Chapter XXIV.
“Indeed,
Postumianus,” replied I, “while I was listening
attentively, all this time, to you talking about the excellences of the
saints, in my secret thoughts I had my mind turned to my friend Martin,
observing on the best of grounds
36that all those things which different
individuals had done separately, were easily and entirely accomplished
by that one man alone. For, although you certainly related lofty deeds,
I really heard nothing from your lips (may I say it, without offence to
these holy men), in which Martin was inferior to any one of them. And
while I hold that the excellence of no one of these is ever to be
compared with the merits of that man, still this point ought to be
attended to, that it is unfair he should be compared, on the same
terms, with the recluses of the desert, or even with the anchorites.
For they, at freedom from every hindrance, with heaven only and the
angels as witnesses, were clearly instructed to perform admirable
deeds; he, on the other hand, in the midst of crowds and intercourse
with human beings—among quarrelsome clerics, and among furious
bishops, while he was harassed with almost daily scandals on all sides,
nevertheless stood absolutely firm with unconquerable virtue against
all these things, and performed such wonders as not even those
accomplished of whom we have heard that they are, or at one time were,
in the wilderness. But even had they done things equal to his, what
judge would be so unjust as not, on good grounds, to decide that he was
the more powerful? For put the case that he was a soldier who fought on
unfavorable ground, and yet turned out a conqueror, and compare them,
in like manner, to soldiers, who however, contended on equal terms, or
even on favorable terms, with the enemy. What then? Although the
victory of all is one and the same, the glory of all certainly cannot
be equal. And even though you have narrated marvelous things, still you
have not stated that a dead man was recalled to life by any one. In
this one particular undoubtedly, it must be owned that no one is to be
compared with Martin.
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