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Works Arnobius the Elder (240-330) Adversus Nationes The Seven Books of Arnobius Against the Heathen
Book V.

45.

Judge fairly, and you are deserving of censure in this, 1 that in your common conversation you name Mars when you mean 2 fighting, Neptune when you mean the seas, Ceres when you mean bread, Minerva when you mean weaving, 3 Venus when you mean filthy lusts. For what reason is there, that, when things can be classed under their own names, they should be called by the names of the gods, and that such an insult should be offered to the deities as not even we men endure, if any one applies and turns our names to trifling objects? But language, you say, is contemptible, if defiled with such words. 4 O modesty, 5 worthy of praise! you blush to name bread and wine, and are not afraid to speak of Venus instead of carnal intercourse!


  1. Lit., "are in this part of censure." ↩

  2. Lit., "for." ↩

  3. Lit., "the warp," stamine. ↩

  4. i.e., if things are spoken of under their proper names. ↩

  5. The ms. reads ac unintelligibly. ↩

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Gegen die Heiden (BKV) Compare
The Seven Books of Arnobius Against the Heathen
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Einleitung
Elucidations - Seven Books Against the Heathens
Introduction to Arnobius

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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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