[217>]
I. ANTISTHENES was an Athenian, the son of Antisthenes. And he was said not to be a
legitimate Athenian; in reference to which he said to some one who was reproaching him
with the circumstance, "The mother of the Gods too is a Phrygian;" for he was
thought to have had a Thracian mother. On which account, as he had borne himself bravely
in the battle of Tanagra, he gave occasion to Socrates to say that the son of two
Athenians could not have been so brave. And he himself, when disparaging the Athenians who
gave themselves great airs as having been born out of the earth itself, said that they
were not more noble as far as that went than snails and locusts.
II. Originally he was a pupil of Gorgias the rhetorician; owing to which circumstance
he employs the rhetorical style of language in his Dialogues, especially in his Truth and
in his Exhortations. And Hermippus says, that he had originally intended in his address at
the assembly, on account of the Isthmian games, to attack and also to praise the
Athenians, and Thebans, and Lacedaemonians; but that he afterwards abandoned the design,
when he saw that there were a great many spectators come from those cities. Afterwards, he
attached himself to Socrates, and made such progress in philosophy while with him, that he
advised all his own pupils to become his fellow pupils in the school of Socrates. And as
he lived in the Piraeus, he went up forty furlongs to the city every day, in order to hear
Socrates, from whom he learnt the art of enduring, and of being indifferent to external
circumstances, and so became the original founder of the Cynic school.
III. And he used to argue that labour was a good thing, by adducing the examples of the
great Hercules, and of Cyrus, one of which he derived from the Greeks and the other from
the barbarians.
IV. He was also the first person who ever gave a definition of discourse, saying,
"Discourse is that which shows what [218>] anything is or was." And he used
continually to say, "I would rather go mad than feel pleasure." And, "One
ought to attach ones self to such women as will thank one for it." He said once
to a youth from Pontus, who was on the point of coming to him to be his pupil, and was
asking him what things he wanted, "You want a new book, and a new pen, and a new
tablet ;" meaning a new mind. And to a pen who asked him from what country he
had better marry a wife, he said, "If you marry a handsome woman, she will be common ; if an ugly woman, she will he a punishment to you." [There is a play on the
similarity of the two sounds, ,koinê, common, and poinê, punishment.] He
was told once that Plato spoke ill of him, and he replied, "It is a royal privilege
to do well, and to be evil spoken of." When he was being initiated into the mysteries
of Orpheus, and the priest said that those who were initiated enjoyed many good things in
the shades below, "Why, then," said he "do not you die?" Being once
reproached as not being the son of two free citizens, he said, "And I am not the son
of two people skilled in wrestling; nevertheless, I am a skilful wrestler." On one
occasion he was asked why he had but few disciples, and said, "Because I drove them
away with a silver rod." When he was asked why he reproved his pupils with bitter
language, he said, "Physicians too use sever remedies for their patients." Once
he saw an adulterer running away, and said, "O unhappy man! how much danger could you
have avoided for one obol!" He used to say, aas Hecaton tells us in his Apophthegms,
"That it was better to fall among crows [The Greek is, es korakas, which
was a proverb for utter destruction.] than among flatterers; for that they only devour the
dead, but the others devour the living." When he was asked what was the most happy
event that could take place in human life, he said, "To die while prosperous."
On one occasion one of his friends was lamenting to him that he had lost his memoranda,
and he said to him, "You ought to have written them on your mind, and not on
paper." A favourite saying of his was, "That envious people were devoured by
their own disposition, just as iron is by rust." Another was, "That those who
wish to be immortal ought to live piously and justly." He used to say too, "That
cities [219>] were ruined when they were unable to distinguish worthless citizens from
virtuous ones."
On one occasion he was being praised by some wicked men, and said, "I am sadly
afraid that I must have done some wicked thing." One of his favourite sayings was,
"That the fellowship of brothers of one mind was stronger than any fortified
city." He used to say, "That those things were the best for a man to take on a
journey, which would float with him if he were shipwrecked." He was once reproached
for being intimate with wicked men, and said, "Physicians also live with those who
are sick; and yet they do not catch fevers." He used to say, "that it was an
absurd thing to clean a cornfield of tares, and in war to get rid of bad soldiers, and yet
not to rid ones self in a city of the wicked citizens." When he was asked what
advantage he had ever derived from philosophy, he replied, "The advantage of being
able to converse with myself." At a drinking party, a man once said to him,
"Give us a song," and he replied, "Do you play us a tune on the
flute." When Diogenes asked him for a tunic, he bade him fold his cloak. He was asked
on one occasion what learning was the most necessary, and he replied, "To unlearn
ones bad habits." And he used to exhort those who found themselves ill spoken
of, to endure it more than they would any ones throwing stones at them. He used to
laugh at Plato as conceited; accordingly, once when there was a fine procession, seeing a
horse neighing, he said to Plato, "I think you too would be a very frisky
horse:" and he said this all the more, because Plato kept continually praising the
horse. At another time, he had gone to see him when he was ill, and when he saw there a
dish in which Plato had been sick, he said, " I see your bile there, but I do not see
your conceit." He used to advise the Athenians to pass a vote that asses were horses;
and, as they thought that irrational, he said, "Why, those whom you make generals
have never learnt to be really generals, they have only been voted such."
A man said to him one day, "Many people praise you." "Why, what
evil," said he, "have I done?" When he turned the rent in his cloak
outside, Socrates seeing it, said to him, "I see your vanity through the hole in your
cloak." On another occasion, the question was put to him by some one, as Phanias
relates, in his treatise on the Philosphers of the [220>] Socratic school, what a man
could do to show himself an honourable and a virtuous man; and he replied, "If you
atttend to those who understand the subject, and learn from them that you ought to shun
the bad habits which you have." Some one was praising luxury in his hearing, and he
said, "May the children of my enemies be luxurious." Seeing a young man place
himself in a carefully studied attitude before a modeller, he said, "Tell me, if the
brass could speak, on what would it pride itself?" And when the young man replied,
"On its beauty." "Are you not then," said he, "ashamed to rejoice
in the same thing as an inanimate piece of brass?" A young man from Pontus once
promised to recollect him, if a vessel of salt fish arrived; and so he took him with him,
and also an empty bag, and went to a woman who sold meal, and filled his sack and went
away; and when the woman asked him to pay for it, he said, "The young man will pay
you, when the vessel of salt fish comes home."
He it was who appears to have been the cause of Anytus's banishment, and of
Meletuss death. For having met with some young men of Pontus, who had come to
Athens, on account of the reputation of Socrates, he took them to Anytus, telling them,
that in moral philosophy he was wiser than Socrates; and they who stood by were indignant
at this, and drove him away. And whenever he saw a woman beautifully adorned, he would go
off to her house and desire her husband to bring forth his horse and his arms; and then if
he had such things, he would give him leave to indulge in luxury, for that he had the
means of defending himself; but if he had them not, then he would bid him strip his wife
of her ornaments.
V And the doctrines he adopted were these. He used to insist that virtue was a thing
which might be taught; also, that the nobly born and virtuously disposed, were the same
people; for that virtue was of itself sufficient for happiness, and was in need of
nothing, except the strength of Socrates. He also looked upon virtue as a species of work,
not wanting many arguments, or much instruction; and he taught that the wise man was
sufficient for himself; for that everything that belonged to any one else belonged to him.
He considered obscurity of fame a good thing, and equally good with labour. And he used to
say that the wise man would regulate his conduct as a citizen, not according to the
established laws of the state, but according to the law of virtue. And that he would marry
for the sake of having children, selecting the most beautiful woman for his wife. And that
he would love her; for that the wise man alone knew what objects deserved love.
Diodes also attributes the following apophthegms to him. To the wise man, nothing is
strange and nothing remote. The virtuous man is worthy to be loved. Good men are friends.
It is right to make the brave and just ones allies. Virtue is a weapon of which a
man cannot be deprived. It is better to fight with a few good men against all the wicked,
than with many wicked men against a few good men. One should attend to ones enemies,
for they are the first persons to detect ones errors. One should consider a just man
as of more value than a relation. Virtue is the same in a man as in a woman. What is good
is honourable, and what is bad is disgraceful. Think everything that is wicked, foreign.
Prudence is the safest fortification; for it can neither fall to pieces nor be betrayed.
One must prepare ones self a fortress in ones own impregnable thoughts.
VI. He used to lecture in the Gymnasium called Cynosarges, not far from the gates; and
some people say that it is from that place that the sect got the name of Cynics. And he
himself was called Haplocyon (downright dog).
VII. He was the first person to set the fashion of doubling his cloak, as Diocles says,
and he wore no other garment. And he used to carry a stick and a wallet; but Neanthes says
that he was the first person who wore a cloak without folding it. But Sosicrates, in the
third book of his Successions, says that Diodorus, of Aspendos, let his beard grow, and
used to carry a stick and a wallet.
VIII. He is the only one of all the pupils of Socrates, whom Theopompus praises and
speaks of as clever, and able to persuade whomsoever he pleased by the sweetness of his
conversation. And this is plain, both from his own writings, and from the Banquet of
Xenophon. He appears to have been the founder of the more manly Stoic school; on which
account Athenaeus, the epigrammatist, speaks thus of them :
O ye, who are learned in Stoic fables,
Ye who consign the wisest of all doctrines [222>]
To your most sacred books; you say that virtue
Is the sole good; for that alone can save
The life of man, and strongly fenced cities.
But if some fancy pleasure their best aim,
One of the Muses tis who has convincd them.
He was the original cause of the apathy of Diogenes, and the temperance of Crates, and
the patience of Zeno, having himself, as it were, laid the foundations of the city which
they afterwards built. And Xenophon says, that in his conversation and society, he was the
most delightful of men, and in every respect the most temperate.
