) Moreover the number four also comprehends the principles of the
harmonious concords in music, that in fours, and in fifths, and the diapason, and besides this the
double diapason from which sounds the most perfect system of harmony is produced. For the ratio
of the sounds in fourths is as four to three; and in fifths as three to two; and in the diapason that
ratio is doubled: and in the double diapason it is increased fourfold, all which ratios the number four
comprehends. At all events the first, or the epistritus, is the ratio of four to three; the second, or the
hemiolius, is that of three to two: the twofold ratio is that of two to one, or four to two: and the
fourfold ratio is that of four to one.
XVI. (49) There is also another power of the number four which is a most wonderful one to speak
of and to contemplate. For it was this number that first displayed the nature of the solid cube, the
numbers before four being assigned only to incorporeal things. For it is according to the unit that
that thing is reckoned which is spoken of in geometry as a point: and a line is spoken of according
to the number two, because it is arranged by nature from a point; and a line is length without
breadth. But when breadth is added to it, it becomes a superficies, which is arranged according to
the number three. And a superficies, when compared with the nature of a solid cube, wants one
thing, namely depth, and when this one thing is added to the three, it becomes four. On which
account it has happened that this number is a thing of great importance, inasmuch as from an
incorporeal substance perceptible only by intellect, it has led us on to a comprehension of a body
divisible in a threefold manner, and which by its own nature is first perceived by the external
senses. (50) And he who does not comprehend what is here said may learn to understand it from a
game which is very common. Those who play with nuts are accustomed when they have placed
three nuts on the floor, to place one more on the top of them producing a figure like a pyramid.
Accordingly the triangle stands on the floor, arranged up to the number three, and the nut which is
placed upon it makes up four in number, and in figure it produces a pyramid, being now a solid
body.
(51) And in addition to this there is this point also of which we should not be ignorant, the
number four is the first number which is a square, being equal on all sides, the measure of justice
and equality. And that it is the only number the nature of which is such that it is produced by the
same numbers whether in combination, or in power. In combination when two and two are added
together; and again in power when we speak of twice two;[ 4 ] and in this is
displays an exceedingly beautiful kind of harmony, which is not the lot of any other number.
If we examine the number six which is composed of two threes, if these two numbers are multiplied
it is not the number six that is produced, but a different one, the number nine. (52) And the number
four has many other powers also, which we must subsequently show more accurately in a
separate essay appropriated to it. At present it is sufficient to add this that it was the foundation of
the creation of the whole heaven and the whole world. For the four elements, out of which this
universe was made, flowed from the number four as from a fountain. And in addition to the four
elements the seasons of the year are also four, which are the causes of the generation of animals
and plants, the year being divided into the quadruple division of winter, and spring, and summer,
and autumn.
XVII. (53) The aforesaid number therefore being accounted worthy of such pre-eminence in
nature, the Creator of necessity adorned the heaven by the number four, namely by that most
beautiful and most godlike ornament the lightgiving stars. And knowing that of all existing things light
is the most excellent, he made it the instrument of the best of all the senses, sight. For what the
mind is in the soul, that the eye is in the body. For each of them sees, the one beholding those
existing things which are perceptible only to the intellect, and the other those which are perceptible
to the external senses.
But the mind is in need of knowledge in order to distinguish incorporeal
things, and the eyes have need of light in order to be able to perceive bodies, and light is also the
cause of many other good things to men, and particularly of the greatest, namely philosophy. (54)
For the sight being sent upwards by light and beholding the nature of the stars and their
harmonious movement, and the well-ordered revolutions of the fixed stars, and of the planets,
some always revolving in the same manner and coming to the same places, and others having
double periods in an anomalous and somewhat contrary manner, beholding also, the harmonious
dances of all these bodies arranged according to the laws of perfect music, causes an ineffable
joy and delight to the soul. And the soul, feasting on a continuous series of spectacles, for one
succeeds another, has an insatiable love for beholding such. Then, as is usually the case, it
examines with increased curiosity what is the substance of these things which are visible; and
whether they have an existence without having been created, or whether they received their origin
by creation, and what is the character of their movement, and what the causes are by which
everything is regulated. And it is from inquiries into these things that philosophy has arisen, than
which no more perfect good has entered into human life.
XVIII. (55) But the Creator having a regard to that idea of light perceptible only by the intellect,
which has been spoken of in the mention made of the incorporeal world, created those stars which
are perceptible by the external senses, those divine and superlatively beautiful images, which on
many accounts he placed in the purest temple of corporeal substance, namely in heaven. One of
the reasons for his so doing was that they might give light; another was that they might be signs;
another had reference to their dividing the times of the seasons of the year, and above all dividing
days and nights, of months and years, which are the measures of time; and which have given rise
to the nature of number. (56) And how great is the use and how great the advantage derivable from
each of the aforesaid things, is plain from their effect. But with a view to a more accurate
comprehension of them, it may perhaps not be out of place to trace out the truth in a regular
discussion.
Now the whole of time being divided into two portions day and night, the sovereignty of
the day the Father has assigned to the Sun, as a mighty monarch: and that of the night he has
given to the moon and to the multitude of the other stars. (57) And the greatness of the power and
sovereignty of the sun has its most conspicuous proof in what has been already said: for he, being
one and single has been allotted for his own share and by himself one half portion of all time,
namely day; and all the other lights in conjunction with the moon have the other portion, which is
called night. And when the sun rises all the appearances of such numbers of stars are not only
obscured but absolutely disappear from the effusion of his beams; and when he sets then they all
assembled together, begin to display their own peculiar brilliancy and their separate qualities.
XIX. (58) And they have been created, as Moses tells us, not only that they might send light upon
the earth, but also that they might display signs of future events. For either by their risings, or their
settings, or their eclipses, or again by their appearances and occultations, or by the other
variations observable in their motions, men oftentimes conjecture what is about to happen, the
productiveness or unproductiveness of the crops, the birth or loss of their cattle, fine weather or
cloudy weather, calm and violent storms of wind, floods in the rivers or droughts, a tranquil state of
the sea and heavy waves, unusual changes in the seasons of the year when either the summer is
cold like winter, or the winter warm, or when the spring assumes the temperature of autumn or the
autumn that of spring. (59) And before now some men have conjecturally predicted disturbances
and commotions of the earth from the revolutions of the heavenly bodies, and innumerable other
events which have turned out most exactly true: so that it is a most veracious saying that "the stars
were created to act as signs, and moreover to mark the seasons." And by the word seasons the
divisions of the year are here intended. And why may not this be reasonably affirmed? For what
other idea of opportunity can there be except that it is the time for success? And the seasons bring
everything to perfection and set everything right; giving perfection to the sowing and planting of
fruits, and to the birth and growth of animals.
(60) They were also created to serve as measure of
time; for it is by the appointed periodical revolutions of the sun and moon and other stars, that days
and months and years are determined. And moreover it is owing to them that the most useful of all
things, the nature of number exists, time having displayed it; for from one day comes the limit, and
from two the number two, and from three, three, and from the notion of a month is derived the
number thirty, and from a year that number which is equal to the days of the twelve months, and
from infinite time comes the notion of infinite number.
(61) To such great and indispensable
advantages do the natures of the heavenly bodies and the motions of the stars tend. And to how
many other things might I also affirm that they contribute which are as yet unknown to us? for all
things are not known to the will of man; but of the things which contribute towards the durability of
the universe, those which are established by laws and ordinances which God has appointed to be
unalterable for ever, are accomplished in every instance and in every country.
XX. (62) Then when earth and heaven had been adorned with their befitting ornaments, one with a
triad, and the other, as has been already said, with a quaternion, God proceeded to create the
races of mortal creatures, making the beginning with the aquatic animals on the fifth day, thinking
that there was no one thing so akin to another as the number five as to animals; for animate things
differ from inanimate in nothing more than in sensation, and sensation is divided according to a
fivefold division, into sight, hearing, taste, smell, and touch. Accordingly, the Creator allotted to
each of the senses its appropriate matter, and also its peculiar faculty of judgment, by which it
should decide on what came before it. So sight judges of colours, and hearing of sounds, and taste
of juices, and smell of vapours, and touch of softness and hardness, and of heat and cold, and of
smoothness and roughness: (63) therefore He commanded all the races of fish and sea-monsters
to stand together in their places, animals differing both in their sizes and in their qualities; for they
vary in different seas, though in some cases they are the same, and every animal was not formed
to live every where. And was not this reasonable? For some of them delight in marshy places, and
in water which is very deep; and some in sewers and harbours, being neither able to crawl up upon
the land, nor to swim off far from the land. Some, again, dwell in the middle and in the deep sea,
and avoid all the projecting promontories and islands and rocks: some also exult in fine weather
and in calm, and some in storms and heavy surf. For being exercised by continual buffetings, and
being in the habit of withstanding the current by force, they are very vigorous and become stout.
After that he created the races of birds as akin to the races of aquatic animals (for they are each
of them swimmers), leaving no species of creatures which traverse the air unfinished.
