The Martyrdom of Hypatia or The Death of the Classical World
The Truth About Jesus Is He a Myth?
"The martyrdom of Hypatia, or, The death of the classical world." from The Rationalist, May 1915 by Mangasar Mugurditch Mangasarian 1859-1943,
A speech given before the Independent Religious Society at the
Majestic Theater in Chicago
Our subject this morning takes us to the city of Alexandria, one
of the greatest intellectual centers in the days when Athens and
Rome still ruled the world. The capital of Egypt received its
name from the man who conceived and executed its design --
Alexander the Great. Under the Ptolemies, a line of Greek kings,
Alexandria soon sprang into eminence, and, accumulating culture
and wealth, became the most powerful metropolis of the Orient.
Serving as the port of Europe, it attracted the lucrative trade
of India and Arabia. Its markets were enriched with the gorgeous
silks and fabrics from the bazaars of the Orient. Wealth brought
leisure, and it, in turn, the arts. It became, in time, the home
of a wonderful library and schools of philosophy, representing
all the phases and the most delicate shades of thought. At one
time it was the general belief that the mantle of Athens had
fallen upon the shoulders of Alexandria.
But there was a stubborn and superstitious Oriental constituency
in the city which would not blend with the foreign element --
namely, the Greeks and the Romans. This antagonism between the
Egyptian born and the children of Hellas and Rome, who were
Alexandrians only by adoption, was frequently the occasion of
street riots, feuds, massacres, and civil wars.
In or about the year 400 A.D., Alexandria, which is today a
third-rate Mohammedan town, enjoyed a population of 600,000
inhabitants. The city proper comprehended a circumference of
fifteen miles. It enjoyed the distinction of being quite free
from the curse of poverty. No beggars could be seen loitering in
its streets. No one was idle, and work brought good wages. Such
was the demand for labor that even the lame and the blind found
suitable occupation. The Alexandrians understood the manufacture
of papyrus, a kind of vegetable paper used extensively by the
authors, and they knew how to blow glass and weave linen.
After its magnificent library, whose shelves supported a freight
more precious than beaten gold, perhaps the most stupendous
edifice in the town was the temple of Serapis. It is said that
the builders of the famous temple of Eddessa boasted that they
had succeeded in creating something which future generations
would compare with the temple of Serapis in Alexandria. This
ought to suggest an idea of the vastness and beauty of the
Alexandrian Serapis, and the high esteem in which it was held.
Historians and connoisseurs claim it was one of the grandest
monuments of Pagan civilization, second only to the temple of
Jupiter in Rome, and the inimitable Parthenon in Athens, which
latter is certainly the best gem earth ever wore upon her
zone.
The Serapis temple was built upon an artificial hill, the ascent
to which was by a hundred steps. It was not one building, but a
vast body of buildings, all grouped about a central one of vaster
dimensions, rising on pillars of huge magnitude and graceful
proportions. Some critics have advanced the idea that the
builders of this masterpiece intended to make it a composite
structure, combining the diverse elements of Egyptian and Greek
art into a harmonious whole. The Serapion was regarded by the
ancients as marking the reconciliation between the architects of
the pyramids and the creators of the Athenian Acropolis. It
represented to their minds the blending of the massive in
Egyptian art with the grace and the loveliness of the
Hellenic.
But the greatest attraction of this temple was the god Serapis
himself, within the vaulted building. It is difficult for us to
form an idea of his enormous proportions. He filled the house
with his presence. He stretched his arms and took hold of the two
walls, the one on his right and the other on his left. The artist
had conceived, also, the idea of making the body of the god as
all-embracing as his arms. He fused together all the then known
metals -- gold, silver, copper, iron, tin, lead -- to create a
substance fit to represent a god. He inlaid this multifarious
composition with the rarest gems -- the most costly stones which
the markets of the world offered. He polished them all until the
colossal statue shone like a huge sapphire. Its exquisite tints
and shades are said to have provoked the jealousy of the azure
skies. For a crown, the god wore on his head a bushel, symbol of
plentiful harvests. At his side, in silence, stood a three-headed
animal with the forepart of a lion, a wolf, and a dog. The lion
was meant to represent the present; the rapacious wolf symbolized
the past -- the devoured past; while the dog, the faithful,
friendly animal, stood for the future. Wound around the body of
the god was a mammoth serpent, which, after its many turns and
twists, returned to rest his head on the hand of the god. The
sinuous serpent was meant to personate Time, whose mysterious
birthplace, or birthday, has yet to be discovered.