IX. There are ten volumes of his writings extant. The first volume is that in which
there is the essay on Style, or on Figures of Speech; the Ajax, or speech of Ajax; the
Defence, of Orestes or the treatise on Lawyers; the Isographe, or the Lysias and
Isocrates; the reply to the work of Isocrates, entitled the Absence of Witnesses. The
second volume is that in which we have the treatise on the Nature of Animals; on the
Pro-creation of Children, or on Marriage, an essay of an amatory character; on the
Sophists, an essay of a physionomical character; on Justice and Manly Virtue, being three
essays of an hortatory character; two treatises on Theognis. The third Volume contains a
treatise on the Good; on Manly Courage; on Law, or Political Constitutions; on Law, or
what is Honourable and Just; on Freedom and Slavery; on Good Faith; on a Guardian, or on
Persuasion; on victory, an economical essay. The fourth volume contains the Cyrus;. the
Greater Heracles, or a treatise on Strength. The fifth volume contains the Cyrus, or a
treatise on Kingly Power; the Aspasia.
The sixth volume is that in which there is the treatise Truth; another (a disputatious
one) concerning Arguing; the Sathon, or on Contradiction, in three parts; and an essay on
Dialect. The seventh contains a treatise on Education, or Names, in five books; one on the
Use of Names, or the Contentious Man; one on Questions and Answers; one on Opinion and
Knowledge, in four books; one on Dying; one on Life and Death; one on those who are in the
Shades below; one on Nature, in two books; two books of Questions in Natural Philosophy;
one essay, called Opinions on the Contentious Man; one book of Problems, on the subject of
[223>] Learning. The eighth volume is that in which we find a treatise on Music; one on
Interpreters; one on Homer; one on Injustice and Impiety; one on Calchas; one on a Spy;
one on Pleasure. The ninth book contains an essay on the Odyssey; one on the Magic Wand;
the Minerva, or an essay en Telemachus; an essay on Helen and Penelope; one on Proteus;
the Cyclops, being an essay on Ulysses; an essay on the Use of Wine, or on Drunkenness, or
on the Cyclops; one on Circe; one on Amphiaraus; one on Ulysses and Penelope, and also on
Ulysses Dog. The tenth volume is occupied by the Heracles, or Medas; the Hercules,
or an Essay on Prudence or Strength; the Lord or the Lover; the Lord or the Spies; the
Menexenus, or an essay on Governing; the Alcibiades; the Archelaus, or an essay on Kingly
Power.
These then are the names of his works. And Timon, rebuking him because of their great
number, called him a universal chatterer,
X. He died of some disease; and while he was ill Diogenes came to visit him, and said
to him, "Have you no need of a friend?" Once too he came to see him with a sword
in his hand; and when Antisthenes said, "Who can deliver me from this
suffering?" he, pointing to the sword, said, "This can;" But he rejoined,
"I said from suffering, but not from life;" for he seemed to bear his disease
the more calmly from his love of life. And there is an epigram on him written by
ourselves, which runs thus
In life you were a bitter dog, Antisthenes,
Born to bite peoples minds with sayings sharp,
Not with your actual teeth. Now you are slain
By fell consumption, passers by may say,
Why should he not, one wants a guide to Hell.
There were also three other people of the name of Antisthenes. One, a disciple of
Heraclitus; the second, an Ephesian; the third, a historian of Rhodes. And since we have
spoken of those who proceeded from the school ot Aristippus and Phaedon, we may now go on
to the Cynics and Stoics, who derived their origin from Antisthenes. And we will take them
in the following order.
LIFE OF DIOGENES.
I. Diogenes was a native of Sinope, the son of Tresius, a money-changer. And
Diocles says that he was forced to flee from his native city, as his father kept the
public bank there, and had adulterated the coinage. But Eubulides, in his essay on
Diogenes, says, that it was Diogenes himself who did this, and that he was banished with
his father. And, indeed, he himself, in his Perdalus, says of himself that he had
adulterated the public money. Others say that he was one of the curators, and was
persuaded by the artisans employed, and that he went to Delphi, or else to the oracle at
Delos, and there consulted Apollo as to whether he should do what people were trying to
persuade him to do; and that, as the God gave him permission to do so, Diogenes,
not comprehending that the God meant that he might change the political customs [The
passage is not free from difficulty; but the thing which misled Diogenes appears to have
been that nomisma, the word here used, meant both "a coin, or
coinage," and "a custom."]of his country if he could, adulterated the
coinage; and being detected, was banished. as some people say, but as other accounts have
it, took the alarm and fled away of his own accord. Some again, say that he adulterated
the money which he had received from his father; and that his father was thrown into
prison and died there; but that Diogenes escaped and went to Delphi, and asked, not
whether he might tamper with the coinage, but what he could do to become very celebrated,
and that in consequence he received the oracular answer which I have mentioned.
II. And when he came to Athens he attached himself to Antisthenes; but as he repelled
him, because he admitted no one; he at last forced his way to him by his pertinacity. And
once, when he raised his stick at him, he put his head under it, and said, "Strike,
for you will not find any stick hard enough to drive me away as long as you continue to
speak." And from this time forth he was one of his pupils; and being an exile, he
naturally betook himself to a simple mode of life.
III. And when, as Theophrastus tells us, in his Megaric Philosopher, he saw a mouse
running about and not seeking [225>] for a bed, nor taking care to keep in the dark,
nor.looking for any of those things which appear enjoyable to such an animal, he found a
remedy for his own poverty. He was, according to the account of some people, the first
person who doubled up his cloak out of necessity, and who slept in it; and who carried a
wallet, in which he kept his food; and who used whatever place was near for all sorts of
purposes, eating, and sleeping, and conversing in it. In reference to which habit he used
to say, pointing to the Colonnade of Jupiter. and to the Public Magazine, "that the
Athenians had built him places to live in." Being attacked with illness, he supported
himself with a staff; and after that he carried it continually, not indeed in the city,
but whenever he was walking in the roads, together with his wallet, as Olympiodorus, the
chief man of the Athenians tells us; and Polymeter, the orator, and Lysanias, the son of
Aeschorion, tell the same story.
When he had written to some one to look out and get ready a small house for him, as he
delayed to do it, he took a cask which he found in the Temple of Cybele, for his house, as
he himself tells us in his letters. And during the summer he used to roll himself in the
warm sand, but in winter he would embrace statues all covered with snow, practising
himself, on every occasion, to endure anything.
IV. He was very violent in expressing his haughty disdain of others. He said that the scholê (school) of Eueides was cholê (gall). And he used to call Platos diatribê (discussions) katatribê (disguise). It was also a saying of his that the Dionysian
games were a great marvel to fools; and that the demagogues were the ministers of the
multitude. He used likewise to say, "that when in the course of his life he beheld
pilots, and physicians, and philosophers, he thought man the wisest of all animals; but
when again he beheld interpreters of dreams, and soothsayers. and those who listened to
them, and men puffed up with glory or riches, then he thought that there was not a more
foolish animal than man," Another of his sayings was, "that he thought a man
ought oftener to provide himself with a reason than with a halter." On one occasion,
when he noticed Plato at a very costly entertainment tasting some olives, he said, "O
you wise man! why, after having sailed to Sicily for the sake of such a feast, do you not
now enjoy what you have before you ?" And Plato replied, [226>] " By the
Gods, Diogenes, while I was there I ate olives and all such things a great deal."
Diogenes rejoined, "What then did you want to sail to Syracuse for? Did not Attica at
that time produce any olives?" But Phavorinus, in his Universal History, tells this
story of Aristippus. At another time he was eating dried figs, when Plato met him, and he
said to him, "You may have a share of these;" and as he took some and ate them,
he said, "I said that you might have a share of them, not that you
might eat them all." On one occasion Plato had invited some friends who had come to
him from Dionysius to a banquet, and Diogenes trampled on his carpets, and said,
"Thus I trample on the empty pride of Plato;" and Plato made him answer,
"How much arrogance are you displaying, O Diogenes when you think that you are not
arrogant at all." But, as others tell the story, Diogenes said, "Thus I trample
on the pride of Plato ;" and that Plato rejoined, "With quite as much pride
yourself, O Diogenes." Sotion too, in his fourth book, states, that the Cynic made
the following speech to Plato: Diogenes once asked him for some wine, and then for some
dried figs; so he sent him an entire jar full; and Diogenes said to him "Will you, if
you are asked how many two and two make, answer twenty? In this way, you neither give with
any reference to what you are asked for, nor do you answer with reference to the question
put to you." He used also to ridicule him as an interminable talker. When he was
asked where in Greece he saw virtuous men; "Men," said he, "nowhere; but I
see good boys in Lacedaemon." On one occasion, when no one came to listen to him
while he was discoursing seriously, he began to whistle. And then when people flocked
round him, he reproached them for coming with eagerness to folly, but being lazy and
indifferent about good things. One of his frequent sayings was, "That men contended
with one another in punching and kicking, but that no one showed any emulation in the
pursuit of virtue." He used to express his astonishment at the grammarians for being
desirous to learn everything about the misfortunes of Ulysses, and being ignorant of their
own. He used also to say, "That the musicians fitted the strings to the lyre
properly, but left all the habits of their soul ill-arranged." And, "That
mathematicians kept their eyes fixed on the sun and moon, and overlooked what was under
their feet." "That [227>] orators were anxious to speak justly, but not at
all about acting so." Also, "That misers blamed money, but were preposterously
fond of it." He often condemned those who praise the just for being superior
to money, but who at the same time are eager themselves for great riches. He was also very
indignant at seeing men sacrifice to the Gods to procure good health, and yet at the
sacrifice eating in a manner injurious to health. He often expressed his surprise at
slaves, who, seeing their masters eating in a gluttonous manner, still do not themselves
lay hands on any of the eatables. He would frequently praise those who were about to
marry, and yet did not marry; or who were about to take a voyage, and yet did not take a
voyage; or who were about to engage in affairs of state, and did not do so; and those who
were about to rear children, yet did not rear any; and those who were preparing to take up
their abode with princes, and yet did not take it up. One of his sayings was, "That
one ought to hold out ones hand to a friend without closing the fingers."
