登陆注册
5264600000037

第37章 VI. MARBODIUS(3)

"I will conceal nought from thee. He sent for me; one of his messengers, a simple man, came to say that I was expected, and that, although I had not been initiated into their mysteries, in consideration of my prophetic verses, a place had been reserved for me among those of the new sect. But I refused to accept that invitation; I had no desire to change my lace. I did so not because I share the admiration of the Greeks for the Elysian fields, or because I taste here those joys which caused Proserpine to lose the remembrance of her mother. I never believed much myself in what I say about these things in the 'Aeneid.' I was instructed by philosophers and men of science and I had a correct foreboding of the truth. Life in hell is extremely attenuated; we feel neither pleasure nor pain; we are as if we were not. The dead have no existence here except such as the living lend them. Nevertheless I prefer to remain here."

"But what reason didst thou give, O Virgil, for so strange a refusal?"

"I gave excellent ones. I said to the messenger of the god that I did not deserve the honour he brought me, and that a meaning had been given to my verses which they did not bear. In truth I have not in my fourth Eclogue betrayed the faith of my ancestors. Some ignorant Jews alone have interpreted in favour of a barbarian god a verse which celebrates the return of the golden age predicted by the Sibylline oracles. I excused myself then on the ground that I could not occupy a place which was destined for me in error and to which I recognised that I had no right. Then I alleged my disposition and my tastes, which do not accord with the customs of the new heavens.

"'I am not unsociable,' said I to this man. 'I have shown in life a complaisant and easy disposition, although the extreme simplicity of my habits caused me to be suspected of avarice. I kept nothing for myself alone. My library was open to all and I have conformed my conduct to that fine saying of Euripides, "all ought to be common among friends." Those praises that seemed obtrusive when I myself received them became agreeable to me when addressed to Varius or to Macer. But at bottom I am rustic and uncultivated. I take pleasure in the society of animals; I was so zealous in observing them and took so much care of them that I was regarded, not altogether wrongly, as a good veterinary surgeon. I am told that the people of thy sect claim an immortal soul for themselves, but refuse one to the animals. That is a piece of nonsense that makes me doubt their judgment. Perhaps I love the flocks and the shepherds a little too much. That would not seem right amongst you. There is a maxim to which I endeavour to conform my actions, "Nothing too much."

More even than my feeble health my philosophy teaches me to use things with measure. I am sober; a lettuce and some olives with a drop of Falernian wine form all my meals. I have, indeed, to some extent gone with strange women, but I have not delayed over long in taverns to watch the young Syrians dance to the sound of the crotalum.* But if I have restrained my desires it was for my own satisfaction and for the sake of good discipline. To fear pleasure and to fly from joy appears to me the worst insult that one can offer to nature. I am assured that during their lives certain of the elect of thy god abstained from food and avoided women through love of asceticism, and voluntarily exposed themselves to useless sufferings. I should be afraid of meeting those, criminals whose frenzy horrifies me. A poet must not be asked to attach himself too strictly to any scientific or moral doctrine. Moreover, I am a Roman, and the Romans, unlike the Greeks, are unable to pursue profound speculations in a subtle manner. If they adopt a philosophy it is above all in order to derive some practical advantages from it. Siro, who enjoyed great renown among us, taught me the system of Epicurus and thus freed me from vain terrors and turned me aside from the cruelties to which religion persuades ignorant men. I have embraced the views of Pythagoras concerning the souls of men and animals, both of which are of divine essence; this invites us to look upon ourselves without pride and without shame. I have learnt from the Alexandrines how the earth, at first soft and without form, hardened in proportion as Nereus withdrew himself from it to dig his humid dwellings; I have learned how things were formed insensibly; in what manner the rains, falling from the burdened clouds, nourished the silent forests, and by what progress a few animals at last began to wander over the nameless mountains. I could not accustom myself to your cosmogony either, for it seems to me fitter for a camel-driver on the Syrian sands than for a disciple of Aristarchus of Samos. And what would become of me in the abode of your beatitude if I did not find there my friends, my ancestors, my masters, and my gods, and if it is not given to me to see Rhea's noble son, or Venus, mother of Aeneas, with her winning smile, or Pan, or the young Dryads, or the Sylvans, or old Silenus, with his face stained by Aegle's purple mulberries.' These are the reasons which I begged that simple man to plead before the successor of Jupiter."

* This phrase seems to indicate that, if one is to believe Macrobius, the "Copa" is by Virgil.

"And since then, O great shade, thou hast received no other messages?"

"I have received none."

