Juppiter Tragoedus
Lucian of Samosata
Lucian, Vol. 2. Harmon, A. M., editor. London: William Heinemann, Ltd.; Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1915.
However, I should like to know what it was of Homer’s that convinced you most. What he says about Zeus, how his daughter and his brother and his wife made a plot to fetter him?[*](Iliad 1, 396.) If Thetis had not summoned Briareus, our excellent Zeus would have been caught and put in chains. For this he returned thanks to Thetis by deceiving Agamemnon, sending a false vision to him, in order that many of the Achaeans might lose their lives.[*](Iliad 2, 5.) Don’t you see, it was impossible for him to hurl a thunderbolt and burn. up Agamemnon himself without making himself out a liar? Or perhaps you were most inclined to believe when you heard how Diomed wounded Aphrodite and then even Ares himself at the suggestion of Athena,[*](Iliad 5, 335, 855.) and how shortly afterwards the gods themselves fell to and began duelling promiscuously, males and females ;[*](Iliad 20, 54.) Athena defeated Ares, already overtaxed, no doubt by the wound he had received from Diomed,[*](Iliad 21, 403.) and "Leto fought against Hermes, the stalwart god of good fortune.”[*](Iliad 20, 72.) Or perhaps you thought the tale about Artemis credible, that, being a fault-finding person, she got angry when she was not invited to a feast by Oeneus and so turned loose on his land a monstrous boar of irresistible strength.[*](Iliad 9, 533.) Did Homer convince you by saying that sort of thing?