The Seven Books of Arnobius Against the Heathen.…
The Seven Books of Arnobius Against the Heathen.
42. You worship, says my opponent , one who was born a mere But the He exhibited
16. But, they say , while we are moving swiftly down towards our mortal bodies, to be all even
35. But, say my opponents , if souls are mortal and One than we anything must who is if into
45. But let this monstrous and impious fancy be put far from us
74. And why, my opponent says , did God, the Ruler and Lord of the universe you ask
25. Unxia, my opponent says , presides over the anointing of door-posts
34. Some of your learned men —men, too, who do not chatter merely
12. But let them be true, as you maintain, yet will you have us also believe deity who are
32. But you err, says my opponent , and are mistaken, and show, even in criticising these gratify
7. But why do I speak of the body story in men’s minds which is of all
36. You say that some of them cause excite and these things these to be
38. If the immortal gods cannot be angry, says my opponent is the meaning of had they if
48. But some one will perhaps say that the care of such a god has been denied being to the city
59. If that which it has pleased us to know is within reach, and if such knowledge is open to all, declare to us,573 So the ms.; but all edd. except Hild. and Oehler omit nobis. and say how and by what means showers of rain are produced, so that water is held suspended in the regions above and in mid-air, although by nature it is apt to glide away, and so ready to flow and run downwards. Explain, I say, and tell what it is which sends the hail whirling through the air, which makes the rain fall drop by drop, which has spread out rain and feathery flakes of snow and sheets of lightning;574 So the ms., reading folgora dilatarit, followed by LB. whence the wind rises, and what it is; why the changes of the seasons were established, when it might have been ordained that there should be only one, and one kind of climate, so that there should be nothing wanting to the world’s completeness. What is the cause, what the reason, that the waters of the sea are salt;575 Salsa, corrected from the ms. sola. or that, of those on land, some are sweet, others bitter or cold? From what kind of material have the inner parts of men’s bodies been formed and built up into firmness? From what have their bones been made solid? what made the intestines and veins shaped like pipes, and easily passed through? Why, when it would be better to give us light by several eyes, to guard against the risk of blindness, are we restricted to two? For what purpose have so infinite and innumerable kinds of monsters and serpents been either formed or brought forth? what purpose do owls serve in the world,—falcons, hawks? what other birds576 Alites et volucres; i.e., according to Orelli, the birds from whose flight auguries were drawn, as opposed to the others. and winged creatures? what the different kinds of ants and worms springing up to be a bane and pest in various ways? what fleas, obtrusive flies, spiders, shrew, and other mice, leeches, water-spinners? what thorns, briers, wild-oats, tares? what the seeds of herbs or shrubs, either sweet to the nostrils, or disagreeable in smell? Nay more, if you think that anything can be known or comprehended, say what wheat is,—spelt, barley, millet, the chick-pea, bean, lentil, melon, cumin, scallion, leek, onion? For even if they are useful to you, and are ranked among the different kinds of food, it is not a light or easy thing to know what each is,—why they have been formed with such shapes; whether there was any necessity that they should not have had other tastes, smells, and colours than those which each has, or whether they could have taken others also; further, what these very things are,—taste, I mean,577 So Heraldus, whose punctuation also is here followed, omitting id est sapor—“that is, taste,” which Meursius and LB., followed by Orelli, amend, ut est—“as taste is” in each thing. and the rest; and from what relations they derive their differences of quality. From the elements, you say, and from the first beginnings of things. Are the elements, then, bitter or sweet? have they any odour or578 Vel is here inserted in all edd., most of which read, as above, oloris, which is found in the ms., in later writing, for the original, coloris—“colour,” retained by Ursinus, LB., and Oehler. stench, that we should believe that, from their uniting, qualities were implanted in their products by which sweetness is produced, or something prepared offensive to the senses?
LIX. Si praesto est quod libuerit scire, et in aperto rerum est scientia constituta, edissertate, et dicite , quibus modis fiant et rationibus pluviae? ut in superis partibus, atque in aeris hoc medio suspensa aqua teneatur, natura res labilis, et ad fluorem semper 0902B decursionemque tam prona? Edissertate, inquam, et dicite quid sit quod grandinem torqueat? quod guttatim faciat pluviam labi? quod imbres, ac nives plumeas, et fulgora dilatarit? ventus unde oriatur et quid sit? cur temporum vicissitudines institutae, cum 0903A statui unum posset, et una esse species coeli, nihil ut rerum desideraret integritas? Quae est causa, quae ratio, ut maria salsa sint, aut terrarum hae dulces, aliae sint amarae, vel frigidae? Quo ex materiae genere humanorum corporum concreta et stabilita sunt viscera, unde ossa solidata? quid intestina, quid venas fistulatas, et commeabiles fecerit? Cur cum esset utilius oculis nos illuminare compluribus ad periculum caecitatis, duorum sumus angustis applicati? 0904A Belluarum, et anguium tam infinita atque innumerabilia genera, cujus rei sunt causa vel informata, vel prodita? quid in mundo faciunt bubones, immussuli, buteones? quid alites et volucres caeterae? quid formicarum et vermium genera, in varias labes perniciesque nascentia? quid pulices? quid impudentes muscae, araneae, sorices, mures, sanguisugae, tippulae? quid spinae, quid sentes, quid avenae, quid lolium? quid herbarum, aut fruticum, aut adolentia 0905A naribus, aut tristia in odoribus semina? Immo, si aliquid sciri, comprehendi aut aliquid posse censetis, quid sit triticum, dicite: far, hordeum, milium, cicer, faba, lenticula, melonula, cuminum , porrina, ulpicum, cepe? Non enim si fructui vobis sunt, et ciborum mediis in generibus constituta, expeditum, aut promptum est, quid sint singula, scire: cur talibus figurata sint formis? fuerit necessitas aliqua, ut non alios sapores, alios odores, alios colores, quam quos habent singulae res, habere debuerint, an et alios potuerint sumere? Ipsa deinde haec quid sint, sapor dico, ut est sapor, et caetera qualitatum distantias quibus ex rationibus ducant? Ex elementis, inquitis, et ex principalibus originibus rerum. Amara sunt enim elementa, vel dulcia, odoris sunt alicujus, vel 0905B oloris, ut ex eorum concretione credamus partitas esse in nascentibus qualitates, quibus aut suavitas nascitur, aut sensibus offensio comparatur?