< Page:1888 Cicero's Tusculan Disputations.djvu
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THE NATURE OF THE GODS. 237tion here is not concerning our genius and elocution, but

our species and figure. If we could make and assume to ourselves any form, would you be unwilling to resemble the sea-triton as he is painted supported swimming on sea -monsters whose bodies are partly human? Here I touch on a difficult point ; for so great is the force of nat ure that there is no man who would not choose to be like a man, nor, indeed, any ant that would not be like an ant. But like- what man ? For how few can pretend to beauty ! When I was at Athens, the whole flock of youths afforded scarcely one. You laugh, I see ; but what I tell you is the truth. Nay, to us who, after the exam ples of ancient philosophers, delight in boys, defects are often pleasing. Alca?us was charmed with a wart on a boy's knuckle ; but a wart is a blemish on the body ; yet it seemed a beauty to him. Q. Catulus, my friend and colleague's father, was enamored with your fellow-citizen Roscius, on whom he wrote these verses : As once I stood to hail the rising day, Roscius appearing on the left I spied : Forgive me, Gods, if I presume to say The mortal's beauty with th' immortal vied. Roscius more beautiful than a God ! yet he was then, as he now is, squint-eyed. But what signifies that, if his de fects were beauties to Catulus ? XXIX. I return to the Gods. Can we suppose any of them to be squint-eyed, or even to have a cast in the eye ? Have they any warts ? Are any of them hook-nosed, flap- eared, beetle-browed, or jolt-headed, as some of us are ? Or are they free from imperfections? Let us grant you that. Are they all alike in the face? For if they are many, then one must necessarily be more beautiful than another, and then there must be some Deity not absolute ly most beautiful. Or if their faces are all alike, there would be an Academy 1 in heaven; for if one God does not differ from another, there is no possibility of knowing or distinguishing them. What if your assertion, Velleius, proves absolutely false, that no form occurs to us, in our contemplations on the

That is, there would be the same uncertainty in heaven as is among 

the Academics.

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