43.49784978 If Jupiter sought to have his
games celebrated, and that afresh,49794979 with greater care; if he honestly
sought to restore49804980 the people to health, and that the
evil which he had caused should go no further and not be increased,
would it not have been better that he should come to the consul
himself, to some one of the public priests, the pontifex
maximus, or to his own flamen Dialis, and in a vision reveal
to him the defect in the games occasioned by the dancer, and the
cause of the sadness of the times? What reason had there been
that he should choose to announce his wishes and procure the
satisfaction desired, a man accustomed to live in the country,
unknown from the obscurity of his name, not acquainted with city
matters, and perhaps not knowing what a dancer is? And if he
indeed knew, as he must have known if he was a diviner,49814981 that this
fellow would refuse to obey, would it not have been more natural and
befitting a god, to change the man’s mind, and constrain him to
be willing to obey, than to try more cruel methods, and vent his rage
indiscriminately, without any reason, as robbers do? For if the
old rustic, not being quick in entering upon anything, delayed in
doing what was commanded, being kept back by stronger motives,
of what had his unhappy children been guilty, that
Jupiter’s anger and indignation should be turned upon
them, and that they should pay for another’s offences by being
robbed of their lives? And can any man believe that he is
a god who is so unjust, so impious, and who does not observe
even the laws of men, among whom it would be held a great crime to
punish one for another, and to avenge one man’s offences upon
others?49824982 But,
I am told, he caused the 536man himself to be seized by the cruel
pestilence. Would it not then have been better, nay rather,
juster, if it seemed that this should be done, that dread of punishment
should be first excited by the father, who49834983 had been the cause of such passion
by49844984 his
disobedient delay, than to do violence to the children, and to consume
and destroy innocent persons to make him sorrowful?49854985 What, pray, was the meaning
of this fierceness, this cruelty, which was so great that,
his offspring being dead, it afterwards terrified the father by his own
danger! But if he had chosen to do this long before, that is, in
the first place, not only would not the innocent brothers have been cut
off, but the indignant purpose of the deity also would have been
known. But certainly, it will be said, when he had done
his duty by announcing the vision, the disease immediately left him,
and the man was forthwith restored to health. And what is there
to admire in this if he removed49864986 the evil which he had himself
breathed into the man, and vaunted himself with false
pretence? But if you weigh the circumstances thoroughly, there
was greater cruelty than kindness in his deliverance, for
Jupiter did not preserve him to the joys of life who was
miserable and wishing to perish after his children, but to learn his
solitariness and the agonies of bereavement.