Hermippus, in his Sale of Diogenes, says that he was taken prisoner and put up to be
sold, and asked what he could do; and be answered, "Govern men." And so he bade
the crier "give notice that if any one wants to purchase a master, there is one here
for him." When he was ordered not to sit down; "It makes no difference,"
said he, "for fish are sold, be where they may." He used to say, that he
wondered at men always ringing a dish or jar before buying it, but being content to judge
of a man by his look alone. When Xeniades bought him, he said to him that he ought to obey
him even though he was his slave; for that a physician or a pilot would find men to obey
them even though they might be slaves.
V. And Eubulus says, in his essay entitled, The Sale of Diogenes, that he taught the
children of Xeniades, after their other lessons, to ride, and shoot, and sling, and dart.
And then in the Gymnasium he did not permit the trainer to exercise them after the fashion
of athletes, but exercised them himself to just the degree sufficient to give them a good
colour and good health. And the boys retained in their memory many sentences of poets and
prose writers, and of Diogenes himself; and he used to give them a concise statement of
everything [228>] in order to strengthen their memory; and at home he used to~ teach
them to wait upon themselves, contenting themselves with plain food, and drinking water.
And he accustomed them to cut their hair close, and to eschew ornament, and to go without
tunics or shoes, and to keep silent, looking at nothing except themselves as they walked
along. He used, also to take them out hunting; and they paid the greatest attention and
respect to Diogenes himself, and spoke well of him to their parents.
VI. And the same author affirms, that he grew old in the household of Xeniades, and
that when he died he was buried by his sons. And that while he was living with him,
Xeniades once asked him how he should bury him; and he said, "On my face ;" and
when he was asked why, he said, "Because, in a little while, everything will be
turned upside down." And he said this because the Macedonians were already attaining
power, and becoming a mighty people from having been very inconsiderable. Once, when a man
had conducted him into a magnificent house, and had told him that he must not spit, after
hawking a little, he spit in his face, saying that he could not find a worse place. But
some tell this story of Aristippus. Once, he called out, "Holloa, men." And when
some people gathered round him in conesequence, he drove them away with his stick, saying,
"I called men, and not dregs." This anecdote I have derived from Hecaton, in the
first book of his Apophthegms. They also relate that Alexander said that if he had not
been Alexander, he should have liked to be Diogenes. He used to call annátêriu (cripples), not those who were dumb and blind, but those who had no wallet (pêra).
On one occasion he went half shaved into an entertainment of young men, as Metrocles tells
us in his Apophthegms, and so was beaten by them. And afterwards he wrote the names of all
those who had beaten him, on a white tablet, and went about with the tablet round his
neck, so as to expose them to insult, as they were generally condemned and reproached for
their conduct.
He used to say that he was the hound of those who were praised; but that none of those
who praised them dared to go out hunting with him. A man once said to him, "I
conquered men at the Pythian games:" on which he said, "I conquer men,
but you only conquer slaves." When, some [229>] people said to him, "You are
an old man, and should rest for the remainder of your life;" "Why so?"
replied he, "suppose I had run a long distance, ought I to stop when I was near the
end, and not rather press on?" Once, when he was invited to a banquet, he said that
he would not come: for that the day before no one had thanked him for coming. He used to
go bare foot through the snow, and to do a number of other things which have been already
mentioned. Once he attempted to eat raw meat, but he could not digest it. On one occasion
he found Demosthenes, the orator, dining in an inn; and as he was slipping away, he said
to him, "You will now be ever so much more in an inn." [This line is from
Euripedes, Medea, 411.] Once, when some strangers wished to see Demosthenes, he stretched
out his, middle finger and said, "This is the great demagogue of the Athenian
people." When some one had dropped a loaf, and was ashamed to pick it up again, he,
wishing to give him a lesson, tied a cord round the neck of a bottle and dragged it all
through the Ceramicus. He used to say, that he imitated the teachers of choruses, for that
they spoke too loud, in order that the rest might catch the proper tone. Another of his
sayings, was that most men were within a fingers breadth of being mad. If, then, any
one were to walk along, stretching out his middle finger, he will seem to be mad; but if
he puts out his forefinger, he will not be thought so. Another of his sayings was, that
things of great value were often sold for nothing, and vice versâ. Accordingly,
that a statue would fetch three thousand drachmas, and a bushel of meal only two obols;
and when Xeniades had bought him, he said to him, "Come, do what you are ordered
to." And when he said
"The streams of sacred rivers now
Run backwards to their source!"
"suppose," rejoined Diogenes, "you had been sick, and had bought
a. physician, could you refuse to be guided by him, and tell him
"The streams of sacred rivers now
Run backwards to their source"
Once a man came to him, and wished to study philosophy [230>] as his pupil; and he
gave him a saperda [The saperda was the corancinus (a kind of fish) when salted.] and made
him follow him. And as he from shame threw it away and departed, he soon afterwards met
him and, laughing, said to him, "A saperda has dissolved your friendship for
me." But Diodes tells this story in the following manner; that when some one said to
him, "Give me a commission, Diogenes," he carried him off, and gave him a
halfpenny worth of cheese to carry. And as he refused to carry it, " See," said
Diogenes, "a halfpenny worth of cheese has broken off our friendship."
On one occasion he saw a child drinking out of its hands, and so he threw away the cup
which belonged to his wallet, saying, "That child has beaten me in simplicity."
He also threw away his spoon, after seeing a boy, when he had broken his vessel, take up
his lentils with a crust of bread. And he used to argue thus, "Everything
belongs to the gods; and wise men are the friends of the gods. All things are in common
among friends; therefore everything belongs to wise men." Once he saw a woman falling
down before the Gods in an unbecoming attitude; he, wishing to cure her of her
superstition, as Zoilus of Perga tells us, came up to her, and said, "Are you not
afraid, O woman, to be in such an indecent attitude, when some God may be behind you, for
every place is full of him?" He consecrated a man to Aesculapius, who was to run up
and beat all these who prostrated themselves with their faces to the ground; and he was in
the habit of saying that the tragic curse had come upon him, for that he was
Houseless and citiless, a piteous exile
From his dear native land; a wandering beggar,
Scraping a pittance poor from day to day.
And another of his sayings was that he opposed confidence to fortune, nature to law,
and reason to suffering. Once, while he was sitting in the sun in the Craneum, Alexander
was standing by, and said to him, "Ask any favour you choose of me." And he
replied, " Cease to shade me from the sun." On one occasion a man was reading
some long passages, and when he came to the end of the book and showed that there was
nothing more written, "Be of good cheer, my friends," exclaimed Diogenes,
"I see land." A man once proved to [231>] him syllogistically that he had
horns, so he put his hand to his forehead and said, "I do not see them." And in
a simi1ar manner he replied to one who had been asserting that there was no such thing as
motion, by getting up and walking away. When a man was talking about the heavenly bodies
and meteors, "Pray how many days," said he to him, "is it since you came
down from heaven ?"
A profligate eunuch had written on his house, "Let no evil thing enter in."
"Where," said Diogenes, "is the master of the house going [to go to get
in]?" After having anointed his feet with perfume, he said that the ointment from his
head mounted up to heaven, [but] that from his feet up to his nose. When the Athenians
entreated him to be initiated in the Eleusinian mysteries, and said that in the shades
below the initiated had the best seats; ."It will," he replied, "be an
absurd thing if .Aegesilaus and Epaminondas are to live in the mud, and some miserable
wretches, who have been initiated, are to be in the islands of the blest." Some mice
crept up to his table, and he said, "See, even Diogenes maintains his favourites
[parasutes]." Once, when he was leaving the bath, and a man asked him whether many men were bathing, he said, "No ;" but when a number of people came out, he confessed
that there were a great many [bathers]. When Plato called him a dog, he said,
"Undoubtedly, for I have come back to those who sold me."
Plato defined man thus: "Man is a two-footed, featherless animal," and was
much praised for the definition; so Diogenes plucked a cock and brought it into his
school, and said, "This is Platos man." On which account this addition,
was made to the definition, "With broad flat nails." A man once asked him what
was the proper time for supper, and he made answer, "If you are a rich man, whenever
you please; and if you are a poor man, whenever you can." When he was at Megara he
saw some sheep carefully covered over with skins, and the children running about naked;
and so he said, "It is better at Megara to be a mans ram, than his son." A
man once struck him with a beam, and then said, "Take care." "What,"
said he, "are you going to strike me again?" He used to say that the demagogues
were the servants [lackeys] of the people; and garlands the blossoms of glory. Having
lighted a candle in the day time, he said, "I am looking for a man." On one
occasion he stood under a foun- [232>] tain, and as the bystanders were pitying him,
Plato, who was present, said to them, "If you wish really to show your pity for him,
come away;" intimating that he was only acting thus out of a desire for notoriety [out of vanity]. Once, when a man had struck him with his fist, he said, "O
Hercules, what a strange thing that I should be walking about with a helmet on without
knowing it!" [or, better: "How came I to forget to put on a helmet when I walked
out?'"]."
When Midias struck him with his fist and said, "There are three thousand drachmas
for you ;" the next day Diogenes took the cestus of a boxer and beat him soundly, and
said, "There are three thousand drachmas for you." [This is probably an allusion
to a prosecution instituted by Demosthenes against Midias, which was afterwards
compromised by Midias paying Demosthenes thirty minae, or three thousand drachmae. See
Dem. Or. Cont. Midias..] When Lysias, the drug-seller, asked him whether he thought that
there were any Gods: "How," said he, "can I help [but] thinking so, when I
consider you to be hated by them?" but some attribute this reply to Theodorus. Once
he saw a man purifying himself by washing, and said to him, "Oh, wretched man, do not
you know that as you cannot wash away blunders in grammar by purification, so, too, you
can no more efface the errors of a life [or: conduct] in that same manner?"
