MEDIEVAL HISTORY LIBRARY |
THE EMPEROR JULIAN THE APOSTATE
CHAPTER IIJULIAN'S BOYHOOD, YOUTH, EDUCATION, AND CAESARSHIP.
" This should have been a
noble creature—he
Hath all the energy which
should have made
A goodly frame of glorious
elements
Had they been wisely
mingled."
It is not too much to say that
Julian's personal motives, qualities and aims, all-decisive as they were in
determining the character of the great reaction which history must always
couple with his name, would remain a riddle, had no notices of his early years
survived. The thoughts, training and experiences of Julian's boyhood and youth
shed floods of light upon his subsequent career: they convert a historical
surprise and crux into a consequent and little complicated narrative.
Among the earliest events
indelibly impressed upon the memory of
the imaginative child of six must have been those days of horror when he and
his brother Gallus, hidden away in the obscure recesses of a church, listened
in hushed terror to the tramp of soldiers and cries of bloodshed, watched the
anxious faces of their protectors, the
good Mark of Arethusa and his servants, and heard the whispered news passed
from mouth to mouth of the death of those nearest and dearest to them.
The sun of the sons of
Constantine rose blood-red with the slaughter of their kin. Two uncles and four
cousins were the first-fruits of dominion offered up by him, whom the orphaned
survivor might well call the butcher of his family. These things remained to
Julian the unutterable horrors of a tragedy which he shuddered to recall. In
this indiscriminate and most unnatural carnage fell Julius Constantius, younger
brother of the great Constantine and father to Julian. Alone of indirect
branches of the Imperial house, his two sons survived the hideous massacre.
If Constantius blamed fortune
for having thus preserved them, he yet shrank from forthwith imbruing his hands
yet more deeply in innocent blood. The oversight might be forgiven: the danger
was not imminent. An emperor might spare awhile a child of six, and a boy of
thirteen already, it was said, smitten with a deadly disease. Thus Julian was
saved. A mother's care he had never known, for the accomplished Basilina had survived but a few months the birth of her
Julian first-born. But the child promised to inherit something of his mother's
fondness for the poems and masterpieces of ancient Greece. At least he drank in
with avidity such Homeric or Hesiodic or philosophical lore as the family
eunuch Mardonius, his precise and old-fashioned pedagogue, was pleased to
instill.
The child's eager
teachableness must have often recalled even to the harsh eunuch reminiscences
of the mother whom he had led along the same paths. To Eusebius, the Arian
bishop of Nicomedia, it was entrusted to bring up the child, with whom on the
mother's side he was distantly connected, in the way of the imperial religion.
About his religious education neither Julian himself nor his biographers enter
into detail. He no doubt passed through the regular stages incident at that age
to the Christian catechumen and neophyte—was counted among the purified, the illuminated, and the perfected in orderly succession—received the seal of baptism—participated in the
Eucharist—was instructed in the services of the Church, and initiated into the
highest mysteries of faith and dogma. The old culture and the new faith were
each to mould his intellectual and moral growth: from
the poison of Paganism he was to be guarded inviolate.
For six years or more he was
nurtured thus, in the society of tutors and grown-up folk alone. With no
father's or mother's love to win his confidence, cut off from home affections,
separate from other children, he enjoyed none of those bright sunny influences
which are most essential to the free development of all child-nature.
Mardonius, whatever his moral worth, was at least no congenial companion for a
quick and susceptible child. He was Scythian-born, and rough in manner. A
eunuch moreover, well-advanced in years and not free, we may conjecture, from
the repellent aspect, and the dwarfed moral nature that characterized his
unhappy class. His virtue, if such he possessed, was of a severe, forbidding
type: he mistook distant surliness for dignity, harsh insensibility for wise
reserve. He was a precisian and a martinet, and made his pupil's life one
monotonous round. In going to school he must perforce walk always by the same
road and keep his eyes fixed upon the ground: he must regard with philosophical
or puritanical aversion the pantomime, the dance, the horse-race, everything
indeed that to a Roman boy savored at all of fun or excitement. If ever, as
happened twice or thrice, he went to the theatre, it was by order, as a part of
educational training: if the child's heart longed for a dance or a romp about
the garden, he was drearily referred to the dancing of the Phaeacian lads, the
piping of Phemius or Demodokus,
the bowery isle of Kalypso or the garden of Alcinous, as far more delicious than the living reality.
