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. |
ST. BASIL
LETTERS CCLXXVI TO CCCLXVI
LETTER CCLXXVI.(1)
To the great Harmatius.
THE common law of human nature makes elders fathers to youngsters, and the
special peculiar law of us Christians puts us old men in the place of parents
to the younger. Do not, then, think that I am impertinent or shew myself indefensibly
meddlesome, if I plead with you on behalf of your son. In other respects I
think it only right that you should exact obedience from him; for, so far as
his body is concerned, he is subject to you, both by the law of nature, and
by the civil law under which we live. His soul, however, is derived from a
diviner source, and may properly be held to be subject to another authority.
The debts which it owes to God have a higher claim than any others. Since,
then, he has preferred the God of us Christians, the true God, to your many
gods which are worshipped by the help of material symbols, be not angry with
him. Rather admire his noble firmness of soul, in sacrificing the fear and
respect due to his father to close conjunction with God, through true knowledge
and a life of virtue. Nature herself will move you, as well as your invariable
gentleness and kindliness of disposition, not to allow yourself to feel angry
with him even to a small extent. And I am sure that you will not set my mediation
at naught,--or rather, I should say, the mediation of your townsmen of which
I am the exponent. They all love you so well, and pray so earnestly for all
blessings for you, that they suppose that in you they have welcomed a Christian
too. So overjoyed have they been at the report which has suddenly reached the
town.
LETTER CCLXXVII.(1)
To the learned Maximus.
THE excellent
Theotecnus has given mean account of your highness, whereby he has inspired
me with
a longing
for your acquaintance, so clearly do his
words delineate the character of your mind. He has enkindled in me so ardent
an affection for you, that were it not that I am weighed down with age, that
I am the victim of a congenital ailment, that I am bound hand and foot by the
numberless cares of the Church, nothing would have hindered my coming to you.
For indeed it is no small gain that a member of a great house, a man of illustrious
lineage, in adopting the life of the gospel, should bridle the propensities
of youth by reflection, and subject to reason the affections of the flesh;
should display a humility consistent with his Christian profession, bethinking
himself, as is his duty, whence he is come and whither he is going. For it
is this consideration of our nature that reduces the swelling of the mind,
and banishes all boastfulness and arrogance. In a word it renders one a disciple
of our Lord, Who said, "Learn of me, for I am meek and lowly in heart."(2)
And in truth, very dear son, the only thing that deserves our exertions and
praises is our everlasting welfare; and this is the honour that comes from
God.
Human affairs are fainter than a shadow; more deceitful than a dream. Youth
fades more quickly than the flowers of spring; our beauty wastes with age or
sickness. Riches are uncertain; glory is fickle. The pursuit of arts and sciences
is bounded by the present life; the charm of eloquence, which all covet, reaches
but the ear: whereas the practice of virtue is a precious possession for its
owner, a delightful spectacle for all who witness it. Make this your study;
so will yon be worthy of the good things promised by the Lord.
But a recital of the means whereby to make the acquisition, and secure the
enjoyment of these blessings, lies beyond the intention of this present letter.
Thus much however, after what I heard from my brother Theotecnus, it occurred
to me to write to you. I pray that he may always speak the truth, especially
in his accounts of you; that the Lord may be the more glorified in you, abounding
as you do in the most precious fruits of piety, although derived from a foreign
root.
LETTER CCLXXVIII.(1)
To Valerianus.
I DESIRED, when in Orphanene,(2) to see your excellency; I had also hoped
that while you were living at Corsagaena, there would have been nothing to
hinder your coming to me at a synod which I had expected to hold at Attagaena;
since, however, I failed to hold it, my desire was to see you in the bill-country;
for here again Evesus,(3) being in that neighbourhood, held out hopes of our
meeting. But since I have been disappointed on both occasions, I determined
to write and beg that you would deign to visit me; for I think it is but right
and proper that the young man should come to the old. Furthermore, at our meeting,
I would make you a tender of my advice, touching your negotiations with certain
at Caesarea: a right conclusion of the matter calls for my intervention. If
agreeable then, do not be backward in coming to me.
LETTER CCLXXIX.(4)
To Modestus the Prefect.
ALTHOUGH so numerous are my letters, conveyed to your excellency by as many
bearers, yet, having regard to the especial honour you have shewn me, I cannot
think that their large number causes you any annoyance.
I do not hesitate therefore to entrust to this brother the accompanying letter:
I know that he will meet with all that he wishes, and that you will count me
hut as a benefactor in furnishing occasion for the gratification of your kind
inclinations. He craves your advocacy. His cause be will explain in person,
if you but deign to regard him with a favourable eye, and embolden him to speak
freely in the presence of so august an authority. Accept my assurance that
any kindness shewn to him, I shall regard as personal to myself. His special
reason for leaving Tyana and coming to me was the high value he attached to
the presentation of a letter written by myself in support of his application.
That he may not be disappointed of his hope; that I may continue in the enjoyment
of your consideration; that your interest in all that is good may, in this
present matter, find scope for its full exercised are the grounds on which
I crave a gracious reception for him, and a place amongst those nearest to
you.
LETTER CCLXXX.(1)
To Modestus the Prefect.
I FEEL my boldness in pressing my suit by letter upon a man in your position;
still the honour that you have paid me in the past has banished all my scruples.
Accordingly I write with confidence.
My plea is for a relative of mine, a man worthy of respect for his integrity.
He is the bearer of this letter, and he stands to me in the place of a son.
Your favour is all that he requires for the fulfilment of Iris wishes. Deign
therefore to receive, at the hands of the aforesaid bearer, my letter in furtherance
of his plea. I pray you to give him an opportunity of explaining his affairs
at an interview with those in a position to help him. So by your direction
shall he quickly obtain his desires; while I shall have occasion for boasting
that by God's favour I have found a champion who regards the entreaties of
my friends as personal claims to his protection.
LETTER CCLXXXI.(2)
To Modestus the Prefect.
I AM mindful of the great honour I received in the encouragement you gave
me, along with others, to address your excellency. I avail myself of the privilege
and the enjoyment of your gracious favour.
I congratulate myself upon having such a correspondent, as also upon the opportunity
afforded your excellency of conferring an honour on me by your reply.
I claim your clemency on behalf of Helladius my special friend. I pray that
he may be relieved from the anxieties of TAX assessor, and so be enabled to
work in the interests of our country.
You have already so far given a gracious consent, that I now repeat my request,
and pray you to send instructions to the governor of the Province, that Helladius
may be released from this infliction.
LETTER CCLXXXII.(3)
To a bishop.
You blame me for not inviting you; and, when invited, you do not attend. That
your former excuse was an empty one is clear from your conduct on the second
occasion. For had you been invited before, in all probability you would never
have come.
Act not again unadvisedly, but obey this present invitation; since you know
that its repetition strengthens an indictment, and that a second lends credibility
to a previous accusation.
