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<h2> CHAPTER XIX——OF LIBERTY OF CONSCIENCE </h2>
<p>'Tis usual to see good intentions, if carried on without moderation, push
men on to very vicious effects. In this dispute which has at this time
engaged France in a civil war, the better and the soundest cause no doubt
is that which maintains the ancient religion and government of the
kingdom. Nevertheless, amongst the good men of that party (for I do not
speak of those who only make a pretence of it, either to execute their own
particular revenges or to gratify their avarice, or to conciliate the
favour of princes, but of those who engage in the quarrel out of true zeal
to religion and a holy desire to maintain the peace and government of
their country), of these, I say, we see many whom passion transports
beyond the bounds of reason, and sometimes inspires with counsels that are
unjust and violent, and, moreover, rash.</p>
<p>It is certain that in those first times, when our religion began to gain
authority with the laws, zeal armed many against all sorts of pagan books,
by which the learned suffered an exceeding great loss, a disorder that I
conceive to have done more prejudice to letters than all the flames of the
barbarians. Of this Cornelius Tacitus is a very good testimony; for though
the Emperor Tacitus, his kinsman, had, by express order, furnished all the
libraries in the world with it, nevertheless one entire copy could not
escape the curious examination of those who desired to abolish it for only
five or six idle clauses that were contrary to our belief.</p>
<p>They had also the trick easily to lend undue praises to all the emperors
who made for us, and universally to condemn all the actions of those who
were adversaries, as is evidently manifest in the Emperor Julian, surnamed
the Apostate,</p>
<p>[The character of the Emperor Julian was censured, when Montaigne<br/>
was at Rome in 1581, by the Master of the Sacred Palace, who,<br/>
however, as Montaigne tells us in his journal (ii. 35), referred it<br/>
to his conscience to alter what he should think in bad taste. This<br/>
Montaigne did not do, and this chapter supplied Voltaire with the<br/>
greater part of the praises he bestowed upon the Emperor.—Leclerc.]<br/></p>
<p>who was, in truth, a very great and rare man, a man in whose soul
philosophy was imprinted in the best characters, by which he professed to
govern all his actions; and, in truth, there is no sort of virtue of which
he has not left behind him very notable examples: in chastity (of which
the whole of his life gave manifest proof) we read the same of him that
was said of Alexander and Scipio, that being in the flower of his age, for
he was slain by the Parthians at one-and-thirty, of a great many very
beautiful captives, he would not so much as look upon one. As to his
justice, he took himself the pains to hear the parties, and although he
would out of curiosity inquire what religion they were of, nevertheless,
the antipathy he had to ours never gave any counterpoise to the balance.
He made himself several good laws, and repealed a great part of the
subsidies and taxes levied by his predecessors.</p>
<p>We have two good historians who were eyewitnesses of his actions: one of
whom, Marcellinus, in several places of his history sharply reproves an
edict of his whereby he interdicted all Christian rhetoricians and
grammarians to keep school or to teach, and says he could wish that act of
his had been buried in silence: it is probable that had he done any more
severe thing against us, he, so affectionate as he was to our party, would
not have passed it over in silence. He was indeed sharp against us, but
yet no cruel enemy; for our own people tell this story of him, that one
day, walking about the city of Chalcedon, Maris, bishop of the place; was
so bold as to tell him that he was impious, and an enemy to Christ, at
which, they say, he was no further moved than to reply, "Go, poor wretch,
and lament the loss of thy eyes," to which the bishop replied again, "I
thank Jesus Christ for taking away my sight, that I may not see thy
impudent visage," affecting in that, they say, a philosophical patience.
