LIFE OF ARISTOTLE
I. Aristotle was the son of Nicomachus and Phæstias, a
citizen of Stagira; and Nicomachus was descended from
Nicomachus, the son of Machaon, the son of Æsculapius, as
Hermippus tells us in his treatise on Aristotle; and he lived
with Amyntas, the king of the Macedonians, as both a
physician and a friend.
II. He was the most eminent of all the pupils of Plato; he
had a lisping voice, as is asserted by Timotheus the Athenian,
in his work on Lives. He had also very thin legs, they say,
and small eyes; but he used to indulge in very conspicuous
dress, and rings, and used to dress his hair carefully.
III. He had also a son named Nicomachus, by Herpyllis
his concubine, as we are told by Timotheus.
IV. He seceded from Plato while he was still alive; so
that they tell a story that he said, “Aristotle has kicked us off
just as chickens do their mother after they have been hatched.”
But Hermippus says in his Lives, that while he was absent on
an embassy to Philip, on behalf of the Athenians, Xenocrates
became the president of the school in the Academy; and that
when he returned and saw the school under the presidency of
some one else, he selected a promenade in the Lyceum, in
which he used to walk up and down with his disciples, discussing
subjects of philosophy till the time for anointing
themselves came; on which account he was called a Peripatetic.
But others say that he got this name because once
when Alexander was walking about after recovering from a
sickness, he accompanied him and kept conversing with him.
But when his pupils became numerous, he then gave them
seats, saying:—
It would be shame for me to hold my peace,
And for Isocrates to keep on talking.
And he used to accustom his disciples to discuss any
question which might be proposed, training them just as an
orator might.
V. After that he went to Hermias the Eunuch, the tyrant
of Atarneus, who, as it is said, allowed him all kinds of
liberties; and some say that he formed a matrimonial connection
with him, giving him either his daughter or his niece in
marriage, as is recorded by Demetrius of Magnesia, in his
essay on Poets and Prose-writers of the same name. And the
same authority says that Hermias had been the slave of
Eubulus, and a Bithynian by descent, and that he slew his
master. But Aristippus, in the first book of his treatise on
Ancient Luxury, says that Aristotle was enamoured of the
concubine of Hermias, and that, as Hermias gave his consent,
he married her; and was so overjoyed that he sacrificed to
her, as the Athenians do to the Eleusinian Ceres. And he
wrote a hymn to Hermias, which is given at length below.
VI. After that he lived in Macedonia, at the court of
Philip, and was entrusted by him with his son Alexander as a
pupil; and he entreated him to restore his native city which
had been destroyed by Philip, and had his request granted;
and he also made laws for the citizens. And also he used to
make laws in his schools, doing this in imitation of Xenocrates,
so that he appointed a president every ten days. And
when he thought that he had spent time enough with Alexander,
he departed for Athens, having recommended to him
his relation Callisthenes, a native of Olynthus; but as he
spoke too freely to the king, and would not take Aristotle’s
advice, he reproached him and said:—
Alas! my child, in life’s primeval bloom,
Such hasty words will bring thee to thy doom.
And his prophecy was fulfilled, for as he was believed by
Hermolaus to have been privy to the plot against Alexander,
he was shut up in an iron cage, covered with lice, and untended;
and at last he was given to a lion, and so died.
VII. Aristotle then having come to Athens, and having
presided over his school there for thirteen years, retired
secretly to Chalcis, as Eurymedon, the hierophant had impeached
him on an indictment for impiety, though Phavorinus,
in his Universal History, says that his prosecutor was Demophilus,
on the ground of having written the hymn to the
beforementioned Hermias, and also the following epigram
which was engraven on his statue at Delphi:—
The tyrant of the Persian archer race,
Broke through the laws of God to slay this man
Not by the manly spear in open fight,
But by the treachery of a faithless friend.
And after that he died of taking a draught of aconite, as
Eumelus says in the fifth book of his Histories, at the age of
seventy years. And the same author says that he was thirty
years old when he first became acquainted with Plato. But
this is a mistake of his, for he did only live in reality sixty-three
years, and he was seventeen years old when he first
attached himself to Plato. And the hymn in honour of
Hermias is as follows:—
O Virtue, won by earnest strife,
And holding out the noblest prize
That ever gilded earthly life,
Or drew it on to seek the skies;
For thee what son of Greece would
Deem it an enviable lot,
To live the life, to die the death,
That fears no weary hour, shrinks from no fiery breath?
Such fruit hast thou of heavenly bloom,
A lure more rich than golden heap,
More tempting than the joys of home,
More bland than spell of soft-eyed sleep.
For thee Alcides, son of Jove,
And the twin boys of Leda strove,
With patient toil and sinewy might,
Thy glorious prize to grasp, to reach thy lofty height.
Achilles, Ajax, for thy love
Descended to the realms of night;
Atarneus’ King thy vision drove,
To quit for aye the glad sun-light,
Therefore, to memory’s daughters dear,
His deathless name, his pure career,
Live shrined in song, and link’d with awe,
The awe of Xenian Jove, and faithful friendship’s law.
There is also an epigram of ours upon him, which runs
thus:—
Eurymedon, the faithful minister
Of the mysterious Eleusinian Queen,
Was once about t’ impeach the Stagirite
Of impious guilt. But he escaped his hands
By mighty draught of friendly aconite,
And thus defeated all his wicked arts.
Phavorinus, in his Universal History, says that Aristotle was
the first person who ever composed a speech to be delivered
in his own defence in a court of justice, and that he did so on
the occasion of this prosecution, and said that at Athens:—
Pears upon pear-trees grow; on fig-trees, figs.
Apollodorus, in his Chronicles, says that he was born in the
first year of the ninety-ninth olympiad, and that he attached
himself to Plato, and remained with him for twenty years,
having been seventeen years of age when he originally joined
him. And he went to Mitylene in the archonship of Eubulus,
in the fourth year of the hundred and eighth olympiad. But
as Plato had died in the first year of this same olympiad, in
the archonship of Theophilus, he departed for the court of
Hermias, and remained there three years. And in the archonship
of Pythodotus he went to the court of Philip, in the
second year of the hundred and ninth olympiad, when
Alexander was fifteen years old; and he came to Athens in
the second year of the hundred and eleventh olympiad, and
presided over his school in the Lyceum for thirteen years;
after that he departed to Chalcis, in the third year of the
hundred and fourteenth olympiad, and died, at about the age
of sixty-three years, of disease, the same year that Demosthenes
died in Calauria, in the archonship of Philocles.
VIII. It is said also that he was offended with the king,
because of the result of the conspiracy of Callisthenes against
Alexander; and that the king, for the sake of annoying him,
promoted Anaximenes to honour, and sent presents to Xenocrates.
And Theocritus, of Chios, wrote an epigram upon him
to ridicule him, in the following terms, as it is quoted by
Ambryon in his account of Theocritus:—
The empty-headed Aristotle rais’d
This empty tomb to Hermias the Eunuch,
The ancient slave of the ill-us’d Eubulus.
Who, for his monstrous appetite, preferred
The Bosphorus to Academia’s groves.
And Timon attacked him too, saying of him:—
Nor the sad chattering of the empty Aristotle.
Such was the life of the philosopher.
