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Works Jerome (347-420) Epistolaes (CCEL) The Letters of St. Jerome
Letter LII. To Nepotian.

2.

But that I may not seem to quote only profane literature, listen to the mystical teaching of the sacred writings. Once David had been a man of war, but at seventy age had chilled him so that nothing would make him warm. A girl is accordingly sought from the coasts of Israel—Abishag the Shunamite—to sleep with the king and warm his aged frame. 1 Does it not seem to you—if you keep to the letter that killeth 2—like some farcical story or some broad jest from an Atellan play? 3 A chilly old man is wrapped up in blankets, and only grows warm in a girl’s embrace. Bathsheba was still living, Abigail was still left, and the remainder of those wives and concubines whose names the Scripture mentions. Yet they are all rejected as cold, and only in the one young girl’s embrace does the old man become warm. Abraham was far older than David; still, so long as Sarah lived he sought no other wife. Isaac counted twice the years of David, yet never felt cold with Rebekah, old though she was. I say nothing of the antediluvians, who, although after nine hundred years their limbs must have been not old merely, but decayed with age, had no recourse to girls’ embraces. Moses, the leader of the Israelites, counted P. 90 one hundred and twenty years, yet sought no change from Zipporah.


  1. 1 Kings i. 1–4 .  ↩

  2. 2 Cor. iii. 6 .  ↩

  3. So called because first devised in the Oscan town of Atella.  ↩

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The Letters of St. Jerome

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Faculty of Theology, Patristics and History of the Early Church
Miséricorde, Av. Europe 20, CH 1700 Fribourg

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