The Fourth Book of the Maccabees

capítulo 11


Capítulos:


verso 1

When he had died, disfigured in his torments, the fifth leaped forward, and said,


verso 2

“I don’t intend, O tyrant, to get excused from the torment which is on behalf of virtue.


verso 3

But I have come of my own accord, that by my death you may owe heavenly vengeance and punishment for more crimes.


verso 4

O you hater of virtue and of men, what have we done that you thus revel in our blood?


verso 5

Does it seem evil to you that we worship the Founder of all things, and live according to his surpassing law?


verso 6

But this is worthy of honors, not torments,


verso 7

if you had been capable of the higher feelings of men, and possessed the hope of salvation from God.


verso 8

Behold now, being alien from God, you make war against those who are religious toward God.”


verso 9

As he said this, the spearbearers bound him and drew him to the rack,


verso 10

to which binding him at his knees, and fastening them with iron fetters, they bent down his loins upon the wedge of the wheel; and his body was then dismembered, scorpion-fashion.


verso 11

With his breath thus confined, and his body strangled, he said,


verso 12

“A great favor you bestow upon us, O tyrant, by enabling us to manifest our adherence to the law by means of nobler sufferings.”


verso 13

He also being dead, the sixth, quite a youth, was brought out. On the tyrant asking him whether he would eat and be delivered, he said,


verso 14

“I am indeed younger than my brothers, but in understanding I am as old;


verso 15

for having been born and reared to the same end. We are bound to die also on behalf of the same cause.


verso 16

So that if you think it is proper to torment us for not eating the unclean, then torment!”


verso 17

As he said this, they brought him to the wheel.


verso 18

Extended upon this, with limbs racked and dislocated, he was gradually roasted from beneath.


verso 19

Having heated sharp spits, they approached them to his back; and having transfixed his sides, they burned away his entrails.


verso 20

He, while tormented, said, “O good and holy contest, in which for the sake of religion, we kindred have been called to the arena of pain, and have not been conquered.


verso 21

For religious understanding, O tyrant, is unconquered.


verso 22

Armed with upright virtue, I also will depart with my kindred.


verso 23

I, too, bearing with me a great avenger, O inventor of tortures, and enemy of the truly pious.


verso 24

We six youths have destroyed your tyranny.


verso 25

For isn’t your inability to overrule our reasoning, and to compel us to eat the unclean, your destruction?


verso 26

Your fire is cold to us. Your racks are painless, and your violence harmless.


verso 27

For the guards not of a tyrant but of a divine law are our defenders. Through this we keep our reasoning unconquered.”

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