同类推荐
  • SECRETS OF THE WOODS

    SECRETS OF THE WOODS

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 正说篇

    正说篇

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • London in 1731

    London in 1731

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 还丹复命篇

    还丹复命篇

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • Bruce

    Bruce

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 十生诗集

    十生诗集

    现代诗歌发展至今,已经很难辨识流派,事实上也很少有诗人乐意接受被贴上的标签。流派少不代表写诗的人少。诗歌写作大多成为抽屉里的秘密,发表出来的已经不太能代表这些秘密又安静的写作。作者笔名十生,原名马抱抱,青年诗人。让诗歌向本质回归,写诗也越来越成为个人的事情,和刷牙洗脸一样。每个诗人都是孤独的岛,都是宇宙中脱离轨道的自由的小行星。
  • 九型人格读人术

    九型人格读人术

    九型人格理论的卓越之处在于能透过人们表面的喜怒哀乐,进入人心最隐秘之处,发现人的最真实、最根本的需求和渴望。九型人格具有科学性、实用性和系统性,“九型人格与领导力”被斯坦福商学院列为工商管理硕士的进修课程,同时它也是众多跨国公司广泛采用的人力资源培训项目。本书作者中原老师一直是国内九型人格最有影响力的讲师,也是国内最早通过电视和音像制品传授九型人格的培训老师。通过此书可以帮助读者对他人的处境有更多了解,从而设身处地为他人着想。当你运用性格类型的视角观察周围人时,你会发现,没有哪一种性格是完美无缺的,不仅你所属的性格的存在偏见,其他不同性格类型也因为观念的不同,存在着这样那样的局限性。
  • 许三观卖血记(第3版)

    许三观卖血记(第3版)

    本书在国内外引起了巨大轰动!小说以博大的温情描绘了磨难中的人生,以激烈的故事形式表达了人在面对厄运时求生的欲望。讲述了许三观靠着卖血渡过了人生的一个个难关,战胜了命运强加给他的惊涛骇浪,而当他老了,知道自己的血再也没有人要时,他哭了。法国《读书》杂志在评论《许三观卖血记》时说道:这是一部精妙绝伦的小说,是朴实简洁和内涵意蕴深远的完美结合。本书获美国巴恩斯-诺贝尔新发现图书奖,入选中国百位批评家和文学编辑评选的“20世纪90年代最有影响的10部作品”。
  • 专情首席不爱我

    专情首席不爱我

    她,相貌平平,他,赫赫有名的珠宝世家继承人,才貌双全,平凡女却对他一见钟情,从此扛上首席绝不罢手!
  • A Cathedral Courtship

    A Cathedral Courtship

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 任正非:用户选择的不是产品而是公司

    任正非:用户选择的不是产品而是公司

    品牌就是金钱,但金钱不等于品牌。品牌是由三个层次构成的,分别是知名度、美誉度和忠诚度。烧钱做品牌,顶多能烧出个“名牌”,提高了知名度,而不是真正意义上的“品牌”。
  • 像猫一样生活,像狗一样工作

    像猫一样生活,像狗一样工作

    人是万物之灵,但是万物之中还有其他许多可爱的生灵。与人类接触最多的,恐怕就是随处可见的猫猫狗狗了。有的人喜欢它们,有的人讨厌它们,不管怎样,它们身上还是有很多值得我们人类学习的地方。能让身处职场的你学到精妙的为人处世的哲学和实用的工作哲学,能够帮助您成为人际关系达人,最终实现职场上的成功。 本书将向您呈现猫咪身上特有的处世哲学和狗狗身上独有的工作哲学。
  • 都市无敌邪医

    都市无敌邪医

    千古难遇的修炼天才,自遇轩辕神龙诀以后,修为暴涨但也难以突破一层瓶颈。老头子掐指一算,你机缘在山下!林夕一怔,差点泪崩:这么多年了,你终于说出了这句话。
  • 随心淘婚

    随心淘婚

    所谓淘婚,即通过网购婚庆用品,搞定终身大事,大到钻戒礼服,小到红包糖果,一网打尽!某人嘀咕:就算要淘婚,也要讲究个按部就班吧,新娘还没影呢,就打算白水下锅?哼、既然要淘婚,那就淘个全套的,连老婆一起淘了算了!淘婚族坚信:只要你想得到,网上都可以淘得到!于是乎,某人被迫逼上淘婚一族,开始全套淘婚攻略——先淘个老婆、再淘婚!——将淘婚进行到底!看来运气还不错,一网定终身,不过貌似淘来的这个老婆很......
  • 墨香。凤舞

    墨香。凤舞

    原本在普通世界活得很普通的人,能在乱世生存下去吗?她说:没有经历过别人的痛苦,不要轻易指责别人。她说:因为没有地方让我哭,所以我不哭。她说:人总会为了什么而坚强一次,为了一个人或是一件事。她说:生命其实很珍贵。快乐其实很重要。她说:我从不奢望改变已经被鲜血浸染的他们,我没有那么伟大,只是希望,他们能在想起我的时候,多一丝对尘世的眷念,多一点温暖。她说:对于伤害和背叛,不是不恨,只是,如此珍贵的人生哪里有那么多的时间浪费在仇恨上?而且,她只是心软而已。