18. This being from the very
first and most firmly established, touching other lies the question
proceeds more securely. But by consequence we must also see that
all lies must be kept aloof which hurt any man unjustly: because no
man is to have a wrong, albeit a lighter one is done to him, that
another may have a heavier kept from him. Nor are those lies to be
allowed, which, though they hurt not another, yet do nobody any
good, and are hurtful to the persons themselves who gratuitously
tell them. Indeed, these are the persons who are properly to be
called liars. For there is a difference between lying and being a
liar. A man may tell a lie unwillingly; but a liar loves to lie,
and inhabits in his mind in the delight of lying. Next to such are
those to be placed who by a lie wish to please men, not that they
may do wrong or bring reproach upon any man; for we have already
before put away that kind; but that they may be pleasant in
conversation. These, differ from the class in which we have placed
liars in this respect, that liars delight in lying, rejoicing in
deceit for its own sake: but these lust to please by agreeable
talk, and yet would rather please by saying things that were true,
but when they do not easily find true things to say that are
pleasant to the hearers, they choose rather to tell lies than to
hold their tongues. Yet it is difficult for these sometimes to
undertake a story which is the whole of it false; but most commonly
they interweave falsehood with truth, where they are at a loss for
something sweet. Now these two sorts of lies do no harm to those
who believe them, because they are not deceived concerning any
matter of religion and truth, or concerning any profit or advantage
of their own. It 467suffices them, to judge the
thing possible which is told, and to have faith in a man of whom
they ought not rashly to think that he is telling a lie. For where
is the harm of believing that such an one’s father or grandfather
was a good man, when he was not? or that he has served with the
army even in Persia, though he never set foot out of Rome? But to
the persons who tell these lies, they do much harm: to the former
sort, because they so desert truth as to rejoice in deceit: to the
latter, because they want to please people better than the
truth.