I exhort you always to bear with me; or even if you cannot, at any rate it
is your duty not to neglect the Martyrs, to join in whose commemoration you
are invited. Render therefore your service to us both; or if you will not consent
to this, at any rate to the more worthy.
LETTER CCLXXXIII.(1)
To a widow.
I HOPE to find a suitable day for the conference, after those which I intend
to fix for the hill-country. I see no opportunity for our meeting (unless the
Lord so order it beyond my expectation), other than at a public conference.
You may imagine my position from your own experience. If in the care of a
single household you are beset with such a crowd of anxieties, how many distractions,
think you, each day brings to me?
Your dream, I think, reveals more perfectly the necessity of making provision
for spiritual contemplation, and cultivating that mental vision by which God
is wont to be seen. Enjoying as you do the consolation of the Holy Scriptures,
you stand in need neither of my assistance nor of that of anybody else to help
you to comprehend your duty. You have the all-sufficient counsel and guidance
of the Holy Spirit to lead you to what is right.
LETTER CCLXXXIV.(2)
To the assessor in the case of monks.
CONCERNING the monks, your excellency has, I believe, already rules in force,
so that I need ask for no special favour on their behalf.
It is enough that they share with others the enjoyment of your general beneficence;
still I feel it incumbent upon me too to interest myself in their case. I therefore
submit it to your more perfect judgment, that men who have long since taken
leave of this life, who have mortified their own bodies, so that they have
neither money to spend nor bodily service to render in the interests of the
common weal, should be exempted from taxation. For if their lives are consistent
with their profession, they possess neither money nor bodies; for the former
is spent in communicating to the needy; while their bodies are worn away in
prayer and fasting.
Men living such lives you will, I know, regard with special reverence; nay
you will wish to secure their intervention, since by their life in the Gospel
they are able to prevail with God.
LETTER CCLXXXV.(1)
Without Address.
THE hearer of this letter is one on whom rests the care of our Church and
the management of its property--our beloved son.
Deign to grant him freedom of speech on those points that are referred to
year holiness, and attention to the expression of his own views; so shall our
Church at length recover herself, and henceforth be released from this many-headed
Hydra.
Our property is our poverty; so much so that we are ever in search of one
to relieve us of it; for the expenses of the Church property amount to more
than any profit that she derives from it.
LETTER CCLXXXVI.(2)
To the Commentariensis.(3)
WHEREAS certain vagabonds have been arrested in the church for stealing, in
defiance of God's commandment, some poor men's clothing, of little value otherwise,
yet such as they had rather have on than off their backs; and whereas you consider
that in virtue of your office you yourself should have the custody of the offenders:--I
hereby declare, that I would have you know that for offences committed in the
church it is our business to mete out punishment, and that the intervention
of the civil authorities is in these cases superfluous. Wherefore, the stolen
property, as set forth in the document in your possession and in the transcript
made in the presence of eyewitnesses, I enjoin you to retain, reserving part
for future claims, and distributing the rest among the present applicants.
As for the offenders,--that they be corrected in the discipline and admonition
of the Lord. By this means I hope to work their successive reformations. For
where the stripes of human tribunals have failed, I have often known the fearful
judgments of God to be effectual. If it is, however, your wish to refer this
matter also to the count, such is my confidence in his justice and uprightness
that I leave you to follow your own counsels.
LETTER CCLXXXVII.(1)
Without address.
IT is difficult to deal with this man. I scarcely know how to treat so shifty,
and, to judge from the evidence, so desperate a character. When summoned before
the court, he fails to appear; and if he does attend, he is gifted with such
volubility of words and oaths, that I think myself well off to be quickly rid
of him. I have often known him twist round his accusations upon his accusers.
In a word, there is no creature living upon earth so subtile and versatile
in villainy. A slight acquaintance with him suffices to prove this. Why then
do you appeal to me ? Why not at once bring yourselves to submit to his ill-treatment,
as to a visitation of God's anger?
At the same time you must not be contaminated by contact with wickedness.
I enjoin therefore that he and all his household be forbidden the services
of the Church, and all other communion with her ministers. Being thus made
an example of, he may haply be brought to a sense of his enormities.
LETTER CCLXXXVIII.
Without address. Excommunicatory.
WHEN public
punishment fails to bring a man to his senses, or exclusion from the prayers
of the
Church to
drive him to repentance, it only remains to treat
him in accordance with our Lord's directions--as it is written, " If thy
brother shall trespass against thee ....tell him his fault between thee and
him; ... if he will not hear thee, take with 'thee another;" "and
if he shall" then " neglect to hear, tell it unto the Church; but
if he neglect to hear even the Church, let him be unto thee henceforth as an
heathen man, and as a publican."(1) Now all this we have done in the case
of this fellow. First, he was accused of his fault; then he was convicted in
the presence of one or two witnesses; thirdly, in the presence of the Church.
Thus we have made our solemn protest, and he has not listened to it. Henceforth
let him be excommunicated.
Further, let proclamation be made throughout the district, that he be excluded
from participation in any of the ordinary relations of life; so that by our
withholding ourselves from all intercourse with him he may become altogether
food for the devil.(2)
LETTER CCLXXXIX.(3)
Without address. Concerning an afflicted woman.
I CONSIDER it an equal mistake, to let the guilty go unpunished, and to exceed
the proper limits of punishment. I accordingly passed upon this man the sentence
I considered it incumbent on me to pass--ex-communication from the Church.
The sufferer I exhorted not to avenge herself; but to leave to God the redressing
of her wrongs. Thus if my admonitions had possessed any weight, I should then
have been obeyed, for the language I employed was far more likely to ensure
credit, than any letter to enforce compliance.
So, even after listening to her statements that contained matter sufficiently
grave, I still held my peace; and even now I am not sure that it becomes me
to treat again of this same question.
For, she says, I have foregone husband, children, all (he enjoyments of life,
for the attainment of this single object, the favour of God, and good repute
amongst men. Yet one day the offender, an adept from boyhood in corrupting
families, with the impudence habitual to him, forced an entrance into my house;
and thus within the bare limits of an interview an acguaintanceship was formed.
It was only owing to my ignorance of the man, and to that timidity which comes
from inexperience, that I hesitated openly to turn him out of doors. Yet to
such a pitch of impiety and insolence did he come, that he filled the whole
city with slanders, and publicly inveighed against me by affixing to the church
doors libellous placards. For this conduct, it is true, he incurred the displeasure
of the law: but, nevertheless, he returned to his slanderous attacks on me.
Once more the market-place was filled with his abuse, as well as the gymnasia,
theatres, and houses whose congeniality of habits gained him an admittance.
Nor did his very extravagance lead men to recognise those virtues wherein I
was conspicuous, so universally had I been represented as being of an incontinent
disposition. In these calumnies, she goes on to say, some find a delight--such
is the pleasure men naturally feel in the disparagement of others; some profess
to be pained, but shew no sympathy; others believe the truth of these slanders;
others again, having regard to the persistency of his oaths, are undecided.