XXI. (64) So now when the air and the water had received their appropriate races of animals as an
allotment that was their due, God again summoned the earth for the creation of that share which
still remained: and after the production of plants, the terrestrial animals still remained. And God
said, "Let the earth bring forth cattle and beasts, and creeping things of each kind." And the earth
did as it was commanded, and immediately sent forth animals differing in their formation and in
their strength, and in the injurious or beneficial powers that were implanted in them.
(65) And after
all He made man. But how he made him I will mention presently, after I have first explained that he
adopted the most beautiful connection and train of consequences according to the system of the
creation of animals which he had sketched out to himself; for of souls the most sluggish and the
most weakly formed has been allotted to the race of fishes; and the most exquisitely endowed soul,
that which is in all respects most excellent, has been given to the race of mankind, and one
something between the two to the races of terrestrial animals and those which traverse the air; for
the soul of such creatures is endowed with more acute sensations than the soul of fishes, but is
more dull than that of mankind. (66) And it was on this account that of all living creatures God
created fishes first, inasmuch as they partake of corporeal substance in a greater degree than
they partake of soul, being in a manner animals and not animals, moving soulless things, having a
sort of semblance of soul diffused through them for no object beyond that of keeping their bodies
live (just as they say that salt preserves meat), in order that they may not easily be destroyed. And
after the fishes, he created winged and terrestrial animals: for these are endowed with a higher
degree of sensation, and from their formation show that the properties of their animating principle
are of a higher order. But after all the rest, then, as has been said before, he created man, to
whom he gave that admirable endowment of mind--the soul, if I may so call it, of the soul, as being
like the pupil to the eye; for those who most accurately investigate the natures of things affirm, that
it is the pupil which is the eye of the eye.
XXII. (67) So at last all things were created and existing together. But when they all were collected
in one place, then some sort of order was necessarily laid down for them for the sake of the
production of them from one another which was hereafter to take place. Now in things which exist
in part, the principle of order is this, to begin with that which is most inferior in its nature, and to end
with that which is the most excellent of all; and what that is we will explain. It has been arranged that
seed should be the principle of the generation of animals. It is plainly seen that this is a thing of no
importance, being like foam; but when it has descended into the womb and remained there, then
immediately it receives motion and is changed into nature; and nature is more excellent than seed,
as also motion is better than quiet in created things; and nature, like a workman, or, to speak more
correctly, like a faultless art, endows the moist substance with life, and fashions it, distributing it
among the limbs and parts of the body, allotting that portion which can produce breath, and
nourishment, and sensation to the powers of the soul: for as to the reasoning powers, we may
pass over them for the present, on account of those who say, that the mind enters into the body
from without, being something divine and eternal.
(68) Nature therefore began from an insignificant
seed, and ended in the most honourable of things, namely, in the formation of animals and men.
And the very same thing took place in the creation of every thing: for when the Creator determined
to make animals the first created in his arrangement were in some degree inferior, such as the
fishes, and the last were the best, namely, man. And the others the terrestrial and winged
creatures were between these extremes, being better than the first created, and inferior to the last.
XXIII. (69) So then after all the other things, as has been said before, Moses says that man was
made in the image and likeness of God. And he says well; for nothing that is born on the earth is
more resembling God than man. And let no one think that he is able to judge of this likeness from
the characters of the body: for neither is God a being with the form of a man, nor is the human
body like the form of God; but the resemblance is spoken of with reference to the most important
part of the soul, namely, the mind: for the mind which exists in each individual has been created
after the likeness of that one mind which is in the universe as its primitive model, being in some
sort the God of that body which carries it about and bears its image within it. In the same rank that
the great Governor occupies in the universal world, that same as it seems does the mind of man
occupy in man; for it is invisible, though it sees everything itself; and it has an essence which is
undiscernible, though it can discern the essences of all other things, and making for itself by art
and science all sorts of roads leading in divers directions, and all plain; it traverses land and sea,
investigating everything which is contained in either element. (70) And again, being raised up on
wings, and so surveying and contemplating the air, and all the commotions to which it is subject, it
is borne upwards to the higher firmament, and to the revolutions of the heavenly bodies. And also
being itself involved in the revolutions of the planets and fixed stars according to the perfect laws of
music, and being led on by love, which is the guide of wisdom, it proceeds onwards till, having
surmounted all essence intelligible by the external senses, it comes to aspire to such as is
perceptible only by the intellect: (71) and perceiving in that, the original models and ideas of those
things intelligible by the external senses which it saw here full of surpassing beauty, it becomes
seized with a sort of sober intoxication like the zealots engaged in the Corybantian festivals, and
yields to enthusiasm, becoming filled with another desire, and a more excellent longing, by which it
is conducted onwards to the very summit of such things as are perceptible only to the intellect, till it
appears to be reaching the great King himself. And while it is eagerly longing to behold him pure
and unmingled, rays of divine light are poured forth upon it like a torrent, so as to bewilder the eyes
of its intelligence by their splendour.
But as it is not every image that resembles its archetypal
model, since many are unlike, Moses has shown this by adding to the words "after his image," the
expression, "in his likeness," to prove that it means an accurate impression, having a clear and
evident resemblance in form.
XXIV. (72) And he would not err who should raise the question why Moses attributed the creation
of man alone not to one creator, as he did that of other animals, but to several. For he introduces
the Father of the universe using this language: "Let us make man after our image, and in our
likeness." Had he then, shall I say, need of any one whatever to help him, He to whom all things are
subject? Or, when he was making the heaven and the earth and the sea, was he in need of no one
to co-operate with him; and yet was he unable himself by his own power to make man an animal so
short-lived and so exposed to the assaults of fate without the assistance of others? It is plain that
the real cause of his so acting is known to God alone, but one which to a reasonable conjecture
appears probable and credible, I think I should not conceal; and it is this.
(73) Of existing things,
there are some which partake neither of virtue nor of vice; as for instance, plants and irrational
animals; the one, because they are destitute of soul, and are regulated by a nature void of sense;
and the other, because they are not endowed with mind of reason. But mind and reason may be
looked upon as the abode of virtue and vice; as it is in them that they seem to dwell. Some things
again partake of virtue alone, being without any participation in any kind of vice; as for instance,
the stars, for they are said to be animals, and animals endowed with intelligence; or I might rather
say, the mind of each of them is wholly and entirely virtuous, and unsusceptible of every kind of
evil. Some things again are of a mixed nature, like man, who is capable of opposite qualities, of
wisdom and folly, of temperance and dissoluteness, of courage and cowardice, of justice and
injustice, in short of good and evil, of what is honourable and what is disgraceful, of virtue and vice.
(74) Now it was a very appropriate task for God the Father of all to create by himself alone, those
things which were wholly good, on account of their kindred with himself. And it was not inconsistent
with his dignity to create those which were indifferent since they too are devoid of evil, which is
hateful to him. To create the beings of a mixed nature, was partly consistent and partly inconsistent
with his dignity; consistent by reason of the more excellent idea which is mingled in them;
inconsistent because of the opposite and worse one.
(75) It is on this account that Moses says, at
the creation of man alone that God said, "Let us make man," which expression shows an
assumption of other beings to himself as assistants, in order that God, the governor of all things,
might have all the blameless intentions and actions of man, when he does right attributed to him;
and that his other assistants might bear the imputation of his contrary actions. For it was fitting that
the Father should in the eyes of his children be free from all imputation of evil; and vice and energy
in accordance with vice are evil. (76) And very beautifully after he had called the whole race "man,"
did he distinguish between the sexes, saying, that "they were created male and female;" although
all the individuals of the race had not yet assumed their distinctive form; since the extreme species
are contained in the genus, and are beheld, as in a mirror, by those who are able to discern
acutely.
XXV. (77) And some one may inquire the cause why it was that man was the last work in the
creation of the world. For the Creator and Father created him after every thing else as the sacred
scriptures inform us. Accordingly, they who have gone most deeply into the laws, and who to the
best of their power have investigated everything that is contained in them with all diligence, say that
God, when he had given to man to partake of kindred with himself, grudged him neither reason,
which is the most excellent of all gifts, nor anything else that is good; but before his creation,
provided for him every thing in the world, as for the animal most resembling himself, and dearest to
him, being desirous that when he was born, he should be in want of nothing requisite for living, and
for living well; the first of which objects is provided for by the abundance of supplies which are
furnished to him for his enjoyment, and the other by his power of contemplation of the heavenly
bodies, by which the mind is smitten so as to conceive a love and desire for knowledge on those
subjects; owing to which desire, philosophy has sprung up, by which, man, though mortal, is made
immortal. (78) As then, those who make a feast do not invite their guests to the entertainment
before they have provided everything for festivity, and as those who celebrate gymnastic or
dramatic contests, before they assemble the spectators, provide themselves with an abundance of
competitors and spectacles, and sweet sounds, with which to fill the theatres and the stadia; so in
the same manner did the Ruler of all, as a man proposing games, or giving a banquet and being
about to invite others to feast and to behold the spectacle, first provide everything for every kind of
entertainment, in order that when man came into the world he might at once find a feast ready for
him, and a most holy theatre; the one abounding with everything which the earth, or the rivers, or
the sea, or air, brings forth for use and enjoyment, and the other being full of every description of
light, which has either its essence or its qualities admirable, and its motions and revolutions worthy
of notice, being arranged in perfect order, both as to the proportions of its numbers, and the
harmony of its periods. And a man would not be far wrong who should say that in all these things
there might be discovered that archetypal and real model music, the images of which the
subsequent generations of mankind engraved in their own souls, and in this way handed down the
art which is the most necessary and the most advantageous to human life.