He used to say that men were wrong for complaining of fortune; for that they ask of the
Gods what appear to be good things, not what are really so. And to those who were alarmed
at dreams he said, that they did not regard what they do while they are awake, but make a
great fuss about what they fancy they see while they are asleep. Once, at the Olympic
games, when the herald proclaimed, "Dioxippus is the conqueror of men ;" he
said, "He is the conqueror of slaves, I am the conqueror of men."
He was greatly beloved by the Athenians; accordingly, when a youth had broken his cask
they beat him, and gave Diogenes another. And Dionysius, the Stoic, says that after the
battle of Chnronea he was taken prisoner and brought to Philip; and being asked who he
was, replied, "A spy, to spy upon your insatiability." And Philip marvelled at
him and let him go. Once, when Alexander had sent a letter to Athens to Antipater, by the
hands of a man named Athlias, he, being present, said, "Athlias from Athlius, by
means of [233>] Athlias to Athlius. [This is a pun upon the similarity of
Athliass name to the Greek adjective athlios, which signifies miserable.
Alternative translation: Graceless son of graceless sire to graceless wight by graceless
squire."] When Perdiccas threatened that he would put him to death if he did not come
to him, he replied, "That is nothing strange, for a scorpion or a tarantula could do
as much: you had better threaten me that, if I kept away, you should be very happy."
He used constantly to repeat with emphasis that an easy life had been given to man by the
Gods, but that it had been overlaid by their seeking for honey, cheese-cakes, and
unguents, and things of that sort. On which account he said to a man, who had his shoes
put on by his servant, "You are not thoroughly happy, unless he also wipes your nose
for you; and he will do this, if you are crippled in your hands." On one occasion,
when he had seen the hieromnemones [The heironmêmones were the sacred
secretaries or recorders sent by each Amphictyonic state to the council along with their pulagoras, (the actual deputy or minister). L. & S. Gr. & Eng. Lex., in
voc.] leading off one of the stewards who had. stolen a goblet, he said, "The
great thieves are carrying off the little thief." At another time, seeing a young man
throwing stones at a cross [gibbet], he said, "Well done, you will be sure to reach
the mark [viz., end up at the gallows]." Once, too, some boys got round him and said,
"We are taking care that you do not bite us;" but he said, "Be of good
cheer, my boys, a dog does not eat beef [better: beetroot]." He saw a man giving
himself airs because he was clad in a lions skin, and said to him, "Do not go
on disgracing the garb of [those of a courageous] nature." When people were speaking
of the happiness of. Calisthenes, and saying what splendid treatment he received from
Alexander, he replied, "The man then is wretched, for he is forced to breakfast and
dine whenever Alexander chooses." When he was in want of money, he said that he
reclaimed it from his friends and did not beg for it.
On one occasion he was working with his hands [viz., masturbating] in the market-place,
and said, "I wish I could rub my stomach in the same way, and so avoid hunger."
When he saw a young man going with some satraps to supper, he dragged him away and led him
off to his relations, and bade them take care of him. He was once addressed by a youth
beautifully adorned, who asked him some question; and he refused to give him any answer,
till he satisfied him whether he was a man or a woman. And on one occasion, when a youth
was playing the [234>] cottabus in the bath, he sad to him, "The better you do it,
the worse you do it [to yourself]." Once at a banquet, some of the guests threw him
bones, as if he had been a dog; so he, as he went away, put up his leg against them as if
he had been a dog in reality. He used to call the orators, and all those who speak for
fame trisanthropoi (thrice men), instead of [rather: meaning instead] trisathlioi (thrice miserable). He said that a rich but ignorant man, was like a sheep with a golden
fleece. When he saw a notice on the house of a profligate man, "To be sold."
"I knew," said he, "that you who are so incessantly drunk, would soon vomit
up your owner." To a young man, who was complaining of the number of people who
sought his acquaintance, he said, "Do not make such a parade of your vanity."
[Or: Cease to hang out a sign of invitation.]
Having been in a very dirty bath, he said, "I wonder where the people, who bathe
here, clean themselves." When all the company was blaming an indifferent [stout]
harp-player, he alone praised him, and being asked why he did so, he said, "Because,
though he is such as he is, he plays the harp and does not steal." He saluted a harp
player who was always being left alone by his hearers, with, "Good morning,
cock;" and when the man asked him, "Why so ?" he said, "Because you,
when you sing, make every one get up." When a young man was one day making a display
of himself [in giving speeches], he having filled the bosom of his robe with lupins, began
to eat them; and when the multitude looked at him, he said, "that he marvelled at
their leaving the young man to look at him." And when a man who was very
superstitious said to him "With one blow I will break your head;" "And
I," he replied, "with one sneeze [from the left] will make you tremble."
When Hegesias entreated him to lend him one of his books, he said, "You are a silly
fellow, Hegesias. for you will not take painted figs, but real ones; and yet you overlook
the genuine practice of virtue, and seek for what is merely written." A man once
reproached him with his banishment, and his answer was, "You wretched man, that is
what made me a philosopher." And when, on another occasion, some one said to him,
"The people of Sinope condemned you to banishment," he replied, "And I
condemned them to remain where they were." Once he saw a man who had been victor at
the Olympic games, feeding (nemonta) sheep, and he said to him, " You have
soon come across my friend from the Olympic games, to the Nemean [lit.: Shepherd's
Bush].", [235>] When he was asked by athletes are insensible to pain, he said,
"Because they are built up of pork and beef."
He once asked for a statue; and being questioned as to his reason for doing so, he
said, "I am practising disappointment." Once he was begging of some one (for he
did this at first out of actual want), he said, "If you have given to any one else,
give also to me; and if you have never given to any one, then begin with me." On one
occasion, he was asked by the tyrant, "What sort of brass was the best for a statue
?" and he replied, "That of which the statues of Haromodius and Aristogiton are
made." When he was asked how Dionysius treats his friends, he said, "Like bags;
those which are full he hangsup, and those which are empty he throws away." A man who
was lately married put an inscription en his house, " Hercules Callinicus, the son of
Jupiter, lives here; let no evil enter." And so Diogenes wrote in addition, "An
alliance is made after the war is over." He used to say that covetousness was the
metropolis of all evils. Seeing on one occasion a profligate man in an inn eating olives,
he said, "If you had dined [viz., breakfasted] thus, you would not have supped
thus." One of his apophthegms was, that good men were the images of the Gods;
another, that love was the business of those who had nothing to do. When he was asked what
was miserable in life, he answered, "An indigent old man." And when the question
was put to him, what beast inflicts the worst bite, he said, " Of wild beasts the
sycophant, and of tame animals the flatterer."
On one occasion he saw two Centaurs very badly painted; he said, "Which of the two
is the worst [cheirôn: Chiron was the name for the celebrated Centaur tutor of
Achilles]?" He used to say that a speech, the object of which was solely to please,
was a honeyed halter. He called the belly, the Charybdis of life. Having heard once that
Didymon the adulterer, had been caught in the fact [viz., in the act], he said, "He
deserves to be hung by his name [viz., by his balls]." When the question was put to
him, why gold is of a pale colour, he said, " Because it has so many people plotting
against it." When he saw a woman in a litter, he said," The cage is not suited
to the animal." And seeing a runaway slave sitting on a well, he said, "My boy,
take care you do not fall in." Another time, he saw a little boy who was a stealer of
clothes from the baths, and said, "Are you going for unguents, (alleimmation),
or for other garments (all' himation)." Seeing some women hanging on olive
trees, he said, "I wish every tree bore similar fruit." At another time, he saw
a clothes stealer, and addressed him thus :
What moves thee, say, when sleep has closd the sight,
To roam the silent fields in dead of night
Art thou some wretch by hopes of plunder led,
Through heaps of carnage to despoil the dead
[Homer, Illiad, x. 343, 387, Pope's translation]
When he was asked whether he had any girl or boy to wait on him, he said,
"No." And as his questioner asked further, "If then you die, who will bury
you?" He replied, "Whoever wants my house." Seeing a handsome youth
sleeping without any protection, he nudged him, and said, "Wake up
Mixd with the vulgar shall thy fate be found,
Piercd in the back, a vile dishonest wound.
[Homer, Illiad, v 40, viii 95, Pope's translation]
And he addressed a man who was buying delicacies at a great expense :
Not long, my son, will you on earth remain,
If such [be] your dealings.
[Cf., Homer, Illiad, xiv 95, Pope's translation]
When Plato was discoursing about his "ideas," and using the nouns
"tableness " and "cupness ;" "I, O Plato!" interrupted
Diogenes, "see a table and a cup, but I see no tableness or cupness." Plato made
answer, "That is natural enough, for you have eyes, by which a cup and a table are
contemplated; but you have not intellect, by which tableness and cupness are seen."