Serapis, whose statue adorned the temple, was once the most
popular god in the Orient. He was believed to be the source of
the Nile, whose breasts he swelled until they poured their wealth
upon the surrounding soil. As long as his eye remained open, the
sun would shine, and the land would produce, and women would give
birth. But if he should close his eye, life would became as a
sere and sapless leaf. But Serapis was a stranger in Egypt. He
was not an African by birth, but was imported from Sinope, on the
Euxine. When he first made his appearance in the land of the
Nile, the people -- the Alexandrians, especially -- rose up en
masse and protested vehemently against the introduction of a
foreign deity. Did they not have Osiris, the great god of their
ancestors, and Isis, his consort -- the divine woman with her
infant, Horus, sitting upon her knees? Why, then should a strange
god be admitted to the throne or to the bed of Osiris and Isis?
Did they not have their holy trinity, Osiris, Isis, and Horus --
father, mother, and child -- the best trinity ever conceived? But
Ptolemy was king, and his will prevailed. He told them that
Osiris had, in a dream, commanded him to accept Serapis as a new
and well-beloved god, and he did not wish to do anything contrary
to his dream.
In all this do we not see a similarity to the story about Jesus,
and how his friends compelled solitary Jehovah to accept him as
his son, and share with him the honors of divinity? We know how
the people objected at first to Jesus, precisely as the
Alexandrians did to Serapis, and how, finally, through dreams and
miracles, Jesus, the new God, grew to be even more popular than
the old one.
When Christianity gained the upper hand in Alexandria, it set
its mind from the start upon destroying two of the principal
monuments of its powerful rival, Paganism -- the library and the
temple of Serapis. Let me at this juncture remind you that
Alexandria, at a very early period, became one of the foremost
strongholds of the Christian religion. Of the five capitols of
the new faith -- Jerusalem, Constantinople, Carthage, Alexandria,
Rome -- Alexandria at one time led Constantinople, and was not
second even to Rome. What was said about Christianity being
essentially an Asiatic philosophy is confirmed, it seems to me,
by this additional fact; that out of five of its greatest centres
four were in the Orient. It felt more at home in Asia and Africa
than in Europe. A still stronger confirmation of the affinity
between Asia and Christianity is the fact that as soon as the
Roman Empire became Christian it shifted its capital from Europe
to Asia, from Rome to Constantinople. The first Christian
emperor, Constantine, impelled, as it were, by the logic of his
new religion, left Rome to take up his residence on the
Bosphorus, which washed the shores of the continent that had
cradled Christianity. For a ruler who coveted absolute power, who
feared democracy, who hated liberty and who preferred stagnation
of thought to the movement of ideas, who desired slaves for
subjects, Asia was the more suitable place. Without wishing to
offend anyone, I must say that Christianity was more Asiatic than
Paganism, and the Orient was better fitted to be the home of
political and religious absolutism than the occident.
Christianity, as the religion of meekness and obedience, had
irresistible attractions for Constantine. He not only embraced
it, but he went to dwell as close to where its cradle had swung
as he could.
It is not the fault of Christianity that the Asiatic is servile,
but the fault of the Asiatic that Christianity is so supple and
submissive. It is not so much religion that makes the character
of a people, as it is the people who determine the character of
their religion. Religion is only the resume of the national
ideas, thoughts, and character. Religion is nothing but an
expression. It is not, for instance, the word or the language
which creates the idea, but the idea which provokes the word into
existence. In the same way religion is only the expression of a
people's mentality. And yet a man's religion or philosophy, while
it is but the product of his own mind, exerts a reflex influence
upon his character. The child influences the parent, of whom it
is the offspring; language affects thought, of which, originally,
it was but the tool. So it is with religion. The Christian
religion, as soon as it got into power, turned the world about.