XXVI. (79) This is the first reason on account of which it seems that man was created after all
other animals. And there is another not altogether unreasonable, which I must mention. At the
moment of his first birth, man found all the requisites for life ready prepared for him that he might
teach them to those who should come afterwards. Nature all but crying out with a distinct voice,
that men, imitating the Author of their being, should pass their lives without labour and without
trouble, living in the most ungrudging abundance and plenty. And this would be the case if there
were neither irrational pleasures to obtain mastery over the soul raising up a wall of gluttony and
lasciviousness, nor desires of glory, or power, or riches, to assume dominion over life, nor pains to
contract and warp the intellect, nor that evil councillor--fear, to restrain the natural inclinations
towards virtuous actions, nor folly and cowardice, and injustice, and the incalculable multitude of
other evils to attack them. (80) But now that all the evils which I have now been mentioning are
vigorous, and that men abandon themselves without restraint to their passions, and to those
unbridled and guilty inclinations, which it is impious even to mention, justice encounters them as a
suitable chastiser of wicked habits; and therefore, as a punishment for wrong doers, the
necessaries of life have been made difficult of acquisition. For men ploughing up the plains with
difficulty, and bringing streams from rivers, and fountains by channels, and sowing and planting,
and submitting indefatigably day and night to the labour of cultivating the ground, provide
themselves every year with what is necessary, even that at times being attended with pain; and not
very sufficient in quantity, from being injured by many causes. For either a fall of incessant rain has
carried away the crops, or the weight of hail which has fallen upon them has crushed them
altogether, or snow has chilled them, or the violence of the winds has torn them up by the roots; for
water and air cause many alterations, tending to destroy and productiveness of the crops. (81) But
if the immoderate violence of the passions were appeased by temperance, and the inclination to
do wrong and depraved ambition were corrected by justice, and in short if the vices and unhallowed
actions done in accordance with them, were corrected by the virtues, and the energies in
accordance with them, the war of the soul being terminated, which is in good truth the most
grievous and heavy of all wars, and peace being established, and founding amid all our faculties, a
due regard for law, with all tranquillity and mildness, then there would be hope that God, as being a
friend to virtue, and a friend to honour, and above all a friend to man, would bestow upon the race
of man, all kinds of spontaneous blessings from his ready store. For it is evident that it is easier to
supply most abundantly the requisite supplies without having recourse to agricultural means, from
treasures which already exist, than to bring forth what as yet has no existence.
XXVII. (82) I have now mentioned the second reason. There is also a third, which is as
follows:--God, intending to adapt the beginning and the end of all created things together, as being
all necessary and dear to one another, made heaven the beginning, and man the end: the one
being the most perfect of incorruptible things, among those things which are perceptible by the
external senses; and the other, the best of all earthborn and perishable productions--a short-lived
heaven if one were to speak the truth, bearing within himself many starlike natures, by means of
certain arts and sciences, and illustrious speculations, according to every kind of virtue. For since
the corruptible and the incorruptible, are by nature opposite, he has allotted the best thing of each
species to the beginning and to the end. Heaven, as I before said, to the beginning, and man to the
end.
XXVIII. (83) And besides all this, another is also mentioned among the necessary causes. It was
necessary that man should be the last of all created beings; in order that being so, and appearing
suddenly, he might strike terror into the other animals. For it was fitting that they, as soon as they
first saw him should admire and worship him, as their natural ruler and master; on which account,
they all, as soon as they saw him, became tame before him; even those, who by nature were most
savage, becoming at once most manageable at the first sight of him; displaying their unbridled
ferocity to one another, and being tame to man alone. (84) For which reason the Father who made
him to be a being dominant over them by nature not merely in fact, but also by express verbal
appointment, established him as the king of all the animals, beneath the moon, whether terrestrial
or aquatic, or such as traverse the air. For every mortal thing which lives in the three elements,
land, water or air, did he put in subjection to him, excepting only the beings that are in heaven, as
creatures who have a more divine portion. And what is apparent to our eyes it the most evident
proof of this. For at times, innumerable herds of beasts are led about by one man, not armed, nor
wearing iron, nor any defensive weapon, but clad only in a skin for a garment, and carrying a staff,
for the purpose of making signs, and to lean upon also in his journeys if he become weary. (85)
And so the shepherd, and the goatherd, and the cowherd, lead numerous flocks of sheep, and
goats, and herds of oxen; men neither vigorous, nor active in their bodies, so as to strike those
who behold them with admiration because of their fine appearance; and all the might and power of
such numerous and well-armed beasts (for they have means of self-defence given them by
nature), yet dread them as slaves do their master, and do all that is commanded them. Bulls are
yoked to the plough to till the ground, and cutting deep furrows all day, sometimes even for a long
space of time together, while some farmer is managing them. And rams being weighed down with
heavy fleeces of wool, in the spring season, at the command of the shepherd, stand quietly, and
lying down, without resistance, permit their wool to be shorn off, being accustomed naturally, like
cities, to yield a yearly tribute to their sovereign. (86) And moreover, that most spirited of animals,
the horse, is easily guided after he has been bridled; in order that he may not become frisky, and
shake off the rein; and he hollows his back in an admirable manner to receive his rider and to
afford him a good seat, and then bearing him aloft, he gallops at a rapid pace, being eager to arrive
at and carry him to the place to which he is urging him. And the rider without any toil, but in the most
perfect quiet, makes a rapid journey, by using the body and feet of another animal.
XXIX. (87) And any one who was inclined to dwell upon this subject might bring forward a great
many other instances, to prove that there is no animal in the enjoyment of perfect liberty, and
exempt from the dominion of man; but what has been already said is sufficient by way of example.
We ought, however, not to be ignorant of this also, that it is no proof because man was the last
created animal that he is the lowest in rank, and charioteers and pilots are witnesses of this; (88)
for the charioteers sit behind their beasts of burden, and are placed at, their backs, and yet when
they have the reins in their hands, they guide them wherever they choose, and at one time they
urge them on to a swift pace, and at another time they hold them back, if they are going on at a
speed greater than is desirable. And pilots again, sitting in the hindmost part of the ship, that is the
stern are, as one may say, the most important of all the people in the ship, inasmuch as they have
the safety of the ship and of all those who are in it, in their hands. And so the Creator has made
man to be as it were a charioteer and pilot over all other animals, in order that he may hold the
reins and direct the course of every thing upon earth, having the superintendence of all animals
and plants, as a sort of viceroy of the principal and mighty King.
XXX. (89) But after the whole world had been completed according to the perfect nature of the
number six, the Father hallowed the day following, the seventh, praising it, and calling it holy. For
that day is the festival, not of one city or one country, but of all the earth; a day which alone it is
right to call the day of festival for all people, and the birthday of the world. (90) And I know not if any
one would be able to celebrate the nature of the number seven in adequate terms, since it is
superior to every form of expression. But it does not follow that because it is more admirable than
anything that can be said of it, that on that account one ought to keep silence; but rather we ought
to try, even if one cannot say everything which is proper, or even that which is most proper, at all
events to utter such things as may be attainable by our capacities.
(91) The number seven is
spoken of in two ways; the one within the number ten which is measured by repeating the unit alone
seven times, and which consists of seven units; the other is the number outside ten, the beginning
of which is altogether the unit increasing according to a twofold or threefold, or any other
proportion whatever; as are the numbers sixty-four, and seven hundred and twenty-nine; the one
number of which is increased by doubling on from the unit, and the other by trebling. And it is not
well to examine either species superficially, but the second has a most manifest pre-eminence.
(92) For in every case the number which is combined from the unit in double or treble ratio, or any
other ratio, whatsoever, is the seventh number, a cube and a square, embracing both species,
both that of the incorporeal and that of the corporeal essence. That of the incorporeal essence
according to the superficies which quadrangular figures present, and that of the corporeal essence
according to the other figure which cubes make; (93) and the clearest proof of this is afforded by
the numbers already spoken of. In the seventh number increasing immediately from the unit in a
twofold ratio, namely, the number sixty-four, is a square formed by the multiplication of eight by
eight, and it is also a cube by the multiplication of four and four, four times. And again, the seventh
number from the unit being increased in a threefold ratio, that is to say, the number seven hundred
and twenty-nine, is a square, the number seven and twenty being multiplied by itself; and it is also a
cube, by nine being multiplied by itself nine times. (94) And in every case a man making his
beginning from the unit, and proceeding on to the seventh number, and increasing in the same ratio
till he comes to the number seven, will at all times find the number, when increased, both a cube
and a square. At all events, he who begins with the number sixty-four, and combines them in a
doubling ratio, will make the seventh number four thousand and ninety-six, which is both a square
and a cube, having sixty-four as its square root, and sixteen as its cube root.