He was properly steeped in
philosophy from Socrates to Theophrastus. Thus at the most critical time of
life all his spontaneity and natural affectionateness of disposition was
chilled and nipped. A remarkably beautiful character was strangely marred. Not
only, like all children who are thrown much or entirely with their elders, did
he become precocious in habits and thoughts. He was by nature a wistful dreamy
child, full of strange reveries; from his earliest years he would be possessed
by a strange elation of soul as he gazed upon the splendor of the sun, and
would strive to meet his rays with unblenching eyes;
or again under the pure firmament, a child-worshipper, would meditate upon the
wonder of the stars till all thought of self, all sense of surrounding sights
or sounds were swallowed up in yearning contemplation of the Gods. This rich
emotional nature was all forced in upon itself: there was no one to encourage
his child-confidences, or guide them into true channels.
Hard experience made him day
by day increasingly and sadly worldly-wise: reserve, distrust, dissimulation
became a second nature to him. The dullest reader may feel touched at the sad
self-conscious irony of the Misopogon, as Julian with ill-concealed bitterness traces
his rough ungraciousness of manner, his severe unsympathizing view of life to
the training of that loveless childhood: almost against his will he tells us
how the iron had entered into his soul, and to his last day rankled there. From
self-recorded traits of boyhood, nay even from the letters of his manhood,
considering what a training he had endured, we see how full he by nature was of
tender brimming lovingness. He possessed to a singular degree the twofold
power of attaching others to himself, and not less himself to others. If he
came out of the ordeal so frank and loyal a friend, so thoughtful and
sympathizing a master, so grateful and humble a disciple, so fervent and
self-forgetful a worshipper of all that he believed good and true, what might
not a happier training have made him?
But fate gave no amends for
past unkindness. At thirteen years of age, when in years he had but just passed
from the child into the boy, but in thought and premature discretion was almost
full-grown, Julian was removed from Constantinople to a new home. The jealous
suspicions of Constantius could not suffer any prince of the blood royal so
near the seat of power. Julian and Gallus, hitherto designedly kept separate,
were now together banished to the wilds of Cappadocia. Not that the royal chateau
of Macellum was in itself unpleasing. True it was far from the haunts of men:
yet placed on a spreading plain skirted by woods that climb towards the snowy
peaks of the Argean range, its natural situation was lovely and picturesque
enough: without were gardens and fountains ever flowing, while within doors the
appointments were admirable, the fare and service princely.
But to Julian it was in his
own words an oriental state-prison. It was heaven's help, not man's kindness,
that brought him safely through. His sole gain was the society of his
step-brother Gallus, itself a questionable advantage. Not only was Gallus
several years his senior: in character as in looks he was a complete contrast
to Julian. His rough untutored mind, his strong natural passions were the very
reverse of Julian's refined intellectual taste, and gentle self-controlled demeanour. A Titus was linked to a Domitian. And Gallus'
natural violence and savagery were aggravated, not subdued by the treatment to
which the two brothers were in common subjected. Immured like very prisoners,
kept under secret espionage as well as open surveillance, cut off from every
play-mate, every teacher, every servant even in whom they could repose
confidence, they were forced to consort with slaves ever on the watch for an
unguarded word or look. Suspicion was the very air they breathed, repression of
each natural sentiment the alphabet of their moral training. Under such
auspices they sucked the milk of godly doctrine from paid agents of the tyrant.
Stinted of
more
liberal culture, the youthful princes were taught the Christian evidences, were
trained to give alms, to observe fasts, to venerate and with their own hands
rear the shrines of martyrs, and even to officiate themselves in the services
of the Church.
Such was Julian's life from
thirteen to nineteen, such his preparation for the more active existence on
which he next entered. What was the character of his sentiments at this time?
Endowed by nature with intellectual capacities of a high order, he was yet by
no means the mere student or recluse. The blood of Constantius Chlorus ran in his veins. The course of his life testifies
to the full the practical vigor, the ardent courage, the restless indefatigable
craving for action that animated him. It was because all other channels were
closed to him that Julian plunged with characteristic vigor into literary
pursuits. Though devoid, as his works testify, of originality or of actual
genius, he was possessed of a quick active intellect, and of receptive powers
of the very first order. The grace of style, the abounding readiness of
allusion, the variety of knowledge he displays, show with what diligence and
with how great success he steeped himself in the productions of the greatest
writers of Greece. But his intellectual labors are for our immediate purpose
less material; it is rather his religious standpoint at this juncture that we
must seek clearly to realize.