IX. We have also met with his will, which is couched in
the following terms:—“May things turn out well; but if any
thing happens to him, in that case Aristotle has made the
following disposition of his affairs. That Antipater shall be
the general and universal executor. And until Nicanor marries
my daughter, I appoint Aristomedes, Timarchus, Hipparchus,
Dioteles, and Theophrastus, if he will consent and accept the
charge, to be the guardians of my children and of Herpyllis,
and the trustees of all the property I leave behind me; and I
desire them, when my daughter is old enough, to give her in
marriage to Nicanor; but if any thing should happen to the
girl, which may God forbid, either before or after she is married,
but before she has any children, then I will that Nicanor
shall have the absolute disposal of my son, and of all other
things, in the full confidence that he will arrange them in a
manner worthy of me and of himself. Let him also be the
guardian of my daughter and son Nicomachus, to act as he
pleases with respect to them, as if he were their father or
brother. But if anything should happen to Nicanor, which
may God forbid, either before he receives my daughter in
marriage, or after he is married to her, or before he has any
children by her, then any arrangements which he may make
by will shall stand. But, if Theophrastus, in this case, should
choose to take my daughter in marriage, then he is to stand
exactly in the same position as Nicanor. And if not, then I
will, that my trustees, consulting with Antipater concerning
both the boy and girl, shall arrange everything respecting them
as they shall think fit; and that my trustees and Nicanor,
remembering both me and Herpyllis, and how well she has
behaved to me, shall take care, if she be inclined to take a
husband, that one be found for her who shall not be unworthy
of us; and shall give her, in addition to all that has been
already given her, a talent of silver, and three maidservants
if she please to accept them, and the handmaid whom she has
now, and the boy Pyrrhæus. And if she likes to dwell at
Chalcis, she shall have the house which joins the garden; but
if she likes to dwell in Stagira, then she shall have my father’s
house. And whichever of these houses she elects to take, I
will that my executors do furnish it with all necessary furniture,
in such manner as shall seem to them and to Herpyllis to be
sufficient. And let Nicanor be the guardian of the child
Myrmex, so that he shall be conducted to his friends in a
manner worthy of us, with all his property which I received.
I also will that Ambracis shall have her liberty, and that there
shall be given to her when her daughter is married, five
hundred drachmas, and the handmaid whom she now has.
And I will that there be given to Thales, besides the handmaiden
whom she now has, who was bought for her, a
thousand drachmas and another handmaid. And to Timon, in
addition to the money that has been given to him before for
another boy, an additional slave, or a sum of money which shall
be equivalent. I also will that Tychon shall have his liberty
when his daughter is married, and Philon, and Olympius, and
his son. Moreover, of those boys who wait upon me, I will
that none shall be sold, but my executors may use them, and
when they are grown up then they shall emancipate them if
they deserve it. I desire too, that my executors will take
under their care the statues which it has been entrusted to
Gryllion to make, that when they are made they may be
erected in their proper places; and so too shall the statues of
Nicanor, and of Proxenus, which I was intending to give him
a commission for, and also that of the mother of Nicanor. I
wish them also to erect in its proper place the statue of
Arimnestus which is already made, that it may be a memorial
of her, since she has died childless. I wish them also to
dedicate a statue of my mother to Ceres at Nemea, or wherever
else they think fit. And wherever they bury me, there
I desire that they shall also place the bones of Pythias, having
taken them up from the place where they now lie, as she
herself enjoined. And I desire that Nicanor, as he has been
preserved, will perform the vow which I made on his behalf,
and dedicate some figures of animals in stone, four cubits high,
to Jupiter the saviour, and Minerva the saviour, in Stagira.”
These are the provisions of his will.
X. And it is said that a great many dishes were found in
his house; and that Lycon stated that he used to bathe in a
bath of warm oil, and afterwards to sell the oil. But some
say that he used to place a leather bag of warm oil on his
stomach. And whenever he went to bed, he used to take a
brazen ball in his hand, having arranged a brazen dish below
it; so that, when the ball fell into the dish, he might be awakened
by the noise.
XI. The following admirable apophthegms are attributed to
him.
He was once asked, what those who tell lies gain by it;
“They gain this,” said he, “that when they speak truth they
are not believed.”
On one occasion he was blamed for giving alms to a worthless
man, and he replied, “I did not pity the man, but his
condition.”
He was accustomed continually to say to his friends and
pupils wherever he happened to be, “That sight receives the
light from the air which surrounds it, and in like manner the
soul receives the light from the science.”
Very often, when he was inveighing against the Athenians,
he would say that they had invented both wheat and laws, but
that they used only the wheat and neglected the laws.
It was a saying of his that the roots of education were bitter,
but the fruit sweet.
Once he was asked what grew old most speedily, and he replied,
“Gratitude.”
On another occasion the question was put to him, what
hope is? and his answer was, “The dream of a waking man.”
Diogenes once offered him a dry fig, and as he conjectured
that if he did not take it the cynic had a witticism ready prepared,
he accepted it, and then said that Diogenes had lost his
joke and his fig too; and another time when he took one from
him as he offered it, he held it up as a child does, and said,
“O great Diogenes;” and then he gave it to him back again.
He used to say that there were three things necessary to
education; natural qualifications, instruction, and practice.
Having heard that he was abused by some one, he said,
“He may beat me too, if he likes, in my absence.”
He used to say that beauty is the best of all recommendations,
but others say that it was Diogenes who gave this description
of it; and that Aristotle called beauty, “The gift of
a fair appearance,” that Socrates called it “A short-lived
tyranny;” Plato, “The privilege of nature;” Theophrastus,
“A silent deceit;” Theocritus, “An ivory mischief;” Carneades,
“A sovereignty which stood in need of no guards.”
On one occasion he was asked how much educated men
were superior to those uneducated; “As much,” said he, “as
the living are to the dead.”
It was a saying of his that education was an ornament in
prosperity, and a refuge in adversity. And that those parents
who gave their children a good education deserved more honour
than those who merely beget them: for that the latter only
enabled their children to live, but the former gave them the
power of living well.
When a man boasted in his presence that he was a native
of an illustrious city, he said, “That is not what one ought to
look at, but whether one is worthy of a great city.”
He was once asked what a friend is; and his answer was,
“One soul abiding in two bodies.”
It was a saying of his that some men were as stingy as if
they expected to live for ever, and some as extravagant as if
they expected to die immediately.
When he was asked why people like to spend a great deal
of their time with handsome people, “That,” said he, “is a
question fit for a blind man to ask.”
The question was once put to him, what he had gained by
philosophy; and the answer he made was this, “That I do
without being commanded, what others do from fear of the
laws.”
He was once asked what his disciples ought to do to get on;
and he replied, “Press on upon those who are in front of
them, and not wait for those who are behind to catch them.”
A chattering fellow, who had been abusing him, said to
him, “Have not I been jeering you properly?” “Not that I
know of,” said he, “for I have not been listening to you.”
A man on one occasion reproached him for having given a
contribution to one who was not a good man (for the story
which I have mentioned before is also quoted in this way),
and his answer was, “I gave not to the man, but to humanity.”
The question was once put to him, how we ought to behave
to our friends; and the answer he gave was, “As we should
wish our friends to behave to us.”
He used to define justice as “A virtue of the soul distributive
of what each person deserved.”
Another of his sayings was, that education was the best
viaticum for old age.
Phavorinus, in the second book of his Commentaries, says
that he was constantly repeating, “The man who has friends
has no friend.” And this sentiment is to be found also in the
seventh book of the Ethics.
These apophthegms then are attributed to him.
XII. He also wrote a great number of works; and I have
thought it worth while to give a list of them, on account
of the eminence of their author in every branch of philosophy.
