登陆注册
20269000000003

第3章

Then did I rally my spirit till it was strong again, and answered,' Does the savage bitterness of my fortune still need recounting? Does it not stand forth plainly enough of itself? Does not the very aspect of this place strike you? Is this the library which you had chosen Page 10for yourself as your sure resting-place in my house? Is this the room in which you would so often tarry with me expounding the philosophy of things human and divine? Was my condition like this, or my countenance, when I probed with your aid the secrets of nature, when you marked out with a wand the courses of the stars, when you shaped our habits and the rule of all our life by the pattern of the universe? 1 Are these the rewards we reap by yielding ourselves to you? Nay, you yourself have established this saying by the mouth of Plato, that commonwealths would be blessed if they were guided by those who made wisdom their study, or if those who guided them would make wisdom their study.2 By the mouth of that same great man did you teach that this was the binding reason why a commonwealth should be governed by philosophers, namely that the helm of government should not be left to unscrupulous or criminal citizens lest they should bring corruption and ruin upon the good citizens.3 Since, then, I had learned from you in quiet and inaction of this view, I followed it further, for I desired to practise it in public government.

You and God Himself, who has grafted you in the minds of philosophers, are my witnesses that never have I applied myself to any office of state except that I might work for the 10:1 -- Boethius means that his chief ' philosophical ' studies had been physics, astronomy, and ethics.

10:2 -- Plato, Repub.v 473.

10:3 -- Plato, Repub.vi, 488, 489.Page 11common welfare of all good men.Thence followed bitter quarrels with evil men which could not be appeased, and, for the sake of preserving justice, contempt of the enmity of those in power, for this is the result of a free and fearless conscience.How often have I withstood Conigastus 1 to his face, whenever he has attacked a weak man's fortune! How often have I turned by force Trigulla, 1 the overseer of the Emperor's household, from an unjust act that he had begun or even carried out! How many times have I put my own authority in danger by protecting those wretched people who were harried with unending false charges by the greed of barbarian Goths which ever went unpunished! Never, I say, has any man depraved me from justice to injustice.My heart has ached as bitterly as those of the sufferers when I have seen the fortunes of our subjects ruined both by the rapacity of persons and the taxes of the state.Again, in a time of severe famine, a grievous, intolerable sale by compulsion was decreed in Campania, and devastation threatened that province.Then I undertook for the sake of the common welfare a struggle against the commander of the Imperial guard; though the king was aware of it, I fought against the enforcement of the sale, and fought successfully.Paulinus was a man who had been consul:

the jackals of the court had 11:1 -- Conigastus and Trigulla were favourite officers of the Emperor, Theodoric, the Goth: they used their influence with him for the oppression of the weak.Page 12in their own hopes and desires already swallowed up his possessions, but I snatched him from their very gaping jaws.I exposed myself to the hatred of the treacherous informer Cyprian, that I might prevent Albinus, also a former consul, being overwhelmed by the penalty of a trumped-up charge.Think you that I have raised up against myself bitter and great quarrels enough? But I ought to have been safer among those whom I helped;for, from my love of justice, I laid up for myself among the courtiers no resource to which I might turn for safety.Who, further, were the informers upon whose evidence I was banished? One was Basilius: he was formerly expelled from the royal service, and was driven by debt to inform against me.Again, Opilio and Gaudentius had been condemned to exile by the king for many unjust acts and crimes: this decree they would not obey, and they sought sanctuary in sacred buildings, but when the king was aware of it, he declared that if they departed not from Ravenna before a certain day, they should be driven forth branded upon their foreheads.What could be more stringent than this? Yet upon that very day information against me was laid by these same men and accepted.Why so? Did my character deserve this treatment?

Or did my prearranged condemnation give credit and justification to my accusers? Did Fortune feel no shame for this? If not for innocence calumniated, at any rate for the baseness of the calumniators? Page 13'Would you learn the sum of the charges against me? It was said that "I had desired the safety of the Senate." You would learn in what way.I was charged with "having hindered an informer from producing papers by which the Senate could be accused of treason." What think you, my mistress? Shall I deny it lest it shame you? Nay, I did desire the safety of the Senate, nor shall ever cease to desire it.Shall I confess it? Then there would have been no need to hinder an informer.Shall I call it a crime to have wished for the safety of that order? By its own decrees concerning myself it has established that this is a crime.Though want of foresight often deceives itself, it cannot alter the merits of facts, and, in obedience to the Senate's command, I cannot think it right to hide the truth or to assent to falsehood.