It struck at the Roman Empire, and grabbing everything it could
lay its hands on -- the sceptre, the sword, the imperial diadem,
the throne -- it walked away with them to Asia. We could never
ask for a more eloquent defense of the position that Christianity
is Asiatic than is found in this historic transfer of the seat of
power from Europe to Asia, from Rome to Constantinople.
Now, naturally enough, a religion which combats the culture and
traditions of European life in Europe, will not tolerate them in
Asia. Do we understand this point? If it seeks to down European
thought in Europe, how much more will it seek to expel it from
Asia? If it persecutes Socrates, Plato, Cicero, and Seneca in
Europe, it cannot, of course, tolerate them in Asia. Christianity
tried to destroy all the monuments of Paganism in Rome, in free
and proud Rome; could it, then, leave them standing in
Alexandria, in Constantinople, or in Antioch? On the contrary, in
Asia, which is her proper home, the seat of her power, and with
the Emperor transferred to Constantinople, Christianity became
more aggressive against Paganism and civilization than even in
Europe. Religion, like everything else, is consistent as long as
it is young and virile, and Christianity in the early centuries
was both young and virile, and therefore logical. Changing
slightly the great words of Shakespeare, we might say:
There is a logic which shapes our ends
Rough hew them as we may.
We wonder sometimes that a Japanese gentleman or an Arab, or a
Siamese, who has never mingled with Europeans or Americans,
should think as we do, or exhibit the polite manners of
occidental races. There are those who refuse to believe that a
Pagan, living three thousand years ago, could possess the very
virtues which we prize today. The sectarian who believes that
only people of the size and calibre of his creed can be good, is
at a loss to explain the universality of culture and virtue. This
is explained by his inability to perceive that there is a logic
in the development of the human being which brings about the same
results the world over -- before Christ, and after. Let us
appreciate this truth. How can a Moslem or a Jew or a Pagan be as
good as a Christian? By a law of nature and evolution the ripened
human fruit is the same the world over. If only Mohammedanism or
Christianity or Judaism possessed the power to make men good,
then there would be no morality outside these religions. But
history contradicts so sweeping a conclusion. There is a logic,
we repeat, in the culture of the mind which makes a Trajan, who
was a Pagan, as sweet and sane as a Washington, who was born in a
Christian era, or the Chinese Confucius, as noble and independent
as the French Voltaire. I say there is a universality in the
evolution of man, before which all sectarian pretenses and
conceits are like chaff for the wind to sport with. And we cannot
be really large-minded, nor can we read history and philosophy
aright, until we appreciate the power of the logic which shapes
our ends "rough hew them as we may."
The transference of the capital of the world and the seat of
authority from Europe to Asia was not an accident. It was a
logical step. Christianity, to be consistent, had to break up
housekeeping in Europe and move its menage from Rome to
Constantinople. She was homesick for the climate, the atmosphere,
the peoples, the traditions, the spirit, the institutions -- the
milieu in which she was born. Unable to assimilate western ideas,
she pined for Asia. By the same logic, she wished to wipe out in
Asia every trace of European thought and culture. When,
therefore, we read of the destruction of Pagan schools,
libraries, and monuments, let us not look upon such acts as
accidents in the history of Christianity, but as the logical
unfolding of its genius. Why, you may ask, does it no longer
pursue the policy of extermination? For the best of reasons; it
is no longer virile enough to be logical. It has stumbled into
the ways of inconsistency by reason of old age. Fifteen hundred
years ago, in Alexandria, when our religion was both young and
lusty, it attempted to, and succeeded in, destroying everything
that reminded the world of the glory and liberty of ancient Rome
and Greece.