Four books on Justice; three books on Poets; three
books on Philosophy; two books of The Statesman; one on
Rhetoric, called also the Gryllus; the Nerinthus, one; the
Sophist, one; the Menexenus, one; the Erotic, one; the
Banquet, one; on Riches, one; the Exhortation, one; on the
Soul, one; on Prayer, one; on Nobility of Birth, one; on
Pleasure, one; the Alexander, or an Essay on Colonists, one;
on Sovereignty, one; on Education, one; on the Good, three;
three books on things in the Laws of Plato; two on Political
Constitutions; on Economy, one; on Friendship, one; on
Suffering, or having Suffered, one; on Sciences, one; on Discussions,
two; Solutions of Disputed Points, two; Sophistical
Divisions, four; on Contraries, one; on Species and Genera,
one; on Property, one; Epicheirematic, or Argumentative
Commentaries, three; Propositions relating to Virtue, three;
Objections, one; one book on things which are spoken of in
various ways, or a Preliminary Essay; one on the Passion of
Anger; five on Ethics; three on Elements; one on Science;
one on Beginning; seventeen on Divisions; on Divisible
Things, one; two books of Questions and Answers; two on
Motion; one book of Propositions; four of Contentious Propositions;
one of Syllogisms; eight of the First Analytics;
two of the second greater Analytics; one on Problems; eight
on Method; one on the Better; one on the Idea; Definitions
serving as a preamble to the Topics, seven; two books more
of Syllogisms; one of Syllogisms and Definitions; one on
what is Eligible, and on what is Suitable; the Preface to the
Topics, one; Topics relating to the Definitions, two; one
on the Passions; one on Divisions; one on Mathematics;
thirteen books of Definitions; two of Epicheiremata, or
Arguments; one on Pleasure; one of Propositions; on the
Voluntary, one; on the Honourable, one; of Epicheirematic
or Argumentative Propositions, twenty-five books; of Amatory
Propositions, four; of Propositions relating to Friendship, two;
of Propositions relating to the Soul, one; on Politics, two;
Political Lectures, such as that of Theophrastus, eight; on
Just Actions, two; two books entitled, A Collection of Arts;
two on the Art of Rhetoric; one on Art; two on other Art;
one on Method; one, the Introduction to the Art of Theodectes;
two books, being a treatise on the Art of Poetry;
one book of Rhetorical Enthymemes on Magnitude; one of
Divisions of Enthymemes; on Style, two; on Advice, one;
on Collection, two; on Nature, three; on Natural Philosophy,
one; on the Philosophy of Archytas, three; on the Philosophy
of Speusippus and Xenocrates, one; on things taken from the
doctrines of Timæus and the school of Archytas, one; on
Doctrines of Melissus, one; on Doctrines of Alcmæon, one;
on the Pythagoreans, one; on the Precepts of Gorgias, one;
on the Precepts of Xenophanes, one; on the Precepts of
Zeno, one; on the Pythagoreans, one; on Animals, nine;
on Anatomy, eight; one book, a Selection of Anatomical
Questions; one on Compound Animals; one on Mythological
Animals; one on Impotence; one on Plants; one on Physiognomy;
two on Medicine; one on the Unit; one on Signs
of Storms; one on Astronomy; one on Optics; one on
Motion; one on Music; one on Memory; six on Doubts
connected with Homer; one on Poetry; thirty-eight of
Natural Philosophy in reference to the First Elements; two
of Problems Resolved; two of Encyclica, or General Knowledge;
one on Mechanics; two consisting of Problems derived
from the writings of Democritus; one on Stone; one book of
Comparisons; twelve books of Miscellanies; fourteen books
of things explained according to their Genus; one on Rights;
one book, the Conquerors at the Olympic Games; one, the
Conquerors at the Pythian Games in the Art of Music; one,
the Pythian; one, a List of the Victors in the Pythian
Games; one, the Victories gained at the Olympic Games;
one on Tragedies; one, a List of Plays; one book of
Proverbs; one on the Laws of Recommendations; four books
of Laws; one of Categories; one on Interpretation; a book
containing an account of the Constitutions of a hundred and
fifty-eight cities, and also some individual democratic, oligarchic,
aristocratic, and tyrannical Constitutions; Letters to Philip;
Letters of the Selymbrians; four Letters to Alexander; nine
to Antipater; one to Mentor; one to Ariston; one to
Olympias; one to Hephæstion; one to Themistagoras; one
to Philoxenus; one to Democritus; one book of Poems
beginning:—
Hail! holy, sacred, distant-shooting God.
A book of Elegies which begins:—
Daughter of all-accomplish’d mother.
The whole consisting of four hundred and forty-five thousand
two hundred and seventy lines.
XIII. These then are the books which were written by him.
And in them he expresses the following opinions:—that there
is in philosophy a two-fold division; one practical, and the other
theoretical. Again, the practical is divided into ethical and
political, under which last head are comprised considerations
affecting not only the state, but also the management, of a
single house. The theoretical part, too, is subdivided into
physics and logic; the latter forming not a single division,
turning on one special point, but being rather an instrument
for every art brought to a high degree of accuracy. And he
has laid down two separate objects as what it is conversant
about, the persuasive and the true. And he has used two
means with reference to each end; dialectics and rhetoric, with
reference to persuasion; analytical examination and philosophy,
with reference to truth; omitting nothing which can bear
upon discovery, or judgment, or use. Accordingly, with reference
to discovery, he has furnished us with topics and
works on method, which form a complete armoury of propositions,
from which it is easy to provide one’s self with an
abundance of probable arguments for every kind of question.
And with reference to judgment, he has given us the former
and posterior analytics; and by means of the former analytics,
we may arrive at a critical examination of principles;
by means of the posterior, we may examine the conclusions
which are deduced from them. With reference to the use or
application of his rules, he has given us works on discussion,
on question, on disputation, on sophistical refutation, on
syllogism, and on things of that sort.
He has also furnished us with a double criterion of truth.
One, on the perception of those effects, which are according
to imagination; the other, the intelligence of those things
which are ethical, and which concern politics, and economy,
and laws. The chief good he has defined to be the exercise
of virtue in a perfect life. He used also to say, that happiness
was a thing made up of three kinds of goods. First of
all, the goods of the soul, which he also calls the principal
goods in respect of their power; secondly, the goods of the
body, such as health, strength, beauty, and things of
that sort; thirdly, external goods, such as wealth, nobility of
birth, glory, and things like those. And he taught that virtue
was not sufficient of itself to confer happiness; for that it
had need besides of the goods of the body, and of the
external goods, for that a wise man would be miserable if he
were surrounded by distress, and poverty, and circumstances
of that kind. But, on the other hand, he said, that vice was
sufficient of itself to cause unhappiness, even if the goods of
the body and the external goods were present in the greatest
possible degree. He also asserted that the virtues did not
reciprocally follow one another, for that it was possible for a
prudent, and just, and impartial man, to be incontinent and
intemperate; and he said, that the wise man was not destitute
of passions, but endowed with moderate passions.
He also used to define friendship as an equality of mutual
benevolence. And he divided it into the friendship of kindred,
and of love, and of those connected by ties of hospitality.
And he said, that love was divided into sensual and philosophical
love. And that the wise man would feel the influence
of love, and would occupy himself in affairs of state, and
would marry a wife, and would live with a king. And as
there were three kinds of life, the speculative, the practical,
and the voluptuous, he preferred the speculative. He also
considered the acquisition of general knowledge serviceable to
the acquisition of virtue. As a natural philosopher, he was
the most ingenious man that ever lived in tracing effects back
to their causes, so that he could explain the principles of the
most trifling circumstances; on which account he wrote a great
many books of commentaries on physical questions.
He used to teach that God was incorporeal, as Plato also
asserted, and that his providence extends over all the heavenly
bodies; also, that he is incapable of motion. And that he
governs all things upon earth with reference to their sympathy
with the heavenly bodies. Another of his doctrines was, that
besides the four elements there is one other, making the fifth,
of which all the heavenly bodies are composed; and that this
one possesses a motion peculiar to itself, for it is a circular
one. That the soul is incorporeal, being the first ἐντελέχεια;
for it is the ἐντελέχεια of a physical and organic body, having
an existence in consequence of a capacity for existence. And
this is, according to him, of a twofold nature. By the word
ἐντελέχεια, he means something which has an incorporeal species,
either in capacity, as a figure of Mercury in wax, which has a
capacity for assuming any shape; or a statue in brass; and so the
perfection of the Mercury or of the statue is called ἐντελέχεια,
with reference to its habit. But when he speaks of the ἐντελέχεια
of a natural body, he does so because, of bodies some are
wrought by the hands, as for instance, those which are made by
artists, for instance, a tower, or a ship; and some exist by
nature, as the bodies of plants and animals. He has also
used the term with reference to an organic body, that is to
say, with reference to something that is made, as the faculty
of sight for seeing, or the faculty of hearing for the purpose of
hearing. The capacity of having life must exist in the thing
itself. But the capacity is twofold, either in habit or in
operation. In operation, as a man, when awake, is said to have
a soul; in habit, as the same is said of a man when asleep.