But this action of his bears no comparison to the cruelty that he is said
to have exercised against us. "He was," says Eutropius, my other witness,
"an enemy to Christianity, but without putting his hand to blood." And, to
return to his justice, there is nothing in that whereof he can be accused,
the severity excepted he practised in the beginning of his reign against
those who had followed the party of Constantius, his predecessor. As to
his sobriety, he lived always a soldier-like life; and observed a diet and
routine, like one that prepared and inured himself to the austerities of
war. His vigilance was such, that he divided the night into three or four
parts, of which the least was dedicated to sleep; the rest was spent
either in visiting the state of his army and guards in person, or in
study; for amongst other rare qualities, he was very excellent in all
sorts of learning. 'Tis said of Alexander the Great, that being in bed,
for fear lest sleep should divert him from his thoughts and studies, he
had always a basin set by his bedside, and held one of his hands out with
a ball of copper in it, to the end, that, beginning to fall asleep, and
his fingers leaving their hold, the ball by falling into the basin, might
awake him. But the other had his soul so bent upon what he had a mind to
do, and so little disturbed with fumes by reason of his singular
abstinence, that he had no need of any such invention. As to his military
experience, he was excellent in all the qualities of a great captain, as
it was likely he should, being almost all his life in a continual exercise
of war, and most of that time with us in France, against the Germans and
Franks: we hardly read of any man who ever saw more dangers, or who made
more frequent proofs of his personal valour.</p>
<p>His death has something in it parallel with that of Epaminondas, for he
was wounded with an arrow, and tried to pull it out, and had done so, but
that, being edged, it cut and disabled his hand. He incessantly called out
that they should carry him again into the heat of the battle, to encourage
his soldiers, who very bravely disputed the fight without him, till night
parted the armies. He stood obliged to his philosophy for the singular
contempt he had for his life and all human things. He had a firm belief of
the immortality of souls.</p>
<p>In matter of religion he was wrong throughout, and was surnamed the
Apostate for having relinquished ours: nevertheless, the opinion seems to
me more probable, that he had never thoroughly embraced it, but had
dissembled out of obedience to the laws, till he came to the empire. He
was in his own so superstitious, that he was laughed at for it by those of
his own time, of the same opinion, who jeeringly said, that had he got the
victory over the Parthians, he had destroyed the breed of oxen in the
world to supply his sacrifices. He was, moreover, besotted with the art of
divination, and gave authority to all sorts of predictions. He said,
amongst other things at his death, that he was obliged to the gods, and
thanked them, in that they would not cut him off by surprise, having long
before advertised him of the place and hour of his death, nor by a mean
and unmanly death, more becoming lazy and delicate people; nor by a death
that was languishing, long, and painful; and that they had thought him
worthy to die after that noble manner, in the progress of his victories,
in the flower of his glory. He had a vision like that of Marcus Brutus,
that first threatened him in Gaul, and afterward appeared to him in Persia
just before his death. These words that some make him say when he felt
himself wounded: "Thou hast overcome, Nazarene"; or as others, "Content
thyself, Nazarene"; would hardly have been omitted, had they been
believed, by my witnesses, who, being present in the army, have set down
to the least motions and words of his end; no more than certain other
miracles that are reported about it.</p>
<p>And to return to my subject, he long nourished, says Marcellinus, paganism
in his heart; but all his army being Christians, he durst not own it. But
in the end, seeing himself strong enough to dare to discover himself, he
caused the temples of the gods to be thrown open, and did his uttermost to
set on foot and to encourage idolatry. Which the better to effect, having
at Constantinople found the people disunited, and also the prelates of the
church divided amongst themselves, having convened them all before him, he
earnestly admonished them to calm those civil dissensions, and that every
one might freely, and without fear, follow his own religion. Which he the
more sedulously solicited, in hope that this licence would augment the
schisms and factions of their division, and hinder the people from
reuniting, and consequently fortifying themselves against him by their
unanimous intelligence and concord; having experienced by the cruelty of
some Christians, that there is no beast in the world so much to be feared
by man as man; these are very nearly his words.</p>
<p>Wherein this is very worthy of consideration, that the Emperor Julian made
use of the same receipt of liberty of conscience to inflame the civil
dissensions that our kings do to extinguish them. So that a man may say on
one side, that to give the people the reins to entertain every man his own
opinion, is to scatter and sow division, and, as it were, to lend a hand
to augment it, there being no legal impediment or restraint to stop or
hinder their career; but, on the other side, a man may also say, that to
give the people the reins to entertain every man his own opinion, is to
mollify and appease them by facility and toleration, and to dull the point
which is whetted and made sharper by singularity, novelty, and difficulty:
and I think it is better for the honour of the devotion of our kings, that
not having been able to do what they would, they have made a show of being
willing to do what they could.</p>
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