Theodosius was at the time, of which we will now speak, the
Christian ruler of the Empire. In reply to a request by the
Archbishop of Alexandria, he sent a sentence of destruction
against the ancient religion of Egypt. Both the Pagans and the
Christians had assembled in the public square to hear the reading
of the Emperor's letter, and when the Christians learned that
they may destroy the gods of the Pagans, a wild shout of joy rent
the air. The disappointed Pagans, on the other hand, realizing
the danger of their position, silently slipped into their homes
through dark alleys and hidden passage-ways. Yet they did not
stand aside and see the temples of their gods razed to the ground
without first offering a desperate resistance. Under the
leadership of a zealot, Olympus, the Pagans fell upon the
Christians, maddened with the cry in their ears of their leader,
"Let us die with our gods!" Then came the turn of the Christians.
Theophilius, the Archbishop of Alexandria, with a cross in his
hand, and followed by his monks, marched upon the temple of
Serapis, and proceeded to pull its pillars down. When they came
to strike at the colossal statue of the god, for centuries
worshiped as a deity, even the Christians turned pale with
superstitious awe, and held their breath. A soldier armed with a
heavy axe, was hesitating to strike the first blow. Will the god
tolerate the insult? Will he not crash the roof upon the heads of
the sacrilegious vandals? But the soldier struck the thundering
blow right in the cheeks of Serapis, who offered no remonstrance
whatever. The sun shone as usual, and the laws of nature
maintained their even pace. Encouraged by this indifference of
the god to defend himself, the Christian rabble rushed upon the
statue, and pulling Serapis off his seat, dragged him in pieces
through the streets of Alexandria that the Pagans might behold
the disgrace into which their great god had fallen. Thousands of
Pagans, seeing how helpless their gods were to avenge this
insult, deserted Paganism and joined the Christians. As soon as
the ground of the temple was sufficiently cleared, a church was
erected on the ancient site. The Alexandrian library was the next
point of attack. Its shelves were soon cleared, and you and I,
and twenty centuries, were most lamentably deprived of the
intellectual treasures which our Greek and Roman forefathers had
bequeathed unto us.
When the archbishop under whose influence the monuments and
libraries of Pagan civilization were pillaged and pulled down
died, he was succeeded by his nephew, St. Cyril, who was even
more Asiatic in his sympathies and more hostile to European
thought than his uncle, Theophilius. The new archbishop directed
his efforts against the living monuments of Paganism -- the
scholars, the poets, the philosophers -- the men and women who
still cherished a passionate regard for the culture and
civilization of the Pagan world. The most illustrious
representative of Greco-Roman culture in Alexandria about this
time was Hypatia, the gifted daughter of Theon, a mathematician
and a philosopher of considerable renown. It is said that Theon
would have come down to us as a great man had not his daughter's
fame eclipsed his.
Hypatia was a remarkably gifted woman. Her example demonstrates
how all difficulties yield to a strong will. Being a girl, and
excluded by the conventions of the time from intellectual
pursuits, she could have given many reasons why she should leave
philosophy to stronger and freer minds. But she had an
all-compelling passion for the life of the mind, which overcame
every obstacle that interfered with her purpose. The example of a
young woman conquering tremendous difficulties, and becoming the
undisputed queen of an intellectual empire, ought to be a great
inspiration to us faint hearts. She won the prize which was
denied her sex, and became "the glory of her age and the wonder
of ours."
To pursue her studies, she persuaded her father to send her to
Athens, where her earnest work, her devotion to philosophy, the
readiness with which she sacrificed all her other interests to
the cultivation of her mind, earned for herself the laurel wreath
which the university of Athens conferred only upon the foremost
of its pupils. Hypatia wore this wreath whenever she appeared in
public, as her best ornament. Upon her return to Alexandria, she
was elected president of the Academy, which at this period was
the rendezvous of the leading minds of the East and West. In
fact, it was in this academy that the effort of the advanced
thinkers to bring about a pacification between the culture of
Europe and that of Asia originated. They wished to make
Alexandria, situated midway between the occident and the orient,
the point of confluence of the two streams of civilization. They
wished to celebrate the marriage of the East as bride to the West
as bridegroom. It was their plan to make Alexandria a sort of
intellectual distillery, refining and fusing the two
civilizations into one. But this amalgamation -- this
assimilation -- Christianity, alas, helped to prevent by bringing
into still bolder relief the Asiatic habits of mind, and by
refusing to concede an inch to the larger spirit of the West.