But sympathy I have none. And now indeed I begin to realise my loneliness,
and bewail myself. I have no brother, friend, relation, no servant, bond or
free, in a word, no one whatever to share my grief. And yet, I think, I am
more than any one else an object of pity, in a city where the haters of wickedness
are so few. They bandy violence; but violence, though they fail to see it,
moves in a circle, and in time will overtake each one of them.
In such and still more appealing terms she told her tale, with countless tears,
and so departed. Nor did she altogether acquit me of blame; thinking that,
when I ought to sympathise with her like a father, I am indifferent to her
troubles, and regard the sufferings of others too philosophically.
For it is not, she urged, the loss of money that you bid me disregard; nor
the endurance of bodily sufferings; but a damaged reputation, an injury involving
loss upon the Church at large.
This is
her appeal; and now I pray you, most excellent sir, consider what answer
you would have me
make her.
The decision I have come to in my own mind
is, not to surrender offenders to the magistrates; yet not to rescue those
already in their custody, since it has long ago been declared by the Apostle,
that the magistrates should be a terror to them in their evil-doings; for,
it is said, "he beareth not the sword in vain."(1) To surrender him,
then, is contrary to my humanity; while to release him would be an encouragement
to his violence.
Perhaps, however, you will defer taking action until my arrival. I will then
shew you that I can effect nothing from there being none to obey me.
LETTER CCXC.(1)
To Nectarius.
MAY many blessings rest on those who encourage your excellency in maintaining
a constant correspondence with me! And regard not such a wish as conventional
merely, but as expressing my sincere conviction of the value of your utterances.
Whom could I honour above Nectarius--known to me from his earliest days as
a child of fairest promise, who now through the exercise of every virtue has
reached a position of the highest eminence?--So much so, that of all my friends
the dearest is the bearer of your letter.
Touching the election of those set over districts,(2) God forbid that I should
do anything for the gratification of man, through listening to importunities
or yielding to fear. In that case I should be not a steward. but a huckster,
battering the gift of God for the favour of man. But seeing that votes are
given but by mortals, who can only bear such testimony as they do from outward
appearances, while the choice of fit persons is committed in all humility to
Him Who knows the secrets of the heart, haply it is best for everybody, when
he has tendered the evidence of his vote, to abstain from all heat and contention,
as though some self-interest were involved in the testimony, and to pray to
God that what is advantageous may not remain unknown. Thus the result is no
longer attributable to man, but a cause for thankfulness to God. For these
things, if they be of man, cannot be said to be; but are pretence only, altogether
void of reality.
Consider also, that when a man strives with might and main to gain his end,
there is no small danger of his drawing even sinners to his side; and there
is much sinfulness, such is the weakness of man's nature, even where we should
least expect it.
Again, in private consultation we often offer our friends good advice, and,
though we do not find them taking it, yet we are not angry. Where then it is
not man that counsels, but God that determines, shall we feel indignation at
not being preferred before the determination of God?
And if these things were given to man by man, what need were there for us
to ask them of ourselves? Were it not better for each to take them from himself
? But if they are the gift of God, we ought to pray and not to grieve. And
in our prayer we should not seek oar own will, but leave it to God who disposes
for the best.
Now may the holy God keep from your home all taste of sorrow; and grant to
you and to your family a life exempt from harm and sickness.
LETTER CCXCI.(1)
To Timotheus the Chorepiscopus.(2)
THE due limits of a letter, and that mode of addressing you, render it inconvenient
for me to write all I think; at the same time to pass over my thoughts in silence,
when my heart is burning with righteous indignation against you, is well-nigh
impossible. I will adopt the midway course: I will write some things; others
I will omit. For I wish to chide you, if so I may, in terms both flank and
friendly.
Yes! that Timotheus whom I have known from boyhood, so intent upon an upright
and ascetic life, as even to be accused of excess therein, now forsakes the
enquiry after those means whereby we may be united to God; now makes it his
first thought what some one else may think of him, and lives a life of dependence
upon the opinions of others; is mainly anxious how to serve his friends, without
incurring the ridicule of enemies; and fears disgrace with the world as a great
misfortune. Does he not know, that while he is occupied with these trifles
he is unconsciously neglecting his highest interests? For, that we cannot be
engaged with both at once--the things of this world and of Heaven--the holy
Scriptures are full of teaching for us. Nay, Nature herself is full of such
instances. In the exercise of the mental faculty, to think two thoughts at
the same time is quite impossible. In the perceptions of our senses, to admit
two sounds falling upon our ears at the same moment, and to distinguish them,
although we are provided with two open passages, is impossible. Our eyes, again,
unless they are both fixed upon the object of our vision, are unable to perform
their action accurately.
Thus much for Nature; but to recite to you the evidence of the Scriptures
were as ridiculous as, so runs the proverb, ` to carry owls to Athens.'(1)
Why then combine things incompatible--the tumults of civil life and the practice
of religion?
Withdraw from clamour; be no more the cause or object of annoyance; let us
keep ourselves to ourselves. We long since proposed religion as our aim; let
us make the attainment of it our practice, and shew those who have the wish
to insult us that it does not lie with them to annoy us at their will. But
this will only be when we have clearly shewn them that we afford no handle
for abuse.
For the present enough of this ! Would that some day we might meet and more
perfectly consider those things that be for our souls' welfare; so may we not
be too much occupied with thoughts of vanity, since death mast one day overtake
us.
I was greatly pleased with the gifts you kindly sent me. They were most welcome
on their own account; the thought of who it was that sent them made them many
times more welcome. The gifts from Pontus, the tablets and medicines, kindly
accept when I send them. At present they are not by me.
N.B. The
letters numbered CCXCII.-CCCLXVI. are included by the Ben. Ed. in a "Classis Tertia," having
no note of time. Some are doubtful, and some plainly spurious. Of these I
include
such as seem most important.
LETTER CCXCII.
To Palladius.
THE one-half of my desire has God fulfilled in the interview He granted me
with our fair sister, your wife. The other half He is able to accomplish; and
so with the sight of your excellency I shall render my full thanks to God.
And i am the more desirous of seeing you, now that I hear you have been adorned
with that great ornament, the clothing of immortality, which clokes our mortality,
and puts out of sight the death of the flesh; by virtue of which the corruptible
is swallowed up in incorruption.
Thus God
of His goodness has now alienated you from sin, united you to Himself, has
opened the doors
of Heaven,
and pointed out the paths that lead to heavenly
bliss. I entreat you therefore by that wisdom wherein you excel all other men,
that you receive the divine favour circumspectly, proving a faithful guardian
of this treasure, as the repository of this royal gift, keeping watch over
it with all carefulness. Preserve this seal of righteousness unsullied, that
so you may stand before God, shining in the brightness of the Saints. Let no
spot or wrinkle defile the pure robe of immortality; but keep holiness in all
your members, as having put on Christ. "For," it is said, " as
many of you as have been baptized into Christ, have put on Christ."(1)
Wherefore let all your members be holy as becomes their investment in a raiment
of holiness and light.