That, therefore, he may come under his definition, he has
added the word capacity.
He has also given other definitions on a great many subjects,
which it would be tedious to enumerate here. For he
was in every thing a man of the greatest industry and ingenuity,
as is plain from all his works which I have lately
given a list of; which are in number nearly four hundred, the
genuineness of which is undoubted. There are, also, a great
many other works attributed to him, and a number of apophthegms
which he never committed to paper.
XIV. There were eight persons of the name of Aristotle.
First of all, the philosopher of whom we have been speaking;
the second was an Athenian statesman, some of whose forensic
orations, of great elegance, are still extant; the third was a
man who wrote a treatise on the Iliad; the fourth, a Siciliot
orator, who wrote a reply to the Panegyric of Isocrates; the
fifth was the man who was surnamed Myth, a friend of
Æschines, the pupil of Socrates; the sixth was a Cyrenean,
who wrote a treatise on Poetry; the seventh was a schoolmaster,
who is mentioned by Aristoxenus in his Life of Plato;
the eighth, was an obscure grammarian, to whom a treatise on
Pleonasm is attributed.
XV. And the Stagirite had many friends, the most eminent
of whom was Theophrastus, whom we must proceed to
speak of.
LIFE OF THEOPHRASTUS
I. Theophrastus was a native of Eresus, the son of Melantas,
a fuller, as we are told by Athenodorus in the eighth
book of his Philosophical Conversations.
II. He was originally a pupil of Leucippus, his fellow
citizen, in his own country; and subsequently, after having
attended the lectures of Plato, he went over to Aristotle. And
when he withdrew to Chalcis, he succeeded him as president
of his school, in the hundred and fourteenth olympiad.
III. It is also said that a slave of his, by name Pomphylus,
was a philosopher, as we are told by Myronianus of Amastra,
in the first book of Similar Historical Chapters.
IV. Theophrastus was a man of great acuteness and industry,
and, as Pamphila asserts in the thirty-second book of
her Commentaries, he was the tutor of Menander, the comic
poet. He was also a most benevolent man, and very affable.
V. Accordingly Cassander received him as a friend; and
Ptolemy sent to invite him to his court. And he was thought
so very highly of at Athens, that when Agonides ventured to
impeach him on a charge of impiety, he was very nearly fined
for his hardihood. And there thronged to his school a crowd
of disciples to the number of two thousand. In his letter to
Phanias, the Peripatetic, among other subjects he speaks of
the court of justice in the following terms: “It is not only
out of the question to find an assembly (πανήγυρις), but it is
not easy to find even a company (συνέδριον) such as one would
like; but yet recitations produce corrections of the judgment.
And my age does not allow me to put off everything and to feel
indifference on such a subject.” In this letter he speaks of
himself as one who devotes his whole leisure to learning.
And though he was of this disposition, he nevertheless went
away for a short time, both he and all the rest of the philosophers,
in consequence of Sophocles, the son of Amphiclides,
having brought forward and carried a law that no one
of the philosophers should preside over a school unless the
council and the people had passed a resolution to sanction their
doing so; if they did, death was to be the penalty. But they
returned again the next year, when Philion had impeached
Sophocles for illegal conduct; when the Athenians abrogated
his law, and fined Sophocles five talents, and voted that the
philosophers should have leave to return, that Theophrastus
might return and preside over his school as before.
VI. His name had originally been Tyrtamus, but Aristotle
changed it to Theophrastus, from the divine character of his
eloquence.
VII. He is said also to have been very much attached to
Aristotle’s son, Nicomachus, although he was his master; at
least, this is stated by Aristippus in the fourth book of his
treatise on the Ancient Luxury.
VIII. It is also related that Aristotle used the same
expression about him and Callisthenes, which Plato, as I
have previously mentioned, employed about Xenocrates and
Aristotle himself. For he is reported to have said, since
Theophrastus was a man of extraordinary acuteness, who
could both comprehend and explain everything, and as the
other was somewhat slow in his natural character, that Theophrastus
required a bridle, and Callisthenes a spur.
IX. It is said, too, that he had a garden of his own after
the death of Aristotle, by the assistance of Demetrius Phalereus,
who was an intimate friend of his.
X. The following very practical apophthegms of his are
quoted. He used to say that it was better to trust to a horse
without a bridle than to a discourse without arrangement.
And once, when a man preserved a strict silence during the
whole of a banquet, he said to him, “If you are an ignorant
man, you are acting wisely; but if you have had any education,
you are behaving like a fool.” And a very favourite expression
of his was, that time was the most valuable thing that a man
could spend.
XI. He died when he was of a great age, having lived
eighty-five years, when he had only rested from his labours a
short time. And we have composed the following epigram
on him:—
The proverb then is not completely false,
That wisdom’s bow unbent is quickly broken;
While Theophrastus laboured, he kept sound,
When he relaxed, he lost his strength and died.
They say that on one occasion, when dying, he was asked by
his disciples whether he had any charge to give them; and he
replied, that he had none but that they should “remember
that life holds out many pleasing deceits to us by the vanity
of glory; for that when we are beginning to live, then we are
dying. There is, therefore, nothing more profitless than ambition.
But may you all be fortunate, and either abandon
philosophy (for it is a great labour), or else cling to it diligently,
for then the credit of it is great; but the vanities of
life exceed the advantage of it. However, it is not requisite
for me now to advise you what you should do; but do you
yourselves consider what line of conduct to adopt.” And
when he had said this, as report goes, he expired. And the
Athenians accompanied him to the grave, on foot, with the
whole population of the city, as it is related, honouring the
man greatly.
XII. But Phavorinus says, that when he was very old he
used to go about in a litter; and that Hermippus states this,
quoting Arcesilaus, the Pitanæan, and the account which he
sent to Lacydes of Cyrene.