Christianity is responsible for the miscarriage which has ever
since left Asia a widow, or, to change the simile, a withered
branch upon the tree of civilization. Christianity broke the link
which scholarship and humanity were trying to forge between
Europe and Asia. The world has never since been one as it came
near being under the Roman Empire.
Cyril, the Archbishop of Alexandria, persuaded himself that
Hypatia's good name and talents were giving the cause of Paganism
a dangerous prestige, and thereby preventing the progress of the
new faith. Hypatia was indeed a great power in Alexandria. She
was the most popular personage in the city. When she appeared in
her chariot on the streets people threw flowers at her, applauded
her gifts, and cried, "Long live the daughter of Theon." Poets
called her the "Virgin of Heaven," "the spotless star," "of
highest speech the flower." Judging by the chronicles of the
times, it appears that her beauty, which would have made even a
Cleopatra jealous, was as great as her modesty, and both were
matched by her eloquence, and all three surpassed by her
learning.
Her beauty did astonish the survey of eyes,
Her words all ears took captive.
Her renown as a lecturer on philosophy brought students from
Rome and Athens, and all the great cities of the empire, to
Alexandria. It was one of the great events of each day to flock
to the hall in the academy where Hypatia explained Plato and
Aristotle. Cyril, the Asiatic archbishop, passing frequently the
house of Hypatia, and seeing the long train of horses, litters,
and chariots which had brought a host of admirers to the female
philosopher's shrine, conceived a terrible hatred for this Pagan
girl. He did not relish her popularity. Her learning was rubbish
to him. Her charms, temptations for the ruin of man. He hated her
because she, a frail woman, dared to be free and to think for
herself. He argued in his mind that she was competing with
Christianity, taking away from Christ the homage which belonged
to him. With Hypatia out of the way the people would turn to God,
and give him the love and honor which they were wasting upon her.
She was robbing God of his rights, and she must fall; for He is a
jealous God. Such was the reasoning of Cyril, whom the Church has
canonized.
Moreover, Orestes, the Prefect of Alexandria, respected Hypatia,
and was a constant attendant at her lectures. Cyril believed that
she influenced the Prefect and tainted him with her Paganism.
With Hypatia crushed, Orestes would be more responsive to
Christian influences. Ah, it is a cruel story which I am about to
unfold. Generally speaking, if a man is jealous and small, no
religion can make him sweet; and if he is generous and
pure-minded, no superstition can altogether poison the springs of
his love. Religion is strong, but nature is stronger.
Unfortunately Cyril was a barbarian, and the doctrines of his
religion only sharpened his claws and whipped his passion into a
rage.
If we were living in those days we would have witnessed at the
close of each day, when both sea and sky blush with the departing
kiss of the sun, Hypatia mounting her chariot to ride to the
academy, where she is announced to speak on some philosophical
subject. She is followed by many enthusiastic and devoted
admirers impatient to catch her eye. She is nodding to her
friends on her right and on her left. She, who refused lovers
that she may love philosophy, is not insensible to the
appreciation of her pupils. Approaching the academy, she
dismounts, ascends the white marble steps and enters by the door,
on either side of which sit two silent sphinxes. As we follow her
into the hall, we see that it is lighted by numerous swinging
lamps filled with perfumed oil; the rotunda of the ceiling has
been embellished by a Greek artist, with figures of Jupiter and
his divine companions, who appear to be rapt in the words which
fall from his lips. The walls have been decorated by Egyptian
artists, with pictures of the sacred animals, the crocodile, the
cat, the cow, and the dog; and with sacred vegetables, the onion,
the lotus, and the laurel. Besides these there is a scene on the
walls representing the marriage of Osiris and Isis. On an
elevated platform is a divan in purple velvet, and upon a little
table is placed the silver statue of Minerva, goddess of wisdom
and patron of Hypatia. Behind the table sits the philosophic
young woman dressed in a robe of white, fastened about her throat
and waist by a band of pearls, and carrying upon her brow the
laurel crown which Athens had decreed to her. A musical murmur
sweeps over the audience as she rises to her feet. But in a
moment all is silent again save the throbbing and trembling of
Hypatia's silvery voice. She speaks in Greek, the language of
thought and beauty, of the ancient world. Alas! this is her last
appearance at the academy. Tomorrow that hall will be a tomb.
