Again said Ioasaph, “The Lord
God prosper thee, O thou Wisest of men! For thou
hast gladdened my soul with thine apt and excellent
sayings. Wherefore sketch me yet another picture
of the vanity of the world, and how a man may pass
through it in peace and safety.”
Barlaam took up his parable and said,
“Hear then a similitude of this matter too.
I once heard tell of a great city whose citizens had,
from old time, the custom of taking some foreigner
and stranger, who knew nothing of their laws and traditions,
and of making him their king, to enjoy absolute power,
and follow his own will and pleasure without hindrance,
until the completion of a year. Then suddenly,
while he was living with never a care in rioting and
wantonness, without fear, and alway supposing that
his reign would only terminate with his life, they
would rise up against him, strip him bare of his royal
robes, lead him in triumph up and down the city, and
thence dispatch him beyond their borders into a distant
great island; there, for lack of food and raiment,
in hunger and nakedness he would waste miserably away,
the luxury and pleasure so unexpectedly showered upon
him changed as unexpectedly into woe. In accordance
therefore with the unbroken custom of these citizens,
a certain man was ordained to the kingship. But
his mind was fertile of understanding, and he was not
carried away by this sudden access of prosperity,
nor did he emulate the heedlessness of the kings that
had gone before him, and had been miserably expelled,
but his soul was plunged in care and trouble how he
might order his affairs well. After long and
careful search, he learned from a wise counsellor
the custom of the citizens, and the place of perpetual
banishment, and was taught of him without guile how
to ensure himself against this fate. So with
this knowledge that within a very little while he
must reach that island and leave to strangers this
chance kingdom among strangers, he opened the treasures
whereof he had awhile absolute and unforbidden use,
and took a great store of money and huge masses of
gold and silver and precious stones and delivered
the same to trusty servants and sent them before him
to the island whither he was bound. When the
appointed year came to an end, the citizens rose against
him, and sent him naked into banishment like those
that went before him. But while the rest of these
foolish kings, kings only for a season, were sore
anhungred, he, that had timely deposited his wealth,
passed his time in continual plenty mid dainties free
of expense, and, rid of all fear of those mutinous
and evil citizens, could count himself happy on his
wise forethought.
“Understand thou, therefore,
that the city is this vain and deceitful world; that
the citizens are the principalities and powers of the
devils, the rulers of the darkness of this world, who
entice us by the soft bait of pleasure, and counsel
us to consider corruptible and perishable things as
incorruptible, as though the enjoyment that cometh
from them were co-existent with us, and immortal as
we. Thus then are we deceived; we have taken
no thought concerning the things which are abiding
and eternal, and have laid up in store for ourselves
no treasure for that life beyond, when of a sudden
there standeth over us the doom of death. Then,
then at last do those evil and cruel citizens of darkness,
that received us, dispatch us stript of all worldly
goods, for all our time has been wasted
on their service and carry us off ’to
a dark land and a gloomy, to a land of eternal darkness,
where there is no light, nor can one behold the life
of men.’ As for that good counsellor,
who made known all the truth and taught that sagacious
and wise king the way of salvation, understand thou
that I, thy poor and humble servant, am he, who am
come hither for to shew thee the good and infallible
way to lead thee to things eternal and unending, and
to counsel thee to lay up all thy treasure there;
and I am come to lead thee away from the error of
this world, which, to my woe, I also loved, and clave
to its pleasures and delights. But, when I perceived,
with the unerring eyes of my mind how all human life
is wasted in these things that come and go; when I
saw that no man hath aught that is stable and steadfast,
neither the rich in his wealth, nor the mighty in
his strength, nor the wise in his wisdom, nor the prosperous
in his prosperity, nor the luxurious in his wantonness,
nor he that dreameth of security of life in that vain
and feeble security of his dreams, nor any man in
any of those things that men on earth commend (’tis
like the boundless rush of torrents that discharge
themselves into the deep sea, thus fleeting and temporary
are all present things); then, I say, I understood
that all such things are vanity, and that their enjoyment
is naught; and, that even as the past is all buried
in oblivion, be it past glory, or past kingship, or
the splendour of rank, or amplitude of power, or arrogance
of tyranny, or aught else like them, so also present
things will vanish in the darkness of the days to come.