XIII. He also left behind him a very great number of
works, of which I have thought it proper to give a list on
account of their being full of every sort of excellence. They
are as follows:—
Three books of the First Analytics; seven of the Second
Analytics; one book of the Analysis of Syllogisms; one book,
an Epitome of Analytics; two books, Topics for referring
things to First Principles; one book, an Examination of
Speculative Questions about Discussions; one on Sensations;
one addressed to Anaxagoras; one on the Doctrines of Anaxagoras;
one on the Doctrines of Anaximenes; one on the
Doctrines of Archelaus; one on Salt, Nitre, and Alum; two
on Petrifactions; one on Indivisible Lines; two on Hearing;
one on Words; one on the Differences between Virtues; one
on Kingly Power; one on the Education of a King; three
on Lives; one on Old Age; one on the Astronomical System
of Democritus; one on Meteorology; one on Images or
Phantoms; one on Juices, Complexions, and Flesh; one on
the Description of the World; one on Men; one, a Collection
of the Sayings of Diogenes; three books of Definitions; one
treatise on Love; another treatise on Love; one book on
Happiness; two books on Species; on Epilepsy, one; on
Enthusiasm, one; on Empedocles, one; eighteen books of
Epicheiremes; three books of Objections; one book on the
Voluntary; two books, being an Abridgment of Plato’s Polity;
one on the Difference of the Voices of Similar Animals; one
on Sudden Appearances; one on Animals which Bite or
Sting; one on such Animals as are said to be Jealous; one
on those which live on Dry Land; one on those which Change
their Colour; one on those which live in Holes; seven on
Animals in General; one on Pleasure according to the Definition
of Aristotle; seventy-four books of Propositions; one
treatise on Hot and Cold; one essay on Giddiness and Vertigo
and Sudden Dimness of Sight; one on Perspiration; one
on Affirmation and Denial; the Callisthenes, or an essay on
Mourning, one; on Labours, one; on Motion, three; on Stones,
one; on Pestilences, one; on Fainting Fits, one; the Megaric
Philosopher, one; on Melancholy, one; on Mines, two;
on Honey, one; a collection of the Doctrines of Metrodorus,
one; two books on those Philosophers who have treated of
Meteorology; on Drunkenness, one; twenty-four books of
Laws, in alphabetical order; ten books, being an Abridgment
of Laws; one on Definitions; one on Smells; one on Wine
and Oil; eighteen books of Primary Propositions; three
books on Lawgivers; six books of Political Disquisitions;
a treatise on Politicals, with reference to occasions as they
arise, four books; four books of Political Customs; on the
best Constitution, one; five books of a Collection of Problems;
on Proverbs, one; on Concretion and Liquefaction,
one; on Fire, two; on Spirits, one; on Paralysis, one; on
Suffocation, one; on Aberration of Intellect, one; on the
Passions, one; on Signs, one; two books of Sophisms; one
on the Solution of Syllogisms; two books of Topics; two
on Punishment; one on Hair; one on Tyranny; three
on Water; one on Sleep and Dreams; three on Friendship;
two on Liberality; three on Nature; eighteen on Questions
of Natural Philosophy; two books, being an Abridgment
of Natural Philosophy; eight more books on Natural Philosophy;
one treatise addressed to Natural Philosophers;
two books on the History of Plants; eight books on
the Causes of Plants; five on Juices; one on Mistaken
Pleasures; one, Investigation of a proposition concerning the
Soul; one on Unskilfully Adduced Proofs; one on Simple
Doubts; one on Harmonics; one on Virtue; one entitled
Occasions or Contradictions; one on Denial; one on Opinion;
one on the Ridiculous; two called Soirees; two books of
Divisions; one on Differences; one on Acts of Injustice;
one on Calumny; one on Praise; one on Skill; three books
of Epistles; one on Self-produced Animals; one on Selection;
one entitled the Praises of the Gods; one on Festivals;
one on Good Fortune; one on Enthymemes; one
on Inventions; one on Moral Schools; one book of Moral
Characters; one treatise on Tumult; one on History; one
on the Judgment Concerning Syllogisms; one on Flattery;
one on the Sea; one essay, addressed to Cassander, Concerning
Kingly Power; one on Comedy; one on Meteors; one on
Style; one book called a Collection of Sayings; one book of
Solutions; three books on Music; one on Metres; the Megades,
one; on Laws, one; on Violations of Law, one; a
collection of the Sayings and Doctrines of Xenocrates, one;
one book of Conversations; on an Oath, one; one of Oratorical
Precepts; one on Riches; one on Poetry; one being
a collection of Political, Ethical, Physical, and amatory
Problems; one book of Proverbs; one book, being a Collection
of General Problems; one on Problems in Natural
Philosophy; one on Example; one on Proposition and Exposition;
a second treatise on Poetry; one on the Wise Men;
one on Counsel; one on Solecisms; one on Rhetorical Art,
a collection of sixty-one figures of Oratorical Art; one book on
Hypocrisy; six books of a Commentary of Aristotle or Theophrastus;
sixteen books of Opinions on Natural Philosophy;
one book, being an Abridgment of Opinions on Natural Philosophy;
one on Gratitude; one called Moral Characters; one
on Truth and Falsehood; six on the History of Divine Things;
three on the Gods; four on the History of Geometry; six
books, being an Abridgment of the work of Aristotle on
Animals; two books of Epicheiremes; three books of Propositions;
two on Kingly Power; one on Causes; one on Democritus;
one on Calumny; one on Generation; one on the
Intellect and Moral Character of Animals; two on Motion;
four on Sight; two on Definitions; one on being given in
Marriage; one on the Greater and the Less; one on Music;
one on Divine Happiness; one addressed to the Philosophers
of the Academy; one Exhortatory Treatise; one discussing
how a City may be best Governed; one called Commentaries;
one on the Crater of Mount Etna in Sicily; one on Admitted
Facts; one on Problems in Natural History; one,
What are the Different Manners of Acquiring Knowledge;
three on Telling Lies; one book, which is a preface to the
Topics; one addressed to Æschylus; six books of a History
of Astronomy; one book of the History of Arithmetic relating
to Increasing Numbers; one called the Acicharus; one on
Judicial Discourses; one on Calumny; one volume of Letters
to Astycreon, Phanias, and Nicanor; one book on Piety; one
called the Evias; one on Circumstances; one volume entitled
Familiar Conversations; one on the Education of Children;
another on the same subject, discussed in a different manner;
one on Education, called also, a treatise on Virtue, or on
Temperance; one book of Exhortations; one on Numbers;
one consisting of Definitions referring to the Enunciation of
Syllogisms; one on Heaven; two on Politics; two on Nature, on
Fruits, and on Animals. And these works contain in all two
hundred and thirty-two thousand nine hundred and eight lines.
These, then, are the books which Theophrastus composed.
XIV. I have also found his will, which is drawn up in the
following terms:—
May things turn out well, but if anything should happen to
me, I make the following disposition of my property. I give
everything that I have in my house to Melantes and Pancreon,
the sons of Leon. And those things which have been
given to me by Hipparchus, I wish to be disposed of in the
following manner:—First of all, I wish everything about the
Museum and the statue of the goddesses to be made perfect,
and to be adorned in a still more beautiful manner than at
present, wherein there is room for improvement. Then I
desire the statue of Aristotle to be placed in the temple, and
all the other offerings which were in the temple before. Then
I desire the colonnade which used to be near the Museum to
be rebuilt in a manner not inferior to the previous one. I
also enjoin my executors to put up the tablets on which the
maps of the earth are drawn, in the lower colonnade, and to
take care that an altar is finished in such a manner that
nothing may be wanting to its perfectness or its beauty. I
also direct a statue of Nicomachus, of equal size, to be erected
at the same time; and the price for making the statue has
been already paid to Praxiteles; and he is to contribute what
is wanting for the expense. And I desire that it shall be placed
wherever it shall seem best to those who have the charge of providing
for the execution of the other injunctions contained in
this will. And these are my orders respecting the temple
and the offerings. The estate which I have at Stagira, I give
to Callinus, and all my books I bequeath to Neleus. My
garden, and my promenade, and my houses which join the
garden, I give all of them to any of the friends whose names I
set down below, who choose to hold a school in them and to
devote themselves to the study of philosophy, since it is not
possible for any one to be always travelling, but I give them
on condition that they are not to alienate them, and that no
one is to claim them as his own private property; but they
are to use them in common as if they were sacred ground,
sharing them with one another in a kindred and friendly
spirit, as is reasonable and just. And those who are to have
this joint property in them are Hipparchus, Neleus, Strato, Callinus,
Demotimus, Demaratus, Callisthenes, Melantes, Pancreon,
and Nicippus. And Aristotle, the son of Metrodorus
and Pythias, shall also be entitled to a share in this property,
if he like to join these men in the study of philosophy. And
I beg the older men to pay great attention to his education
that he may be led on to philosophy as much as possible. I
also desire my executors to bury me in whatever part of the
garden shall appear most suitable, incurring no superfluous
expense about my funeral or monument. And, as has been
said before, after the proper honours have been paid to me,
and after provision has been made for the execution of my
will as far as relates to the temple, and the monument, and
the garden, and the promenade, then I enjoin that Pamphylus,
who dwells in the garden, shall keep it and everything
else in the condition as it has been in hitherto. And
those who are in possession of these things are to take care of
his interests. I further bequeath to Pamphylus and Threptes,
who have been some time emancipated, and who have been of
great service to me, besides all that they have previously received
from me, and all that they may have earned for themselves,
and all that I have provided for being given them by
Hipparchus, two thousand drachmas, and I enjoin that they
should have them in firm and secure possession, as I have
often said to them, and to Melantes and Pancreon, and they
have agreed to provide for this my will taking effect. I also
give them the little handmaid Somatale; and of my slaves, I
ratify the emancipation of Molon, and Cimon, and Parmenon
which I have already given them. And I hereby give their
liberty to Manes and Callias, who have remained four years
in the garden, and have worked in it, and have conducted
themselves in an unimpeachable manner. And I direct that
my executors shall give Pamphylus as much of my household
furniture as may seem to them to be proper, and shall sell the
rest. And I give Carion to Demotimus, and Donax to Neleus.