On one occasion, he was asked by a certain person, "What sort of a man, O
Diogenes, do you think Socrates ?" and he [237] said, "A madman." [A better
translation: When asked by a certain person, "What sort of man, O Diogenes, do you
consider yourself to be," he answered, "A mad Socates."] Another time, the
question was put to him, when a man ought to marry? and his reply was, "Young men
ought not to marry yet, and old men never ought to marry at all." When asked what he
would take to let a man give him a blow on the head ?" he replied, "A
helmet." Seeing a youth smartening himself up very carefully, he said to him,
"If you are doing that for men, you are miserable [a fool]; and if for women, you are
profligate [a knave]." Once he saw a youth blushing, and addressed him,
"Courage, my boy, that is the complexion of virtue." Having once listened to two
lawyers, he condemned them both; saying, "That the one had stolen the thing in
question, and that the other had not lost it." When asked what wine he liked to
drink, he said, "That which belongs to another," A man said to him one day,
"Many people laugh at you." "But I," he replied, am not laughed
down." When a man said to him, that it was a bad thing to live; "Not to
live," said he, "but to live badly." When some people were advising him to
make search for a slave who had run away," he said, "It would be a very absurd
thing for Manes to be able to live without Diogenes, but for Diogenes not to be able to
live without Manes." When he was dining on olives, a cheese-cake was brought in, on
which he threw the olive away [mistranslation: rather he threw away the cake], saying
:
Keep well aloof, O stranger, from all tyrants. [This is a line of the Phcenissn of
Euripides, v. 40]
And presently he added :-
He drove the olive off (mastixen d' elaan) [The pun here is on the similarity of
the noun elaan, an olive, to the verb elaan, to drive; the words mastixen
d' elaan are of frequent occurrence in Homer.]
When he was asked what sort of a dog he was, he replied, "When hungry, I am a dog
of Melita; when satisfied, a Molossian; a sort which most of those who
praise, do not like to take out hunting with them, because of the labour of keeping up
with them; and in like manner, you cannot associate with me, from fear of the pain I give
you." The question was put to him, whether wise men ate cheese-cakes, and he replied,
"They eat everything, just as the rest of mankind." When asked why people give
to beggars and not to philoso- [238>] phers, he said, "Because they think it
possible that they themselves may become lame and blind, but they do not expect ever to
turn out philosophers." He once begged of a covetous man, and as he was slow to give,
he said, "Man, I am asking you for something to maintain me (eis trophên) and
not to bury me (eis taphên)." When some one reproached him for having
tampered with the coinage, he said, "There was a time when I was such a person as you
are now; but there never was when you were such as I am now, and never will be." And
to another person who reproached him on the same grounds, he said, "There were times
when I did what I did not wish to, but that is not the case now." When he went to
Myndus, he saw some very large gates, but the city was a small one, and so he said,
"Oh men of Myndus, shut your gates, lest your city should steal out." On one
occasion, he saw a man who had been detected stealing purple, and so he said
A purple death, and mighty fate oertook him. [Homer. Il. v. 83]
When Craterus entreated him to come and visit him, he said, "I would rather lick
up salt at Athens, than enjoy a luxurious table with Craterus." On one occasion, he
met Anaximenes, the orator, who was a fat man, and thus accosted him; "Pray give us,
who are poor, some of our belly; for by so doing you will be relieved yourself, and you
will assist us " And once, when he was discussing some point, Diogenes held up a
piece of salt fish, and drew off the attention of his hearers; and as Anaximenes was
indignant at this, he said, "See, one pennyworth of salt fish has put an end to the
lecture of Anaximenes." Being once reproached for eating in the market-place, he made
answer, "I did, for it was in the market-place that I was hungry." Some authors
also attribute the following repartee to him.. Plato saw him washing vegetables, and so,
coming up to him, he quietly accosted him thus, "If you had paid court to Dionysius,
you would not have been washing vegetables." "And," he replied, with equal
quietness, "if you had washed vegetables, you would never have paid court to
Dionysius." When a man said. to him once, "Most people laugh at you;"
"And very [239>] likely," he replied, "the asses laugh at them; but they
do not regard the asses, neither do I regard them." Once he saw a youth studying
philosophy, and said to him, "Well done; inasmuch as you are leading those who admire
your person to contemplate the beauty of your mind."
A certain person was admiring the offerings in the temple at Samothrace [The
Samothracian Gods were Gods of the sea, and it was customary for those who had been saved
from shipwreck to make them an offering of some part of what they had saved; and of their
hair, if they had saved nothing but, their lives. The Samothracian Gods were Gods of the
sea, and it was customary for those who had been saved from shipwreck to make them an
offering of some part of what they had saved; and of their hair, if they had saved nothing
but, their lives.], and he said to him, "They would have been much more numerous, if
those who were lost had offered them instead of those who were saved;" but some
attribute this speech to Diagoras the Thelian. Once he saw a handsome youth going to a
banquet, and said to him, "You will come back worse (xeirôn);" and when
he the next day after the banquet said to him, "I have left the banquet, and was no
worse for it;" he replied, "You were not Chiron, but Eurytion." [Eurytion
was another Of the Centaurs, who was killed by Hercules.] He was begging once of a very
ill-tempered man, and as he said to him, "If you can persuade me, I will give you
something ;" he replied, "If I could persuade you, I would beg you to hang
yourself." He was on one occasion returning from Lacedaemon to Athens; and when some
one asked him, "Whither are you going, and whence do you come?" he said, "
I am going from the mens apartments to the womens." Another time he was
returning from the Olympic games, and when some one asked him whether there had been a
great multitude there, he said, "A great multitude, but very few men." He used
to say that debauched men resembled figs growing on a precipice; the fruit of which is not
tasted by men, but devoured by crows and vultures. When Phryne had dedicated a golden
statue of Venus at Delphi, he wrote upon it, "From the profligacy of the
Greeks."
Once Alexander the Great came and stood by him, and said, "I am Alexander, the
great king." "And I," said he, "am Diogenes the dog [cuôn,
also, Cynic]." And when he was asked to what actions of his it was owing that he was
called a dog, he said, "Because I fawn upon those who give me anything, and bark at
those who give me nothing, and bite the rogues." On on occasion he was gathering some
of the fruit of a fig-tree, and [240>] when the man who was guarding it told him a man
hung himself on this tree the other day, " I, then," said he, " will now
purify [or: purge] it." Once he saw a man who had been a conqueror at the Olympic
games looking very often at a courtesan; " Look," said he, "at that warlike
ram, who is taken prisoner by the first [foxy] girl he meets." One of his sayings
was, that good-looking courtesans were like poisoned mead.
On one occasion he was eating his dinner in the market-place, and the bystanders kept
constantly calling out "Dog;" but he said, "It is you
who are the dogs, who stand around me while I am at dinner." When two effeminate
fellows were getting out of his way, he said, "Do not be afraid, a dog does not eat
beetroot." Being once asked about a debauched boy, as to what country he came from,
he said, "He is a Tegean." [This is a punon the similarity of the sound, Tegea,
to tegos, a brothel.] Seeing an unskilful wrestler professing to heal a man he
said, "What are you about, are you in hopes now to overthrow [viz., to revenge
yourself on] those who formerly conquered you ?" On one occasion he saw the
son of a courtesan throwing a stone at a crowd, and said to him, "Take care, lest you
hit your father." When a boy showed him a sword that he had received from one to whom
he had done some discreditable service, he told him, "The sword is a good sword, but
the handle is infamous." And when some people were praising a man who had given him
some-thing, he said to them, "And do not you praise me who was worthy to receive
it?" He was asked by some one to give him back his cloak; but he replied, "If
you gave it me, it is mine; and if you only lent it me, I am using it." A
supposititious son (hypobolimaios) of somebody once said to him, that he had gold
in his cloak; "No doubt," said he, "that is the very reason why I sleep
with it under my head (hyobeblêmenos)." When he was asked what advantage he
had derived from philosophy, he replied, "If no other, at least this, that I am
prepared for every kind of fortune." The question was put to him what countryman he
was, and ho replied, "A Citizen of [241>] the world [kosmopolitês]."
Some men were sacrificing to the Gods to prevail on them to send them sons, and he said,
"And do you not sacrifice to procure sons of a. particular character?" Once he
was asking the president of a society for a contribution, and said to him:
"Spoil all the rest, but keep your hands from [viz., off] Hector."
He used to say that courtesans were the queens of kings; for that they asked them for
whatever they chose. When the Athenians had voted that Alexander was Bacchus, he said to
them, "Vote, too, that I am Serapis." When a man rproached him for going into
unclean places, he said, "The sun too penetrates into privies, but is not polluted by
them." When supping in a temple, as some dirty loaves were set before him, he took
them up and threw them away, saying that nothing dirty ought to come into a temple; and
when some one said to him, "You philosophize without being possessed of any
knowledge," he said, "If I only pretend to wisdom, that is philosophizing."
A man once brought him a boy, and said that he was a very clever child, and one of an
admirable disposition." "What, then," said Diogenes, "does he want of
me?" He used to say, that those who utter virtuous sentiments but do not do them, are
no better than harps, for that a harp has no hearing or feeling. Once he was going into a
theatre while every one else was coming out of it; and when asked why he did so, "It
is," said he, "what I have been doing all my life." Once when he saw a
young man putting on effeminate airs, he said to him, "Are you not ashamed to have
worse plans for yourself than nature had for you? for she has made you a man, but you are
trying to force yourself to be a woman." When he saw an ignorant man tuning a
psaltery, he said to him, "Are you not ashamed to be arranging proper sounds on a
wooden instrument, and not arranging your soul to a proper life?" When a man said to
him, "I am not calculated [fitted] for philosophy," he said, "Why then do
you live, if you have no desire to live properly?" To a man who treated his father
with contempt, he said, "Are you not ashamed to despise him to whom you owe it that
you have it in your ,power to give yourself airs at all?" Seeing a handsome young man
chattering in an unseemly manner [242>] he said, "Are you not ashamed to draw a
sword out of lead out of a scabbard of ivory?" Being once reproached for drinking in
a vintners shop, he said, "I have my hair cut, too, in a barbers."
At another time, he was attacked for having accepted a cloak from Antipater, but he
replied:
"Refuse not thou to heed
The gifts which from the mighty Gods proceed."
[Homer, lliad, iii 65]
A man once struck him with a broom, and said, "Take care." so he struck him
in return with his staff, and said, "Take care."
