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<h2> CHAPTER XXXII——DEFENCE OF SENECA AND PLUTARCH </h2>
<p>The familiarity I have with these two authors, and the assistance they
have lent to my age and to my book, wholly compiled of what I have
borrowed from them, oblige me to stand up for their honour.</p>
<p>As to Seneca, amongst a million of little pamphlets that those of the
so-called reformed religion disperse abroad for the defence of their cause
(and which sometimes proceed from so good a hand, that 'tis pity his pen
is not employed in a better subject), I have formerly seen one, that to
make up the parallel he would fain find out betwixt the government of our
late poor King Charles IX. and that of Nero, compares the late Cardinal of
Lorraine with Seneca; their fortunes, in having both of them been the
prime ministers in the government of their princes, and in their manners,
conditions, and deportments to have been very near alike. Wherein, in my
opinion, he does the said cardinal a very great honour; for though I am
one of those who have a very high esteem for his wit, eloquence, and zeal
to religion and the service of his king, and his good fortune to have
lived in an age wherein it was so novel, so rare, and also so necessary
for the public good to have an ecclesiastical person of such high birth
and dignity, and so sufficient and capable of his place; yet, to confess
the truth, I do not think his capacity by many degrees near to the other,
nor his virtue either so clean, entire, or steady as that of Seneca.</p>
<p>Now the book whereof I speak, to bring about its design, gives a very
injurious description of Seneca, having borrowed its approaches from Dion
the historian, whose testimony I do not at all believe for besides that he
is inconsistent, that after having called Seneca one while very wise, and
again a mortal enemy to Nero's vices, makes him elsewhere avaricious, an
usurer, ambitious, effeminate, voluptuous, and a false pretender to
philosophy, his virtue appears so vivid and vigorous in his writings, and
his vindication is so clear from any of these imputations, as of his
riches and extraordinarily expensive way of living, that I cannot believe
any testimony to the contrary. And besides, it is much more reasonable to
believe the Roman historians in such things than Greeks and foreigners.
Now Tacitus and the rest speak very honourably both of his life and death;
and represent him to us a very excellent and virtuous person in all
things; and I will allege no other reproach against Dion's report but
this, which I cannot avoid, namely, that he has so weak a judgment in the
Roman affairs, that he dares to maintain Julius Caesar's cause against
Pompey [And so does this editor. D.W.], and that of Antony against Cicero.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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?</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>I know there have been simple peasants amongst us who have endured the
soles of their feet to be broiled upon a gridiron, their finger-ends to be
crushed with the cock of a pistol, and their bloody eyes squeezed out of
their heads by force of a cord twisted about their brows, before they
would so much as consent to a ransom. I have seen one left stark naked for
dead in a ditch, his neck black and swollen, with a halter yet about it
with which they had dragged him all night at a horse's tail, his body
wounded in a hundred places, with stabs of daggers that had been given
him, not to kill him, but to put him to pain and to affright him, who had
endured all this, and even to being speechless and insensible, resolved,
as he himself told me, rather to die a thousand deaths (as indeed, as to
matter of suffering, he had borne one) before he would promise anything;
and yet he was one of the richest husbandmen of all the country. How many
have been seen patiently to suffer themselves to be burnt and roasted for
opinions taken upon trust from others, and by them not at all understood?