I order Eubius to be sold, and I request Hipparchus to give
Callinus three thousand drachmas. And if I had not seen
the great service that Hipparchus has been to me in former
times, and the embarrassed state of his affairs at present, I
should have associated Melantes and Pancreon with him in
these gifts. But as I see that it would not be easy for them
to arrange to manage the property together, I have thought
it likely to be more advantageous for them to receive a fixed
sum from Hipparchus. Therefore, let Hipparchus pay to
Melantes and to Pancreon a talent a-piece; and let him
also pay to my executors the money necessary for the expenses
which I have here set down in my will, as it shall require
to be expended. And when he has done this, then I will
that he shall be discharged of all debts due from him to me
or to my estate. And if any profit shall accrue to him in
Chalcis, from property belonging to me, it shall be all his
own. My executors, for all the duties provided for in this
will, shall be Hipparchus, Neleus, Strato, Callinus, Demotimus,
Callisthenes, and Ctesarchus. And this my will is
copied out, and all the copies are sealed with the seal-ring of
me, Theophrastus; one copy is in the hands of Hegesias the
son of Hipparchus; the witnesses thereto are Callippus of
Pallene, Philomelus of Euonymus, Lysander of Hybas, and
Philion of Alopece. Another copy is deposited with Olympiodorus,
and the witnesses are the same. A third copy is
under the care of Adimantus, and it was conveyed to him by
Androsthenes, his son. The witnesses to that copy are Arimnestus
the son of Cleobulus, Lysistratus of Thasos, the son of
Phidon; Strato of Lampsacus, the son of Arcesilaus; Thesippus
of Cerami, the son of Thesippus; Dioscorides of the banks
of the Cephisus, the son of Dionysius.—This was his will.
XV. Some writers have stated that Erasistratus, the physician,
was a pupil of his; and it is very likely.
LIFE OF STRATO
I. Theophrastus was succeeded in the presidency of his
school by Strato of Lampsacus, the son of Arcesilaus, of whom
he had made mention in his will.
II. He was a man of great eminence, surnamed the Natural
Philosopher, from his surpassing all men in the diligence
with which he applied himself to the investigation of matters
of that nature.
III. He was also the preceptor of Ptolemy Philadelphus,
and received from him, as it is said, eighty talents; and he
began to preside over the school, as Apollodorus tells us in
his Chronicles, in the hundred and twenty-third olympiad,
and continued in that post for eighteen years.
IV. There are extant three books of his on Kingly Power;
three on Justice; three on the Gods; three on Beginnings;
and one on each of the subjects of Happiness, Philosophy,
Manly Courage, the Vacuum, Heaven, Spirit, Human Nature,
the Generation of Animals, Mixtures, Sleep, Dreams, Sight,
Perception, Pleasure, Colours, Diseases, Judgments, Powers,
Metallic Works, Hunger, and Dimness of Sight, Lightness
and Heaviness, Enthusiasm, Pain, Nourishment and Growth,
Animals whose Existence is Doubted, Fabulous Animals,
Causes, a Solution of Doubts, a preface to Topics; there are,
also, treatises on Contingencies, on the Definition, on the
More and Less, on Injustice, on Former and Later, on the
Prior Genus, on Property, on the Future. There are, also,
two books called the Examination of Inventions; the Genuineness
of the Commentaries attributed to him, is doubted.
There is a volume of Epistles, which begins thus: “Strato
wishes Arsinoe prosperity.”
V. They say that he became so thin and weak, that he
died without its being perceived. And there is an epigram
of ours upon him in the following terms:—
The man was thin, believe me, from the use
Of frequent unguents; Strato was his name,
A citizen of Lampsacus; he struggled long
With fell disease, and died at last unnoticed.
VI. There were eight people of the name of Strato. The
first was a pupil of Isocrates; the second was the man of
whom we have been speaking; the third was a physician, a
pupil of Erasistratus, or, as some assert, a foster-child of
his; the fourth was an historian, who wrote a history of the
Achievements of Philip and Perses in their wars against the
Romans.… The sixth was an epigrammatic poet;
the seventh was an ancient physician, as Aristotle tells us;
the eighth was a Peripatetic philosopher, who lived in Alexandria.
VII. But the will, too, of this natural philosopher is extant,
and it is couched in the following language:—“If anything
happens to me, I make this disposition of my property. I
leave all my property in my house to Lampyrion and Arcesilaus;
and with the money which I have at Athens, in the
first place, let my executors provide for my funeral and for all
other customary expenses; without doing anything extravagant,
or, on the other hand, anything mean. And the following
shall be my executors, according to this my will: Olympichus,
Aristides, Mnesigenes, Hippocrates, Epicrates, Gorgylus,
Diocles, Lycon, and Athanes. And my school I leave to
Lycon, since of the others some are too old, and others too
busy. And the rest will do well, if they ratify this arrangement
of mine. I also bequeath to him all my books, except
such as we have written ourselves; and all my furniture in
the dining-room, and the couches, and the drinking cups.
And let my executors give Epicrates five hundred drachmas,
and one of my slaves, according to the choice made by
Arcesilaus. And first of all, let Lampyrion and Arcesilaus
cancel the engagements which Daippus has entered into for
Iræus. And let him be acquitted of all obligation to Lampyrion
or the heirs of Lampyrion; and let him also be discharged
from any bond or note of hand he may have given.
And let my executors give him five hundred drachmas of silver,
and one of my slaves, whichever Arcesilaus may approve, in
order that, as he has done me great service, and co-operated
with me in many things, he may have a competency, and be
enabled to live decently. And I give their freedom to Diophantus,
and Diocles, and Abus. Simias I give to Arcesilaus.
I also give his freedom to Dromo. And when Arcesilaus
arrives, let Iræus calculate with Olympichus and Epicrates,
and the rest of my executors, the amount that has been expended
on my funeral and on other customary expenses. And
let the money that remains, be paid over to Arcesilaus by
Olympichus, who shall give him no trouble, as to the time or
manner of payment. And Arcesilaus shall discharge the
engagements which Strato has entered into with Olympichus
and Aminias, which are preserved in writing in the care of
Philocrates, the son of Tisamenus. And with respect to my
monument, let them do whatever seems good to Arcesilaus,
and Olympichus, and Lycon.”
This is his will, which is still extant, as Aristo, the Chian,
has collected and published it.
VIII. And this Strato was a man, as has been shown above,
of deservedly great popularity; having devoted himself to the
study of every kind of philosophy, and especially of that
branch of it called natural philosophy, which is one of the
most ancient and important branches of the whole.
LIFE OF LYCON
I. He was succeeded by Lycon, a native of the Troas, the
son of Astyanax, a man of great eloquence, and of especial
ability in the education of youth. For he used to say that
it was fit for boys to be harnessed with modesty and rivalry,
as much as for horses to be equipped with a spur and a bridle.
