37. But what defence can you make in reference to the Apology
which you have written for the works of Origen, or rather in reference
to the book of Eusebius, though you have altered much, and translated
the work of a heretic under the title of a martyr, yet you have set
down still more which is incompatible with the faith of the church. You
as well as I turn Latin books into Greek; can you prohibit me from
giving the works of a foreigner to my own people? If I had made my
answer in the case of some other work of yours in which you had not
attacked me, it might have been thought that, in translating what you
had already translated, I was acting in hostility to you, and wishing
to prove you inaccurate or untrustworthy. But this is a new kind of
complaint, when you take it amiss that an answer is made you on a point
on which you have accused me. All Rome was said to have been upset by
your translation; every one was demanding of me a remedy for this; not
that I was of any account, but that those who asked this thought me so.
You say that you who had made the translation were my friend. But what
would you have had me do? Ought we to obey God or man? To guard our
master’s property or to conceal the theft of a fellow-servant?
Can I not be at peace with you unless I join with you in committing
acts which bring reproach? If you had not mentioned my name, if you had
not tricked me out in your flatteries, I might have had some way of
escape, and have made many excuses for not translating what had already
been translated. But you, my friend, have compelled me to waste a good
many days on this work, and to bring out before the public eye what
should have been engulfed in Charybdis; yet still, though I had been
injured, I observed the laws of friendship, and as far as possible
defended myself without accusing you. It is a too suspicious and
complaining temper which you shew when you take home to yourself as a
reproach what was spoken against the heretics. If it is impossible to
be your friend unless I am the friend of heretics, I shall more easily
put up with your enmity than with their friendship.