XXXI. (95) And we must also pass on to the other species of the number seven, which is contained
in the number ten, and which displays an admirable nature, and one not inferior to the previously
mentioned species. The number seven consists of one, and two and four, numbers which have two
most harmonious ratios, the twofold and the fourfold ratio; the former of which affects the diapason
harmony, while the fourfold ratio causes that of the double diapason. It also comprehends other
divisions, existing in some kind of yoke-like combination. For it is divided first of all into the number
one, and the number six; then into the two and the five; and last of all, into the three and the four.
(96) And the proportion of these numbers is a most musical one; for the number six bears to the
number one a six-fold ratio, and the six-fold ratio causes the greatest possible difference between
existing tones; the distance namely, by which the sharpest tone is separated from the flattest, as
we shall show when we pass on from numbers to the discussion of harmony. Again, the ratio of
four to two displays the greatest power in harmony, almost equal to that Of the diapason, as is most
evidently shown in the rules of that art. And the ratio of four to three effects the first harmony, that
in the thirds, which is the diatessaron.
XXXII. (97) The number seven displays also another beauty which it possesses, and one which is
most sacred to think of. For as it consists of three and four, it displays in existing things a line
which is free from all deviation and upright by nature. And in what way it does so I must show.
The
rectangular triangle, which is the beginning of all qualities, consists of the numbers[ 5 ] and four, and five; and the three and the four, which are the essence of
the seven, contain the right angle; for the obtuse angle and the acute angle show irregularity, and
disorder, and inequality; for one may be more acute or more obtuse than another. But a right angle
does not admit of comparison, nor is one right angle more a right angle than another: but one
remains similar to another, never changing its peculiar nature. But if the right-angled triangle is the
beginning of all figures and of all qualities, and if the essence of the number seven, that is to say,
the numbers three and four together, supply the most necessary part of this, namely, the right
angle, then seven may be rightly thought to be the fountain of every figure and of every quality. (98)
And besides what has been already advanced, this also may be asserted that three is the number
of a plane figure, since a point has been laid down to be, according to a unit, and a line according
to the number two, and a plane superficies according to the number three. Also, four is the number
of a cube, by the addition of one to the number of a plane superficies, depth being added to the
superficies. From which it is plain that the essence of the number seven is the foundation of
geometry and trigonometry; and in a word, of all incorporeal and corporeal substances.
XXXIII. (99) And such great sanctity is there in the number seven, that it has a pre-eminent rank
beyond all the other numbers in the first decade. For of the other numbers, some produce without
being produced, others are produced but have no productive power themselves; others again both
produce and are produced. But the number seven alone is contemplated in no part. And this
proposition we must confirm by demonstration. Now the number one produces all the other
numbers in order, being itself produced absolutely by no other; and the number eight is produced
by twice four, but itself produces no other number in the decade. Again, four has the rank of both,
that is, of parents and of offspring; for it produces eight when doubled, and it is produced by twice
two. (100) But seven alone, as I said before, neither produces nor is produced, on which account
other philosophers liken this number to Victory, who had no mother, and to the virgin goddess,
whom the fable asserts to have sprung from the head of Jupiter: and the Pythagoreans compare it
to the Ruler of all things. For that which neither produces, nor is produced, remains immovable. For
generation consists in motion, since that which is generated, cannot be so without motion, both to
cause production, and to be produced. And the only thing which neither moves nor is moved, is the
Elder, Ruler, and Lord of the universe, of whom the number seven may reasonably be called a
likeness. And Philolaus gives his testimony to this doctrine of mine in the following Words: "for
God," says he "is the ruler and Lord of all things, being one, eternal, lasting, immovable, himself like
to himself, and different from all other beings."
XXXIV. (101) Among the things then which are perceptible only by intellect, the number seven is
proved to be the only thing free from motion and accident; but among things perceptible by the
external senses, it displays a great and comprehensive power, contributing to the improvement of
all terrestrial things, and affecting even the periodical changes of the moon. And in what manner it
does this, we must consider. The number seven when compounded of numbers beginning with the
unit, makes eight-and-twenty, a perfect number, and one equalised in its parts. And the number so
produced, is calculated to reproduce the revolutions of the moon, bringing her back to the point
from which she first began to increase in a manner perceptible by the external senses, and to
which she returns by waning. For she increases from her first crescent-shaped figure, to that of a
half circle in seven days; and in seven more, she becomes a full orb; and then again she turns
back, retracing the same path, like a runner of the diaulos,[ 6 ] receding from an orb full of light, to a half circle again in seven days, and
lastly, in an equal number she diminishes from a half circle to the form of a crescent; and thus the
number before mentioned is completed. (102) And the number seven by those persons who are in
the habit of employing names with strict propriety is called the perfecting number; because by it,
everything is perfected. And any one may receive a confirmation of this from the fact, that every
organic body has three dimensions, length, depth, and breadth; and four boundaries, the point, the
line, the superficies, and the solid; and by theses, when combined, the number seven is made up.
But it would be impossible for bodies to be measured by the number seven, according to the
combination of the three dimensions, and the four boundaries, if it did not happen that the ideas of
the first numbers, one, two, three and four, in which the number ten is founded, comprised the
nature of the number seven. For the aforesaid numbers have four boundaries, the first, the
second, the third, the fourth, and three intervals. The first interval being that between one and two;
the second, that between two and three; the third, that between three and four.
XXXV. (103) And besides what has been already said, the growth of men from infancy to old age,
when measured by the number seven, displays in a most evident manner its perfecting power; for
in the first period of seven years, the putting forth of the teeth takes place. And at the end of the
second period of the same length, he arrives at the age of puberty: at the end of the third period,
the growth of the beard takes place. The fourth period sees him arrive at the fullness of his manly
strength. The fifth seven years is the season for marriage. In the sixth period he arrives at the
maturity of his understanding. The seventh period is that of the most rapid improvement and growth
of both his intellectual and reasoning powers. The eighth is the sum of the perfection of both. In the
ninth, his passions assume a mildness and gentleness, from being to a great degree tamed. In the
tenth, the desirable end of life comes upon him, while his limbs and organic senses are still
unimpaired: for excessive old age is apt to weaken and enfeeble them all.
(104) And Solon, the
Athenian lawgiver, described these different ages in the following elegiac verses:
In seven years from th' earliest breath,
The child puts forth his hedge of teeth;
When strengthened by a similar span,
He first displays some signs of man.
As in a third, his limbs increase,
A beard buds o'er his changing face.
When he has passed a fourth such time,
His strength and vigour's in its prime.
When five times seven years o'er his head
Have passed, the man should think to wed;
At forty two, the wisdom's clear
To shun vile deed of folly or fear:
While seven times seven years to sense
Add ready wit and eloquence.
And seven years further skill admit
To raise them to their perfect height.
When nine such periods have passed,
His powers, though milder grown, still last;
When God has granted ten times seven,
The aged man prepares for heaven.
XXXVI. (105) Solon therefore thus computes the life of man by the aforesaid ten periods of seven
years. But Hippocrates the physician says that there are seven[ 7 ] ages of man,
infancy, childhood, boyhood, youth, manhood, middle age, old age; and that these too, are
measured by periods of seven, though not in the same order. And he speaks thus;
"In the nature
of man there are seven seasons, which men call ages; infancy, childhood, boyhood, and the rest.
He is an infant till he reaches his seventh year, the age of the shedding of his teeth. He is a child till
he arrives at the age of puberty, which takes place in fourteen years. He is a boy till his beard
begins to grow, and that time is the end of a third period of seven years. He is a youth till the
completion of the growth of his whole body, which coincides with the fourth seven years. Then he is
a man till he reaches his forty-ninth year, or seven times seven periods. He is a middle aged man
till he is fifty-six, or eight times seven years old; and after that he is an old man."
(106) And it is also affirmed for the particular praise of the number seven, that it has a very
admirable rank in nature, because it is composed of three and four. And if any one doubles the
third number after the unit, he will find a square; and if he doubles the fourth number, he will find a
cube. And if he doubles the seventh from both, he will both a cube and a square; therefore, the
third number from the unit is a square in a double ratio. And the fourth number, eight, is a cube. And
the seventh number, being sixty-four, is both a cube and a square at the same time; so that the
seventh number is really a perfecting one, signifying both equalities, the plane superficies by the
square, according to the connection with the number three, and the solid by the cube according to
its relationship to the number four; and of the numbers three and four, are composed the number
seven.