And his eloquence and energy in speaking is apparent, from
this instance. For he speaks of a virgin who was poor in the
following manner:—“A damsel, who, for want of a dowry,
goes beyond the seasonable age, is a heavy burden to her
father;” on which account they say that Antigonus said with
reference to him, that the sweetness and beauty of an apple
could not be transferred to anything else, but that one might
see, in the case of this man, all these excellencies, in as great
perfection as on a tree; and he said this, because he was a
surpassingly sweet speaker. On which account, some people
prefixed a Γ to his name. But as a writer, he was very
unequal to his reputation. And he used to jest in a
careless way, upon those who repented that they had not
learnt when they had the opportunity, and who now wished
that they had done so, saying, said that they were accusing
themselves, showing by a prayer which could not possibly be
accomplished, their misplaced repentance for their idleness.
He used also to say, that those who deliberated without coming
to a right conclusion, erred in their calculations, like men
who investigate a correct nature by an incorrect standard, or
who look at a face in disturbed water, or a distorted mirror.
Another of his sayings was, that many men go in pursuit of
the crown to be won in the forum, but few or none seek to attain
the one to be gained at the Olympic games.
II. And as he in many instances gave much advice to the
Athenians, he was of exceedingly great service to them.
III. He was also a person of great neatness in his dress,
wearing garments of an unsurpassable delicacy, as we are
told by Hermippus. He was at the same time exceedingly
devoted to the exercises of the Gymnasium, and a man who
was always in excellent condition as to his body, displaying
every quality of an athlete (though Antigonus of Carystus,
pretends that he was bruised about the ears and dirty); and in
his own country he is said to have wrestled and played at ball
at the Iliæan games.
IV. And he was exceedingly beloved by Eumenes and
Attalus, who made him great presents; and Antigonus also
tried to seduce him to his court, but was disappointed. And
he was so great an enemy to Hieronymus the Peripatetic,
that he was the only person who would not go to see him on
the anniversary festival which he used to celebrate, and which
we have mentioned in our life of Arcesilaus.
V. And he presided over his school forty-four years, as
Strato had left it to him in his will, in the hundred and
twenty-seventh olympiad.
VI. He was also a pupil of Panthoides, the dialectician.
VII. He died when he was seventy-four years of age,
having been a great sufferer with the gout, and there is an
epigram of ours upon him:—
Nor shall wise Lycon be forgotten, who
Died of the gout, and much I wonder at it.
For he who ne’er before could walk alone,
Went the long road to hell in a single night.
VIII. There were several people of the name of Lycon.
The first was a Pythagorean; the second was this man of
whom we are speaking; the third was an epic poet; the
fourth was an epigrammatic poet.
IX. I have fallen in with the following will of this philosopher.
“I make the following disposition of my property;
if I am unable to withstand this disease:—All the property in
my house I leave to my brothers Astyanax and Lycon; and
I think that they ought to pay all that I owe at Athens, and
that I may have borrowed from any one, and also all the
expenses that may be incurred for my funeral, and for other
customary solemnities. And all that I have in the city, or
in Ægina, I give to Lycon because he bears the same name
that I do, and because he has spent the greater part of his
life with me, showing me the greatest affection, as it was fitting
that he should do, since he was in the place of a son to me.
And I leave my garden walk to those of my friends who like
to use it; to Bulon, and Callinus, and Ariston, and Amphion,
and Lycon, and Python, and Aristomachus, and Heracleus,
and Lycomedes, and Lycon my nephew. And I desire that
they will elect as president him whom they think most likely
to remain attached to the pursuit of philosophy, and most
capable of holding the school together. And I entreat the
rest of my friends to acquiesce in their election, for my sake
and that of the place. And I desire that Bulon, and Callinus,
and the rest of my friends will manage my funeral and the
burning of my body, so that my obsequies may not be either
mean or extravagant. And the property which I have in
Ægina shall be divided by Lycon after my decease among the
young men there, for the purpose of anointing themselves, in
order that the memory of me and of him who honoured me,
and who showed his affection by useful presents, may be long
preserved. And let him erect a statue of me; and as for the
place for it, I desire that Diophantus and Heraclides the son
of Demetrius, shall select that, and take care that it be suitable
for the proposed erection. With the property that I have in the
city let Lycon pay all the people of whom I have borrowed anything
since his departure; and let Bulon and Callinus join him
in this, and also in discharging all the expenses incurred for
my funeral, and for all other customary solemnities, and let
him deduct the amount from the funds which I have left in
my house, and bequeathed to them both in common. Let him
also pay the physicians, Pasithemis and Medias, men who,
for their attention to me and for their skill, are very deserving
of still greater honour. And I give to the son of Callinus my
pair of Thericlean cups; and to his wife I give my pair of
Rhodian cups, and my smooth carpet, and my double carpet,
and my curtains, and the two best pillows of all that I leave
behind me; so that as far as the compliment goes, I may be
seen not to have forgotten them. And with respect to those
who have been my servants, I make the following disposition:—To
Demetrius who has long been freed, I remit the price
of his freedom, and I further give five minæ, and a cloak, and
a tunic, that as he has a great deal of trouble about me, he
may pass the rest of his life comfortably. To Criton, the
Chalcedonian, I also remit the price of his freedom, and I
further give him four minæ. Micrus I hereby present with
his freedom; and I desire Lycon to maintain him, and
instruct him for six years from the present time. I also give
his freedom to Chares, and desire Lycon to maintain him.
And I further give him two minæ, and all my books that are
published; but those which are not published, I give to
Callinus, that he may publish them with due care. I also
give to Syrus, whom I have already emancipated, four minæ,
and Menodora; and if he owes me anything I acquit him of
the debt. And I give to Hilaras four minæ, and a double
carpet, and two pillows, and a curtain, and any couch which
he chooses to select. I also hereby emancipate the mother of
Micrus, and Noemon, and Dion, and Theon, and Euphranor,
and Hermeas; and I desire that Agathon shall have his
freedom when he has served two years longer; and that
Ophelion, and Poseideon, my litter-bearers, shall have theirs
when they have waited four years more. I also give to
Demetrius, and Criton, and Syrus, a couch a piece, and
coverlets from those which I leave behind me, according
to the selection which Lycon is hereby authorised to make.
And these are to be their rewards for having performed the
duties to which they were appointed well. Concerning my
burial, let Lycon do as he pleases, and bury me here or at
home, just as he likes; for I am sure that he has the same
regard for propriety that I myself have. And I give all the
things herein mentioned, in the confidence that he will arrange
everything properly. The witnesses to this my will are
Callinus of Hermione, Ariston of Ceos, and Euphronius of
Pæania.”
As he then was thoroughly wise in everything relating to
education, and every branch of philosophy, he was no less
prudent and careful in the framing of his will. So that in
this respect too he deserves to be admired and imitated.
LIFE OF DEMETRIUS
I. Demetrius was a native of Phalerus, and the son of
Phanostratus. He was a pupil of Theophrastus.
II. And as a leader of the people at Athens he governed
the city for ten years, and was honoured with three hundred
and sixty brazen statues, the greater part of which were
equestrian; and some were placed in carriages or in pair-horse
chariots, and the entire number were finished within
three hundred days, so great was the zeal with which they
were worked at. And Demetrius, the Magnesian, in his
treatise on People of the same Name, says that he began to be
the leader of the commonwealth, when Harpalus arrived in
Athens, having fled from Alexander. And he governed his
country for a long time in a most admirable manner. For he
aggrandised the city by increased revenues and by new buildings,
although he was a person of no distinction by birth.
III. Though Phavorinus, in the first book of his Commentaries,
asserts that he was of the family of Conon.
IV. He lived with a citizen of noble birth, named Lamia,
as his mistress, as the same author tells us in his first book.
V. Again, in his second book he tells us that Demetrius
was the slave of the debaucheries of Cleon.
VI. Didymus, in his Banquets, says that he was called
χαριτοβλέφαρος, or Beautiful Eyed, and Lampeto, by some
courtesan.
VII. It is said that he lost his eye-sight in Alexandria, and
recovered it again by the favour of Serapis; on which account
he composed the pæans which are sung and spoken of as his
composition to this day.