LETTER CCXCIII.
To Julianus.
HOW fare you this long while? Have you altogether recovered the use of your
hand ? And how do other things prosper? According to your wishes and my prayers
? In accordance with your purposes ?
Where men are readily disposed to change, it is only natural that their lives
are not well ordered: but where their minds are fixed, steadfast and unalterable,
it follows that their lives should be conformable to their purposes.
True, it is not in the helmsman's power to make a calm when he wishes; but
with us. it is quite easy to render our lives tranquil by stilling the storms
of passion that surge within, by rising superior to those that assail us from
without. The upright man is touched by neither loss, nor sickness, nor the
other ills of life; for he walks in heart with God. keeps his gaze fixed upon
the future, and easily and lightly weathers the storms that rise from earth.
Be not troubled with the cares of earth. Such men are like fat birds, in vain
endowed with flight, that creep like beasts upon the ground. But you--for I
have witnessed you in difficulties--are like swimmers racing out at sea.
A single claw reveals the whole lion: so from a slight acquaintance I think
I know you fully. And I count it a great thing, that you set some store by
me, that I am not absent from your thoughts, but constantly in your recollection.
Now writing is a proof of recollection; and the oftener you write, the better
pleased I am.
LETTER CCXCIV.
To Festus and Magnus.
IT is doubtless a father's duty to make provision for his children; a husbandman's
to tend his plants and crops; a teacher's to bestow care upon his pupils, especially
when, innate goodness shews signs of promise for them.
The husbandman finds toil a pleasure when he sees the ears ripen or the plants
increase; the teacher is gladdened at his pupils' growth in knowledge, the
father at his son's in stature. But greater is the care I feel for you; higher
the hopes I entertain; in proportion as piety is more excellent than all the
arts, than all the animals and fruits together.
And piety I planted in your heart while still pure and tender, and I matured
it in the hopes of seeing it reach maturity and bearing fruits in due season.
My prayers meanwhile were furthered by your love of learning. And you know
well that you have my good wishes, and that God's favour rests upon your endevours;
for when rightly directed, called or uncalled, God is at hand to further them.
Now every man that loves God is prone to teaching; nay, where there is the
power to teach things profitable, their eagerness is well nigh uncontrollable;
but first their hearers' minds must be cleared of all resistance.
Not that separation in the body is a hindrance to instruction. The Creator,
in the fulness of His love and wisdom, did not confine our minds within our
bodies, nor the power of speaking to our tongues. Ability to profit derives
some advantage even from lapse of time; thus we are able to transmit instruction,
not only to those who are dwelling far away, but even to those who are hereafter
to be born. And experience proves my words: those who lived many years before
teach posterity by instruction preserved in their writings; and we, though
so far separated in the body, are always near in thought, and converse together
with ease.
Instruction is bounded neither by sea nor land, if only we have a care for
our souls' profit.
LETTER CCXCV.
To monks.
I DO not think that I need further commend you to God's grace, after the words
that I addressed to you in person. I then bade you adopt the life in common,
after the manner of living of the Apostles. This you accepted as wholesome
instruction, and gave God thanks for it.
Thus your conduct was due, not so much to the words I spoke, as to my instructions
to put them into practice, conducive at once to your advantage who accepted,
to my comfort who gave you the advice, and to the glory and praise of Christ,
by Whose name we are called.
For this reason I have sent to you our well-beloved brother, that he may learn
of your zeal, may quicken your sloth, may report to me of opposition. For great
is my desire to see you all united in one body, and to hear that you are not
content to live a life without witness; but have undertaken to be both watchful
of each other's diligence, and witnesses of each other's success.
Thus will each of you receive a reward in full, not only on his own behalf,
but also for his brother's progress. And, as is fitting, you will be a source
of mutual profit, both by your words and deeds, as a result of constant intercourse
and exhortation. But above all I exhort you to be mindful of the faith of the
Fathers, and not to be shaken by those who in your retirement would try to
wrest you from it. For you know that unless illumined by faith in God, strictness
of life availeth nothing; nor will a right confession of faith, if void of
good works, be able to present you before the Lord.
Faith and works must be joined: so shall the man of God be perfect, and his
life not halt through any imperfection.
For the faith which saves us, as saith the Apostle, is that which worketh
by love.
LETTER CCXCVI.
To a widow.
[A short letter in which Basil excuses himself for making use of the widow's
mules.]
LETTER CCXCVII.
To a widow.
[A short letter of introduction.]
LETTER CCXCVIII.
Without address.
[A short letter of commendation.]
LETTER CCXCIX.
To a Censitor.(1)
I WAS aware, before you told me, that you do not like your employment in public
affairs. It is an old saying that those who are anxious to lead a pious life
do not throw themselves with pleasure into office. The case of magistrates
seems to me like that of physicians. They see awful sights; they meet with
bad smells; they get trouble for themselves out of other people's calamities.
This is at least the case with those who are real magistrates. All men who
are engaged in business, look also to make a profit, and are excited about
this kind of glory, count it the greatest possible advantage to acquire some
power and influence by which they may be able to benefit their friends, punish
their enemies, and get what they want for themselves. You are not a man of
this kind. How should you be? You have voluntarily withdrawn from even high
office in the State. You might have ruled the city like one single house, but
you have preferred a life free from care and anxiety. You have placed a higher
value on having no troubles yourself and not troubling other people, than other
people do on making themselves disagreeable. But it has seemed good to the
Lord that the district of Ibora(2) should not be under the power of hucksters,
nor be turned into a mere slave market. It is His will that every individual
in it should be enrolled, as is right. Do you therefore accept this responsibility
? It is vexatious, I know, but it is one which may bring you the approbation
of God. Neither fawn upon the great and powerful, nor despise the poor and
needy. Show to all under your rule an impartiality of mind, balanced more exactly
than any scales. Thus in the sight of those who have entrusted you with these
responsibilities your zeal for justice will be made evident, and they will
view you with exceptional admiration. And even though you go unnoticed by them,
you will not be unnoticed by our God. The prizes which He has put before us
for good works are great.
LETTER CCC.
Without address.
[A consolatory letter to a father.]
LETTER CCCI.
To Maximus.
[Consolatory on the death of his wife.]
LETTER CCCII.
To the wife of Briso.
[Consolatory on the death of her husband. These three consolatory letters
present no features different from those contained in previous letters of a
similar character.]
LETTER CCCIII.
To the Comes Privatarum.
YOU have, I think, been led to impose a contribution of mares(1) on these
people by false information on the part of the inhabitants. What is going on
is quite unfair. It cannot but be displeasing to your excellency, and is distressing
to me on account of my intimate connexion with the victims of the wrong. I
have therefore lost no time in begging year Lordship not to allow these promoters
of iniquity to succeed in their malevolence.
