26. O dreadful forms of
terror and47574757 frightful
bugbears47584758 on account
of which the human race was to be benumbed for ever, to attempt nothing
in its utter amazement, and to restrain itself from every wicked and
shameful act—little sickles, keys, caps, pieces of wood, winged
sandals, staves, little timbrels, pipes, psalteries, breasts protruding
and of great size, little drinking cups, pincers, and horns filled with
fruit, the naked bodies of women, and huge veretra openly
exposed! Would it not have been better to dance and to
sing, than calling it gravity and pretending to be serious, to relate
what is so insipid and so silly, that images47594759 were formed by the ancients to check
wrongdoing, and to arouse the fears of the wicked and
impious? Were the men of that age and time, in understanding, so
void of reason and good sense, that they were kept back from wicked
actions, just as if they were little boys, by the
preternatural47604760 savageness of
masks, by grimaces also, and bugbears?47614761 And how has this been so
entirely changed, that though there are so many temples in your states
filled with images of all the gods, the multitude of criminals cannot
be resisted even with so many laws and so terrible punishments,
and their audacity cannot be overcome47624762 by any means, and wicked deeds,
repeated again and again, multiply the more it is striven by laws and
severe judgments to lessen the number of cruel deeds, and to
quell them by the check given by means of punishments? But
if images caused any fear to men, the passing of laws would cease, nor
would so many kinds of tortures be established against the daring of
the guilty: now, however, because it has been proved and
established that the supposed47634763 terror which is said to flow out
from the images is in reality vain, recourse has been had to the
ordinances of laws, by which there might be a dread of punishment
which should be most certain fixed in men’s minds also, and a
condemnation settled; to which these very images also owe it that they
yet stand safe, and secured by some respect being yielded to
them.