And, as I am myself of the present, I also shall
doubtless be subject to its accustomed change; and,
even as my fathers before me were not allowed to take
delight for ever in the present world, so also shall
it be with me. For I have observed how this
tyrannical and troublesome world treateth mankind,
shifting men hither and thither, from wealth to poverty,
and from poverty to honour, carrying some out of life
and bringing others in, rejecting some that are wise
and understanding, making the honourable and illustrious
dishonoured and despised, but seating others who are
unwise and of no understanding upon a throne of honour,
and making the dishonoured and obscure to be honoured
of all.
“One may see how the race of
mankind may never abide before the face of the cruel
tyranny of the world. But, as when a dove fleeing
from an eagle or a hawk flitteth from place to place,
now beating against this tree, now against that bush,
and then anon against the clefts of the rocks and
all manner of bramble-thorns, and, nowhere finding
any safe place of refuge, is wearied with continual
tossing and crossing to and fro, so are they which
are flustered by the present world. They labour
painfully under unreasoning impulse, on no sure or
firm bases: they know not to what goal they are
driving, nor whither this vain life leadeth them this
vain life, whereto they have in miserable folly subjected
themselves, choosing evil instead of good, and pursuing
vice instead of goodness; and they know not who shall
inherit the cold fruits of their many heavy labours,
whether it be a kinsman or a stranger, and, as oft
times it haps, not even a friend or acquaintance at
all, but an enemy and foeman.
“On all these things, and others
akin to them, I held judgement in the tribunal of
my soul, and I came to hate my whole life that had
been wasted in these vanities, while I still lived
engrossed in earthly things. But when I had
put off from my soul the lust thereof, and cast it
from me, then was there revealed unto me the true good,
to fear God and do his will; for this I saw to be
the sum of all good. This also is called the
beginning of wisdom, and perfect wisdom. For
life is without pain and reproach to those that hold
by her, and safe to those who lean upon her as upon
the Lord. So, when I had set my reason on the
unerring way of the commandments of the Lord, and had
surely learned that there is nothing froward or perverse
therein, and that it is not full of chasms and rocks,
nor of thorns and thistles, but lieth altogether smooth
and even, rejoicing the eyes of the traveller with
the brightest sights, making beautiful his feet, and
shoeing them with ‘the preparation of the Gospel
of peace,’ that he may walk safely and without
delay, this way, then, I rightly chose above all others,
and began to rebuild my soul’s habitation, which
had fallen into ruin and decay.
“In such wise was I devising
mine estate, and establishing mine unstable mind,
when I heard the words of a wise teacher calling loudly
to me thus, ‘Come ye out,’ said he, ’all
ye that will to be saved. Be ye separate from
the vanity of the world, for the fashion thereof quickly
passeth away, and behold it shall not be. Come
ye out, without turning back, not for nothing and
without reward, but winning supplies for travelling
to life eternal, for ye are like to journey a long
road, needing much supplies from hence, and ye shall
arrive at the place eternal that hath two regions,
wherein are many mansions; one of which places God
hath prepared for them that love him and keep his
commandments, full of all manner of good things; and
they that attain thereto shall live for ever in incorruption,
enjoying immortality without death, where pain and
sorrow and sighing are fled away. But the other
place is full of darkness and tribulation and pain,
prepared for the devil and his angels, wherein also
shall be cast they who by evil deeds have deserved
it, who have bartered the incorruptible and eternal
for the present world, and have made themselves fuel
for eternal fire.’
“When I heard this voice, and
recognized the truth, I did my diligence to attain
to that abode, that is free from all pain and sorrow,
and full of security and all good things, whereof
I have knowledge now only in part, being but a babe
in my spiritual life, and seeing the sights yonder
as through mirrors and riddles; but when that which
is perfect is come, and I shall see face to face,
then that which is in part shall be done away.
Wherefore I thank God through Jesus Christ our Lord;
for the law of the Spirit of life in Christ Jesus
hath made me free from the law of sin and of death,
and hath opened mine eyes to see clearly that the
will of the flesh is death, but the will of the Spirit
is life and peace. And even as I did discern
the vanity of present things and hate them with a
perfect hatred, so likewise I counsel thee to decide
thereon, that thou mayest treat them as something alien
and quickly passing away, and mayest remove all thy
store from earth and lay up for thyself in the incorruptible
world a treasure that can not be stolen, wealth inexhaustible,
in that place whither thou must shortly fare, that
when thou comest thither thou mayest not be destitute,
but be laden with riches, after the manner of that
aptest of parables that I lately showed thee.”