Piscator
Lucian of Samosata
Lucian, Vol. 3. Harmon, A. M., editor. London: William Heinemann, Ltd.; Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1921.
SOCRATES Pelt, pelt the scoundrel with plenty of stones! Heap him with clods! Pile him up with broken dishes, too! Beat the blackguard with your sticks! Look out he doesn’t get away! Throw, Plato; you too, Chrysippus ; you too; everybody at once! Let’s charge him together. “Let wallet to wallet give succour, and cudgel to cudgel,” [*](κρῖν᾽ ἄνδρας κατὰ φῦλα, κατὰ φρήτρας, ᾿Ἀγάμεμνον,ὡς φρήτρη φρήτρηφιν ἀρήγῃ, φῦλα δὲ φύλοις.Iliad2, 363) for he is our joint enemy, and there is not a man of us whom he has not outraged. Diogenes, ply your stick, if ever you did before; let none of you weaken; let him pay the penalty for his ribaldry. What is this? Have yon given out, Epicurus and Aristippus? Come, that is too bad!
Iliad6, 112; Homer has “friends,” not “sages.”
- Show yourselves men, ye sages, and call up the fury of battle.
Aristotle, make haste! Still faster! That’s well; the game is bagged. We have you, villain! you shall soon find out what sort of men you have been
PHILOSOPHER I suggest he be crucified.
ANOTHER Yes, by Heaven; but flogged beforehand.
ANOTHER Let him have his eyes put out long beforehand
ANOTHER Let him have that tongue of his cut off, even longer beforehand.
SOCRATES And you, Empedocles—what do you suggest ?
EMPEDOCLES That he be thrown into my crater,[*](Aetna, into which Eimpedocles is said to have leapt. ) so that he may learn not to abuse his betters.
PLATO Indeed, the best suggestion would have been for him, like another Pentheus or Orpheus, “To find among the crags a riven doom,”[*](Both Pentheus and Orpheus were torn to ieces by Maenads. The verse is from a lost tragedy (Nauck, Fr Fragm. p. 895). ) so that each of us might have gone off with a scrap of him.
FRANKNESS No, no! In the name of Him who hears the suppliant,[*](Zeus. ) spare me!
Iliad22, 262. FRANKNESS Indeed, I myself will quote Homer in begging you for mercy. Perhaps you will revere his verses and will not ignore me when I have recited them :
- Since between lions and men there exist no bonds of alliance.
A cento; Iliad6, 46, 48; 20, 65. PLATO But we ourselves shall not be at a loss for a Homeric reply to you ; listen to this, for instance :
- Save me, for I am no churl, and I receive what is fitting in ransom,
- Copper and gold, that in truth are desirable even to sages.
Iliad10, 447-8, with alterations. FRANKNESS Oh, what wretched luck! Homer, in whom I had my greatest hope, is useless to me. I suppose I must take refuge with Euripides ; perhaps he might save me :
- Think not now in your heart of escape, you speaker of slander,
- Even by talking of gold, oncé into our hands you have fallen.
Nauck, p. 663. Cf. Ion1553. PLATO Ah, but is not this by Euripides, too?
- Slay not! The suppliant thou shalt not skay.
Orestes413.
- No harm for them that wrought to suffer harm.
Euripides? Nauck, p. 663. PLATO Yes, by Heaven! Anyhow, he himself says :
- hen will ye slay me now, because of words?
Bacchae386 ff.
- Of mouths that are curbless
- And fools that are lawless
- The end is mischance.
FRANKNESS Well, then, as you are absolutely determined to kill me and there is no possibility of my escaping, do tell me at least who you are and what irreparable injuries you have received from me that you’ are irreconcilably angry and have seized me for execution.
PLATO What dreadful wrongs you have done us you may ask yourself, you rascal, and those precious dialogues of yours in which you not only spoke abusively of Philosophy herself, but insulted us by advertising for sale, as if in a slave-market, men who are learned, and what is more, free-born. Indignant at this, we requested a brief leave of absence from Pluto and have come up to get you—Chrysippus here, Epicurus, Plato (myself), Aristotle over there, Pythagoras here, who says nothing, Diogenes, and everyone that you vilified in your dialogues.