登陆注册
15677000000298

第298章

Let us now come to Plutarch: Jean Bodin is a good author of our times, and a writer of much greater judgment than the rout of scribblers of his age, and who deserves to be read and considered. I find him, though, a little bold in this passage of his Method of history, where he accuses Plutarch not only of ignorance (wherein I would have let him alone: for that is beyond my criticism), but that he "often writes things incredible, and absolutely fabulous ": these are his own words. If he had simply said, that he had delivered things otherwise than they really are, it had been no great reproach; for what we have not seen, we are forced to receive from other hands, and take upon trust, and I see that he purposely sometimes variously relates the same story; as the judgment of the three best captains that ever were, given by Hannibal; 'tis one way in the Life of Flammius, and another in that of Pyrrhus. But to charge him with having taken incredible and impossible things for current pay, is to accuse the most judicious author in the world of want of judgment. And this is his example; "as," says he, "when he relates that a Lacedaemonian boy suffered his bowels to be torn out by a fox-cub he had stolen, and kept it still concealed under his coat till he fell down dead, rather than he would discover his theft." I find, in the first place, this example ill chosen, forasmuch as it is very hard to limit the power of the faculties of--the soul, whereas we have better authority to limit and know the force of the bodily limbs; and therefore, if I had been he, I should rather have chosen an example of this second sort; and there are some of these less credible: and amongst others, that which he refates of Pyrrhus, that "all wounded as he was, he struck one of his enemies, who was armed from head to foot, so great a blow with his sword, that he clave him down from his crown to his seat, so that the body was divided into two parts." In this example I find no great miracle, nor do I admit the excuse with which he defends Plutarch, in having added these words, "as 'tis said," to suspend our belief; for unless it be in things received by authority, and the reverence to antiquity or religion, he would never have himself admitted, or enjoined us to believe things incredible in themselves; and that these words, "as 'tis said," are not put in this place to that effect, is easy to be seen, because he elsewhere relates to us, upon this subject, of the patience of the Lacedaemonian children, examples happening in his time, more unlikely to prevail upon our faith; as what Cicero has also testified before him, as having, as he says, been upon the spot: that even to their times there were children found who, in the trial of patience they were put to before the altar of Diana, suffered themselves to be there whipped till the blood ran down all over their bodies, not only without crying out, but without so much as a groan, and some till they there voluntarily lost their lives: and that which Plutarch also, amongst a hundred other witnesses, relates, that at a sacrifice, a burning coal having fallen into the sleeve of a Lacedaemonian boy, as he was censing, he suffered his whole arm to be burned, till the smell of the broiling flesh was perceived by those present. There was nothing, according to their custom, wherein their reputation was more concerned, nor for which they were to undergo more blame and disgrace, than in being taken in theft.

I am so fully satisfied of the greatness of those people, that this story does not only not appear to me, as to Bodin, incredible; but I do not find it so much as rare and strange. The Spartan history is full of a thousand more cruel and rare examples; and is; indeed, all miracle in this respect.

Marcellinus, concerning theft, reports that in his time there was no sort of torments which could compel the Egyptians, when taken in this act, though a people very much addicted to it, so much as to tell their name.

A Spanish peasant, being put to the rack as to the accomplices of the murder of the Praetor Lucius Piso, cried out in the height of the torment, "that his friends should not leave him, but look on in all assurance, and that no pain had the power to force from him one word of confession," which was all they could get the first day. The next day, as they were leading him a second time to another trial, strongly disengaging himself from the hands of his guards, he furiously ran his head against a wall, and beat out his brains.

Epicharis, having tired and glutted the cruelty of Nero's satellites, and undergone their fire, their beating, their racks, a whole day together, without one syllable of confession of her conspiracy; being the next day brought again to the rack, with her limbs almost torn to pieces, conveyed the lace of her robe with a running noose over one of the arms of her chair, and suddenly slipping her head into it, with the weight of her own body hanged herself. Having the courage to die in that manner, is it not to be presumed that she purposely lent her life to the trial of her fortitude the day before, to mock the tyrant, and encourage others to the like attempt?