LETTER CCCIV.
To Aburgius.
[A few unimportant words of introduction.]
LETTER CCCV.
Without address.
[An unimportant letter of recommendation.]
LETTER CCCVI.
To the Governor of Sebasteia.(2)
I AM aware that your excellency is favourably receiving my letters, and I
understand why. You love all that is good; you are ready in doing kindnesses.
So whenever I give you the opportunity of shewing your magnanimity, you are
eager for my letters, because you know that they furnish an occasion for good
deeds. Now, once more, behold an occasion for your shewing all the signs of
rectitude, and at the same time for the public exhibition of your virtues !
Certain persons have come from Alexandria for the discharge of a necessary
duty which is due from all men to the dead. They ask your excellency to give
orders that it may be permitted them to have conveyed away, under official
sanction, the corpse of a relative who departed this life at Sebasteia, while
the troops were quartered there. They further beg that, as far as possible,
aid may be given them for travelling at the public expense, so that, of your
bounty, they may find some help and solace in their long journey. The tidings
of this will travel as far as to great Alexandria. and will convey thither
the report of your excellency's astonishing kindness. This you well understand
without my mentioning it. I shall add gratitude for this one more favour to
that which I feel for all which you have done me.
LETTER CCCVII.
Without address.
[A request to mediate between two litigants.]
LETTER CCCVIII.
Without address.
[Commendatory, with the mention of a place called Capralis.]
LETTER CCCIX.
Without address.
[Commendatory on behalf of a man reduced from wealth to poverty, with three
children, and anxious about his rating.]
LETTER CCCX.
Without address.
[Commendatory on behalf of some kinsfolk, and of the people of Ariarathia,
a place in the Sargaransene, about 60 m. E. of Caesarea.(1)]
LETTER CCCXI.
[Commendatory: short and of no importance.]
LETTER CCCXII.
[Commendatory: short and unimportant.]
LETTER CCCXIII.
[Commendatory of the interests of Sulpicius.]
LETTER CCCXIV.
Without address.
[Commendatory.]
LETTER CCCXV.
Without address.
[Commendatory of a widow.]
LETTERS CCCXVI., CCCXVII., CCCXVIII., CCCXIX.
Without address.
[Commendatory; short.]
LETTER CCCXX.
Without address.
[A salutation.]
LETTER CCCXXI.
To Thecla.
[Included among the Letters of Gregory of Nazianzus, who is assumed by the
Ben. Ed. to be indubitably the writer.(1)]
LETTER CCCXXII.
Without address.
[Asking a friend to come with his wife and spend Easter with him.]
LETTER CCCXXIII.
To Philagrius Arcenus.
LETTER CCCXXIV.
To Pasinicus, the Physician.
LETTER CCCXXV.
To Magninianus.
LETTER CCCXXVI.
Without address.
[Monitory.]
LETTER CCCXXVII.
Without address.
[Hortatory.]
LETTER CCCXXVII.
To Hyperectius.
[On Basil's health.]
LETTER CCCXXIX.
To Phalirius.
[WITH thanks for a present of fish.]
LETTERS CCCXXX., CCCXXXI., CCCXXXII., CCCXXXIII.
[All short and without address. Letters from CCCXXIII to CCCXXXIII. have no
importance.]
LETTER CCCXXXIV.
To a writer.
WRITE straight, and make the lines straight. Do not let your hand go too high
or too low. Avoid forcing the pen to travel slantwise, like AEsop's crab. Advance
straight on, as if following the line of the carpenter's rule, which always
preserves exactitude and prevents any irregularity. The oblique is ungraceful.
It is the straight which pleases the eye, and does not allow the reader's eyes
to go nodding up and down like a swing-beam. This has been my fate in reading
your writing. As the lines lie ladderwise, I was obliged, when I had to go
from one to another, to mount up to the end of the last: then, when no connexion
was to be found, I bad to go back, and seek for the right order again, retreating
and following the furrow,(1) like Theseus in the story following Ariadne's
thread.(3) Write straight, and do not confuse our mind by your slanting and
irregular writing.
LETTER CCCXXXV.
Basil to Libanius.(3)
I AM really ashamed of sending you the Cappadocians out by one. I should prefer
to induce all our youths to devote themselves to letters and learning, and
to avail themselves of your instruction in their training. But it is impracticable
to get hold of them all at once, while they choose what suits themselves. I
therefore send you those who from time to time are won over; and this I do
with the assurance that I am conferring on them a boon as great as that which
is given by those who bring thirsty men to the fountain. The lad, whom I am
now sending, will be highly valued for his own sake when he has been in your
society. He is already well known on account of his father, who has won a name
among us both for rectitude of life and for authority in our community. He
is, moreover, a close friend of my own. To requite him for his friendship to
me, I am conferring on his son the benefit of an introduction to you--a boon
well worthy of being earnestly prayed for by all who are competent to judge
of a man's high character.
LETTER CCCXXXVI.
Libanius to Basilius.
1. After some little time a young Cappadocian has reached me. One gain to
me is that he is a Cappadocian. But this Cappadocian is one of the first rank.
This is another gain. Further, he brings me a letter from the admirable Basil.
This is the greatest gain of all. You think that I have forgotten you. I had
great respect for you in your youth. I saw you vying with old men in self-restraint,
and this in a city teeming with pleasures. I saw you already in possession
of considerable learning. Then you thought that you ought also to see Athens,
and you persuaded Celsus to accompany you. Happy Celsus, to be dear to you!
Then you returned, and lived at home, and I said to myself, What, I wonder,
is Basil about now? To what occupation has he betaken himself? Is he following
the ancient orators, and practising in the courts? Or is he turning the sons
of fortunate fathers into orators? Then there came those who reported to me
that you were adopting a course of life better than any of these, and were,
rather, bethinking you how you might win the friendship of God than heaps of
gold, I blessed both you and the Cappadocians; you, for making this your aim;
them, for being able to point to so noble a fellow-countryman.
2. I am aware that the Firmus, whom yet mention, has continually won everywhere;
hence his great power as a speaker. But with all the eulogies that have been
bestowed on him, I am not aware that he has ever received such praise as I
have heard of in your letter. For what a credit it is to him, that it should
be you who declare that his reputation is inferior to none!
Apparently, you have despatched this young man to me before seeing Firminus;
had you done so, your letters would not have failed to mention him. What is
Firminus now doing or intending to do? Is he still anxious to be married ?
