Tacitus' Germania
Page 2
11.
Affairs of smaller moment the chiefs determine: about matters of higher
consequence the whole nation deliberates; yet in such sort, that whatever depends
upon the pleasure and decision of the people, is examined and discussed by the
chiefs. Where no accident or emergency intervenes, they assemble upon stated
days, either, when the moon changes, or is full: since they believe such seasons
to be the most fortunate for beginning all transactions. Neither in reckoning
of time do they count, like us, the number of days but that of nights. In this
style their ordinances are framed, in this style their diets appointed; and
with them the night seems to lead and govern the day. From their extensive liberty
this evil and default flows, that they meet not at once, nor as men commanded
and afraid to disobey; so that often the second day, nay often the third, is
consumed through the slowness of the members in assembling. They sit down as
they list, promiscuously, like a crowd, and all armed. It is by the Priests
that silence is enjoined, and with the power of correction the Priests are then
invested. Then the King or Chief is heard, as are others, each according to
his precedence in age, or in nobility, or in warlike renown, or in eloquence;
and the influence of every speaker proceeds rather from his ability to persuade
than from any authority to command. If the proposition displease, they reject
it by an inarticulate murmur: if it be pleasing, they brandish their javelins.
The most honourable manner of signifying their assent, is to express their applause
by the sound of their arms.
12.
In the assembly it is allowed to present accusations, and to prosecute capital
offences. Punishments vary according to the quality of the crime. Traitors and
deserters they hang upon trees. Cowards, and sluggards, and unnatural prostitutes
they smother in mud and bogs under an heap of hurdles. Such diversity in their
executions has this view, that in punishing of glaring iniquities, it behoves
likewise to display them to sight; but effeminacy and pollution must be buried
and concealed. In lighter transgressions too the penalty is measured by the
fault, and the delinquents upon conviction are condemned to pay a certain number
of horses or cattle. Part of this mulct accrues to the King or the community,
part to him whose wrongs are vindicated, or to his next kindred. In the same
assemblies are also chosen their chiefs or rulers, such as administer justice
in their villages and boroughs. To each of these are assigned an hundred persons
chosen from amongst the populace, to accompany and assist him, men who help
him at once with their authority and their counsel.
13.
Without being armed they traisact nothing, whether of public or private
concernment. But it is repugnant to their custom for any man to use arms, before
the community has attested his capacity to wield them. Upon such testimonial,
either one of the rulers, or his father, or some kinsman dignify the young man
in the midst of the assembly, with a shield and javelin. This amongst them is
the manly robe, this the first degree of honour conferred upon their youth.
Before this they seem no more than part of a private family, but thenceforward
part of the Commonweal. The princely dignity they confer even upon striplings,
whose race is eminently noble, or whose fathers have done great and signal services
to the State. For about the rest, who are more vigorous and long since tried,
they crowd to attend: nor is it any shame to be seen amongst the followers of
these. Nay, there are lilkewise degrees of followers, higher or lower, just
as he whom they follow judges fit. Mighty too is the emulation amongst these
followers, of each to be first in favour with his Prince; mighty also the emulation
of the Princes, to excel in the number and valour of followers. This is their
principal state, this their chief force, to be at all times surrounded with
a huge band of chosen young men, for ornament and glory in peace, for security
and defence in war. Nor is it amongst his own people only, but even from the
neighbouring communities, that any of their Princes reaps so much renown and
a name so great, when he surpasses in the number and magnanimity of his followers.
For such are courted by Embassies, and distinguished with presents, and by the
terror of their fame alone often dissipate wars.
14.
In the day of battle, it is scandalous to the Prince to be surpassed in
feats of bravery, scandalous to his followers to fail in matching the bravery
of the Prince. But it is infamy during life, and indelible reproach, to return
alive from a battle where their Prince was slain. To preserve their Prince,
to defend him, and to ascribe to his glory all their own valorous deeds, is
the sum and most sacred part of their oath. The Princes fight for victory; for
the Prince his followers fight. Many of the young nobility, when their own community
comes to languish in its vigour by long peace and inactivity, betake themselves
through impatience to other States which then prove to be in war. For, besides
that this people cannot brook repose, besides that by perilous adventures they
more quickly blazon their fame, they cannot otherwise than by violence and war
support their huge train of retainers. For from the liberality of their Prince,
they demand and enjoy that war-horse of theirs, with that victorious javelin
dyed in the blood of their enemies. In the place of pay, they are supplied with
a daily table and repasts; though grossly prepared, yet very profuse. For maintaining
such liberality and munificence, a fund is furnished by continual wars and plunder.
Nor could you so easily persuade them to cultivate the ground, or to await the
return of the seasons and produce of the year, as to provoke the foe and to
risk wounds and death: since stupid and spiritless they account it, to acquire
by their sweat what they can gain by their blood.
15.
Upon any recess from war, they do not much attend the chase. Much more of
their time they pass in indolence, resigned to sleep and
repasts.(4) All the most brave, all the most warlike,
apply to nothing at all; but to their wives, to the ancient men, and to every
the most impotent domestic, trust all the care of their house, and of their
lands and possessions. They themselves loiter. (5)
Such is the amazing diversity of their nature, that in the same men is found
so much delight in sloth, with so much enmity to tranquillity and repose. The
communities are wont, of their own accord and man by man, to bestow upon their
Princes a certain number of beasts, or a certain portion of grain; a contribution
which passes indeed for a mark of reverence and honour, but serves also to supply
their necessities. They chiefly rejoice in the gifts which come from the bordering
countries, such as are sent not only by particulars but in the name of the State;
curious horses, splendid armour, rich harness, with collars of silver and gold.
Now too they have learnt, what we have taught them, to receive money.
16.
