De Facie Quae in orbe Lunae Apparet

Plutarch

Plutarch. Moralia, Vol. XII. Cherniss, Harold and William Clark Helmbold translators. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press; London: William Heinemann Ltd., 1957 (printing).

---These were Sullas words.[*](Concerning the mutilated beginning of the dialogue see Introduction § 1.)For it concerns my story and that is its source; but I think that I should first like to learn whether there is any need to put back for a fresh start[*](For the metaphor cf. An Seni Respublica Gerenda Sit, 787 E, and Plato, Philebus, 13 D; the meaning is guaranteed by ἀρωσθέντες (driven from our course) infra. Of. the nautical metaphor with which Sulla interrupts Lamprias at 940 F s.v. (τὸν μῦθον ἐξοκείλας).) to those opinions concerning the face of the moon which are current and on the lips of everyone.What else would you expect us to have done, I said,[*](The speaker and narrator of the dialogue is Lamprias, the brother of Plutarch; cf. 937 D, 940 F, 945 D, s.v..) since it was the difficulty in these opinions that drove us from our course upon those others? As people with chronic diseases when they have despaired of ordinary remedies and customary regimens turn to expiations and amulets and dreams, just so in obscure and perplexing speculations, when the ordinary and reputable and customary accounts are not persuasive, it is necessary to try those that are more out of the way and not scorn them but literally to chant over ourselves[*](cf. Plato, Phaedo, 77 E and 114 D, Republic, 608 A.) the charms of the ancients and use every means to bring the truth to test.