'However, I leave it to your judgment and that of philosophers to decide how the justice of this may be; but I have committed to writing for history the true course of events, that posterity may not be ignorant thereof.I think it unnecessary to speak of the forged letters through which I am accused of " hoping for the freedom of Rome." Their falsity would have been apparent if I had been free to question the evidence of the informers themselves, for their confessions have much force in all such business.

同类推荐
  • 十住经卷第一

    十住经卷第一

    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。
  • 与胡居士皆病寄此诗

    与胡居士皆病寄此诗

    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。
  • 太上登真三矫灵应经

    太上登真三矫灵应经

    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。
  • 北户录

    北户录

    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。
  • 朱子论定程董学则

    朱子论定程董学则

    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
  • 再苦也要笑一笑(大全集)

    再苦也要笑一笑(大全集)

    人生在世不过数年,要视宠辱如花开花落般平常才能不惊,视名利如云卷云舒般坦然才能无意。生活中不乏酸甜苦辣,面对艰难困苦我们应该学会一笑置之。本书用通俗的语言,将人生的浅显而又深刻的哲理向您娓娓道来,希望它能够让您重新感悟人生的真谛和美好,放下过去的包袱,面带微笑踏上新的征途。
  • 魔王宠魅:夫君请暖床

    魔王宠魅:夫君请暖床

    22世纪女特工欧阳菲雪被自己的男人和最好的朋友陷害爆炸死亡。一朝穿越,穿越到欧阳丞相府千金小姐同名同姓的欧阳菲雪身上,同样也是被自己的未婚夫所害致死。醒来,契约萌兽,炼制魔法阵,虐死渣渣未婚夫,不鸣则已一鸣惊人!
  • 神真破天

    神真破天

    神帝大陆,没有魔法,有的,只是源源不断的神气!神者,神师,大神师,神灵,神王,神皇,神宗,神尊,真神尊,神圣,真神圣,神帝!无比森严的等级!当地球的超级修真者,3S级异能者,神级武者龙潇尘重生在神帝大陆的时候,又会发生什么呢?(本故事及人物纯属虚构,如有雷同,纯属巧合,切勿模仿。)
  • 灵车漂移

    灵车漂移

    年轻人,你可曾听说过……七号公路,八号当铺……本书已完结,至于七号公路到底如何,请看新篇,谢谢各位的支持!【QQ群481239446,虽然知道什么人气,但还是申请了一个群,望读者大大们赏脸。。。_(:зゝ∠)_】
  • 万界神尊

    万界神尊

    万千世界,各族争锋;亿万天才,群雄逐鹿。遭人陷害而死的赵若尘逆天改命,重回十六岁。这一世,他势必要弥补所有遗憾,再次追逐武道巅峰,亲手谱写一曲热血沸腾的传奇史诗!
  • 长生恨

    长生恨

    有些时候,你会爱上一个陌生人,有些时候,爱上一个路人,可谁又不是从陌生人成为熟悉?谁又不会从一场深爱中转身出来,成为另一个路人呢?小女人的心思谁能理解,不管是进也罢,退也罢,哭也罢笑也罢,万般无奈的挣扎辗转,也无非是一场若梦似幻的经历,十年后,风起了,你心里记得的那个人,还在那里吗……妙文出品,必属精品。
  • 狼王传奇

    狼王传奇

    上古时期,被天神选中的狼王,它和它的后代将永生永世受狼群追随。一匹幸运被天神选中的狼王,他和配偶生下个小狼王后,小狼王在一次狼王争夺战而逝。“嗷”狼王发出一声悲惨的嚎叫,在狼王的号召群狼最终杀死了那个企图争夺狼王之位狼。疾此后的路会如何?
  • 让心跳动:那些恐怖之事

    让心跳动:那些恐怖之事

    《让心跳动:那些恐怖之事》是知名作家殷谦继恐怖悬疑小说《关中灵异鬼尸》之后的又一部长篇小说。《让心跳动:那些恐怖之事》——将带你走进人类思想的苦旅,但又是在寻求着刺激与恐惧,愉快和幸福。真正能穿越历史空间的是故事,真正能占据历史遂道的,也是故事。
  • 四福晋传奇

    四福晋传奇

    曼宁知道自己要嫁给四阿哥胤禛作为妻子的时候,便下定决心做一个贤良淑德的好福晋。嫁过去之后,她才知道,做一个福晋不容易,做一个合格贤惠的好福晋更是难上加难。
  • 幻影计划:无形幽灵

    幻影计划:无形幽灵

    一次天文学的发现,唤醒了全球人们统一的愿望。可爱但又恐怖的队长代领的幻影与幽灵两支精英部队勇猛作战,只为让地球永久和平。“相信我shadow,总有一天地球将是一体的”我是影子(shadow),那个改变世界的影子