4 Maccabees 9
1 Why delayest thou, O tyrant? for we
are readier to die than to transgress the injunctions of our fathers.
2 And we should be disgracing our
fathers if we did not obey the law, and take knowledge for our guide.
3 O tyrant, counsellor of
law-breaking, do not, hating us as thou dost, pity us more than we pity
ourselves. 4 For we account your pity
of us on the terms of unlawful escape to be worse than death.
5 And you think to scare us, by
threatening us with death by tortures, as though thou hadst learned nothing by
the death of Eleazar. 6 But if aged
men of the Hebrews have died in the cause of religion after enduring torture,
more rightly should we younger men die, scorning your cruel tortures, which
our aged instructor overcame.
7 Make the attempt, then, O tyrant;
and if thou puttest us to death for our religion, think not that thou harmest
us by torturing us. 8 For we through
this ill-treatment and endurance shall bear off the rewards of virtue.
9 But thou, for the wicked and
despotic slaughter of us, shalt, from the Divine vengeance, endure eternal
torture by fire.
10 When they had thus spoken, the
tyrant was not only exasperated against them as being refractory, but enraged
with them as being ungrateful. 11 So
that, at his bidding, the torturers brought forth the eldest of them, and
tearing through his tunic, bound his hands and arms on each side with thongs.
12 And when they had laboured hard
without effect in scourging him, they hurled him upon the wheel.
13 And the noble youth, extended upon
this, became dislocated. 14 And with
every member disjointed, he exclaimed in expostulation,
15 O most accursed tyrant, and enemy
of heavenly justice, and cruel-hearted, I am no murderer, nor sacrilegious
man, whom thou thus ill-usest; but a defender of the Divine law.
16 And when the spearmen said,
Consent to eat, that you may be released from your tortures,—
17 he answered, Not so powerful, O
accursed ministers, is your wheel, as to stifle my reasoning; cut my limbs,
and burn my flesh, and twist my joints.
18 For through all my torments I will
convince you that the children of the Hebrews are alone unconquered in behalf
of virtue.
19 While he was saying this, they
heaped up fuel, and setting fire to it, strained him upon the wheel still
more. 20 And the wheel was defiled
all over with blood, and the hot ashes were quenched by the droppings of gore,
and pieces of flesh were scattered about the axles of the machine.
21 And although the framework of his
bones was now destroyed, the high-minded and Abrahamic youth did not groan.
22 But, as though transformed by fire
into immortality, he nobly endured the rackings, saying,
23 Imitate me, O brethren, nor ever
desert your station, nor abjure my brotherhood in courage: fight the holy and
honourable fight of religion; 24 by
which means our just and paternal Providence, becoming merciful to the nation,
will punish the pestilent tyrant.
25 And saying this, the revered youth
abruptly closed his life.
26 And when all admired his
courageous soul, the spearmen brought forward him who was second in point of
age, and having put on iron hands, bound him with pointed hooks to the
catapelt. 27 And when, on enquiring
whether he would eat before he was tortured, they heard his noble sentiment,
28 after they with the iron hands had
violently dragged all the flesh from the neck to the chin, the panther-like
beasts tore off the very skin of his head: but he, bearing with firmness this
misery, said, 29 How sweet is every
form of death for the religion of our fathers! and he said to the tyrant,
30 Thinkest thou not, most cruel of
all tyrants, that thou art now tortured more than I, finding thy overweening
conception of tyranny conquered by our patience in behalf of our religion?
31 For I lighten my suffering by the
pleasures which are connected with virtue.
32 But thou art tortured with
threatenings for impiety; and thou shalt not escape, most corrupt tyrant, the
vengeance of Divine wrath.