And whoever will inquire of our troopers the experiences they have had in our civil wars, will find effects of patience and obstinate resolution in this miserable age of ours, and amongst this rabble even more effeminate than the Egyptians, worthy to be compared with those we have just related of the Spartan virtue.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 机甲快递员

    机甲快递员

    大学一年级新生,却已身缠万贯!他只是兼职做一下星际快递员而已——天下机甲,唯快不破。《机甲快递员》来袭!
  • 明星丫头遇冷少

    明星丫头遇冷少

    一个是黑帮大哥,一个是一介明星,两人一见面就掐,他们究竟能擦出怎样的火花???
  • 郎在江湖

    郎在江湖

    来到大明,他是一个官二代;在清官老爹的严苛要求下,他的前程一片美好。但权阉当道,一夜之间他家破人亡,奢靡风流的少爷生活顷刻破产。他不得不远遁江湖,踏上复仇之旅。沉冤得雪之后,他又承担起家门崛起的重任,奋威朝堂,文治武功,谱写了自己波澜壮阔的侠义之歌和种马一生。惩恶扬善、开疆拓土、乾坤逆转……还有那无尽风流,尽在本书中。
  • 狂拽女王爷:圣尊再让我吃一次

    狂拽女王爷:圣尊再让我吃一次

    初见,中了媚药,应错阳差的把功力尽失的圣尊XXOO了。后来,又中了媚药,“圣尊,再帮帮忙呗。”诶诶诶你别走!再让我上一次吧,就上一次啊〒_〒人设:女主——狂拽霸气吊炸天。男主——温柔贤惠识大体(高冷傲娇大腹黑)。女主:“本王的人设是狂拽霸气吊炸天,作者你这蠢货写的都是什么鬼?凭什么本王总被压制?”作者咬着笔杆:全天下人都知道很狂很拽很霸气,可你那是被智商压制,怪我咯。好,这个忍了,但是:“你喵的不是说男主温柔贤惠识大体么?可为毛这只腹黑毒舌,傲娇又难搞?”作者继续咬着笔杆:哦,你看到的是他的隐藏属性。PS:霸气女王爷VS腹黑圣尊武力值爆表与智商值爆炸的终极PK
  • 重生,不会再放你走

    重生,不会再放你走

    她,爱了他整整二十年,他,亦是爱了她二十年,但却再一朝一夕间,爱情灰飞烟灭,却只是天神开了一个巨大的玩笑她,重生了,他,再一次爱上她,她,不会再飞蛾扑火,她会掌握自己的人生,他,会收服她的野心,用自己温暖的心,来融化她这座冰山。她又一次接受他,再一次爱上他,理解他,渐渐明白了他的苦衷,与他有情人终成眷属。爱你,是你教会了我如何去爱,爱你,哪怕是山崩海啸,爱你,知道天无陵,地无合,永远永远...
  • 豪门盛爱,总裁的隐婚妻

    豪门盛爱,总裁的隐婚妻

    苏清茉跟自己的死对头一起演戏,对方借着拍掌掴她的戏份,把她的一边脸给划了一道深深的划痕,鲜血直流,险些毁容!这一次她不能再忍受了,对着那个站在顶端的男人,她曾经的初恋说:“我接受你之前提出的要求,我陪你一晚,你让我的演艺事业从此顺风顺水。”他神色淡淡的看着她,而后唇角轻勾,一抹玩味的笑意:“我现在改变主意了。”在他看到她失落的眼神时,再次开口:“我要你陪我一辈子。”“一辈子就一辈子,谁怕谁?”“那好,等你的脸好了,带上户口本来找我。”“你要我的户口本干什么?”她满眼疑惑的看着他,他这是要搞人口普查吗?“去民政局缺少了户口本有些事情会不太好办。”
  • 昱火

    昱火

    我在目睹整个大陆的昱火,它注定的死去的结局。
  • 无我谁仙

    无我谁仙

    被逼至死的煞星之体,换魂重生,却不得不以亡故之名苟活。放眼万里山河,竟无一处容我安养生息。闻言煞星可逆天而诛仙,我便成仙重铸苍天!从此天地之间,皆为吾土;今后千秋英雄,皆为吾属!天下无我,谁为仙?
  • 遇见,我的学生时代

    遇见,我的学生时代

    一个拥有散打和篮球双料国家一级运动员的学生徐浩扬的学生时代。
  • 盛世溺宠:宝贝你别逃

    盛世溺宠:宝贝你别逃

    【已完结】他是反恐的最高督察、少校军衔,我行我素,从不受任何的拘束。她是第一恐怖组织的高层机密人员,活泼可爱,却又玩笑世间。他们本应该像两条平行线,永远也不可能相交,然而命运却总是爱开玩笑。将他们紧紧绑在了一起!他说:我一直觉得我可以冷漠的对待全天下所有人,可是遇见你,却让我明白了什么叫心甘情愿。她说:我可以为了我的家人、为了我的职责而放弃我的生命。但是你,却是我始终都放不下的那个人。