Alexander
Lucian of Samosata
Lucian, Vol. 4. Harmon, A. M., editor. London: William Heinemann, Ltd.; Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1925.
Let me also tell you a few of the responses that were given to me. When I asked whether Alexander was bald, and sealed the question carefully and conspicuously, a “nocturnal” oracle was appended :
Sabardalachou malachaattealos en.[*](In failing to submit this to the official interpreters, Lucian lost a priceless opportunity. )At another time, I asked a single question in each of two scrolls under a different name, “What was the poet Homer’s country?” In one case, misled by my serving-man, who had been asked why he came and had said, “To request a cure for a pain in the side,” he replied:
To the other, since in this case he had been told that the one who sent it enquired whether it would be better for him to go to Italy by sea or by land, he gave an answer which had nothing to do with Homer:
- Cytmis[*](Alexander’s nostrum ; cf c. 22. ) I bid you apply, combined with the spume of a charger.
- Make not your journey by sea, but travel afoot by the highway.