He once said to a man who was addressing anxious entreaties to a courtesan, "What
can you wish to obtain, you wretched man, that you had not better be disappointed
in?" Seeing a man reeking all over with unguents, he said to him, "Have a care,
lest the fragrance of your head give a bad odour to your life." One of his sayings
was, that servants serve their masters, and that wicked men are the slaves of their
appetites. Being asked why [footmen ]slaves were called andrapoda, he replied,
"Because they have the feet of men (tous podas andrôn), and a soul such as
you who are asking this question." He once asked a profligate fellow for a mina; and
when he put the question to him, why he asked others for an obol, and him for a mina, he
saidm "Because I hope I to get something from the others another time, but the Gods
alone know whether I shall ever extract anything from you again." Once he was
reproached for asking favours, while Plato never asked for any; and he said;
"He asks as well as I do, but he does it
Bending his head, that no one else may hear."
One day he saw an unskilful archer shooting; so he went and sat down by the target,
saying, "Now I shall be out of harms way." He used to say, that those who
were in love were disappointed in regard of the pleasure they expected. When he was asked
whether death was an evil, he replied, "How can that be an evil which we do not feel
when it is present?" When Alexander was once standing by him, and saying, "Do
not you fear me ?" He replied, " No; for what are you, a good or an evil?"
And as he said that he was good, "Who, then," said Diogenes, "fears the
good ?" He used to say, that education was, for the young sobriety, for the old
comfort, for the poor riches, and for the rich an ornament." When Didymus the
adulterer was once trying to cure the eye of a young girl (korês), he said,
"Take care, lest when you are curing the eye of the maiden, you do not hurt the
pupil." [There is a pun here: korê means both "a girl" and
"the pupil of the eye." And phthei ô, "to destroy," is also
especially used for "to seduce."] A man once said to him, that his friends laid
plots against him; "What then," said he, " are you to do, if you must look
upon both your friends and enemies in the same light ?"
On one occasion he was asked, what was the most excellent thing among men; and he said,
" Freedom of speech (parrêsia)." He went once into a school, and saw
many statues of the Muses, but very few pupils, and said, "Gods, and all my good
schoolmasters, you have plenty of pupils." He was in the habit of doing everything in
public, whether in respect of Venus or Ceres; and he used to put his conclusions in this
way to people: "If there is nothing absurd in dining, then it is not absurd to dine
in the market-place. But it is not absurd to dine, therefore it is riot absurd to dine in
the market-place." And as he was continually doing manual work [viz., masturbating]
in public, he said one day, "Would that by rubbing my belly I could get rid of
hunger." Other sayings also are attributed to him, which it would take a long time to
enumerate, there is such a multiplicity of them.
He used to say, that there were two kinds of exercise: that, namely, of the mind and
that of the body; and that the latter of these created in the mind such quick and agile
phantasies at the time of its performance, as very much facilitated the practice of
virtue; but that one was imperfect without the other, since the health and vigour
necessary for the practice of what is good, depend equally on both mind and body. And he
used to allege as proofs of this, and of the ease which practice imparts to acts of
virtue, that people could see that in the case of mere common working trades, and other
employments of that kind, the artisans arrived at no inconsiderable accuracy by constant
practice; and that any one may see how much one flute player, or one wrestler, is superior
to another, by his own continued practice. And that if these [344>] men transferred the
same training to their minds they wou1d not labour in a profitless or imperfect manner. He
used to say also, that there was nothing whatever in life which could be brought to
perfection without practice, and that that alone was able to overcome every obstacle;
that, therefore, as we ought to repudiate all useless toils, and to apply ourselves to
useful labours, and to live happily, we are only unhappy in consequence of most exceeding
folly. For the very contempt of pleasure, if we only inure ourselves to it, is very
pleasant; and just as they who are accustomed to live luxuriously, are brought very
unwillingly to adopt the contrary system; so they who have been originally inured to that
opposite system, feel a sort of pleasure in the contempt of pleasure.
This used to be the language which he held, and he used to show in practice, really
altering mens habits, and deferring in all things rather to the principles of nature
than to those of law; saying that he was adopting the same fashion of life as Hercules
had, preferring nothing in the world to liberty; and saying that everything belonged to
the wise, and advancing arguments such as I mentioned just above. For instance every thing
belongs to the Gods; and the Gods are friends to the wise; and all the property of friends
is held in common; therefore everything belong to the wise. He also argued about the law,
that without it there is no possibility of a constitution being maintained; for without a
city there can be nothing orderly, but a city is an orderly thing; and without a city
there can be no law; therefore law is order. And he played in the same manner with the
topics of noble birth, and reputation, and all things of that kind, saying that they were
all veils, as it were, for wickedness; and that that was the only proper constitution
which consisted in order. Another of his doctrines was that all women ought to be
possessed in common; and he said that marriage was a nullity, and that the proper way
would be for every man to live with her whom he could persuade to agree with him. And on
the same principle he said, that all peoples sons ought to belong to every one in
common; and there was nothing intolerable in the idea of taking anything out of a temple,
or eating any animal whatever, and that there was no impiety in tasting even human flesh;
as is plain from the habits of foreign nations; and he said that this principle might be
correctly extended to [245>] every ease and every people. For he said that in reality
everything was a combination of all things. For that in bread there was meat, and in
vegetables there was bread, and so there were some particles of all other bodies in
everything, communicating by invisible passages and evaporating.
VII. And he explains this theory of his clearly in the Thyestes, if indeed the
tragedies attributed to him are really his composition, and not rather the work of
Philistus, of Aegina, his intimate friend, or of Pasiphon, the son of Lucian, who is
stated by Phavorinus, in his Universal History, to have written them after Diogenes
death.
VIII. Music and geometry, and astronomy, and all things of that kind, he neglected, as
useless and unnecessary. But he was a man very happy in meeting arguments, as is plain
from what we have already said.
IX. And he bore being sold with a most magnanimous spirit. For as he was sailing to
Aegina, and was taken prisoner by some pirates, under the command of Scirpalus, he was
carried off to Crete and sold; and when the Circe asked him what art he understood, he
said, "That of governing men." And presently pointing out a Corinthian, very
carefully dressed, (the same Xeniades whom we have mentioned before), he said, "Sell
me to that man; for he wants a master." Accordingly Xeniades bought him and carried
him away to Corinth; and then he made him tutor of his sons, and committed to him the
entire management of his house. And he behaved himself in every affair in such a manner,
that Xeniades, when looking over his property, said, "A good genius has come into my
house." And Cleomenes, in his book which is called the Schoolmaster, says, that he
wished to ransom all his relations, but that Diogenes told him that they were all fools;
for that lions did not become the slaves of those who kept them, but, of the contrary,
those who maintained lions were their slaves. For that it was the part of a slave to fear,
but that wild beasts were formidable to men.
X. And the man had the gift of persuasion in a wonderful degree; so that he could
easily overcome any one by his arguments. Accordingly, it is said that an Aeginetan of the
name of Onesicritus, having two Sons, sent to Athens one of them, whose name was
Androsthenes, and that he, after having heard Diogenes lecture, remained there; and that
after [246>] that, he sent the elder, Philiscus, who has been already mentioned, and
that Philiscus was charmed in the same manner. And last of all, he came himself, and then
he too remained, no less than his son, studying philosophy at the feet of Diogenes. So
great a charm was there in the discourses of Diogenes. Another pupil of his was Phocion,
who was surnamed the Good; and Stilpon, the Megarian, and a great many other men of
eminence as statesmen.
XI. He is said to have died when he was nearly ninety years of age, but there are
different accounts given of his death. For some say that he ate an oxs foot raw, and
was in consequence seized with a bilious attack, of which he died; others, of whom
Cercidas, a Megalopolitan or Cretan, is one, say that he died of holding his breath for
several days; and Cercidas speaks thus of him in his Meliambics:
He, that Sinopian who bore the stick,
Wore his cloak doubled, and in th open air
Dined without washing, would not bear with life
A moment longer: but he shut his teeth,
And held his breath. He truly was the so[n]
Of Jove, and a most heavenly-minded dog,
The wise Diogenes.
Others say that he, while intending to distribute a polypus [viz., octopus] to his
dogs, was bitten by them through the tendon of his foot, and so died. But his own greatest
friends, as Antisthenes tells us in his Successions, rather sanction the story of his
having died from holding his breath. For he used to live in the Craneum, which was a
Gymnasium at the gates of Corinth. And his friends came according to their custom, and
found him with his head covered; and as they did not suppose that he was asleep, for he
was not a man much subject to the influence of night or sleep, they drew away his cloak
from his face, and found him no longer breathing; and they thought that he had done this
on purpose, wishing to escape the remaining portion of his life.
On this there was a quarrel, as they say, between his friends, as to who should bury
him, and they even came to blows; but when the elders and chief men of the city came
there, they say that he was buried by them at the gate which leads to the Isthmus. And
they placed over him a pillar, and on that a dog in Parian marble. And at a later period
his fellow [247>] citizens honoured him with brazen statues, and put this inscription
on them :
Een brass by lapse of time doth old become,
But there is no such time as shall efface.
Your lasting glory, wise Diogenes;
Since you alone did teach to men the
Of a contented life: the surest path
To glory and a lasting happiness.
We ourselves have also written an epigram on him in the proceleusmatic metre.
A. Tell me, Diogenes, tell me true, I pray,
How did you die; what fate to Pluto bore you?
B. The savage bite of an envious dog did kill me.
Some, however, say that when he was dying, he ordered his friends to throw his corpse
away without burying it, so that every beast might tear it, or else to throw it into a
ditch, and sprinkle a little dust over it. And others say that his injunctions were, that
he should be thrown into the Ilissus; that so he might be useful to his brethren. But
Demetrius, in his treatise on Men of the Same Name, says that Diogenes died in Corinth the
same day that Alexander died in Babylon. And he was already an old man, as early as the
hundred and thirteenth olympiad.