That Julian was a professing
Christian there is no doubt. Not only was he intimately acquainted with the
Bible, and a practiced theologian versed in patristic lore; but in his outward
life he attended divine service, observed fasts, practiced scrupulously the
regimen of ecclesiastical discipline, built shrines to the holy martyr Mamas,
and performed subordinate clerical functions. All this however, it is manifest,
proves nothing whatever as to his private convictions. Theodoret states
explicitly that “fear of Constantius” instigated these outward exhibitions of
Christianity. Christian or no Christian,
he must regulate his outward conduct as such. It was a part of the yoke laid
upon him. Christianity was one of the accomplishments he was to acquire. To
demur, to object, to rebel might have cost him his life. He was too subjugated
now, and what is more, too discreet to think for an instant of anything but
passive submission. By this time too he had become too practiced a dissimulant to betray himself by unguarded words or acts.
Years later, even when joint-emperor, in an outlying province, surrounded by
trusty legions, while in private practice and conviction he was a complete
Pagan, to all outward seeming he remained a Christian. How much more then as a solitary, defenseless youth! Not that he had
become as yet even at heart an open dissident, a pronounced unbeliever; but
rather that the religion, which he obediently accepted in externals, had laid
no hold upon him inwardly, while his bias was to see and notice the objections
and imperfections with which it was surrounded.
Such at least would seem a priori
the probable state of the case if we consider how Christianity presented itself
to him. It came to him under royal stamp and warrant, as the religion of his
oppressors. It was part of his discipline, a wise prison-rule, so to speak,
that the most beneficent Constantius was pleased to lay upon him. His gentle
cousin, who had made him an orphan, had butchered his kinsmen, had driven him
into exile, had treated him as a slave, provided him now with a religion. Would
Julian be very eager to accept it unquestioned?
With his works before us it is
no mere conjecture to say that the first instinct of Julian's youth was a
terrifying awe and a shrinking abhorrence of Constantius. He says how he
shunned the hated presence; and what efforts it cost him to lodge under the
same roof with his father's murderer. It was well enough for courtier slaves to
palaver of Constantius' past innocence, of his present regrets, his wish to
make amends, his sense that his childlessness was a deserved judgment from on
high, but Julian had facts to speak to him as well as servile mouths. The
Emperor had first spoiled him of his kin, then stripped him anew of every
friend, then robbed him of liberty itself, and should he in return accept
without demur the boon of the religion that he offered? Fear, suspicion,
resentment, hate, passions not less potent because assiduously masked, were all
enlisted against, not for the religion of the tyrant.
Nor could the religion commend
itself by its own virtue. Christianity, it must never be forgotten, was set
before Julian in the mangled imperfect form of Arianism. From his later
writings, from the contemptuous scorn with which he almost invariably treats
the teaching and even the name of Christ, it may safely be affirmed that the
moral beauty of Christ's character and work had never captivated the
imagination of the Apostate; and there is little wonder in this, considering
how violently Arian was his training, and also how that heresy neglects and
tends therefore to mar and deface the true personality of Christ.
But not only was this
mutilated distortion of Christianity the aspect of it displayed to Julian; even
this was propounded by most unworthy advocates. There is no positive evidence
that one sincere Christian was numbered among the young prince's tutors: such
were not readily found, nor greatly patronized among the dependents of
Constantius: certain it is that most of his teachers were either wholly
careless, or else Pagans in disguise, as they openly became so soon as the
court breezes blew that way. Julian is hardly to be blamed if he regarded with
indifference or even concealed dislike an enforced religion propounded so
imperfectly, and commended so disadvantageously.
On the other hand, what were
his relations towards Paganism? Besides his day-dreams, his yearning reveries,
his communings with a felt but unknown Deity, his
foremost pleasure was his books. They distracted him from the miserable
present: in Homer he could revel by the hour, forgetful of frets and troubles
and perils looming in the distance; Plato was already perhaps his darling
author; Aristotle's keen dialectics were familiar ground. And in all these
authors whom he loved the best, in the poets and historians, in the orators and
philosophers of Greece there was one common property; they were believers in
and teachers of a polytheistic creed. Compared with their garlands of
everlasting flowers, the writings of divines and long drawn discussions on
dogma or Christian evidence seemed colourless and perfumeless indeed. Was it not a legitimate inference that
the inspiration of each was drawn from the creed, and that the value of the
creed might be in some measure determined by the efficacy of the inspiration?
At this age, be it remembered,
the Bible had not yet attained, the chosen Classics had not yet lost that
common sanction of the wisest, which conferred on them something more than
their inherent lustre. The critic and schoolman still
handled the Bible with contempt. Like Mohammed claiming the Koran as his true
miracle, Paganism could point to her Homeric scriptures, that “Old Testament”
which enlisted nay enforced the admiring reverence even of the disbeliever, and
say “These are the seal of my Apostleship”. Julian must thus early have begun
to feel, what in later life he continually reiterates, that the splendid
afflatus of the old culture was the gift of the Gods whom it reverenced.
