Nilus of Ancyra→Beryllus|c. 415 AD|nilus ancyra|From Ancyra|AI-assisted
To Beryllus the Monk.
Who, then, among those of sound mind would wish to be drenched all over with filth? Who, then, among those who reason rightly would want to breathe in the stench of rotting matter, and to long for the maggots, and to be fond of the foul-smelling, befouled streams? Who could ever endure to sit beside the outlet of the privies, and beside the channels of the city's unclean sewers, and to look continually upon human excrement and loathsome refuse, and to take hold of foul-smelling slops and drains filled with every kind of stench? Who, then, would consent to descend each day into a pit of misery and into mire of destruction, as it is written? [Psalm 39:3 LXX / 40:2] Who, then, among those who hold right belief in the Divine would ever choose to give himself up to the rottenness of Callinice in keeping with your folly?
Who, then, among those of sound mind would wish to be drenched all over with filth? Who, then, among those who reason rightly would want to breathe in the stench of rotting matter, and to long for the maggots, and to be fond of the foul-smelling, befouled streams? Who could ever endure to sit beside the outlet of the privies, and beside the channels of the city's unclean sewers, and to look continually upon human excrement and loathsome refuse, and to take hold of foul-smelling slops and drains filled with every kind of stench? Who, then, would consent to descend each day into a pit of misery and into mire of destruction, as it is written? [Psalm 39:3 LXX / 40:2] Who, then, among those who hold right belief in the Divine would ever choose to give himself up to the rottenness of Callinice in keeping with your folly?
AI-assisted translation - This translation was produced with AI assistance and has not been peer-reviewed. See the 19th-century translation or original Latin/Greek below for scholarly use.