XII. The following books are attributed to him. The dialogues entitled the Cephalion;
the Icthyas; the Jackdaw; the Leopard; the People (demos) of the Athenians; the
Republic; one called Moral Art; one on Wealth; one on Love; the Theodorus; the Hypsias;
the Aristarchus; one on Death; a volume of Letters; seven Tragedies, the Helen, the
Thyestes, the Hercules, the Achilles, the Medea, the Chrysippus, and the Oedippus.
But Sosicrates, in the first book of his Successions, and Satyrus, in the fourth book
of his Lives, both assert that none of all these are the genuine composition of Diogenes.
And Satyrus affirms that the tragedies are the work of Philiscus, the Aeginetan, a friend
of Diogenes. But Sotion, in his seventh book, says that these are the only genuine works
of Diogenes : a dialogue on Virtue; another on the Good; another on Love; the Beggar; the
Solmaeus; the Leopard; the Cassander; the Cephalion; and that the Aristarchus, the
[248>] Sisyphus, the Ganymede, a volume of Apophthegms, and another of Letters, are all
the work of Philiscus.
XIII. There were five persons of the name of Diogenes. The first a native of Apollonia,
a natural philosopher; and the beginning of his treatise on Natural Philosophy is as
follows: "It appears to me to be well for every one who commences any kind of
philosophical treatise, to lay down some undeniable principle to start with." The
second was a Sicymian, who wrote an account of Peloponnesus. The third was the man of whom
we have been speaking. The fourth was a Stoic, a native of Seleucia, but usually called a
Babylonian, from the proximity of Seleucia to Babylon. The fifth was a native of Tarsus,
who wrote on the subject of some questions concerning poetry which he endeavours to solve.
XIV. Athenodorus, in the eighth book of his Conversations, says, that the philosopher
always had a shining appearance, from his habit of anointing himself.
LIFE OF MONIMUS.
I. Monimws was a Syracusan, and a pupil of Diogenes, but also a slave of some
Corinthian money-changer, as Sosicrater tells us. Xeniades, who bought Diogenes, used
often to come to him, extolling the excellency of Diogenes both in actions and words, till
he excited a great affection for the man in the mind of Monimus. For he immediately
feigned madness, and threw about all the money and all the coins that were on the table,
until his master discarded him, and then he straightway went to Diogenes and became his
pupil. He also followed Crates the Cynic a good deal, and devoted himself to the same
studies as he did; and the sight of this conduct of his made his master all the more think
him mad.
II. And he was a very eminent man, so that even Menander, the comic poet, speaks of
him; accordingly, in one of his plays, namely in the Hippocomus [viz., The Groom],
he mentions him thus :
There is a man, O Philo, named Monimus,
A wise man, though little known, and one [249>]
Who bears a wallet at his back, and is nobt
Content with one but three. He never spoke
A single sentence, by great Jove I swear,
Like this one, "Know thyself," or any other
Of the oft-quoted proverbs: all such sayings
He scorned, as he did beg his way through dirt;
Teaching that all opinion is but vanity.
But he was a man of such gravity that he despised glory, and sought only for truth.
III. He wrote some jests mingled with serious treatises, and two essays on the
Appetites, and an Exhortation [to Philosophy].
LIFE OF ONESICRITUS.
I. Onesicritus is called by some authors an .Aeginetan, but Demetrius the Magnesian
affirms that he was a native of Astypahia. He also was one of the most eminent of the
disciples of Diogenes.
II. And he appears in some points to resemble Xenophon. For Xenophon joined in the
expedition of Cyrus, and Onesicritus in that of Alexander; and Xenophon wrote the
Cyropadia, and Onesicritus wrote an account of the education of Alexander. Xenophon, too,
wrote a Panegyric on Cyrus, and Onesicritus one on Alexander. They were also both similar
to one another in style, except that a copyist is naturally inferior to the original.
III. Menander, too, who was surnamed Drymus, was a pupil of Diogenes, and a great
admirer of Homer: and so was Hegesius of Sinope, who was nicknamed Clocus, and Philiscus
the Aeginetan, as we have said before.
LIFE OF CRATES.
I. CRATES was a Theban by birth, and the son of Ascondus. He also was one of the
eminent disciples of the Cynic. But Hippobotus asserts that he was not a pupil of
Diogenes, but of Bryson the Achaean. [250>]
II. There are the following sportive lines of his quoted
The waves surround vain Peres fruitful soil,
And fertile acres crown the sea-born isle;
Land which no parasite eer dares invade,
Or lewd seducer of a hapless maid;
It bears figs, bread, thyme, garlics savoury charms,
Gifts which neer tempt men to detested arms,
Theyd rather fight for gold than glorys dreams,
There is also an account-book of his much spoken of, which is drawn up in such terms as
these:
Put down the cook for minas half a score,
Put down the doctor for a drachma more:
Five talents to the flatterer; some smoke
To the adviser, an obol and a cloak
For the philosopher; for the willing nymph,
A talent
He was also nicknamed Door-opener, because he used to enter every house and give the
inmates advice. These lines, too, are his
All this I learnt and pondered in my mind,
Drawing deep wisdom from the Muses kind,
But all the rest is vanity.
There is a line, too, which tells us that he gained from philosophy
A peck of lupins, and to care for nobody.
This, too, is attributed to him:
Hunger checks love; and should it not, time does.
If both should fail you, then a halter choose.
He flourished about the hundred and thirteenth olympiad.
Antisthenes, in his Successions, says that he, having once, in a certain tragedy, seen
Telephus holding a date basket, and in a miserable plight in other respects, betook
himself to the Cynic philosophy; and having turned his patrimony into money (for he was of
illustrious extraction), he collected three hundred talents by that means, and divided
them among the citizens. And after that he devoted himself to philosophy with such
eagerness, that even Philemon the comic poet mentions him. Accordingly he says:
[251>]
And in the summer hed a shaggy gown,
To inure himself to hardship: in the winter
He wore mere rags.
But Diodes says that it was Diogenes who persuaded him to discard all his estate and
his flocks, and to throw his money into the sea; and he says further, that the house of
Crates was destroyed by Alexander, and that of Hipparchia under Philip. And he would very
frequently drive away with his staff those of his relations who came after him, and
endeavoured to dissuade him from his design; and he remained immoveable.
V. Demetrius, the Magnesian, relates that he deposited his money with a banker, making
an agreement with him, that if his sons tuned out ordinary ignorant people, he was then to
restore it to them; but if they became philosophers, then he was to divide it among the
people, for that they, if they were philosophers, would have no need of anything. And
Eratosthenes tells us that he had by Hipparchia, whom we shall mention hereafter, a son
whose name was Pasicles, and that when he grew up, he took him to a brothel kept by a
female slave, and told him that that was all the marriage that his father designed for
him; but that marriages which resulted in adultery were themes for tragedians; and had
exile and bloodshed for their prizes; and the marriages of those who lived with courtesans
were subjects for the comic poets, and often produced madness as the result of debauchery
and drunkenness.
VI. He had also a brother named Pasicles, a pupil of Euclides.
VII. Phavorinus, in the second book of his Commentaries, relates a witty saying of his;
for he says, that once, when he was begging a favour of the master of a gymnasium, on the
behalf of some acquaintance, he touched his thighs; and as he expressed his indignation at
this, he said, "Why, do they not belong to you as well as your knees?" He used
to say that it was impossible to find a man who had never done wrong, in the same way as
there was always some worthless seed in a pomegranate. On one occasion he provoked
Nicodromus, the harp-player. and received a black eye from him ; so he put a plaster on
his forehead and wrote upon it, "Nicodromus did this." He used to abuse
prostitutes designedly, for the purpose of practising himself in enduring reproaches. When
[252>] Demetrius Phalereus sent him some loaves and wine, he attacked him for his
present, saying, "I wish that the fountains bore loaves;" and it is notorious
that he was a water drinker.
He was once reproved by the aediles of the Athenians, for wearing fine linen, and so he
replied, "I will show you Theophrastus also clad in fine linen." And as they did
not believe him, he took them to a barbers shop, and showed him to them as he was
being shaved. At Thebes he was once scourged by the master of the Gymnasium, (though some
say it was by Euthycrates, at Corinth), and dragged out by the feet; but he did not care,
and quoted the line
I feel, O mighty chief, your matchless might,
Dragged, foot first, downward from th ethereal height.[Cf., Homer, Illiad i 591]
But Diocles says that it was by Menedemus, of Eretria, that he was dragged in this
manner, for that as he was a handsome man, and supposed to be very obsequious to
Asclepiades, the Phliasian, Crates touched his thighs and said, "Is Asclepiacles
within?" And Menedemus was very much offended, and dragged him out, as has been
already, said; and then Crates quoted the above-cited line.
VIII. Zeno, the Cittiaean, in his Apophthegms, says, that he once sewed up a
sheeps fleece in his cloak, without thinking of it; and he was a very ugly man, and
one who excited laughter when he was taking exercise. And he used to say, when he put up
his hands, "Courage, Crates, as far as your eyes and the rest of your body is
concerned;
IX. "For you shall see those who now ridicule you, convulsed with disease, and
envying your happiness, and accusing themselves of slothfulness." One of his sayings
was, "That a man ought to study philosophy, up to the point of looking on generals
and donkey-drivers in the same light." Another was, that those who live with
flatterers, are as desolate as calves when in the company of wolves; for that neither the
one nor the other are with those whom they ought to be, or their own kindred, but only
with those who are plotting against them.
X. When he felt that he was dying, he made verses on himself, saying : [253>]
Youre going, noble hunchback, you are going
To Plutos realms, bent double by old age.
