reproaches of noise and silence, of delay and precipitation, of military force and of popular clamor. One
martyr and one confessor were selected among the Catholic bishops; twenty- eight escaped by flight,
and eighty-eight by conformity; forty-six were sent into Corsica to cut timber for the royal navy; and three
hundred and two were banished to the different parts of Africa, exposed to the insults of their enemies,
and carefully deprived of all the temporal and spiritual comforts of life. The hardships of ten years' exile
must have reduced their numbers; and if they had complied with the law of Thrasimund, which prohibited
any episcopal consecrations, the orthodox church of Africa must have expired with the lives of its actual
members. They disobeyed, and their disobedience was punished by a second exile of two hundred
and twenty bishops into Sardinia; where they languished fifteen years, till the accession of the gracious
Hilderic. The two islands were judiciously chosen by the malice of their Arian tyrants. Seneca, from
his own experience, has deplored and exaggerated the miserable state of Corsica, and the plenty of
Sardinia was overbalanced by the unwholesome quality of the air. III. The zeal of Generic and his successors,
for the conversion of the Catholics, must have rendered them still more jealous to guard the purity of the
Vandal faith. Before the churches were finally shut, it was a crime to appear in a Barbarian dress; and
those who presumed to neglect the royal mandate were rudely dragged backwards by their long hair.
The palatine officers, who refused to profess the religion of their prince, were ignominiously stripped
of their honors and employments; banished to Sardinia and Sicily; or condemned to the servile labors
of slaves and peasants in the fields of Utica. In the districts which had been peculiarly allotted to the
Vandals, the exercise of the Catholic worship was more strictly prohibited; and severe penalties were
denounced against the guilt both of the missionary and the proselyte. By these arts, the faith of the
Barbarians was preserved, and their zeal was inflamed: they discharged, with devout fury, the office of
spies, informers, or executioners; and whenever their cavalry took the field, it was the favorite amusement
of the march to defile the churches, and to insult the clergy of the adverse faction. IV. The citizens who
had been educated in the luxury of the Roman province, were delivered, with exquisite cruelty, to the
Moors of the desert. A venerable train of bishops, presbyters, and deacons, with a faithful crowd of four
thousand and ninety- six persons, whose guilt is not precisely ascertained, were torn from their native
homes, by the command of Hunneric. During the night they were confined, like a herd of cattle, amidst
their own ordure: during the day they pursued their march over the burning sands; and if they fainted
under the heat and fatigue, they were goaded, or dragged along, till they expired in the hands of their
tormentors. These unhappy exiles, when they reached the Moorish huts, might excite the compassion
of a people, whose native humanity was neither improved by reason, nor corrupted by fanaticism: but if
they escaped the dangers, they were condemned to share the distress of a savage life. V. It is incumbent
on the authors of persecution previously to reflect, whether they are determined to support it in the last
extreme. They excite the flame which they strive to extinguish; and it soon becomes necessary to chastise
the contumacy, as well as the crime, of the offender. The fine, which he is unable or unwilling to discharge,
exposes his person to the severity of the law; and his contempt of lighter penalties suggests the use and
propriety of capital punishment. Through the veil of fiction and declamation we may clearly perceive,
that the Catholics more especially under the reign of Hunneric, endured the most cruel and ignominious
treatment. Respectable citizens, noble matrons, and consecrated virgins, were stripped naked, and raised
in the air by pulleys, with a weight suspended at their feet. In this painful attitude their naked bodies
were torn with scourges, or burnt in the most tender parts with red-hot plates of iron. The amputation of
the ears the nose, the tongue, and the right hand, was inflicted by the Arians; and although the precise
number cannot be defined, it is evident that many persons, among whom a bishop and a proconsul
may be named, were entitled to the crown of martyrdom. The same honor has been ascribed to the
memory of Count Sebastian, who professed the Nicene creed with unshaken constancy; and Genseric
might detest, as a heretic, the brave and ambitious fugitive whom he dreaded as a rival. VI. A new mode
of conversion, which might subdue the feeble, and alarm the timorous, was employed by the Arian ministers.
They imposed, by fraud or violence, the rites of baptism; and punished the apostasy of the Catholics,
if they disclaimed this odious and profane ceremony, which scandalously violated the freedom of the
will, and the unity of the sacrament. The hostile sects had formerly allowed the validity of each other's
baptism; and the innovation, so fiercely maintained by the Vandals, can be imputed only to the example
and advice of the Donatists. VII. The Arian clergy surpassed in religious cruelty the king and his Vandals; but
they were incapable of cultivating the spiritual vineyard, which they were so desirous to possess. A patriarch