XXXVII. (107) But this number is not only a perfecter of things, but it is also, so to say, the most
harmonious of numbers; and in a manner the source of that most beautiful diagram which
describes all the harmonies, that of fourths, and that of fifths, and the diapason. It also comprises
all the proportions, the arithmetical, the geometrical, and moreover the harmonic proportion. And
the square consists of these numbers, six, eight, nine, and twelve; and eight bears to six the ratio
of being one third greater, which is the diatessaron of harmony. And nine bears to six the ratio of
being half as great again, which is the ratio of fifths. And twelve is to six, in a twofold proportion;
and this is the same as the diapason. (108) The number seven comprises also, as I have said, all
the proportions of arithmetrical proportion, from the numbers six, and nine, and twelve; for as the
number in the middle exceeds the first number by three, it is also exceeded by three by the last
number. And geometrical proportion is according to these four numbers. For the same ratio that
eight bears to six, that also does twelve bear to nine. And this is the ratio of thirds. Harmonic ratio
consists of three numbers, six, and eight, and twelve. (109) But there are two ways of judging of
harmonic proportion. One when, whatever ratio the last number bears to the first, the excess by
which the last number exceeds the middle one is the same as the excess by which the middle
number exceeds the first. And any one may derive a most evident proof of this from the numbers
before mentioned, six, and eight, and twelve: for the last number is double the first. And again, the
excess of twelve over eight is double the excess of eight over six. For the number twelve exceeds
eight by four, and eight exceeds six by two; and four is the double of two. (110) And another test of
harmonic proportion is, when the middle term exceeds and is exceeded by those on each side of it,
by an equal portion; for eight being the middle term, exceeds the first term by a third part; for if six
be subtracted from it, the remainder two is one third of the original number six: and it is exceeded
by the last term in an equal proportion; for if eight be taken from twelve, the remainder four is one
third of the whole number twelve.
XXXVIII. (111) Let this then be premised, as of necessity it must, respecting the honourable
qualities which this diagram or square has, and the name to which it is entitled, and the number
seven unfolds an equal number of ideas, and even more in the case of incorporeal things, which
are perceptible only by the intellect; and its nature extends also over every visible essence,
reaching to both heaven and earth, which are the boundaries of every thing. For what portion of all
the things on earth is there which is not fond of seven; being subdued by an affection and longing
for the seventh. (112) Accordingly men say, that the heaven is girdled with seven circles, the
names of which are as follows; the arctic, the antarctic, the summer tropic, the winter tropic, the
equinoctial, the zodiac, and last of all the galaxy. For the horizon is something which affects
ourselves, in proportion as any one has acute vision, or the contrary; our sensation cutting off at
one time a lesser, and at another time a greater circumference. (113) The planets too, and the
corresponding host of fixed stars, are arrayed in seven divisions, displaying a very great sympathy
with the air and the earth. For they turn the air towards the times, that are called the seasons of the
year, causing in each of them innumerable changes by calm weather, and pleasant breezes, and
clouds, and irresistible blasts of wind. And again, they make rivers to overflow and to subside, and
turn plains into lakes; and again, on the contrary, they dry up the waters: they also cause the
alterations of the seas, when they receded, and return with a reflux. For at times, when the tide
recedes on a sudden, an extensive line of shore occupies what is usually a wide gulf of sea; and in
a short time afterwards, the waters are brought back, and there appears a sea, sailed over, not by
shallow boats, but by ships of exceeding great burden. And they also give increase and perfection
to all the terrestrial animals and plants which produce fruit, endowing each with a nature to last a
long time, so that new plants may flourish and come to maturity; the old ones having passed
away, in order to provide an abundant supply of necessary things.
XXXIX. (114) Moreover, the constellation Ursa Major, which men call the guide of mariners,
consists of seven stars, which the pilots keeping in view, steer in innumerable paths across the
sea, directing their endeavours towards an incredible task, beyond the capacity of human intellect.
For it is through conjectures, directed by the aforementioned stars, that they have discovered
countries which were previously unknown; those who dwell on the continent having discovered
islands, and islanders having found out continents. For it was fitting that the recesses both of earth
and sea should be revealed to that God-loving animal, the race of mankind, by the purest of
essences, namely heaven.
(115) And besides the stars above mentioned the band of the Pleiades
is also made up of seven stars, the rising and occultation of which are the causes of great benefits
to all men. For when they set, the furrows are ploughed up for the purpose of sowing; and when
they are about to rise, they bring glad tidings of harvest; and after they have arisen, they awaken
the rejoicing husbandman to the collection of their necessary food. And they with joy store up their
food for their daily use. (116) And the sun, the ruler of the day, making two equinoxes every year,
both in spring and autumn. The spring equinox in the constellation of Aries, and the autumnal one in
Libra, gives the most evident demonstration possible of the divine dignity of the number seven. For
each of the equinoxes takes place in the seventh month, at which time men are expressly
commanded by law to celebrate the greatest and most popular and comprehensive festivals; since
it is owing to both these seasons, that all the fruits of the earth are engendered and brought to
perfection; the fruit of corn, and all other things which are sown, being owing to the vernal equinox;
and that of the vine, and of all the other plants which bear hard berries, of which there are great
numbers, to the autumnal one.
XL. (117) And since all the things on the earth depend upon the heavenly bodies according to a
certain natural sympathy, it is in heaven too that the ratio of the number seven began, and from
thence it descended to us also, coming down to visit the race of mortal men. And so again, besides
the dominant part of our mind, our soul is divided into seven divisions; there being five senses, and
besides them the vocal organ, and after that the generative power. All which things, like the puppets
in a raree show, which are moved by strings by the manager, are at one time quiet, and at another
time in motion, each according to its suitable habits and capacities of motion.
(118) And in the
same way, if any one were to set about investigating the different parts of the body, in both their
interior and the exterior arrangement, he will in each case find seven divisions. Those which are
visible are as follow; ùthe head, the chest, the belly, two arms, and two legs; the internal parts, or
the entrails, as they are called, are the stomach, the heart, the lungs, the spleen, the liver, and the
two kidneys. (119) Again, the principal and dominant part in an animal is the head, and that has
seven most necessary divisions: two eyes, an equal number of ears, two channels for the nostrils,
and the mouth to make up seven, through which as Plato says, mortal things find their entrance,
and immortal things their exit. For into the mouth do enter meat and drink, perishable food of a
perishable body; but from out of it proceed words—the immortal laws of an immortal soul, by
means of which rational life is regulated.
XLI. (120) Again, the things which are judged of by the best of the senses, sight, partake of number
according to their kind. For the things which are seen are seven; body, distance, shape,
magnitude, colour, motion, tranquillity, and besides these there is nothing. (121) It also happens
that all the changes of the voice amount to seven; the acute, the grave, the contracted, in the
fourth place the aspirated sound, the fifth is the tone, the sixth the long, the seventh the short
sound.
(122) There are also seven motions; the motion upwards, the motion downwards, that to
the right, that to the left, the forward motion, the backward motion, and the rotatory motion, as is
most especially shown by those who exhibit dances. (123) It is affirmed also that the secretions of
the body are performed in the aforesaid number of seven. For tears are poured out through the
eyes, and the purifications of the head through the nostrils, and through the mouth the saliva which
is spit out; there are, besides two other channels for the evacuation of the superfluities of the body,
the one being placed in front and the other behind; the sixth mode of evacuation is the effusion of
perspiration over the whole body, and the seventh that most natural exercise of the generative
powers. (124) Again, in the case of women, the flux called the catamenia, is usually carried on for
seven days. Also, children in the womb receive life at the end of seven months, so that a very
extraordinary thing happens: for children who are born at the end of the seventh month live, while
those who are born at the expiration of the eighth month are altogether incapable of surviving.
(125) Again, the dangerous diseases of the body, especially when lasting fevers, arising from the
distemperature of the powers within us, attack us, are usually decided about the seventh day. For
that day determines the contest for life, allotting safety to some men, and death to others.
XLII. (126) And the power of this number does not exist only in the instances already mentioned,
but it also pervades the most excellent of the sciences, the knowledge of grammar and music. For
the lyre with seven strings, bearing a proportion to the assemblage of the seven planets, perfects
its admirable harmonies, being almost the chief of all instruments which are conversant about
music. And of the elements of grammar, those which are properly called vowels are, correctly
speaking, seven in number, since they can be sounded by themselves, and when they are
combined with other letters, they make complete sounds; for they fill up the deficiency existing in
semi-vowels, making the sounds whole; and they change and alter the natures of the mutes
inspiring them with their own power, in order that what has no sound may become endowed with
sound. (127) On which account it appears to me that they also originally gave letters their names,
and acting as became wise men, did give the name to the number seven from the respect[ 8 ] they had for it, and from regard to the dignity inherent in it. But the Romans, adding the
letter S, which had been omitted by the Greeks, show still more conspicuously the correct
etymological meaning of the word, calling it septem, as derived from semnos, venerable, as has
been said before, and from sebasmos, veneration.
XLIII. (128) These things, and more still are said in a philosophical spirit about the number seven,
on account of which it has received the highest honours, in the highest nature. And it is honoured
by those of the highest reputation among both Greeks and barbarians, who devote themselves to
mathematical sciences. It was also greatly honoured by Moses, a man much attached to
excellence of all sorts, who described its beauty on the most holy pillars of the law, and wrote it in
the hearts of all those who were subject to him, commanding them at the end of each period of six
days to keep the seventh holy; abstaining from all other works which are done in the seeking after
and providing the means of life, devoting that day to the single object of philosophizing with a view
to the improvement of their morals, and the examination of their consciences: for conscience
being seated in the soul as a judge, is not afraid to reprove men, sometimes employing pretty
vehement threats; at other times by milder admonitions, using threats in regard to matters where
men appear to be disobedient, of deliberate purpose, and admonitions when their offences seem
involuntary, through want of foresight, in order to prevent their hereafter offending in a similar
manner.