This growing bias towards
Paganism could not but tend to develope. It was
Julian's misfortune to be brought up book-learning without the healthy corrective of practical
observation. Cut off from his fellows, except a picked and unworthy few, he saw
things from the student's point of view; he became what in great part he
continued to be through life, a pedant. Defrauded of all opportunity of testing
their practical influence upon men's lives, he judged creeds by their
self-enunciation or their literary results. No view of polytheism could have
been more favorable. What he knew from personal observation of Christianity,
what he witnessed of its moral power, was not encouraging: the man he most
hated for his crimes was the man most loud in Christian profession; the paid
satellites, who were his spies and tools, were one and all Christians. Of
Paganism on the other hand he knew only, on the positive side, that it was the
avowed creed of all those whose works he cherished and admired, and still the
living faith of one half of the Roman Empire; on the negative, that it was the
faith not only hated by those whom he hated, and suspected by those who
suspected him, but also feared for its power by those who prohibited him
contact with its more gifted exponents. Not that such thoughts as these were
consciously present to Julian in a developed form: he had not yet formulated a
theory; self-analysis and introspection had not proceeded thus far. Some
Socrates was needed with skilled majestic art to bring them to the birth; but
dormant they lay there, a self-sown seed ready to spring up under the first
warmth of sympathy, or the dew of judicious instruction.
That such was Julian's state of mind is quite confirmed by such
intimations as remain. “From the first rudiments of boyhood”, writes Ammian, “his bias was towards Paganism; little by little
with growing years his devotion that way grew with him. In fear and trembling,
yet as often as he was able, he meditated in secret on all that looked thitherward”.
With his own lips he himself declares with what strange fascination in those
early days he gazed upon the sun and stars, so that wholly forsaken of earthly
thoughts, he was possessed with the beauties of heaven, and, a beardless
astrologer, entered into strange and sensible rapport with them, as he pondered
then upon the Gods. There is yet another testimony, which though rejected by
some as coming from hostile sources yet seems so natural as even to invite
belief. In the training of catechumens it was an established practice to set
the students rhetorical theses, which constantly took the form of apologetic
defense or attack upon Christianity. In such school-room exercises Julian, it
is said, was prone to conduct the defense of Paganism with unseemly vigour and ingenuity against the less impartial Gallus.
Here is a genuine representation in the concrete of exactly that state of mind
which it has been the aim of these pages to depict, and in which he continued
to hang balanced until the day came when he bade adieu to Macellum, and by
Imperial permission repaired to Constantinople.
EDUCATION.
The five years that followed
the recall from Macellum were decisive of the part Julian was to play in life.
They were passed in the prosecution of his studies, in the first instance at
Constantinople. He received the training of an ordinary well-educated citizen:
grammar he learnt of Nikokles; his master in rhetoric
was the sophist Hekebolius, a sort of Vicar of Bray
of his times, who an Arian under Constantius, and a hot Pagan under Julian,
pleaded abjectly in the succeeding reign for readmission into the Christian
communion. In philosophical acquirements as in natural genius he had by this
time outstripped his instructors. Fairly beaten and baffled by the precocity of
their pupil, his teachers had petitioned Constantius, that their young charge
might he permitted to attend others of the more
famous seats of learning. More important than this was the fact that in the
metropolis his merits were too much before the world. It was not safe to leave
a prince of the blood, brother to a reigning Emperor, free to his own devices.
He was imprudent enough to make friends amid fellow-students and teachers;
unfortunate enough to attract the notice of citizens. Dangerous talk of his
talents, his sociability, his fitness for Empire reached the Imperial ear.
Constantius' suspicions took fire.
He must leave Constantinople.