Or is all that over now ? Are the claims of the senate heavy on him? Is he
obliged to stay where he is? Is there any hope of his taking to study again
? Let him send me an answer, and I trust it may be satisfactory. If it be a
distressing one, at least it will relieve him from seeing me at his door. And
if Firminus had been now at Athens, what would your senators have done ? Would
they have sent the Salaminia(2) after him? You see that it is only by your
fellow-countrymen that I am wronged. Yet I shall never cease to love anti praise
the Cappadocians. I should like them to be better disposed to me, but, if they
continue to act as they do, I shall bear it. Firminus was four months with
me, and was not a day idle. You will know how much he has acquired, and perhaps
will not complain. As to his being able to come here again, what ally can I
call in ? If your senators are right-mided, as men of education ought to be,
they will honour me in the second case, since they grieved me in the first.
LETTER CCCXXXVII.
Basil to Libanius.
Lo and behold, yet another Cappadocian has come to you; a son of my own! Yet
my present position makes all men my sons. On this ground he may be regarded
as a brother of the former one, and worthy of the same attention alike from
me his father, and from you his instructor--if really it is possible for these
young men, who come from me, to obtain any further favours. I do not mean that
it is not possible for your excellency to give anything more to your old comrades,
but because year services are so lavishly bestowed upon all. It will be sufficient
for the lad before he gets experience if he be numbered among those who are
intimately known to you. I trust you may send him back to me worthy of my prayers
and of your great reputation in learning and eloquence. He is accompanied by
a young man of his own age, and of like zeal for instruction; a youth of good
family, and closely associated with myself. I am sure be will be in every way
as well treated, though his means are smaller than is the case with the rest.
LETTER CCCXXXVIII.
Libanius to Basil.
I KNOW
you will often write, "Here is another Cappadocian for you !" I
expect that you will send me many. I am sure that you are everywhere putting
pressure on both fathers and sons by all your complimentary expressions about
me. But it would not be kind on my part not to mention what happened about
your good letter. There were sitting with me not a few of our people of distinction,
and among them the very excellent Alypius, Hierocles' cousin. The messengers
gave in the letter. I read it right through without a word; then with a smile,
and evidently gratified, I exclaimed, "I am vanquished!" "How?
When? Where ?" they asked. " How is it that you are not distressed
at being vanquished ?" " I am beaten," I replied, "in beautiful
letter writing. Basil has won. But I love him; and so I am delighted." On
hearing this, they all wanted to bear of the victory from the letter itself.
It was read by Alypius, while all listened. It was voted that what I had said
was quite true. Then the reader went out, with the letter still in his hand,
to shew it, I suppose, to others. I had some difficulty in getting it back.
Go on writing others like it; go on winning. This is for me to win. You are
quite right in thinking that my services are not measured by money. Enough
for him who has nothing to give, that he is as wishful to receive. If I perceive
any one who is poor to be a lover of learning, he takes precedence of the rich.
True, I never found such instructors; but nothing shall stand in the way of
my being, at least in that respect, an improvement on mine. Let no one, then,
hesitate to come hither because he is poor, if only he possesses the one qualification
of knowing how to work.
LETTER CCCXXXIX.
Basil to Libanius.
WHAT could not a sophist say? And such a sophist! One whose peculiar art is,
whenever he likes, to make great things small, and to give greatness to small
things! This is what you have shewn in my case. That dirty little letter of
mine, as, perhaps, you who live in all luxury of eloquence would call it, a
letter in no way more tolerable than the one you hold in your hands now you
have so extolled as, forsooth, 'to be eaten by it, and to be yielding me the
prize for composition! You are acting much as fathers do, when they join in
their boys' games, and let the little fellows be proud of the victories which
they have let them win without any loss to themselves, and with much gain to
the children's emulation. Really and truly the delight your speech must have
given, when you were joking about me, must have been indescribable ! It is
as though some Polydamas(1) or Milo(2) were to decline the pancratium or a
wrestling bout with me !(3) After carefully examining, I have found no sign
of weakness. So those who look for exaggeration are the more astonished at
your being able to descend in sport to my level, than if you had led the barbarian
in full sail over Athos.(4) I, however, my dear sir, am now spending my time
with Moses and Elias, and saints like them, who tell me their stories in a
barbarous tongue,(5) and I utter what I learnt from them, true, indeed, in
sense, though rude in phrase, as what I am writing testifies. If ever I learned
anything from you, I have forgotten it in the course of time. But do you continue
to write to me, and so suggest other topics for correspondence. Your letter
will exhibit you, and will not convict me. I have already introduced to you
the son of Anysius, st as a son of my own. If he is my son, he is e the child
of his father, poor, and a poor man's e son. What I am saying is well known
to who is wise as well as a sophist.(1)
LETTER CCCXL.
Libanius to Basil.
HAD you been for a long time considering how best you could reply to my letter
about yours, you could not in my judgment have acquitted yourself better than
by writing as you have written now. You call me a sophist, and you allege that
it is a sophist's business to make small things great and great things small.
And you maintain that the object of my letter was to prove yours a good one,
when it was not a good one, and that it was no better than the one which you
have sent last, and, in a word that you have no power of expression, the books
which you have now in hand producing no such effect, and the eloquence which
you once possessed having all disappeared. Now, in the endeavour to prove this,
you have made this epistle too, which you are reviling, so admirable, that
my visitors could not refrain from leaping with admiration as it was being
read. I was astonished that after your trying to run down the former one by
this, by saying that the former one was like it, you have really complimented
the former by it. To carry out your object, you ought to have made this one
worse, that you might slander the former. But it is not like you, I think,
to do despite to the truth. It would have been done despite to, if you had
purposely written badly, and not put out the powers yon have. It would be characteristic
of you not to find fault with what is worthy of praise, lest in your attempt
to make great things insignificant, your proceedings reduce you to the rank
of the sophists. Keep to the books which you say are inferior in style, though
better in sense. No one hinders you. But of the principles which are ever mine,
and once were yours, the roots both remain and will remain, as long as you
exist. Though yon water them ever so little, no length of time will ever completely
destroy them.
LETTER CCCXLI.
Libanius ta Basil.
You have not yet ceased to be offended with me, and so I tremble as I write.
If you have cared, why, my dear sir, do you not write? If you are still offended,
a thing alien from any reasonable soul and from your own, why, while you are
preaching to others, that they must not keep their anger till sundown,(1) have
you kept yours during many suns? Peradventure you have meant to punish me by
depriving me of the sound of your sweet voice? Nay; excellent sir, be gentle,
and let me enjoy your golden tongue.
LETTER CCCXLII.
Basil to Libanius.
ALL who are attached to the rose, as might be expected in the case of lovers
of the beautiful, are not displeased even at the thorns from out of which the
flower blows. I have even heard it said about roses by some one, perhaps in
jest, or, it may be, even in earnest, that nature has furnished the bloom with
those delicate thorns, like stings of love to lovers, to excite those who pluck
them to intenser longing by these ingeniously adapted pricks.(2) But what do
I mean by this introduction of the rose into my letter? You do not need telling,
when you remember your own letter. It had indeed the bloom of the rose, and,
by its fair speech, opened out all spring to me; but it was bethorned with
certain fault findings and charges against me. But even the thorn of your words
is delightful to me, for it enkindles in me a greater longing for your friendship.