XLIV. (129) So Moses, summing up his account of the creation of the world, says in a brief style,
"This is the book of the creation of the heaven and of the earth, when it took place, in the day on
which God made the heaven and the earth, and every green herb before it appeared upon the
earth, and all the grass of the field before it sprang up." Does he not here manifestly set before us
incorporeal ideas perceptible only by the intellect, which have been appointed to be as seals of the
perfected works, perceptible by the outward senses. For before the earth was green, he says that
this same thing, verdure, existed in the nature of things, and before the grass sprang up in the field,
there was grass though it was not visible. (130) And we must understand in the case of every thing
else which is decided on by the external senses, there were elder forms and motions previously
existing, according to which the things which were created were fashioned and measured out. For
although Moses did not describe everything collectively, but only a part of what existed, as he was
desirous of brevity, beyond all men that ever wrote, still the few things which he has mentioned are
examples of the nature of all, for nature perfects none of those which are perceptible to the
outward senses without an incorporeal model.
XLV. (131) Then, preserving the natural order of things, and having a regard to the connection
between what comes afterwards and what has gone before, he says next, "And a fountain went up
from the earth and watered the whole face of the earth." For other philosophers affirm that all water
is one of the four elements of which the world was composed. But Moses, who was accustomed to
contemplate and comprehend matters with a more acute and far-sighted vision, considers thus: the
vast sea is an element, being a fourth part of the entire universe, which the men after him
denominated the ocean, while they look upon the smaller seas which we sail over in the light of
harbours. And he drew a distinction between the sweet and drinkable water and that of the sea,
attributing the former to the earth, and considering it a portion of the earth, rather than of the
ocean, on account of the reason which I have already mentioned, that is to say, that the earth may
be held together by the sweet qualities of the water as by a chain; the water acting in the manner of
glue. For if the earth were left entirely dry, so that no moisture arose and penetrated through its
holes rising to the surface in various directions, it would split. But now it is held together, and
remains lasting, partly by the force of the wind which unites it, and partly because the moisture
does not allow it to become dry, and so to be broken up into larger and smaller fragments.
(132)
This is one reason; and we must also mention another, which is aimed at the truth like an arrow at
a mark. It is not the nature of anything upon the earth to exist without a moist essence. And this is
indicated by the throwing of seed, which is either moist, as the seed of animals, or else does not
shoot up without moisture, such as the seeds of plants; from which it is evident that it follows that
the aforesaid moist essence must be a portion of the earth which produces everything, just as the
flux of the catamenia is a part of women. For by men who are learned in natural philosophy, this
also is said to be the corporeal essence of children. (133) Nor is what we are about to say
inconsistent with what has been said; for nature has bestowed upon every mother, as a most
indispensable part of her conformation, breasts gushing forth like fountains, having in this manner
provided abundant food for the child that is to be born. And the earth also, as it seems, is a mother,
from which consideration it occurred to the early ages to call her Demetra, combining the names of
mother (mêter), and earth (gê or dê). For it is not the earth which imitates the woman, as
Plato has said, but the woman who has imitated the earth which the race of poets has been
accustomed with truth to call the mother of all things, and the fruit-bearer, and the giver of all things,
since she is at the same time the cause of the generation and durability of all things, to the animals
and plants. Rightly, therefore, did nature bestow on the earth as the eldest and most fertile of
mothers, streams of rivers, and fountains like breasts, in order that the plants might be watered,
and that all living things might have abundant supplies of drink.
XLVI. (134) After this, Moses says that "God made man, having taken clay from the earth, and he
breathed into his face the breath of life." And by this expression he shows most clearly that there is
a vast difference between man as generated now, and the first man who was made according to
the image of God. For man as formed now is perceptible to the external senses, partaking of
qualities, consisting of body and soul, man or woman, by nature mortal. But man, made according
to the image of God, was an idea, or a genus, or a seal, perceptible only by the intellect,
incorporeal, neither male nor female, imperishable by nature. (135) But he asserts that the
formation of the individual man, perceptible by the external senses is a composition of earthy
substance, and divine spirit. For that the body was created by the Creator taking a lump of clay,
and fashioning the human form out of it; but that the soul proceeds from no created thing at all, but
from the Father and Ruler of all things. For when he uses the expression, "he breathed into," etc.,
he means nothing else than the divine spirit proceeding form that happy and blessed nature, sent
to take up its habitation here on earth, for the advantage of our race, in order that, even if man is
mortal according to that portion of him which is visible, he may at all events be immortal according
to that portion which is invisible; and for this reason, one may properly say that man is on the
boundaries of a better and an immortal nature, partaking of each as far as it is necessary for him;
and that he was born at the same time, both mortal and the immortal. Mortal as to his body, but
immortal as to his intellect.
XLVII. (136) But the original man, he who was created out of the clay, the primeval founder of all
our race, appears to me to have been most excellent in both particulars, in both soul and body, and
to have been very far superior to all the men of subsequent ages from his pre-eminent excellence
in both parts. For he in truth was really good and perfect. And one may form a conjecture of the
perfection of his bodily beauty from three considerations, the first of which is this: when the earth
was now but lately formed by its separation from that abundant quantity of water which was called
the sea, it happened that the materials out of which the things just created were formed were
unmixed, uncorrupted, and pure; and the things made from this material were naturally free from all
imperfection. (137) The second consideration is that it is not likely that God made this figure in the
present form of a man, working with the most sublime care, after he had taken the clay from any
chance portion of earth, but that he selected carefully the most excellent clay of all the earth, of the
pure material choosing the finest and most carefully sifted portion, such as was especially fit for
the formation of the work which he had in hand. For it was an abode or sacred temple for a
reasonable soul which was being made, the image of which he was about to carry in his heart,
being the most God-like looking of images. (138) The third consideration is one which admits of no
comparison with those which have been already mentioned, namely, this: the Creator was good
both in other respects, and also in knowledge, so that every one of the parts of the body had
separately the numbers which were suited to it, and was also accurately completed in the
admirable adaptation to the share in the universe of which it was to partake. And after he had
endowed it with fair proportions, he clothed it with beauty of flesh, and embellished it with an
exquisite complexion, wishing, as far as was possible, that man should appear the most beautiful of
beings.
XLVIII. (139) And that he is superior to all these animals in regard of his soul, is plain. For God
does not seem to have availed himself of any other animal existing in creation as his model in the
formation of man; but to have been guided, as I have said before, by his own reason alone. On
which account, Moses affirms that this man was an image and imitation of God, being breathed
into in his face in which is the place of the sensations, by which the Creator endowed the body with
a soul. Then, having placed the mind in the dominant part as king, he gave him as a body of
satellites, the different powers calculated to perceive colours and sounds, and flavours and
odours, and other things of similar kinds, which man could never have distinguished by his own
resources without the sensations. And it follows of necessity that an imitation of a perfectly
beautiful model must itself be perfectly beautiful, for the word of God surpasses even that beauty
which exists in the nature which is perceptible only by the external senses, not being embellished
by any adventitious beauty, but being itself, if one must speak the truth, its most exquisite
embellishment.
XLIX. (140) The first man, therefore, appears to me to have been such both in his body and in his
soul, being very far superior to all those who live in the present day, and to all those who have gone
before us. For our generation has been from men: but he was created by God. And in the same
proportion as the one Author of being is superior to the other, so too is the being that is produced.
For as that which is in its prime is superior to that the beauty of which is gone by, whether it be an
animal, or a plant, or fruit, or anything else whatever of the productions of nature; so also the first
man who was ever formed appears to have been the height of perfection of our entire race, and
subsequent generations appear never to have reached an equal state of perfection, but to have at
all times been inferior both in their appearance and in their power, and to have been constantly
degenerating, (141) which same thing I have also seen to be the case in the instance of the
sculptors' and painters' art. For the imitations always fall short of the original models. And those
works which are painted or fashioned from models must be much more inferior, as being still
further removed from the original. And the stone which is called the magnet is subject to a similar
deterioration. For any iron ring which touches it is held by it as firmly as possible, but another which
only touches that ring is held less firmly. And the third ring hangs from the second, and the fourth
from the third, and the fifth from the fourth, and so on one from another in a long chain, being all
held together by one attractive power, but still they are not all supported in the same degree. For
those which are suspended at a distance from the original attraction, are held more loosely,
because the attractive power is weakened, and is no longer able to bind them in an equal degree.