Fondly hoping that literary zeal might foster political indifference and
supplant dangerous aspirations, he ordered or permitted Julian to proceed to
Nicomedia. There he was to remain under the eye of Hekebolius,
and was solemnly pledged not to imperil his orthodoxy by attendance at the
lecture-room of Libanius. Hekebolius cared little
about the taint of Paganism. Perhaps he imagined that it was the personal
influence of Libanius that alone need be feared. Be that as it may, Julian,
though keeping the letter of his oath, was enabled day by day to peruse the
lectures that he was forbidden in person to attend. He devoured them
voraciously; he made them the model of his style. They fell in with his
half-formed prepossessions. Predisposed to Hellenism alike by his philosophical
and literary studies, and by the estimate of Christianity which personal
experience had taught him, Julian responded to the advances made to him by the
leaders of the Neo-Platonist movement. They had only arguments, and scoffs, and
polite contempt for the Christian “superstition”, but were also men of real
culture, and not less of insight into character. They showed him sympathy, such
as he had never before received: treated him with a kindness and deferential courtesy
hitherto unknown to him: stimulated his industry, praised his acquirements,
flattered his genius, entered into his difficulties. Their hazy cloud castles
of mystic yearning and promise and hope, fabrics wrapped in visionary
splendors, fascinated wistful longings nursed by the Phaedrus and the Republic;
they chimed with
those obstinate questionings
of sense and outward things,
fallings from us, vanishings;
blank misgivings of a Creature
moving about in worlds not
realized,
of which his religious
sentiment rather than conviction had consisted. He drank in the new Gospel. He
was soon a convert to its creed.
For to this period beyond all
cavil his definite perversion to Paganism must be referred. Whatever his
previous misgivings or self-questionings, he had not definitely renounced
Christianity before his arrival in Nicomedia in 351. Under more favorable
auspices he might yet have been won for the Church. Had he for instance chosen
Alexandria as his school, and fallen under the influence of an Athanasius, it
is curious to think what a transposition of his whole subsequent career might
have resulted.
The testimonies here are
decisive. Not only does Sozomen single this out as
the period of his conversion, and Libanius speak of him as at this time bridling
his virulent hate against the gods, and, tamed by divinations, breaking loose
like a lion from the chains which fastened him, put Julian himself designates
his twentieth year as that in which he began first “to walk with the gods”.
For the young man of
twenty—for Julian as for many another—the impressions now received, the
emotions now awakened were to mould his entire
future. To himself he seemed issuing out of darkness into day: “let the time of
that darkness be forgotten”, he writes, speaking of the years immediately
preceding this period. Light was streaming in upon his soul, chasing away the
shadows that had rested there and illuminating the heights that lay before him.
He was not yet wholly satisfied: his soul still panted Excelsior!: the old cravings after a goal still unattained spurred
him on. His shrewd teachers perceived them, and forged them into chains that
bound him fast. By wise reticence, by suppressed allusions, by mystical hints
and innuendoes, they taught the neophyte to believe “that there were new
glories, unknown ecstasies, more transcendent revelations awaiting the
initiated believer”. The fame of Aedesius attracted
him to Pergamus. With all the gravity of age but all
the enthusiasm of youth, Julian sat at the old man's feet drinking in
breathless and open-mouthed the master's wisdom. Pressed to reveal those higher
esoteric mysteries to which from time to time he would refer, the old man
answered, “Thou knowest all my heart, thou hast heard
all my instruction; thou seest with thine eyes how
feeble is this outward tenement of soul, and its frame nigh to dissolution. If
thou wouldst do aught, loved child of wisdom, get thee to mine own true-born
sons, and there take thy fill of the sweet juices of all wisdom and
instruction: if thou participates in those holy mysteries, thou wilt verily
blush to have borne the nature and name of man. Would that Maximus Eusebius or
Priscus were here present! But of my friends, Eusebius and Chrysanthius alone are left here. Take heed unto them and have compassion on my age”.
Thus he was transferred to the
teaching of Eusebius and Chrysanthius. At the close
of elaborate philosophical discourses, Eusebius would utter obscure warnings
against impostures that delude and mock the senses, magicians' acts, cheating
and materializing men's conceptions by pretended miracles. On one such occasion
Julian took Chrysanthius aside, and asked him to
expound the meaning of such epilogues. Affecting a profound gravity he sagely
replied, “You will do well not to learn of me, but of their author”; in
accordance with which advice he consulted Eusebius directly. After some fencing
Eusebius, pressed hard by Julian's pertinacious curiosity, and finding him at
length fairly in the net, told him of one Maximus, among the oldest and most
honored of their teachers, who with the magnificent boldness of genius,
despising sober logical demonstration, applied himself to these fool's
manifestations. He then went on to say how Maximus had one day summoned them to
the temple of Hecate; and how, after he had adored the goddess and burned
incense and chanted a hymn, the statue of the goddess, as they sat there,
smiled visibly upon him, and the torches in her hands took fire. At this
recital, continues the narrator, the divine Julian bade him farewell and stick
to his books; “for you have shown me the man I was looking for”. So saying, he
kissed Chrysanthius and set off with speed for
Ephesus.
