THE LIVES OF THE SAINTS
S. APOLLINARIS SYNCLETICA
(BEGINNING OF 5TH
CENT.)
[Her life,
written by one who lived at the same time, is given by Metaphrastes. This
life represents her as daughter of Anthemius, the Emperor. Metaphrastes
concludes, but wrongly, that she was daughter of Anthemius, who was appointed
Emperor of the West by Leo I. But it appears more probable that she was the
daughter of Anthemius, consular prefect of the city, who acted as regent after
the death of Arcadius, during the minority of Theodosius the younger. This
Anthemius was grandfather of the Emperor Anthemius. It is quite possible that
the regent may have received imperial honours.]
SAINT APOLLINARIS, called
from her high rank Syncletica, was the daughter of Anthemius. She had a
sister of a different spirit from herself. The parents of Apollinaris
desired to unite her in marriage, at an early age, to some wealthy noble, but
she manifested such a fixed resolution to remain single, that they yielded to
her wish. In her heart she desired to retire completely from the world;
having heard of the wondrous lives of the recluses in Egypt, she longed
greatly to see and imitate them. Her parents having consented to her making a
pilgrimage to Jerusalem, she visited the holy places, and in Jerusalem she
liberated all the slaves who had been sent to bear her company, and dismissed
them with liberal gifts, retaining in her service only an eunuch and an old
man to prepare her tent. In Jerusalem, she bribed an aged woman to procure
for her, secretly, the habit of a recluse, and this she kept by her for a
proper moment. On her way back she visited the tomb of S. Meria, on the Egyptian coast;
and after prayer retired to her sleeping tent, when she assumed the monastic
habit, and cast aside her worldly dress, with all its ornaments. Then, in the
night, when the two men were asleep without, she stole from her tent, and fled
into the desert, and took refuge in a morass. Next morning the servants were
filled with consternation, and sought her everywhere in vain. Then they
appeared before the governor of the city Lemna (?) where they were; and he
assisted in the search, but all was in vain; so the governor sent a letter to
the parents of Apollinaris, with her clothes and baggage, narrating the
circumstances. Anthemius and his wife wept when they heard of the loss of then
daughter, but consoled themselves with the belief that she had entered some
community of religious women.
However, S. Apollinaris
made her way into the desert of Scete, where lived S. Macarius of Alexandria,
at the head of a large monastery of recluses in cells and caves. Apollinaris,
having cut off her hair, and being much tanned by exposure to the sun, and
wasted with hunger in the marsh, where she had lived on a few dates, passed as
a man, and was supposed, from being beardless, to be an eunuch. She spent many
years there under the name of Dorotheus. Now it fell out that her sister, being
grievously tormented with a devil, Anthemius bethought himself on sending her
to Macarius to be healed, for the fame of his miracles had spread far and
wide. But when the young girl was brought to Macarius, the aged abbot, moved by
some interior impulse, conducted her to Dorotheus, and bade him heal the
possessed by prayer. Then S. Apollinaris earnestly, and with many tears,
besought Macarius not to tempt her thus, for God had not given to her the gift
of performing miracles. Nevertheless he persisted; then the possessed woman
was shut into the cell of Dorotheus for several days, that he might, by prayer
and fasting, cast the demon forth. And when, after a while,
the virgin seemed to be healed, she was restored to the attendants, who
conducted her to her parents with great joy.
Some months after, the
maiden suffered from an attack of dropsy, and the parents, in shame and grief,
supposing her to be pregnant, questioned her closely thereabout. But she could
not account for her size, and when they pressed her more vehemently, moved by
the evil spirit, she declared that Dorotheus, the hermit, had seduced her. On
hearing this, Anthemius sent to Scete, that Dorotheus should be brought before
him. The holy congregation was filled with horror and dismay on hearing the
charge, and they went with one accord and cried to God to put away from them so
grievous a reproach. Then said Dorotheus, "Be of good courage, my
brethren, the Lord will reveal my innocence." And when she was brought
before Anthemius, she said, "I am your daughter, Apollinaris." Then
they fell on her neck and wept, and she prayed to God, and kissed her sister, and
the Lord heard her cry, and healed the damsel of her disease. And after having
tarried with them a few days, she returned to the desert once more.