I have known a hundred and a hundred women (for Gascony has a certain
prerogative for obstinacy) whom you might sooner have made eat fire than
forsake an opinion they had conceived in anger. They are all the more
exasperated by blows and constraint. And he that made the story of the
woman who, in defiance of all correction, threats, and bastinadoes, ceased
not to call her husband lousy knave, and who being plunged over head and
ears in water, yet lifted her hands above her head and made a sign of
cracking lice, feigned a tale of which, in truth, we every day see a
manifest image in the obstinacy of women. And obstinacy is the sister of
constancy, at least in vigour and stability.</p>
<p>We are not to judge what is possible and what is not, according to what is
credible and incredible to our apprehension, as I have said elsewhere and
it is a great fault, and yet one that most men are guilty of, which,
nevertheless, I do not mention with any reflection upon Bodin, to make a
difficulty of believing that in another which they could not or would not
do themselves. Every one thinks that the sovereign stamp of human nature
is imprinted in him, and that from it all others must take their rule; and
that all proceedings which are not like his are feigned and false. Is
anything of another's actions or faculties proposed to him? the first
thing he calls to the consultation of his judgment is his own example; and
as matters go with him, so they must of necessity do with all the world
besides dangerous and intolerable folly! For my part, I consider some men
as infinitely beyond me, especially amongst the ancients, and yet, though
I clearly discern my inability to come near them by a thousand paces, I do
not forbear to keep them in sight, and to judge of what so elevates them,
of which I perceive some seeds in myself, as I also do of the extreme
meanness of some other minds, which I neither am astonished at nor yet
misbelieve. I very well perceive the turns those great souls take to raise
themselves to such a pitch, and admire their grandeur; and those flights
that I think the bravest I could be glad to imitate; where, though I want
wing, yet my judgment readily goes along with them. The other example he
introduces of "things incredible and wholly fabulous," delivered by
Plutarch, is, that "Agesilaus was fined by the Ephori for having wholly
engrossed the hearts and affections of his citizens to himself alone." And
herein I do not see what sign of falsity is to be found: clearly Plutarch
speaks of things that must needs be better known to him than to us; and it
was no new thing in Greece to see men punished and exiled for this very
thing, for being too acceptable to the people; witness the Ostracism and
Petalism.—[Ostracism at Athens was banishment for ten years;
petalism at Syracuse was banishment for five years.]</p>
<p>There is yet in this place another accusation laid against Plutarch which
I cannot well digest, where Bodin says that he has sincerely paralleled
Romans with Romans, and Greeks amongst themselves, but not Romans with
Greeks; witness, says he, Demosthenes and Cicero, Cato and Aristides,
Sylla and Lysander, Marcellus and Pelopidas, Pompey and Agesilaus, holding
that he has favoured the Greeks in giving them so unequal companions. This
is really to attack what in Plutarch is most excellent and most to be
commended; for in his parallels (which is the most admirable part of all
his works, and with which, in my opinion, he is himself the most pleased)
the fidelity and sincerity of his judgments equal their depth and weight;
he is a philosopher who teaches us virtue. Let us see whether we cannot
defend him from this reproach of falsity and prevarication. All that I can
imagine could give occasion to this censure is the great and shining
lustre of the Roman names which we have in our minds; it does not seem
likely to us that Demosthenes could rival the glory of a consul,
proconsul, and proctor of that great Republic; but if a man consider the
truth of the thing, and the men in themselves, which is Plutarch's
chiefest aim, and will rather balance their manners, their natures, and
parts, than their fortunes, I think, contrary to Bodin, that Cicero and
the elder Cato come far short of the men with whom they are compared. I
should sooner, for his purpose, have chosen the example of the younger
Cato compared with Phocion, for in this couple there would have been a
more likely disparity, to the Roman's advantage. As to Marcellus, Sylla,
and Pompey, I very well discern that their exploits of war are greater and
more full of pomp and glory than those of the Greeks, whom Plutarch
compares with them; but the bravest and most virtuous actions any more in
war than elsewhere, are not always the most renowned. I often see the
names of captains obscured by the splendour of other names of less desert;
witness Labienus, Ventidius, Telesinus, and several others. And to take it
by that, were I to complain on the behalf of the Greeks, could I not say,
that Camillus was much less comparable to Themistocles, the Gracchi to
Agis and Cleomenes, and Numa to Lycurgus? But 'tis folly to judge, at one
view, of things that have so many aspects. When Plutarch compares them, he
does not, for all that, make them equal; who could more learnedly and
sincerely have marked their distinctions? Does he parallel the victories,
feats of arms, the force of the armies conducted by Pompey, and his
triumphs, with those of Agesilaus? "I do not believe," says he, "that
Xenophon himself, if he were now living, though he were allowed to write
whatever pleased him to the advantage of Agesilaus, would dare to bring
them into comparison." Does he speak of paralleling Lysander to Sylla.
"There is," says he, "no comparison, either in the number of victories or
in the hazard of battles, for Lysander only gained two naval battles."
This is not to derogate from the Romans; for having only simply named them
with the Greeks, he can have done them no injury, what disparity soever
there may be betwixt them and Plutarch does not entirely oppose them to
one another; there is no preference in general; he only compares the
pieces and circumstances one after another, and gives of every one a
particular and separate judgment. Wherefore, if any one could convict him
of partiality, he ought to pick out some one of those particular
judgments, or say, in general, that he was mistaken in comparing such a
Greek to such a Roman, when there were others more fit and better
resembling to parallel him to.</p>
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