The story, even if its literal
correctness is questioned, is full of instruction and significance. It is a
true picture of the restless agitation, the yet unsatisfied cravings that were
driving him forward at all hazards, the constant pursuit of a higher truth, a
completer revelation than any as yet vouchsafed him. It betrays at once the
ardor and the weakness that characterized him: he was full of excitable
impetuosity, and not less of a wistful superstition. He possessed a temperament
dissatisfied yet sanguine, a mind docilely receptive yet ardently inquisitive,
a nature emotional rather than strong, imaginative and sensuous rather than
calmly philosophical or patiently devotional.
Maximus was a teacher well
suited to such a pupil. To a venerable hoary beard, a quick searching eye, a
rich harmonious intonation worthy of an Athene or Apollo, he united a commanding
eloquence and a prophetic earnestness, that seem to have enforced assent,
enchaining his hearers with a kind of awe. “The hidden spark of divination” of
which Libanius speaks, was quickly nursed into flame. Julian became, what he
remained through, life, his devoted adherent. After due probation he was
solemnly initiated in the temple of Artemis. To the accompaniment of weird
chants and unholy rites, amid awful apparitions of demons and spirits of the
departed, with every accessory suited to impress the imagination and stifle
calm deliberation, Julian was admitted to the new faith. He was disinfected
from the pollution of Christianity: the taint of baptism was washed off with
the warm blood of a slaughtered bull sprinkled on his head. From this time
forth his conversion to Paganism was complete hopes of the party centered in
him. He was in active correspondence or personal contact with the leading
Neo-Platonists of Greece and Asia. His change of creed was not of course
outwardly professed. The lion was unshackled, but had yet a while, says
Libanius, to wear the ass's skin. No sooner did whispers of his apostasy, of at
least undue familiarity with Pagan teachers, begin to circulate, than Julian
shaved close, wore the tonsure, observed saints' days, assiduously read the
Scriptures in public, and adopted the outward demeanour of a monk. But in private he indulged in Pagan practices and mystic rites.
The rapidity and the completeness of Julian's conversion demand
neither surprise nor blame. Christianity was presented to him for perfunctory
acceptance, not only in a maimed, disfigured shape, not only as the religion of
his enemies, but also by wretchedly unworthy exponents. With Paganism his
fortune was just opposite. Hellenism, wooing him in its most finished and
becoming dress, courted his spontaneous acceptance, not only as the religion of
new-found friends, but also as introduced to him by most worthy advocates. Not
an Aedesius merely or Maximus the soul-physician, but
Libanius greatest of the sophists, Iamblichus the most divine, Themistius
prince of orators, Proaeresius king of eloquence,
such were the men through whom Julian learned Paganism. In the fact of his
conversion there was nothing unnatural nor ignoble, rather the reverse: it
calls for pity, not for condemnation; it is the permanence of it rather, when
but for prejudice and pride and bigotry a better judgment might have been
formed, that awakes regret. It proved too late to retrace his steps, when
superstition, and pride of consistency, and intellectual self-sufficiency, and
long-protracted pain of enforced disingenuousness, all barred the way.
If anything was yet lacking to
confirm Julian in his adherence to Paganism, and alienation from Christianity,
Constantius was careful to supply the want. Julian had still one relative in
the world, cousin at once and brother-in-law to the Emperor. His hour was now
come to be brought to “The Butcher”. Gallus, who had hitherto disregarded
Constantius' threats and evaded his orders, was now enticed by soft promises to
leave his Eastern province and visit the Emperor in person. At first he
journeyed with the state befitting a Caesar; one by one, as the toils closed
faster round him, the marks of homage were withdrawn; from Constantinople he
was hurried away by imperial order: at Petobio (Pettau) Creatures of the Emperor put him under arrest,
stripped him of the purple, dressed him in common clothes, bade him “Get up at
once”, and so drove him in a post-chaise to Pola. The place was ominous: the
blood of Crispus still cried from its prison walls. It was destined to witness
yet another Caesar's death, falling victim to his kinsman's jealousy. Gallus
was spared the mockery of a trial. His hands tied behind him, he was dragged
like a common felon to the block. Even the decency of burial was denied to the
mutilated trunk.
Scarcely had the news of his
brother's murder reached Julian when he too received the mandate to repair from
the quiet retreats of Ionia “to visit the Emperor in person”. There had risen
in Constantius' mind a doubt whether the Imperial consent had been formally
attached to his departure from Macellum. It was an authenticated fact that only
three years before the young prince-student had had an interview with his
brother on his royal progress eastward through Nicomedia. Letters had passed at
intervals between them. Besides there was an a priori probability that he was a co-conspirator. It was certain
at least that he was connected by blood with the Emperor himself, and was now
the sole offender who had not expiated by death that crime. “The wolf thought
well to be his watch-dog”.