Tomorrow Minerva will be childless. When Hypatia's listeners bade
her farewell on that evening they did not know that within a few
hours they would all become orphans.
The next morning, when Hypatia appeared in her chariot in front
of her residence, suddenly five hundred men, all dressed in black
and cowled, five hundred half-starved monks from the sands of the
Egyptian desert -- five hundred monks, soldiers of the cross --
like a black hurricane, swooped down the street, boarded her
chariot, and, pulling her off her seat, dragged her by the hair
of her head into a -- how shall I say the word? -- into a church!
Some historians intimate that the monks asked her to kiss the
cross, to become a Christian and join the nunnery, if she wished
her life spared. At any rate, these monks, under the leadership
of St. Cyril's right-hand man, Peter the Reader, shamefully
stripped her naked, and there, close to the alter and the cross,
scraped her quivering flesh from her bones with oystershells. The
marble floor of the church was sprinkled with her warm blood. The
alter, the cross, too, were bespattered, owing to the violence
with which her limbs were torn, while the hands of the monks
presented a sight too revolting to describe. The mutilated body,
upon which the murderers feasted their fanatic hate, was then
flung into the flames.
Oh! is there a blacker deed in human annals? When has another
man or woman been so inhumanly murdered? Has politics, has
commerce, has cannibalism even committed a more cruel crime? The
cannibal pleads hunger to cover his cruelty -- what excuse had
Hypatia's murderers? Even Joan of Arc was more fortunate in her
death than this daughter of Paganism! Beautiful woman! murdered
by men who were not worthy to touch the hem of thy garment! And
to think that this happened in a church -- a Christian
church!
I have seen the frost bite the flower; I have watched the spider
trap the fly; I have seen the serpent spring upon the bird! And
yet I love nature! But I will never enter a church nor profess a
religion which can commit such a deed against so lovable a woman.
No, not even if I were offered as a bribe eternal life! If, O
priests and preachers! instead of one hell, there were a
thousand, and each hell more infernal than your creeds describe,
yet I would sooner they would all swallow me up, and feast their
insatiable lust upon my poor bones for ever and ever, than lend
countenance or support to an institution upon which history has
fastened the indelible stigma of Hypatia's murder!
I wish I could live a thousand years to admire the noble spirit
and delight in the courage and beauty of this brave martyr of
Philosophy, Hypatia! O that my voice were strong enough to reach
the ends of the world! I would then summon all independent minds
to join with me in a hymn of praise to that incomparable woman,
who has joined the choir invisible and
Whose music is the gladness of the world.
Honor and love to beautiful Hypatia!
Pity to the monks who killed her! A delicious feeling of
satisfaction, like a warm sunshine on a wintry day, spreads over
me as I contemplate the privilege I am enjoying of vindicating
her memory against her assassins. Fortune has smiled upon me in
selecting me as one of her defenders. I congratulate myself on
having both the heart and the head to weep over her sad fate. And
I tremble and shrink, as from a paralyzing nightmare, when I
think that, under different circumstances, I might still have a
minister of the Church whose hands are, after fifteen hundred
years, still unwashed of her innocent blood. The thought
overpowers me; I labor for breath. But I am free. O joy, O
rapture! I am free to speak the truth about Hypatia. Let the
clergy praise Peter and Paul, St. Cyril and St. Theophilius. I
give my heart to thee, thou glorious victim of superstition!
If we, of this present generation, are responsible for Adam's
sin, and deserve the penalties of his disobedience, as the clergy
say we do, then the Church of today is responsible for Hypatia's
fate. How will they take this practical application of their own
dogma? It will not do for them to say: "We wash our hands clean
of St. Cyril's sin"; for if Adam can, by his remote act, expose
us all to damnation, so shall Bishop Cyril's dark deed cleave for
ever unto the religion which his followers profess. Yet, let the
Church people apologize, and we shall forgive them; but no
apology short of discarding this Asiatic slave-creed, which in
the Old Testament stoned the free thinker to death, and in the
New pronounces him a "heathen and a publican," will satisfy the
ends of justice.
