The Shows, or De Spectaculis.

 III.

 Chapter II.

 Chapter III.

 Chapter IV.

 Chapter V.

 Chapter VI.

 Chapter VII.

 Chapter VIII.

 Chapter IX.

 Chapter X.

 Chapter XI.

 Chapter XII.

 Chapter XIII.

 Chapter XIV.

 Chapter XV.

 Chapter XVI.

 Chapter XVII.

 Chapter XVIII.

 Chapter XIX.

 Chapter XX.

 Chapter XXI.

 Chapter XXII.

 Chapter XXIII.

 Chapter XXIV.

 Chapter XXV.

 Chapter XXVI.

 Chapter XXVII.

 Chapter XXVIII.

 Chapter XXIX.

 Chapter XXX.

Chapter XIX.

We shall now see how the Scriptures condemn the amphitheatre. If we can maintain that it is right to indulge in the cruel, and the impious, and the fierce, let us go there. If we are what we are said to be, let us regale ourselves there with human blood. It is good, no doubt, to have the guilty punished. Who but the criminal himself will deny that? And yet the innocent can find no pleasure in another’s sufferings:  he rather mourns that a brother has sinned so heinously as to need a punishment so dreadful. But who is my guarantee that it is always the guilty who are adjudged to the wild beasts, or to some other doom, and that the guiltless never suffer from the revenge of the judge, or the weakness of the defence, or the pressure of the rack? How much better, then, is it for me to remain ignorant of the punishment inflicted on the wicked, lest I am obliged to know also of the good coming to untimely ends—if I may speak of goodness in the case at all! At any rate, gladiators not chargeable with crime are offered in sale for the games, that they may become the victims of the public pleasure. Even in the case of those who are judicially condemned to the amphitheatre, what a monstrous thing it is, that, in undergoing their punishment, they, from some less serious delinquency, advance to the criminality of manslayers! But I mean these remarks for heathen. As to Christians, I shall not insult them by adding another word as to the aversion with which they should regard this sort of exhibition; though no one is more able than myself to set forth fully the whole subject, unless it be one who is still in the habit of going to the shows. I would rather withal be incomplete than set memory a-working.19    [See Kaye, p. 11. This expression is thought to confirm the probability of Tertullian’s original Gentilism.]

CAPUT XIX.

Expectabimus nunc et amphiteatri repudium de Scripturis (Gen. IX. Exod. XX. Matth. VI). Si saevitiam, si impietatem , si feritatem permissam nobis contendere possumus, eamus in amphiteatrum. Si tales sumus, quales didicimur, 0651B delectemur sanguine humano. Bonum est cum puniuntur nocentes. Quis hoc nisi nocens negabit? Et tamen innocens de supplicio alterius laetari non potest, cum magis competat innocenti dolere, quod homo par ejus tam nocens factus est, ut tam crudeliter impendatur. Quis autem mihi sponsor est, nocentes semper vel ad bestias vel ad quodcunque supplicium decerni, ut non innocentia quoque inferatur, aut ultione judicantis, aut infirmitate defendentis, aut instantia quaestionis? Quam melius ergo est nescire cum mali puniuntur, ne sciam et quum boni pereunt, si tamen bonum sapiunt. Certe quidem gladiatores innocentes in ludum veniunt, ut publicae voluptatis hostiae fiant. Etiam qui damnantur in ludum, quale est ut de leviore 0652A delicto in homicidas emendatione proficiant. Sed haec ethnicis respondi. Caeterum absit ut de istius spectaculi aversione diutius discat Christianus: quanquam nemo haec omnia plenius exprimere potest, nisi qui adhuc spectat malo non implere, quam meminisse.