Treated like a prisoner,
dragged backwards and forwards between Milan and Como, in daily terror of his
life, forced to guard every word and look, he learned bitterly enough that it
was better for him to entrust the care of his life to the gods than to the word
of Constantius. Possessed with deep-seated hatred for the murderer, for whom he
was forced to simulate affection and loyal respect, he transferred no doubt
some portion of that hate to the religion he so loudly professed. “How often”,
says an eloquent writer,” as he raised his eyes to heaven, must he have seen,
rearing itself between him and the God of Constantius, the bloody image of a
father he had never known, and a brother that he dared not mourn”. “His
Eternity” had just reached the climax of Arrogant self-sufficiency. He had
cashiered a fourth Caesar. Persia for the nonce was quiet. Emperor of Emperors
he aspired too to be counted Bishop of Bishops. With a brutal candor he
asserted his lordship in Church as well as in State, in doctrine no less than
in discipline. His civil supremacy he regarded as the proof and the measure of
his religious orthodoxy. Arianism was demonstrably orthodox, if Constantius was
Arian. L'église c'est moi was the position to which he committed himself. To
assert it he browbeat or bribed, menaced or cajoled, imprisoned or exiled,
tortured or deposed refractory bishops, as seemed best. No prestige of office
could protect Liberius from Thracian exile, no
extremity of venerable age deliver Hosius from the
rack.
But it was not only a personal
antipathy to Constantius, not only Constantius' own unworthiness, or his
supercilious domineering over the Christian commonwealth, that finally
discredited Christianity in the eyes of Julian. These things only corroborated
or accorded with results to which personal observation must have led him.
The Christians with whom he
chiefly came in contact during his residence at the court of Milan were beyond
a doubt the Arian bishops who clung About the throne. They justified the bitter
taunt of Liberius, by which he bade the Emperor
remember that bishops were not created to avenge his wrongs. It so chanced that
the council of Milan synchronized with Julian's stay in the place: It is
needless to dwell in detail on the scenes of quarrelsome turbulence, or on
individual cases of duplicity that marked the hey-day of ascendant Arianism,
when a Valens and Ursacius swayed the helm of
council, when honest men turned cowards, and wise men traitors, when prelatical violence and rancor and self-seeking drowned or
gagged the voices of the solitary spokesmen of truth, and the blindness or
timidity of her less unworthy leaders jeoparded well-nigh the existence of the
Church of Christ. With what disdainful scorn must Julian in his hours of privacy
have cast aside that mask of religion which he was forced to wear, and turned
from the present to dream of Hellas, “home of the Muses!” Almost at the very
hour that he was joyfully turning his back on the palace to journey towards his
mother's hearth, another illustrious
exile also set his face northwards, Liberius, chief
bishop of the west, wending his way to weary exile in Thrace, because he
declined to condemn a brother bishop unheard!
Thus we may consider that on
Julian's arrival at Athens in the year 355 his prior alienation from
Christianity had changed into positive aversion. The death of Gallus, the
private and public bearing of Constantius, and the condition of official
Christianity had riveted irrevocably the sentiments which Julian had derived
from Macellum, from Nicomedia, and from Ephesus.
At Athens he appears to have
been initiated into the Eleusinian mysteries. Outward repression and
self-constraint only made his inward excitement more uncontrollable. The
strange excited manner, the restless gait, the twitching shoulders, the dilated
rolling eye, the distended nostril, attracted the notice even of his masters
and fellow-students. At times he would fall into reveries, and so with nodding
head and swaying steps, pass through the streets half-distraught. Then with a
sudden jerk, or a harsh peal of laughter, would turn upon his companion with
some strangely abrupt interrogation. Never, not in the first moments of
elevation to the Caesarship, not in the perils of his
Gallic wars, not in the sole possession of sovereign power, can life have been
more intense to him than now. In the immemorial courts of Athens those
convictions were finally matured which have given its permanent significance to
Julian's life. There he moved amid the most intellectual circles, and though of
royal blood proved not unable to hold his own with the bravest in the peaceful
combats of the schools. Amid students of no common calibre,
such for instance as the young Cappadocians, Basil and Gregory, he shone by his own merit. Needless to say that by professors
and rhetoricians of the Pagan interest—though indeed, as Libanius assures us,
he was to be counted among teachers rather than taught—he was at once
instructed and caressed: but the true history of his University life survives
solidified in the thoughts, the writings, and the policy of maturer manhood.