For he was humpbacked from age.
XI. When Alexander asked him whether he wished to see the restoration of his country,
he said, "What would be the use of it? for perhaps some other Alexander would come at
some future time and destroy it again.
"But poverty and dear obscurity,
Are what a prudent man should think his country
For these een fortune cant deprive him of."
He also said that he was :
A fellow countryman of wise Diogenes,
Whom even envy never had attacked.
Menander, in his Twin-sister, mentions him thus :
For you will walk with me wrapped in your cloak,
As his wife used to with the Cynic Crates.
XII He gave his daughter to his pupils, as he himself used to say:
To have and keep on trial for a month.
LIFE OF METROCLES.
I. METROCLES was the brother of Hipparchia; and though he had formerly been a pupil of
Theophrastus, he had profited so little by his instructions, that once, thinking that,
while listening to a lecture on philosophy, he had disgraced himself by his inattention,
he fell into despondency, and shut himself up in his house, intending to starve himself to
death. Accordingly, when Crates heard of it, he came to him, having been sent for; and
eating a number of lupins, on purpose, he persuaded him by numbers of arguments, that he
had done no harm; for that it was not to be expected that a man should not indulge his
natural inclinations and habits; and he comforted him by showing him that he, in a similar
case, would certainly have behaved in a similar manner. [254>] And after that, he
became a pupil of Crates, and a man of great eminence as a philosopher.
II. He burnt all his writings, as Hecaton tells us in the first book of his
Apophthegms, and said:
These are the phantoms of infernal dreams;
As if he meant that they were all nonsense. But some say that it was the notes which he
had taken of the lectures of Theophrastus which he burnt, quoting the following verse
:
Vulcan, draw near, tis Thetis asks your aid. [Homer, Illiad, xviii 395]]
III. He used to say that some things could be bought with money, as for instance a
house; and some with time and industry, as education; that wealth was mischievous; if a
man did not use it properly.
IV. He died at a great age, having suffocated himself.
V. His pupils were Theomentus and Cleomenes, Demetrius of Alexandria, the son of
Theombrotus, Timarchus of Alexandria, the son of Cleomenes, and Echecles, of Ephesus. Not
but what Echecles was also a pupil of Theombrotus; and Menedemus, of whom we shall speak
hereafter, was his pupil. Menippus, of Sinope, too, was a very eminent person in his
school.
LIFE OF HIPPARCHIA.
I. Hipparchia, the sister of Metrocles, was charmed among others, by the doctrines
of this school.
II. Both she and Metrocles were natives of Maronea. She fell in love with both the
doctrines and manners of Crates, and could not be diverted from her regard for him, by
either the wealth, or high birth, or personal beauty, of any of her suitors, but Crates
was everything to her; and she threatened her parents to make away with herself, if she
were not given in marriage to him. Crates accordingly, being entreated by. her parents to
dissuade her from this resolution, did all he [225>] could; and at last, as he could
not persuade her, he rose up, and placing all his furniture before her, he said,
"This is the bridegroom whom you are choosing, and this is the whole of his property;
consider these facts, for it will not be possible for you to become his partner, if you do
not also apply yourself to the same studies, and conform to the same habits that he
does." But the girl chose him; and assuming the same dress that he wore, went about
with him as her husband, and appeared with him in public everywhere, and went to all
entertainments in his company.
III. And once when she went to sup with Lysimachus, she attacked Theodorus, who was
surnamed the Atheist; proposing to him the following sophism; "What Theodorus could
not be called wrong for doing, that same thing Hipparchia ought not to be called wrong for
doing. But Theodorus does no wrong when he beats himself; therefore Hipparchia does no
wrong when she beats Theodorus." He made no reply to what she said, but only pulled
her clothes about; but Hipparchia was neither offended nor ashamed, as many a woman would
have been; but when he said to her :
"Who is the woman who has left the shuttle
So near the warp? [This line is from the Bacchae of Euripedes, v. 1228]
"I, Theodorus, am that person," she replied; "but do I appear to you to
have come to a wrong decision, if I devote that time to philosophy, which I otherwise
should have spent at the loom?" And these and many other sayings are reported of this
female philosopher.
IV. There is also a volume of letters of Crates extant [From this last paragraph it is
inferred by some critics, that originally the preceding memoirs of Crates, Metrocles, and
Hipparchia. formed only one chapter or book.], in which he philosophizes most excellently;
and in style is very little inferior to Plato. He also wrote some tragedies, which are
imbued with a very sublime spirit of philosophy, of which the following lines are a
specimen
Tis not one town, nor one poor single house,
That is my country; but in every land
Each city and each dwelling seems to me,
A place for my reception ready made.
And he died at a great age, and was buried in Boeotia.
[256>]
LIFE OF MENIPPUS
I. Menippus was also a Cynic, and a Phoenician by descent, a slave by birth, as
Achaicus tells us in his Ethics; and Diodes informs us that his master was a native of
Pontus, of the name of Baton; but that subsequently, in consequence of his importunities
and miserly habits, he became rich, and obtained the rights of citizenship at Corinth.
II. He never wrote anything serious; but his writings are full of ridiculous matter;
and in some respects similar to those of Meleager, who was his contemporary. And Hermippus
tells us that he was a man who lent money at daily interest, and that he was called a
usurer; for he used to lend on nautical usury, and take security, so that he amassed a
very great amount of riches.
III. But at last he fell into a snare, and lost all his money. and in a fit of despair
he hung himself, and so he died. And we have written a playful epigram on him:
This man was a Syrian by birth,
And a Cretan usurious hound,
As the name he was known by sets forth,
Youve heard of him oft Ill be bound;
His name was Menippusmen entered his house,
And stole all his goods without leaving a louse,
When (from this the dogs nature you plainly may tell)
He hung himself up, and so went off to hell.
IV. But some say that the books attributed to him are not really his work, but are the
composition of Dionysius and Zopyrus the Colophonians, who wrote them out of joke, and
then gave them to him as a man well able to dispose of them.
V. There were six persons of the name of Menippus; the first was the man who wrote a
history of the Lydians, and made an abridgment of Xanthus; the second was this man of whom
we have been speaking; the third was a sophist of Stratonice, a Carian by descent; the
fourth was a statuary: the fifth and the sixth were painters, and they are both mentioned
by Apollodorus.
VI. The writings left by the Cynic amount to thirteen volumes; a Description of the
Dead; a volume called Wills; [257>] a volume of Letters in which the Gods are
introduced; treatises addressed to the Natural Philosophers, and Mathematicians, and
Grammanans; one on the Generations of Epicurus, and on the Observance of the Twentieth Day
by the philosophers of his school; and one or two other essays.
THE LIFE OF MENEDEMUS.
I. MENEDEMUS was a disciple of Celotes of Lampsaeus.
II. He proceeded, as Hippobotus tells, to such a great degree of superstition, that he
assumed the garb of a fury, and went about saying that he had come from hell to take
notice of all who did wrong, in order that he might descend thither again and make his
report to the deities who abode in that country. And this was his dress: a tunic of a dark
colour reaching to his feet, and a purple girdle round his waist, an Arcadian hat on his
head with the twelve signs of the zodiac embroidered on it, tragic buskins, a
preposterously long beard, and an ashen staff in his hand.
III. These then are the lives of each of the Cynics; and we shall also subjoin some of
the doctrines which they all held in common, if indeed it is not an abuse of language to
call that a sect of philosophy at all, instead of, as some contend it should be termed, a
mere system of life.
They wished to abolish the whole system of logic and natural philosophy, like Aristo of
Chios, and thought that men should study nothing but ethics; and what some people assert
of Socrates was described by Diodes as a characteristic of Diogenes, for he said that his
doctrine was, that a man ought to investigate
Only the good and ill that taketh place
Within our houses.
They also discard all liberal studies. Accordingly, Antisthenes said that wise men only
applied themselves to literature and learning for the sake of perverting others ; they
also wish to abolish geometry and music, and everything of that [258>] kind.
Accordingly, Diogenes said once to a person who was showing him a clock; "It is a
very useful thing to save a man from being too late for supper." And once when a man
made an exhibition. of musical skill before him, he said:
"Cities are governed, so are houses too,
By wisdom, not by harp-playing and whistling."
[This a parody on two lines in the Antiope of Euripid[es] (Frag. 205)
Gnômêi gar andros eu men oikoountai poleis
Eu d' oikos eis t' au polemon ischuei mega
Which may be translated:
Wisdom it is which regulates both cities
And private citizens, and makes their lot
Secure and happy; nor is her influence
Of less account in war.]
Their doctrine is, that the chief good of mankind is to live according to virtue, as
Antisthenes says in his Hercules, in which they resemble the Stoics. For those two sects
have a good deal in common with one another, on which account they themselves say that
cynicism is a short road to virtue; and Zeno, the Cittiaean lived in the same manner.
They also teach that men ought to live simply, using only plain food in moderate
quantities, wearing nothing but a cloak and despising riches, and glory, and nobleness of
birth; accordingly some of them feed upon nothing beyond herbs and cold water, living in
any shelter that they can find, or in tubs as Diogenes did; for he used to say that it was
the peculiar property of the Gods to want nothing, and that, therefore, when a man wished
for nothing he was like the Gods.
Another of their doctrines is, that virtue is a thing which. may be taught, as
Antisthenes affirms in his Heraclides; and that when it has once been attained it can
never be lost. They also say that the wise man deserves to be loved, and cannot commit
error, and is a friend to every one who resembles him, and that he leaves nothing to
fortune. And everything which is unconnected with either virtue or vice they call
indifferent, agreeing in this with Aristo, the Chian.
These then were the Cynics; and now we must pass on to the Stoics, of which sect the
founder was Zeno, who had been a disciple of Crates.