He who says only what he ought does not look for a corner to say it in;
he is glad to have hearers for he likes to be praised. He must be a
fine teacher, on the other hand, who thinks little of men, does not
care for the brothers, and labours in secret merely to instruct just
one weak woman!
3a. I have wandered for a little from my
immediate subject to discuss the procedure of others in such a case as
yours; and while it is my object to train, nay rather to nurse, the
infant Pacatula, I have in a moment drawn upon myself the hostility of
many women who are by no means daughters of peace.3605
3605 Male
pacatæ, a pun on Pacatula, which means ‘Little
Peaceful.’ | But I shall now return to my proper
theme.
A girl should associate only with girls, she should know
nothing of boys and should dread even playing with them. She should
never hear an unclean word, and if amid the bustle of the household she
should chance to hear one, she should not understand it. Her
mother’s nod should be to her as much a command as a spoken
injunction. She should love her as her parent, obey her as her
mistress, and reverence her as her teacher. She is now a child without
teeth and without ideas, but, as soon as she is seven years old, a
blushing girl knowing what she ought not to say and hesitating as to
what she ought, she should until she is grown up commit to memory the
psalter and the books of Solomon; the gospels, the apostles and the
prophets should be the treasure of her heart. She should not appear in
public too freely or too frequently attend crowded churches. All her
pleasure should be in her chamber. She must never look at young men or
turn her eyes upon curled fops; and the wanton songs of sweet voiced
girls which wound the soul through the ears must be kept from her. The
more freedom of access such persons possess, the harder is it to avoid
them when they come; and what they have once learned themselves they
will secretly teach her and will thus contaminate our secluded
Danaë by the talk of the crowd. Give her for guardian and
companion a mistress and a governess, one not given to much wine or in
the apostle’s words idle and a tattler, but sober, grave,
industrious in spinning wool3606
3606 Lanifica.
Cf. the well-known epitaph on a Roman matron: “She stayed
at home and spun wool.” | and one whose
words will form her childish mind to the practice of virtue. For, as
water follows a finger drawn through the sand, so one of soft and tender
years is pliable for good or evil; she can be drawn in whatever
direction you choose to guide her. Moreover spruce and gay young men
often seek access for themselves by paying court to nurses or
dependants or even by bribing them, and when they have thus gently
effected their approach they blow up the first spark of passion until
it bursts into flame and little by little advance to the most shameless
requests. And it is quite impossible to check them then, for the verse
is proved true in their case: “It is ill rebuking what you have
once allowed to become ingrained.”3607
3607 Already quoted in
Letter CVII. § 8. | I am ashamed to say it and yet I must;
high born ladies who have rejected more high born suitors cohabit with
men of the lowest grade and even with slaves. Sometimes in the name of
religion and under the cloak of a desire for celibacy they actually
desert their husbands in favour of such paramours. You may often see a
Helen following her Paris without the smallest dread of Menelaus. Such
persons we see and mourn for but we cannot punish, for the multitude of
sinners procures tolerance for the sin.
4. The world sinks into ruin: yes! but shameful to say
our sins still live and flourish. The renowned city, the capital of the
Roman Empire, is swallowed up in one tremendous fire; and there is no
part of the earth where Romans are not in exile. Churches once held
sacred are now but heaps of dust and ashes; and yet we have our minds
set on the desire of gain. We live as though we are going to die
tomorrow; yet we build as though we are going to live always in this
world.3608
3608 cf. Letter
CXXIII. 15. | Our walls shine with gold, our
ceilings also and the capitals of our pillars; yet Christ dies before
our doors naked and hungry in the persons of His poor. The pontiff
Aaron, we read, faced the raging flames, and by putting fire in his
censer checked the wrath of God. The High Priest stood between the dead
and the living, and the fire dared not pass his feet.3609 On another occasion God said to Moses,
“Let me alone.…that I may consume this people,”3610 shewing by the words “let me
alone” that he can be withheld from doing what he threatens. The
prayers of His servant hindered His power. Who, think you, is there now
under heaven able to stay God’s wrath, to face the flame of His
judgment, and to say with the apostle, “I could wish that I
myself were accursed for my brethren”?3611
Flocks and shepherds perish together, because as it is with the people,
so is it with the priest.3612 Of old it was
not so. Then Moses spoke in a passion of pity, “yet now if thou
wilt forgive their sin—; and if not, blot me, I pray thee, out of
thy book.”3613 He is not
satisfied to secure his own salvation, he desires to perish with those
that perish. And he is right, for “in the multitude of people is
the king’s honour.”3614
Such are the times in which our little Pacatula is born.
Such are the swaddling clothes in which she draws her first breath; she
is destined to know of tears before laughter and to feel sorrow sooner
than joy. And hardly does she come upon the stage when she is called on
to make her exit. Let her then suppose that the world has always been
what it is now. Let her know nothing of the past, let her shun the
present, and let her long for the future.
These thoughts of mine are but hastily mustered. For my
grief for lost friends has known no intermission and only recently have
I recovered sufficient composure to write an old man’s letter to
a little child. My affection for you, brother Gaudentius, has induced
me to make the attempt and I have thought it better to say a few words
than to say nothing at all. The grief that paralyses my will will
excuse my brevity; whereas, were I to say nothing, the sincerity of my
friendship might well be doubted. E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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