And the race of mankind appears to be subject to an influence of the same kind, since in men the
faculties and distinctive qualities of both body and soul are less vivid and strongly marked in each
succeeding generation. (142) And we shall be only saying what is the plain truth, if we call the
original founder of our race not only the first man, but also the first citizen of the world. For the
world was his house and his city, while he had as yet no structure made by hands and wrought out
of the materials of wood and stone. And in this world he lived as in his own country, in all safety,
removed from any fear, inasmuch as he had been thought worthy of the dominion over all earthly
things; and had everything that was mortal crouching before him, and taught to obey him as their
master, or else constrained to do so by superior force, and living himself surrounded by all the joys
which peace can bestow without a struggle and without reproach.
L. (143) But since every city in which laws are properly established, has a regular constitution, it
became necessary for this citizen of the world to adopt the same constitution as that which
prevailed in the universal world. And this constitution is the right reason of nature, which in more
appropriate language is denominated law, being a divine arrangement in accordance with which
everything suitable and appropriate is assigned to every individual. But of this city and constitution
there must have been some citizens before man, who might be justly called citizens of a mighty
city, having received the greatest imaginable circumference to dwell in; and having been enrolled in
the largest and most perfect commonwealth. (144) And who could these have been but rational
divine natures, some of them incorporeal and perceptible only by intellect, and others not destitute
of bodily substance, such in fact as the stars? And he who associated with and lived among them
was naturally living in a state of unmixed happiness. And being akin and nearly related to the ruler
of all, inasmuch as a great deal of the divine spirit had flowed into him, he was eager both to say
and to do everything which might please his father and his king, following him step by step in the
paths which the virtues prepare and make plain, as those in which those souls alone are permitted
to proceed who consider the attaining a likeness to God who made them as the proper end of their
existence.
LI. (145) We have now then set forth the beauty of the first created man in both respects, in body
and soul, if in a way much inferior to the reality, still to the extent of our power, and the best of our
ability. And it cannot be but that his descendants, who all partake of his original character, must
preserve some traces of their relationship to their father, though they may be but faint. And what is
this relationship? (146) Every man in regard of his intellect is connected with divine reason, being
an impression of, or a fragment or a ray of that blessed nature; but in regard of the structure of his
body he is connected with the universal world. For he is composed of the same materials as the
world, that is of earth, and water, and air and fire, each of the elements having contributed its
appropriate part towards the completion of most sufficient materials, which the Creator was to take
in order to fashion this visible image. (147) And, moreover, man dwells among all the things that
have been just enumerated, as most appropriate places having the closest connection with
himself, changing his abode, and going at different times to different places. So that one may say
with the most perfect propriety that man is every kind of animal, terrestrial, aquatic, flying, and
celestial. For inasmuch as he dwells and walks upon the earth he is a terrestrial animal; but
inasmuch as he often dives and swims, and sails, he is an aquatic creature. And merchants and
captains of ships and purple dyers, and all those who let down their nets for oysters an fish, are a
very clear proof of what is here said. Again, inasmuch as his body is raised at times above the
earth and uses high paths, he may with justice be pronounced a creature who traverses the air;
and, moreover, he is a celestial animal, by reason of that most important of the senses, sight;
being by it brought near the sun and moon, and each of the stars, whether planets or fixed stars.
LII. (148) And with great beauty Moses has attributed the giving of names to the different animals
to the first created man, for it is a work of wisdom and indicative of royal authority, and man was full
of intuitive wisdom and self-taught, having been created by the grace of God, and, moreover, was
a king. And it is proper for a ruler to give names to each of his subjects. And, as was very natural,
the power of domination was excessive in that first-created man, whom God formed with great
care and thought worthy of the second rank in the creation, making him his own viceroy and the
ruler of all other creatures. Since even those who have been born so many generations
afterwards, when the race is becoming weakened by reason of the long intervals of time that have
elapsed since the beginning of the world, do still exert the same power over the irrational beasts,
preserving as it were a spark of the dominion and power which has been handed down to them by
succession from their first ancestor.
(149) Accordingly, Moses says, that "God brought all the
animals to man, wishing to see what names he would give to each." Not because he knew that he
had formed in mortal man a rational nature capable of moving of its own accord, in order that he
might be free from all participation in vice. But he was now trying him as a master might try his
pupil, stirring up the disposition which he had implanted in him; and moreover exciting him to a
contemplation of his own works, that he might extemporise them names which should not be
inappropriate nor unbecoming, but which should well and clearly display the peculiar qualities of the
different subjects. (150) For as the rational nature was as yet uncorrupted in the soul, and as no
weakness, or disease, or affliction had as yet come upon it, man having most pure and perfect
perceptions of bodies and of things, devised names for them with great felicity and correctness of
judgment, forming very admirable opinions as to the qualities which they displayed, so that their
natures were at once perceived and correctly described by him. And he was so excellent in all
good things that he speedily arrived at the very perfection of human happiness.
LIII. (151) But since nothing in creation lasts for ever, but all mortal things are liable to inevitable
changes and alterations, it was unavoidable that the first man should also undergo some disaster.
And the beginning of his life being liable to reproach, was his wife. For, as long as he was single,
he resembled, as to his creation, both the world and God; and he represented in his soul the
characteristics of the nature of each, I do not mean all of them, but such as a mortal constitution
was capable of admitting. But when woman also was created, man perceiving a closely connected
figure and a kindred formation to his own, rejoiced at the sight, and approached her and embraced
her. (152) And she, in like manner, beholding a creature greatly resembling herself, rejoiced also,
and addressed him in reply with due modesty. And love being engendered, and, as it were, uniting
two separate portions of one animal into one body, adapted them to each other, implanting in each
of them a desire of connection with the other with a view to the generation of a being similar to
themselves. And this desire caused likewise pleasure to their bodies, which is the beginning of
iniquities and transgressions, and it is owing to this that men have exchanged their previously
immortal and happy existence for one which is mortal and full of misfortune.
LIV. (153) But while man was still living a solitary life, and before woman was created, the history
relates that a paradise was planted by God in no respect resembling the parks which are seen
among men now. For parks of our day are only lifeless woods, full of all kinds of trees, some
evergreen with a view to the undisturbed delectation of the sight; others budding and germinating in
the spring season, and producing fruit, some eatable by men, and sufficient, not only for the
necessary support of nature as food, but also for the superfluous enjoyment of luxurious life; and
some not eatable by men, but of necessity bestowed upon the beasts. But in the paradise, made
by God, all the plants were endowed in the souls and reason, producing for their fruit the different
virtues, and, moreover, imperishable wisdom and prudence, by which honourable and
dishonourable things are distinguished from one another, and also a life free from disease, and
exempt from corruption, and all other qualities corresponding to these already mentioned. (154)
And these statements appear to me to be dictated by a philosophy which is symbolical rather than
strictly accurate. For no trees of life or of knowledge have ever at any previous time appeared
upon the earth, nor is it likely that any will appear hereafter. But I rather conceive that Moses was
speaking in an allegorical spirit, intending by his paradise to intimate the dominant character of the
soul, which is full of innumerable opinions as this figurative paradise was of trees. And by the tree
of life he was shadowing out the greatest of the virtues—namely, piety towards the gods, by means
of which the soul is made immortal; and by the tree which had the knowledge of good an evil, he
was intimating that wisdom and moderation, by means of which things, contrary in their nature to
one another, are distinguished.
LV. (155) Therefore, having laid down these to be boundaries as it were in the soul, God then, like
a judge, began to consider to which side men would be most inclined by nature. And when he saw
that the disposition of man had a tendency to wickedness, and was but little inclined to holiness or
piety, by which qualities an immortal life is secured, he drove them forth as was very natural, and
banished him from paradise; giving no hope of any subsequent restoration to his soul which had
sinned in such a desperate and irremediable manner. Since even the opportunity of deceit was
blameable in no slight degree, which I must not pass over in this place.
(156) It is said that the old
poisonous and earthborn reptile, the serpent, uttered the voice of a man. And he on one occasion
coming to the wife of the first created man, reproached her with her slowness and her excessive
prudence, because she delayed and hesitated to gather the fruit which was completely beautiful to
look at, and exceedingly sweet to enjoy, and was, moreover, most useful as being a means by
which men might be able to distinguish between good an evil. And she, without any inquiry,
prompted by an unstable and rash mind, acquiesced in his advice, and ate of the fruit, and gave a
portion of it to her husband. And this conduct suddenly changed both of them from innocence and
simplicity of character to all kinds of wickedness; at which the Father of all was indignant. For their
actions deserved his anger, inasmuch as they, passing by the tree of eternal life, the tree which
might have endowed them with perfection of virtue, and by means of which they might have enjoyed
a long and happy life, preferred a brief and mortal (I will not call it life, but) time full of unhappiness;
and, accordingly, he appointed them such punishment as was befitting.