LETTERCCCXLIII.
Libanius to Basil.
IF these are the words of an untrained tongue, what would you be if you would
polish them? On your lips live fountains of words better than the flowing of
springs. I, on the contrary, if I am not daily watered, am silent.
LETTER CCCXLIV.
Basil to Libanius.
I AM dissuaded from writing often to you, learned as you are, by my timidity
and my ignorance. But your persistent silence is different. What excuse can
be offered for it? If any one takes into account that you are slow to write
to me, living as you do in the midst of letters, he will condemn you for forgetfulness
of me. He who is ready at speaking is not unprepared to write. And if a man
so endowed is silent, it is plain that he acts either from forgetfulness or
from contempt. I will, however, requite your silence with a greeting. Farewell,
most honoured sir. Write if you like. If you prefer it, do not write.
LETTER CCCXLV.
Libanius to Basil.
IT is, I think, more needful for me to defend myself for not having begun
to write to you long ago, than to offer any excuse for beginning now. I am
that same man who always used to run up whenever you put in an appearance,
and who listened with the greatest delight to the stream of your eloquence;
rejoicing to hear you; with difficulty tearing myself away; saying to my friends,
This man is thus far superior to the daughters of Achelous, in that, like them,
he soothes, but he does not hurt as they do. Truly it is no great thing not
to hurt; but this man's songs are a positive gain to the hearer. That I should
be in this state of mind, should think that I am regarded with affection, and
should seem able to speak, and yet should not venture to write, is the mark
of a man guilty of extreme idleness, and, at the same time, inflicting punishment
on himself. For it is clear that you will requite my poor little letter with
a fine large one, and will take care not to wrong me again. At this word, I
fancy, many will cry out, and will crowd round with the shout, What! has Basil
done any wrong--even a small wrong? Then so have OEacus, and Minos and his
brother.(1) In other points I admit that you have won. Who ever saw you that
does not envy you? But in one thing yon have sinned against me; and, if I remind
you of it, induce those who are indignant thereat not to make a public outcry.
NO one has ever come to yon and asked a favour which it was easy to give, and
gone away unsuccessful. But I am one of those who have craved a boon without
receiving it. What then did I ask? Often when I was with you in camp. I was
desirous of entering, with the aid of your wisdom, into the depth of Homer
frenzy. If the whole is impossible, I said, do you bring me to a portion of
what I want. I was anxious for a part, wherein, when things have gone ill with
the Greeks. Agamemnon courts with gifts the man whom he has insulted. When
I so spoke, you laughed, because you could not deny that you could if you liked,
but were unwilling to give. Do I really seem to be wronged to you and to your
friends, who were indignant at my saying that you were doing a wrong?
LETTER CCCXLVI.
Libanius to Basil.
You yourself will judge whether I have added anything in the way of learning
to the young men whom you have sent. I hope that this addition, however little
it be, will get the credit of being great, for the sake of your friendship
towards me. But inasmuch as you give less praise to learning than to temperance
and to a refusal to abandon our souls to dishonourable pleasures, they have
devoted their main attention to this, and have lived, as indeed they ought,
with due recollection of the friend who sent them hither.
So welcome what is your own, and give praise to men who by their mode of life
have done credit both to you and to me. But to ask you to be serviceable to
them is like asking a father to be serviceable to his children.
LETTER CCCXLVII.
Libanius to Basil.
EVERY bishop is a thing out of which it is very hard to get anything.(1) The
further you have advanced beyond other people in learning, the more you make
me afraid that you will refuse what I ask. I want some rafters.(2) Any other
sophist would have called them stakes, or poles, not because he wanted stakes
or poles, but rather for shewing off his wordlets than out of any real need.
If you do not supply them, I shall have to winter in the open air.
LETTER CCCXLVIII.
Basil to Libanius.
If <greek>gripizein</greek> is the same thing as to gain, and
this is the meaning of the phrase which your sophistic ingenuity has got from
the depths of Plato, consider, my dear sir, who is the more hard to be got
from, I who am thus impaled(1) by your epistolary skill, or the tribe of Sophists,
whose craft is to make money out of their words. What bishop ever imposed tribute
by Iris words? What bishop ever made his disciples pay taxes? It is you who
make your words marketable, as confectioners make honey-cakes. See how you
have made the old man leap and bound! However, to who make such a fuss about
your declamations, I have ordered as many rafters to be supplied as there were
fighters at Thermopylae,(2) all of goodly length, and, as Homer has it, "long-shadowing,"(3)
which the sacred Alphaeus has promised to restore.(4)
LETTER CCCXLIX.
Libanius to Basil.
WILL you
not give over, Basil, packing this sacred haunt of the Muses with Cappadocians,
and these
redolent
of the frost(5) and snow and all Cappadocia's
good things? They have almost made me a Cappadocian too, always chanting their "I
salute you."
I must endure, since it is Basil who commands. Know, however, that I am making
a careful study of the manners and customs of the country, anti that I mean
to metamorphose the men into the nobility and the harmony of my Calliope, that
they may seem to you to be turned from pigeons into doves.
LETTER CCCL.
Basil to Libanius.
YOUR annoyance is over. Let this be the beginning of my letter. Go on mocking
and abusing me and mine, whether laughing or in earnest. Why say anything about
frost(5) or snow, when you might be luxuriating in mockery? For my part, Libanius,
that I may rouse you to a hearty laugh, I have written my letter enveloped
in a snow-white veil. When you take the letter in your hand, you will feel
how cold it is, and how it symbolizes the condition of the sender--kept at
home and not able to put head out of doors. For my house is a rave till spring
comes and brings us back from death to life, and once more gives to us, as
to plants, the boon of existence.
LETTER CCCLI.
Basil to Libanius.
MANY, who have come to me from where you are, have admired your oratorical
power. They were remarking that there has been a very brilliant specimen of
this, and a very great contest, as they alleged, with the result that all crowded
together, and no one appeared in the whole city but Libanius alone in the lists,
and everybody, young and old, listening. For no one was willing to be absent--not
a man of rank--not a distinguished soldier--not an artisan. Even women hurried
to be present at the struggle. And what was it? What was the speech which brought
together this vast assembly? I have been told that it contained a description
of a man of peevish temper. Pray lose no time in sending me this much admired
speech, in order that I too may join in praising your eloquence. If I am a
praiser of Libanius without his works, what am I likely to become after receiving
the grounds on which to praise him?
LETTER CCCLII.
Libanius to Basil.
BEHOLD! I have sent you my speech, all streaming with sweat as I am! How should
I be otherwise, when sending my speech to one who by his skill in oratory is
able to shew that the wisdom of Plato and the ability of Demosthenes were belauded
in vain? I feel like a gnat compared with an elephant. How I shiver and shake,
as I reckon up the day when you will inspect my performance I am almost ont
of my wits!
LETTER CCCLIII.