I have intimated, by the wording of my subject, that it was a
classic world which was murdered in the person of one of its last
and noblest representatives, Hypatia. Hypatia embodied in her
life and teaching, the proud spirit, the beauty, the culture, and
the sanity of Greece. With her, fell Greece; fell the
intellectual world from her eminence.
Then followed the nearly ten centuries of Egyptian darkness,
which settling over Europe, paralyzed all initiative. During the
thousand years in which the spirit of St. Cyril and his Church
managed, with undisputed sway, the affairs of religion and the
State, night folded to its sterile bosom our orphaned humanity,
and the chains of slavery were upon every mind. A cloud of dust
rising heaven-high choked the flow and dried up the fountains
which had, in the days of Pericles and Antoninus, poured forth a
world of living waters. The barren and lumbering theology of the
Church crowded out the Muses from their earthly walks, and the
world became a prison after having been the home of man. One by
one the great lights went out; Athens was no more, Rome was dead.
The bloom had vanished from the face of the earth, and in its
place there fell upon it the awful shadow of a future hell.
Symonds, in his "The Greek Poets," says that while Cyril's mobs
were dismembering Hypatia, the Greek authors went on creating,
"Musaeus sang the lamentable death of Leander, and Nonnus was
perfecting a new and more polished form of the hexameter." These
authors, ignorant that the Asiatic superstition had destroyed
their world, or that they had themselves been stabbed to death --
like one who has been shot, but whose wound is still warm, and
who does not know that he has but a few more breaths to draw --
kept on singing their song. But their song was, indeed, the "very
swan's notes" of the classical world. "With the story of Hero and
Leander, that immortal love poem, the Muse," says the same
author, "took her final farewell of her beloved Hellas."
After a thousand years of night, when the world awoke from her
sleep, the first song it sang was the last long of the dying
Pagan world. This is wonderfully strange. In the year 1493, when
the Renaissance ushered in a new era, the first book brought out
in Europe was the last book written in Alexandria by a Pagan. It
was the poem of Hero and Leander. The new world resumed the
golden thread where the old world had lost it. The severed
streams of thought and beauty met again into one current, and
began to sing and shine as it rushed forth once more, as in the
days of old. A Greek poem was the last product of the Pagan
world; the same Greek poem was the first product of the new and
renascent world.
Between the dying and reviving Pagan world was the Christian
Church -- that is to say, ten dark centuries.
If Greece and Rome made art, poetry, philosophy, sculpture, the
drama, oratory, beauty, (and) liberty classical, (then)
Christianity the Syrian, Asiatic cult made for nearly fifteen
hundred years persecution, religious wars, massacres, theological
feuds and bloodshed, heresy huntings and heretic burnings,
prisons, dungeons, anathemas, curses, opposition to science,
hatred of liberty, spiritual bondage, the life without love or
laughter, a classic!
But the dawn is in the sky, and it is daybreak everywhere!
We are reasonably confident that never again will this religion,
born and bred in Asia, command sufficient influence over the
minds of modern men to burn or murder the intellectual
aristocrats, the daily beauty of whose lives makes the ugliness
of superstition so very noticeable. What a difference there would
have been in our attitude toward the Christian Church, if,
instead of fearing the thinker and the inquirer, and persecuting
him with a hatred too awful to contemplate, it had opened both
its arms to welcome him with affection and gratitude! But the
"divine" is always jealous of the human. Hypatia eclipsed the
glory of God. She was murdered because only "the poor in spirit"
-- the intellectual babes, are the elect of Heaven.
It is good news, however, that while the Church may still
exclude the mental giants from the world to come, it can no
longer exclude them from the world that now is!
Mangasar Mugurditch Mangasarian 1859-1943, Mangasarian's
lectures Chicago : s.n., 1912-1919 (v. ; 22 cm) Series:
Rationalist (Independent Religious Society of Chicago), v.
1-4