LVI. (157) And these things are not mere fabulous inventions, in which the race of poets and
sophists delights, but are rather types shadowing forth some allegorical truth, according to some
mystical explanation. And any one who follows a reasonable train of conjecture, will say with great
propriety, that the aforesaid serpent is the symbol of pleasure, because in the first place he is
destitute of feet, and crawls on his belly with his face downwards. In the second place, because he
uses lumps of clay for food. Thirdly, because he bears poison in his teeth, by which it is his nature
to kill those who are bitten by him. (158) And the man devoted to pleasure is free form none of the
aforementioned evils; for it is with difficulty that he can raise his head, being weighed down and
dragged down, since intemperance trips him up and keeps him down. And he feeds, not on
heavenly food, which wisdom offers to contemplative men by means of discourses and opinions;
but on that which is put forth by the earth in the varying seasons of the year, from which arise
drunkenness and voracity, and licentiousness, breaking through and inflaming the appetites of the
belly, and enslaving them in subjection to gluttony, by which they strengthen the impetuous
passions, the seat of which is beneath the belly; and make them break forth. And they lick up the
result of the labours of cooks and tavern-keepers; and at times some of them in ecstasy with the
flavour of the delicious food, moves about his head and reaches forward, being desirous to
participate in the sight. And when he sees an expensively furnished table, he throws himself bodily
upon the delicacies which are abundantly prepared, and devotes himself to them, wishing to be
filled with them all together, and so to depart, having no other end in view than that he should allow
nothing of such a sumptuous preparation to be wasted. Owing to which conduct, he too, carries
about poison in his teeth, no less than the serpent does; (159) for his teeth are the ministers and
servants of his insatiability, cutting up and smoothing everything which has a reference to eating,
and committing them, in the first place to the tongue, which decides upon, and distinguishes
between the various flavours, and, subsequently, to the larynx. But immoderate indulgence in
eating is naturally a poisonous and deadly habit, inasmuch as what is so devoured is not capable
of digestion, in consequence of the quantity of additional food which is heaped in on the top of it,
and arrives before what was previously eaten is converted into juice.
(160) And the serpent is said
to have uttered a human voice, because pleasure employs innumerable champions and defenders
who take care to advocate its interests, and who dare to assert that the power over everything,
both small and great, does of right belong to it without any exception whatever.
LVII. (161) Now, the first approaches of the male to the female have a pleasure in them which
brings on other pleasures also, and it is through this pleasure that the formation and generation of
children is carried on. And what is generated by it appears to be attached to nothing rather than to
it, since they rejoice in pleasure, and are impatient at pain, which is its contrary. On which account
even the infant when first brought forth cries, being as it seems in pain at the cold. For coming forth
on a sudden into the air from a very warm, and indeed, hot region namely, the womb, in which it has
been abiding a considerable time, the air being a cold place and one to which it is wholly
unaccustomed, it is alarmed, and pours forth tears as the most evident proof of its grief and of its
impatience at pain. (162) For every animal, it is said, hastens to pleasure as to the cud which is
most indispensable and necessary to its very existence; and, above all other animals, this is the
case with man. For other animals pursue pleasure only in taste and in the acts of generation; but
man aims at it by means of his other senses also, devoting himself to whatever sights or sounds
can impart pleasure to his eyes or ears. (163) And many other things are said in the way of praise
of this inclination, especially that it is one most peculiar and kindred to all animals.
LVIII. But what has been already said is sufficient to show what the reasons were on account of
which the serpent appears to have uttered a human voice. And it is on this account that Moses
appears to me in the particular laws also which he issued in the respect to animals, deciding what
were proper to be eaten, and what were not, to have given especial praise to the animal called the
serpent fighter. This is a reptile with jointed legs above its feet, by which it is able to leap and to
raise itself on high, in the same manner as the tribe of locusts. (164) For the serpent fighter
appears to me to be no other than temperance expressed under a symbolical figure, waging an
interminable and unrelenting warfare against intemperance and pleasure. For temperance
especially embraces economy and frugality, and pares down the necessities to a small number,
preferring a life of austerity and dignity. But intemperance is devoted to extravagance and
superfluity, which are the causes of luxury and effeminacy to both soul and body, and to which it is
owing that in the opinion of wise men life is but a faulty thing, and more miserable than death.
LIX. (165) But its juggleries and deceits pleasure does not venture to bring directly to the man, but
first offers them to the woman, and by her means to the man; acting in a very natural and
sagacious manner. For in human beings the mind occupies the rank of the man, and the
sensations that of the woman. And pleasure joins itself to and associates itself with the sensations
first of all, and then by their means cajoles also the mind, which is the dominant part. For, after
each of the senses have been subjected to the charms of pleasure, and has learnt to delight in
what is offered to it, the sight being fascinated by varieties of colours and shapes, the hearing by
harmonious sounds, the taste by the sweetness of flowers, and the smell by the delicious
fragrance of the odours which are brought before it, these all having received these offerings, like
handmaids, bring them to the mind as their master, leading with them persuasion as an advocate,
to warn it against rejecting any of them whatever. And the mind being immediately caught by the
bait, becomes a subject instead of a ruler, and a slave instead of a master, and an exile instead of
a citizen, and a mortal instead of an immortal. (166) For we must altogether not be ignorant that
pleasure, being like a courtesan or mistress, is eager to meet with a lover, and seeks for panders
in order by their means to catch a lover. And the sensations are her panders, and conciliate love to
her, and she employing them as baits, easily brings the mind into subjection to her. And the
sensations conveying within the mind the things which have been seen externally, explain and
display the forms of each of them, setting their seal upon a similar affection. For the mind is like
wax, and receives the impressions of appearances through the sensations, by means of which it
makes itself master of the body, which of itself it would not be able to do, as I have already said.
LX. (167) And those who have previously become the slaves of pleasure immediately receive the
wages of this miserable and incurable passion. For the woman having received vehement pains,
partly in her travail, and partly such as are a rapid succession of agonies during the other portions
of her life, and especially with reference to the bringing forth and bringing up of her children, to their
diseases and their health, to their good or evil fortune, to an extent that utterly deprives her of her
freedom and subjects her to the dominion of the man who is her companion, finds it unavoidable to
obey all his commands. And the man in his turn endures toils and labours, and continual sweats, in
order to the providing of himself with necessaries, and he also bears the deprivation of all those
spontaneous good things which the earth was originally taught to produce without requiring the skill
of the farmer, and he is subjected to a state in which he lives in incessant labour, for the purpose
of seeking for food and means of subsistence, in order to avoid perishing by hunger.
(168) For I
think that as the sun and the moon do continually give light, ever since they were originally
commanded to do so at the time of the original creation of the universe, and as they constantly
obey the divine injunction, for the sake of no other reason but because evil and disobedience are
banished to a distance far from the boundaries of heaven: so in the same way would the fertile and
productive regions of the earth yield an immense abundance in the various seasons of the year,
without any skill or co-operation on the part of the husbandman. But at present the ever-flowing
fountains of the graces of God have been checked, from the time when wickedness began to
increase faster than the virtues, in order that they might not be supplying men who were unworthy
to be benefited by them. (169) Therefore, the race of mankind, if it had met with strict and befitting
justice, must have been utterly destroyed, because of its ingratitude to God its benefactor and its
Saviour. But God, being merciful by nature, took pity upon them, and moderated their punishment.
And he permitted the race to continue to exist, but he no longer gave them food as he had done
before from ready prepared stores, lest if they were under the dominion of his evils, satiety and
idleness, they should become unruly and insolent.
LXI. (170) Such is the life of those who originally were men of innocence and simplicity, and also of
those who have come to prefer vice to virtue, from whom one ought to keep aloof. And in his
before mentioned account of the creation of the world, Moses teaches us also many other things,
and especially five most beautiful lessons which are superior to all others. In the first place, for the
sake of convicting the atheists, he teaches us that the Deity has a real being and existence. Now,
of the atheists, some have only doubted of the existence of God, stating it to be an uncertain thing;
but others, who are more audacious, have taken courage, and asserted positively that there is no
such thing; but this is affirmed only by men who have darkened the truth with fabulous inventions.
(171) In the second place he teaches us that God is one; having reference here to the assertors
of the polytheistic doctrine; men who do not blush to transfer that worst of evil constitutions,
ochlocracy, from earth to heaven.
Thirdly, he teaches, as has been already related, that the world
was created; by this lesson refuting those who think that it is uncreated and eternal, and who thus
attribute no glory to God.
In the fourth place we learn that the world also which was thus created is
one, since also the Creator is one, and he, making his creation to resemble himself in its
singleness, employed all existing essence in the creation of the universe. For it would not have
been complete if it had not been made and composed of all parts which were likewise whole and
complete. For there are some persons who believe that there are many worlds, and some who
even fancy that they are boundless in extent, being themselves inexperienced and ignorant of the
truth of those things of which it is desirable to have a correct knowledge.
The fifth lesson that
Moses teaches us is, that God exerts his providence for the benefit of the world. (172) For it
follows of necessity that the Creator must always care for that which he has created, just as
parents do also care for their children. And he who has learnt this not more by hearing it than by his
own understanding, and has impressed on his own soul these marvellous facts which are the
subject of so much contention—namely, that God has a being and existence, and that he who so
exists is really one, and that he has created the world, and that he has created it one as has been
stated, having made it like to himself in singleness; and that he exercises a continual care for that
which he has created will live a happy and blessed life, stamped with the doctrines of piety and
holiness.
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Note 1: This is in accordance with the description of him in the Bible, where he is represented as
being learned in all the wisdom of the Egyptians. [«]