Basil to Libanius.
I HAVE read your speech, and have immensely admired it. O muses; O learning;
O Athens; what do you not give to those who love you! What fruits do not they
gather who spend even a short time with you! Oh for your copiously flowing
fountain! What men all who drink of it are shewn to be! I seemed to see the
man himself in your speech, in the company of his chattering little woman.
A living story has been written on the ground by Libanius, who alone has bestowed
the gift of life upon his words.
LETTER CCCLIV.
Libanius to Basil.
Now I recognise men's description of me! Basil has praised me, and I am hailed
victor over all! Now that I have received your vote, I am entitled to walk
with the proud gait of a man who haughtily looks down on all the world. You
have composed an oration against drunkenness. I should like to read it. But
I am unwilling to try to say anything clever. When I have seen your speech
it will teach me the art of expressing myself.
LETTER CCCLV.
Libanius to Basil.
ARE you
living at Athens, Basil? Have you forgotten yourself? The sons of the Caesareans
could not
endure
to hear these things. My tongue was not accustomed
to them. Just as though I were treading some dangerous ground, and were struck
at the novelty of the sounds, it said to me its father, "My father, you
never taught this! This man is Homer, or Plato, or Aristotle, or Susarion.
He knows everything." So far my tongue. I only wish, Basil, that you could
praise me in the same manner!
LETTER CCCLVI.
Basil to Libanius.
I AM delighted at receiving what you write, but when you ask me to reply,
I am in a difficulty. What could I say in answer to so Attic a tongue, except
that I confess, and confess with joy, that I am a pupil of fishermen?
LETTER CCCLVII.
Libanius to Basil.
WHAT has made Basil object to the letter, the proof of philosophy? I have
learned to make fun from you, but nevertheless your fun is venerable and, so
to say, hoary with age. But, by our very friendship, by our common pastimes,
do away, I charge you, with the distress caused by your letter ... in nothing
differing.(1)
LETTER CCCLVIII.
Libanius to Basil.
OH, for the old days in which we were all in all to one another! Now we are
sadly separated! Ye have one another, I have no one like you to replace you.
I hear that Alcimus in his old age is venturing on a young man's exploits,
and is hurrying to Rome, after imposing on you the labour of remaining with
the lads. You, who are always so kind, will not take this ill. You were not
even angry with me for having to write first.
LETTER CCCLIX.
Basil to Libanius.
YOU, who have included all the art of the ancients in your own mind, are so
silent, that you do not even let me get any gain in a letter. I, if the art
of Daedalus had only been safe, would have made me Icarus' wings and come to
you. But wax cannot be entrusted to the sun, anti so, instead of Icarus' wings,
I send you words to prove my affection. It is the nature of words to indicate
the love of the heart. So far, words.(1) You do with them what you will, and,
possessing all the power you do, are silent. But pray transfer to me the fountains
of words that spring from your mouth.
LETTER CCCLX.(2)
Of the Holy Trinity, the Incarnation, the invocation of Saints, and their
Images.
ACCORDING to the blameless faith of the Christians which we have obtained
from God, I confess and agree that I believe in one God the Father Almighty;
God the Father, God the Son, God the Holy Ghost; I adore and worship one God,
the Three.(3) I confess to the oeconomy of the Son in the flesh,(4) and that
the holy Mary, who gave birth to Him according to the flesh, was Mother of
God.(5) I acknowledge also the holy apostles, prophets, and martyrs; and I
invoke them to supplication to God, that through them, that is, through their
mediation, the merciful God may be propitious to me, and that a ransom may
be made and given me for my sins. Wherefore also I honour and kiss the features
of their images, inasmuch as they have been handed down from the holy apostles,
and are not forbidden, but are in all our churches.
LETTERS
CCCLXI. and CCCLXIII., to Apollinarius, and Letters CCCLXII. and CCCLXIV.,
from Apollinarius to
Basil, are condemned as indubitably spurious, not only
on internal evidence, but also on the ground of Basil's asseveration that he
had never written but once to Apollinarius, and that "as layman to layman."(1)
Letter CCCLXV., "to the great emperor Theodosius," on an inundation
in Cappadocia, is also condemned by the Ben. Ed. as spurious, and contains
nothing of ecclesiastical or theological interest. Tillemont however (vol.
v., p. 739) thought its style not unworthy of a young man and a rhetorician,
and conjectures the Theodosius to whom it is addressed to be not the great
emperor, but some magistrate of Cappadocia.
LETTER CCCLXVI.(2)
Basil ta Urbicius the monk, concerning continency.
You do
well in making exact definitions for us, so that we may recognise not only
continency, but
its fruit. Now
its fruit is the companionship of God.
For not to be corrupted, is to have part with God; just as to be corrupted
is the companionship of the world. Continency is denial of the body, and confession
to God. It withdraws from anything mortal, like a body which has the Spirit
of God. It is without rivalry and envy, and causes us to be united to God.
He who loves a body envies another. He who has not admitted the disease of
corruption into his heart, is for the future strong enough to endure any labour,
and though he have died in the body, he lives in incorruption. Verily, if I
rightly apprehend the matter, God seems to me to be continency. because tie
desires nothing, but has all things in Himself. He reaches after nothing, nor
has any sense in eyes or ears; wanting nothing, He is in all respects complete
and full. Concupiscence is a disease of the soul; but continency is its health.
And continency must not be regarded only in one species, as, for instance,
in matters of sensual love. It must be regarded in everything which the soul
lusts after in an evil manner, not being content with what is needful for it.
Envy is caused for the sake of gold, and innumerable wrongs for the sake of
other lusts. Not to be drunken is continency. Not to overeat one's self is
continency. To subdue the body is continency, and to keep evil thoughts in
subjection, whenever the soul is disturbed by any fancy false and bad, and
the heart is distracted by vain cares. Continency makes men free, being at
once a medicine and a power, for it does not teach temperance; it gives it.
Continency is a grace of God. Jesus seemed to be continency, when He was made
light to land and sea; for He was carried neither by earth nor ocean, and just
as He walked on the sea, so He did not weigh down the earth. For if death comes
of corruption, and not dying comes of not having corruption, then Jesus wrought
not mortality but divinity.(1) He ate and drank in a peculiar manner, without
rendering his food., So mighty a power in Him was continency, that His food
was not corrupted in Him, since He had no corruption. If only there be a little
continency in us, we are higher than all. We have been told that angels were
ejected from heaven because of concupiscence and became incontinent. They were
vanquished; they did not come down. What could that plague have effected there,
if an eye such as I am thinking of had been there? Wherefore I said, If we
have a little patience, and do not love the world, but the life above, we shall
be found there where we direct our mind. For it is the mind, apparently, which
is the eye that seeth unseen things. For we say "the mind sees;" "the
mind hears." I have written at length, though it may seem little to you.
But there is meaning in all that I have said, and, when you have read it, you
will see it.
Return to Volume 31 Index