That none of the several people in Germany live together in cities, is abundantly
known; nay, that amongst them none of their dwellings are suffered to be contiguous.
They inhabit apart and distinct, just as a fountain, or a field, or a wood happened
to invite them to settle. They raise their villages in opposite rows, but not
in our manner with the houses joined one to another. Every man has a vacant
space quite round his own, whether for security against accidents from fire,
or that they want the art of building. With them in truth, is unknown even the
use of mortar and of tiles. In all their structures they employ materials quite
gross and unhewn, void of fashion and comeliness. Some parts they besmear with
an earth so pure and resplendent, that it resembles painting and colours. They
are likewise wont to scoop caves deep in the ground, and over them to lay great
heaps of dung. Thither they retire for shelter in the winter, and thither convey
their grain: for by such close places they mollify the rigorous and excessive
cold. Besides when at any time their enemy invades them, he can only ravage
the open country, but either knows not such recesses as are invisible and subterraneous;
or must suffer them to escape him, on this very account that he is uncertain
where to find them.
17.
For their covering a mantle is what they all wear, fastened with a clasp
or, for want of it, with a thorn. As far as this reaches not they are naked,
and lie whole days before the fire. The most wealthy are distinguished with
a vest, not one large and flowing like those of Sarmatians and Parthians, but
girt close about them and expressing the proportion of every limb. They likewise
wear the skins of savage beasts, a dress which those bordering upon the Rhine
use without any fondness or delicacy, but about which such who live further
in the country are more curious, as void of all apparel introduced by commerce.
They choose certain wild beasts, and, having flayed them, diversify their hides
with many spots, as also with the skins of monsters from the deep, such as are
engendered in the distant ocean and in seas unknown. Neither does the dress
of the women differ from that of the men, save that the women are orderly attired
in linen embroidered with purple, and use no sleeves, so that all their arms
are bare. The upper part of their breast is withal exposed.
18.
Yet the laws of matrimony are severely observed there; nor in the whole
of their manners is aught more praiseworthy than this: for they are almost the
only Barbarians contented with one wife, excepting a very few amongst them;
men of dignity who marry divers wives, from no wantonness or lubricity, but
courted for the lustre of their family into many alliances.
To the husband, the wife tenders no dowry; but the husband, to the wife. The
parents and relations attend and declare their approbation of the presents,
not presents adapted to feminine pomp and delicacy, nor such as serve to deck
the new married woman; but oxen and horse accoutred, and a shield, with a javelin
and sword. By virtue of these gifts, she is espoused. She too on her part brings
her husband some arms. This they esteem the highest tie, these the holy mysteries,
and matrimonial Gods. That the woman may not suppose herself free from the considerations
of fortitude and fighting, or exempt from the casualties of war, the very first
solemnities of her wedding serve to warn her, that she comes to her husband
as a partner in his hazards and fatigues, that she is to suffer alike with him,
to adventure alike, during peace or during war. This the oxen joined in the
same yoke plainly indicate, this the horse ready equipped, this the present
of arms. 'Tis thus she must be content to live, thus to resign life. The arms
which she then receives she must preserve inviolate, and to her sons restore
the same, as presents worthy of them, such as their wives may again receive,
and still resign to her grandchildren.
19.
They therefore live in a state of chastity well secured; corrupted by no
seducing shows and public diversions, by no irritations from banqueting. Of
learning and of any secret intercourse by letters, they are all equally ignorant,
men and women. Amongst a people so numerous, adultery is exceeding rare; a crime
instantly punished, and the punishment left to be inflicted by the husband.
He, having cut off her hair, expells her from his house naked, in presence of
her kindred, and pursues her with stripes throughout the village. For, to a
woman who has prostituted her person, no pardon is ever granted. However beautiful
she be, however young, however abounding in wealth, a husband she can never
find. In truth, nobody turns vices into mirth there, nor is the practice of
corrupting and of yielding to corruption, called the custom of the Age. Better
still do those communities, in which none but virgins marry, and where to a
single marriage all their views and inclinations are at once confined. Thus,
as they have but one body and one life, they take but one husband, that beyond
him they may have no thought, no further wishes, nor love
him only as their husband but as their marriage.(6) To
restrain generation and the increase of children, is esteemed an abominable
sin, as also to kill infants newly born. And more powerful with them are good
manners, than with other people are good laws.
20.
In all their houses the children are reared naked and nasty; and thus grow
into those limbs, into that bulk, which with marvel we behold. They are all
nourished with the milk of their own mothers, and never surrendered to handmaids
and nurses. The lord you cannot discern from the slave, by any superior delicacy
in rearing. Amongst the same cattle they promiscuously live, upon the same ground
they without distinction lie, till at a proper age the free-born are parted
from the rest, and their bravery recommend them to notice. Slow and late do
the young men come to the use of women, and thus very long preserve the vigour
of youth. Neither are the virgins hastened to wed. They must both have the same
sprightly youth, the like stature, and marry when equal and able-bodied. Thus
the robustness of the parents is inherited by the children. Children are holden
in the same estimation with their mother's brother, as with their father. Some
hold this tie of blood to be most inviolable and binding, and in receiving of
hostages, such pledges are most considered and claimed, as they who at once
possess affections the most unalienable, and the most diffuse interest in their
family. To every man, however, his own children are heirs and successors: wills
they make none: for want of children his next akin inherits; his own brothers,
those of his father, or those of his mother. To ancient men, the more they abound
in descendants; in relations and affinities, so much the more favour and reverence
accrues. From being childless, no advantage nor estimation is derived.
ENDNOTES:
(4) "Dediti somno, ciboque:"
handed over to sloth and gluttony. Back
(5) Are rude and lazy. Back
(6) "Sed tamquam matrimonium ament." Back
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