Subscribe
to CF
Be
first to know
Read our AAA review
from Catholic Culture
Our Mission
To
bring Jesus Christ; the Way, the Truth and the Life; to all who will follow,
according to scripture and tradition, per the Magisterium
of the Roman Catholic Church.
While you visit!
Listen
to
Radio
For the Sacred
Heart of Jesus and the Immaculate Heart of Mary. |
THE PHOENIX
BY AN UNCERTAIN AUTHOR
ATTRIBUTED TO LACTANTIUS
THERE
iS a happy spot, retired(2) in the first East, where the great gate of the
eternal pole lies
open. It
is not, however, situated near to his rising
in summer or in winter, but where the sun pours the day from his vernal chariot.
There a plain spreads its open tracts; nor does any mound rise, nor hollow
valley open(3) itself. But through twice six ells that place rises above the
mountains, whose tops are thought to be lofty among us. Here is the grove of
the sun; a wood stands planted with many a tree, blooming with the honour of
perpetual foliage. When the pole had blazed with the fires of Phaethon, that
place was uninjured by the flames; and when the deluge had immersed the world
in waves, it rose above the waters of Deucalion. No enfeebling diseases, no
sickly old age, nor cruel death, nor harsh fear, approaches hither, nor dreadful
crime, nor mad desire of riches, nor Mars, nor fury, burning with the love
of slaughter.(4) Bitter grief is absent, and want clothed in rags, and sleepless
cares, and violent hunger. No tempest rages there, nor dreadful violence of
the wind; nor does the hoar-frost cover the earth with cold dew. No cloud extends
its fleecy(5) covering above the plains, nor does the turbid moisture of water
fall from on high; but there is a fountain in the middle, which they call by
the name of "living;"(6) it is clear, gentle, and abounding with
sweet waters, which, bursting forth once during the space of each(7) month,
twelve times irrigates all the grove with waters. Here a species of tree, rising
with lofty stem, bears mellow fruits not about to fall on the ground. This
grove, these woods, a single(8) bird, the phoenix, inhabits,--single, but it
lives reproduced by its own death. It obeys and submits(9) to Phoebus, a remarkable
attendant. Its parent nature has given it to possess this office. When at its
first rising the saffron morn grows red, when it puts to flight the stars with
its rosy light, thrice and four times she plunges her body into the sacred
waves, thrice and four times she sips water from the living stream.(10) She
is raised aloft, and takes her seat on the highest top of the lofty tree, which
alone looks down upon the whole grove; and turning herself to the fresh risings
of the nascent Phoebus, she awaits his rays and rising beam. And when the sun
has thrown back the threshold of the shining gate, and the light gleam(11)
of the first light has shone forth, she begins to pour strains of sacred song,
and to hail(12) the new light with wondrous voice, which neither the notes
of the nightingale(13) nor the flute of the Muses can equal with Cyrrhaean(14)
strains. But neither is it thought that the dying swan can imitate it, nor
the tuneful strings of the lyre of Mercury. After that Phoebus has brought
back his horses to the open heaven,(15) and continually advancing, has displayed(16)
his whole orb; she applauds with thrice-repeated flapping of her wings, and
having thrice adored the fire-bearing head, is silent. And she also distinguishes
the swift hours by sounds not liable to error by day and night: an overseer(17)
of the groves, a venerable priestess of the wood, and alone admitted to thy
secrets, O Phoebus. And when she has now accomplished the thousand years of
her life, and length of days has rendered her burdensome,(1) in order that
she may renew the age which has glided by, the fates pressing(2) her, she flees
from the beloved couch of the accustomed grove. And when she has left the sacred
places, through a desire of being born(3) again, then she seeks this world,
where death reigns. Full of years, she directs her swift flight into Syria,
to which Venus herself has given the name of Phoenice;(4) and through trackless
deserts she seeks the retired groves in the place, where a remote wood lies
concealed through the glens. Then she chooses a lofty palm, with top reaching
to the heavens, which has the pleasing(5) name of phoenix from the bird, and
where(6) no hurtful living creature can break through, or slimy serpent, or
any bird of prey. Then AEolus shuts in the winds in hanging caverns, lest they
should injure the bright(7) air with their blasts, or lest a cloud collected
by the south wind through the empty sky should remove the rays of the sun,
and be a hindrance(8) to the bird. Afterwards she builds for herself either
a nest or a tomb, for she perishes that she may live; yet she produces herself.