To this same period we must
refer the rise of another feeling that laid strong hold upon Julian. He became
impressed with the sense of a mission. He began to regard himself as the
special instrument of the gods to fulfill the predestined restoration of
Hellenism. Vague prophecies were current pointing to the imminent fall of
Christianity; “Peter”, said one heathen oracle, “had by magic secured worship
to Christ for three hundred and sixty five years; but thereafter his kingdom
should fall”. Dreams of a Pagan Messiah floated through men's minds. Already
the fabric of Christianity, triumphant externally, began to crumble from
within. A seeming renaissance of Hellenism had set in. Julian, suggested
far-sighted philosophers, and with growing buoyancy his own heart whispered the
same hopes, alike by position and by actual gifts was the elect of heaven to
consummate the change. Such half-formed aspirations chimed admirably with his
imaginative nature. His mind, like Constantine the Great's, was so tempered,
that while he yielded willingly to superstition, he found in it rather a
strength than a weakness.
Julian could believe in a
fortunate star, could credulously attribute each happy chance, each trivial
success, which was due clearly to his own foresight, to the direct
interposition of the gods on his behalf; while at the same time he was never
frightened by childish omens, or cowed by superstitious fears from boldly facing
and resolutely carrying out enterprises that demanded all his hardihood and
natural resource. It was at this time that he began to recognize the divine
hand in each incident of his career; to hear voices or dream dreams, which he
reverenced as supernatural monitors: to see in himself the favored knight of
Hermes and Athene. In his own language, from the day that he left Athens, the
goddess was everywhere his guide, and compassed him about with guardian angels,
assigned to him from the Sun and Moon. These things were signs of a growing
self-confidence, presages of powers that as yet lay undeveloped, and indeed
unsuspected, under the gauche exterior of the unprincely student.
It does not fall within the
scope of this essay to follow Julian on his return from Athens to court, to
unravel the court cabals and the Imperial hopes and fears which resulted in
Julian's solemn investiture with the Caesarship and
his espousal of Helena, sister to the Emperor. Nor are we concerned with the
marches and counter-marches, that in three brilliant campaigns reduced Gaul and
the Rhine provinces to entire submission to the young Caesar, and left him free
to devote his whole attention to administrative and economical reform in the provinces entrusted to him. He had set out under the ignoble
espionage of his own officers, restricted in all his powers, thwarted at every
turn by privy conspiracies and opposition, with a school-boy's manual in his
pocket regulating his powers, his money allowance, his very diet, a lay-figure
dressed in purple to scare barbarians with the terror of a name, a sort of
shadow apparition king, wearing on his brow the round and top of sovereignty
and nothing more.
In three short years his
native force, his industry, and his tenacity of purpose, had secured him a
commanding ascendancy. His state of mind remained such as has been already
described, though growing years and a career of almost unchequered success deepened no doubt his previous religious convictions. In life and
belief a Pagan, in outward act a somewhat unpronounced Christian, he adopted a
policy consonant with his ambiguous position. With, or more probably without
his consent, his name was appended by Constantius to a law declaring it a
capital offence to adore or sacrifice to idols. He interfered as little as
possible with religious parties or disputes of any kind. Political necessities
required perhaps his formal acquiescence in the banishment of Hilary, the young
Bishop of Poitiers, from Gaul. But this was an isolated act, the omission of
which must have alarmed the suspicions of Constantius and fanned his growing
jealousy. Julian was too astute to provoke collision or give a handle to
opponents by open professions of Paganism. He satisfied the requirements of
imperial orthodoxy. Even after his army had by acclaim declared him worthy of
the supreme dignity of empire, when open war was imminent, if not proclaimed,
between him and Constantius, the young Augustus was still to be found wearing
the ass' skin, and participating in Christian rites at Epiphany-tide in the
church of Vienne. It was on the march to meet Constantius that he publicly
abjured Christianity, took the title of Pontifex, and conducted sacrifice in
Pagan temples. Even then deference to the feelings of not a few of his soldiers
led him to temporize in some points. But from Illyria he can write joyfully to
his foster-father in philosophy: “We worship the gods publicly; the whole army
which is following my fortunes are devout believers: we openly sacrifice oxen:
with many a hecatomb we render thank-offerings to the gods”. He issued to all
true Greeks his Pagan manifesto. Confident in his mission, fortified by
assurance of divine favor and looking for “great fruit of labor”, amid the plaudits of men and with heaven's smile,
he set his face eastward to regenerate a misguided world and by the gods behest
to make all things pure.
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