Hence she collects juices and odours, which the Assyrian gathers from the rich
wood, which the wealthy Arabian gathers; which either the Pygmaean(9) nations,
or India crops, or the Sabaean land produces from its soft bosom. Hence she
heaps together cinnamon and the odour of the far-scented amomum, and balsams
with mixed leaves. Neither the twig of the mild cassia nor of the fragrant
acanthus is absent, nor the tears and rich drop of frankincense. To these she
adds tender ears(10) of flourishing spikenard, and joins the too pleasing pastures(11)
of myrrh. Immediately she places her body about to be changed on the strewed
nest, and her quiet limbs on such(12) a couch. Then with her mouth she scatters
juices around and upon her limbs, about to die with her own funeral rites.
Then amidst various odours she yields up(13) her life, nor fears the faith
of so great a deposit. In the meantime her body, destroyed by death, which
proves the source of life,(14) is hot, and the heat itself produces a flame;
and it conceives fire afar off from the light of heaven: it blazes, and is
dissolved into burnt ashes. And these ashes collected in death it fuses,(15)
as it were, into a mass, and has an effect(16) resembling seed. From this an
animal is said to arise without limbs, but the worm is said to be of a milky
colour. And it suddenly increases vastly with an imperfectly formed(17) body,
and collects itself into the appearance of a well-rounded egg. After this it
is formed again, such as its figure was before, and the phoenix, having burst
her shell,(18) shoots forth, even as caterpillars(19) in the fields, when they
are fastened by a thread to a stone, are wont to be changed into a butterfly.
No food is appointed for her in our world, nor does any one make it his business
to feed her while unfledged. She sips the delicate(20) ambrosial dews of heavenly
nectar which have fallen from the star-bearing pole. She gathers these; with
these the bird is nourished in the midst of odours, until she bears a natural
form. But when she begins to flourish with early youth, she flies forth now
about to return to her native abode. Previously, however, she encloses in an
ointment of balsam, and in myrrh and dissolved(21) frankincense, all the remains
of her own body, and the bones or ashes, and relics(22) of herself, and with
pious mouth brings it into a round form,(23) and carrying this with her feet,
she goes to the rising of the sun, and tarrying at the altar, she draws it
forth in the sacred temple. She shows and presents herself an object of admiration
to the beholder; such great beauty is there, such great honour abounds. In
the first place, her colour is like the brilliancy(24) of that which the seeds
of the pomegranate when ripe take under the smooth rind;(25) such colour as
is contained in the leaves which the poppy produces in the fields, when Flora
spreads her garments beneath the blushing sky. Her shoulders and beautiful
breasts shine with this covering; with this her head, with this her neck, and
the upper parts of her back shine. And her tail is extended, varied with yellow
metal, in the spots of which mingled purple blushes. Between her wings there
is a bright(26) mark above, as(27) Tris on high is wont to paint a cloud from
above. She gleams resplendent with a mingling of the green emerald, and a shining
beak(28) of pure horn opens itself. Her eyes are large;(29) you might believe
that they were two jacinths;(1) from the middle of which a bright flame shines.
An irradiated crown is fitted(2) to the whole of head, resembling on high the
glory of the head of Phoebus.(3) Scales cover her thighs spangled with yellow
metal, but a rosy(4) colour paints her claws with honour. Her form is seen
to blend the figure of the peacock with that of the painted bird of Phasis.(5)
The winged creature which is produced in the lands of the Arabians, whether
it be beast or bird, can scarcely equal her magnitude.(6) She is not, however,
slow, as birds which through the greatness of their body have sluggish motions,
and a very heavy(7) weight. But she is light and swift, full of royal beauty.
Such she always shows herself(8) in the sight of men. Egypt comes hither to
such a wondrous(9) sight, and the exulting crowd salutes the rare bird. Immediately
they carve her image on the consecrated marble, and mark both the occurrence
and the day with a new title. Birds of every kind assemble together; none is
mindful of prey, none of fear. Attended by a chorus of birds, she flies through
the heaven, and a crowd accompanies her, exulting in the pious duty. But when
she has arrived at the regions of pure ether, she presently returns;(10) afterwards
she is concealed in her own regions. But oh, bird of happy lot and fate,(11)
to whom the god himself granted to be born from herself! Whether it be female,
or male, or neither, or both, happy she, who enters into(12) no compacts of
Venus. Death is Venus to her; her only pleasure is in death: that she may be
born, she desires previously to die. She is an offspring to herself, her own
father and heir, her own nurse, and always a foster-child to herself. She is
herself indeed, but not the same, since she is herself, and not herself, having
gained eternal life by the blessing of death.
Back to Volume 7 Index