VIII. He was held in the greatest honour among the Athenians,
but nevertheless, he found his fame darkened by envy,
which attacks every thing; for he was impeached by some
one on a capital charge, and as he did not appear, he was condemned.
His accusers, however, did not become masters of
his person, but expended their venom on the brass, tearing
down his statues and selling some and throwing others into
the sea, and some they cut up into chamber-pots. For even
this is stated. And one statue alone of him is preserved
which is in the Acropolis. But Phavorinus in his Universal
History, says that the Athenians treated Demetrius in this
manner at the command of the king; and they also impeached
him as guilty of illegality in his administration, as Phavorinus
says. But Hermippus says, that after the death of Cassander,
he feared the enmity of Antigonus, and on that account fled
to Ptolemy Soter; and that he remained at his court for a
long time, and, among other pieces of advice, counselled the
king to make over the kingdom to his sons by Eurydice.
And as he would not agree to this measure, but gave the
crown to his son by Berenice, this latter, after the death of
his father, commanded Demetrius to be kept in prison until
he should come to some determination about him. And there
he remained in great despondency; and while asleep on one
occasion, he was bitten by an asp in the hand, and so he died.
And he is buried in the district of Busiris, near Diospolis, and
we have written the following epigram on him:—
An asp, whose tooth of venom dire was full,
Did kill the wise Demetrius.
The serpent beamed not light from out his eyes,
But dark and lurid hell.
But Heraclides, in his Epitome of the Successions of Sotion,
says that Ptolemy wished to transmit the kingdom to Philadelphus,
and that Demetrius dissuaded him from doing so by
the argument, “If you give it to another, you will not have it
yourself.” And when Menander, the comic poet, had an
information laid against him at Athens (for this is a statement
which I have heard), he was very nearly convicted, for
no other reason but that he was a friend of Demetrius. He
was, however, successfully defended by Telesphorus, the son-in-law
of Demetrius.
IX. In the multitude of his writings and the number of
lines which they amount to, he exceeded nearly all the Peripatetics
of his day, being a man of great learning and experience
on every subject. And some of his writings are historical,
some political, some on poets, some rhetorical, some
also are speeches delivered in public assemblies or on embassies;
there are also collections of Æsop’s Fables, and many
other books. There are five volumes on the Legislation of
Athens; two on Citizens of Athens; two on the Management
of the People; two on Political Science; one on Laws;
two on Rhetoric; two on Military Affairs; two on the Iliad;
four on the Odyssey; one called the Ptolemy; one on Love;
the Phædondas, one; the Mædon, one; the Cleon, one; the
Socrates, one; the Artaxerxes, one; the Homeric, one; the
Aristides, one; the Aristomachus, one; the Exhortatory, one;
one on the Constitution; one on his Ten Years’ Government;
one on the Ionians; one on Ambassadors; one on Good
Faith; one on Gratitude; one on Futurity; one on Greatness
of Soul; one on Marriage; one on Opinion; one on Peace;
one on Laws; one on Studies; one on Opportunity; the
Dionysius, one; the Chalcidean, one; the Maxims of the
Athenians, one; on Antiphanes, one; a Historic Preface, one;
one Volume of Letters; one called an Assembly on Oath; one
on Old Age; one on Justice; one volume of Æsop’s Fables;
one of Apophthegms. His style is philosophical, combined
with the energy and impressiveness of an orator.
X. When he was told that the Athenians had thrown down
his statues, he said, “But they have not thrown down my
virtues, on account of which they erected them.” He used to
say that the eyebrows were not an insignificant part of a
man, for that they were able to overshadow the whole life.
Another of his sayings was that it was not Plutus alone who
was blind, but Fortune also, who acted as his guide. Another,
that reason had as much influence on government, as steel
had in war. On one occasion, when he saw a debauched young
man, he said, “There is a square Mercury with a long robe,
a belly, and a beard.” It was a favourite saying of his, that
in the case of men elated with pride one ought to cut something
off their height, and leave them their spirit. Another
of his apophthegms was, that at home young men ought to
show respect to their parents, and in the streets to every one
whom they met, and in solitary places to themselves. Another,
that friends ought to come to others in good fortune only
when invited, but to those in distress of their own accord.
These are the chief sayings attributed to him.
XI. There were twenty persons of the name of Demetrius,
of sufficient consideration to be entitled to mention. First,
a Chalcedonian, an orator, older than Thrasymachus; the
second, this person of whom we are speaking; the third was a
Byzantine, a Peripatetic philosopher; the fourth was a man
surnamed Graphicus, a very eloquent lecturer, and also a
painter; the fifth was a native of Aspendus, a disciple of
Apollonius, of Soli; the sixth was a native of Calatia, who wrote
twenty books about Asia and Europe; the seventh was a
Byzantine, who wrote an account of the crossing of the Gauls
from Europe into Asia, in thirteen books, and the History of
Antiochus and Ptolemy, and their Administration of the
Affairs of Africa, in eight more; the eighth was a Sophist
who lived in Alexandria, and who wrote a treatise on Rhetorical
Art; the ninth was a native of Adramyttium, a grammarian,
who was nick-named Ixion, in allusion to some crime
he had committed against Juno; the tenth was a Cyrenean,
a grammarian, who was surnamed Stamnus, a very distinguished
man; the eleventh was a Scepsian, a rich man of noble
birth, and of great eminence for learning. He it was who
advanced the fortunes of Metrodorus his fellow citizen; the
twelfth was a grammarian of Erythræ, who was made a citizen
of Lemnos; the thirteenth was a Bithynian, a son of Diphilus
the Stoic, and a disciple of Panætius of Rhodes; the fourteenth
was an orator of Smyrna. All of these were prose writers.
The following were poets:—The first a poet of the Old
Comedy. The second an Epic poet, who has left nothing
behind him that has come down to us, except these lines
which he wrote against some envious people:—
They disregard a man while still alive,
Whom, when he’s dead, they honour; cities proud,
And powerful nations, have with contest fierce,
Fought o’er a tomb and unsubstantial shade
The third was a native of Tarsus; a writer of Satires. The
fourth was a composer of Iambics, a bitter man. The fifth
was a statuary, who is mentioned by Polemo. The sixth was
a native of Erythræ, a man who wrote on various subjects,
and who composed volumes of histories and relations.
LIFE OF HERACLIDES
I. Heraclides was the son of Euthyphron, and was born
at Heraclea, in Pontus; he was also a wealthy man.
II. After he came to Athens, he was at first a disciple of
Speusippus, but he also attended the schools of the Pythagorean
philosophers, and he adopted the principles of Plato;
last of all he became a pupil of Aristotle, as we are told by
Sotion in his book entitled the Successions.
III. He used to wear delicate garments, and was a man
of great size, so that he was nicknamed by the Athenians
Pompicus instead of Ponticus. But he was of quiet manners
and noble aspect.
IV. There are several books extant by him, which are
exceedingly good and admirable. They are in the form of
dialogue; some being Ethical dialogues; three on the subject
of Justice; one on Temperance; five on Piety; one on Manly
Courage; one, and a second which is distinct from it, on
Virtue; one on Happiness; one on Supremacy; one on Laws
and questions connected with them; one on Names; one
called Covenants; one called The Unwilling Lover; and the
Clinias.
Of the physical dialogues, one is on the Mind; one on
the Soul; one on the Soul, and Nature and Appearances;
one addressed to Democritus; one on the Heavenly Bodies;
one on the State of Things in the Shades below; two on
Lives; one on the Causes of Diseases; one on the Good; one
on the doctrines of Zeno; one on the Doctrines of Metron.
Of his grammatical dialogues, there are two on the Age of
Homer and Hesiod; two on Archilochus and Homer.
There are some on Music too; three on Euripides and
Sophocles, and two on Music. There are also two volumes,
Solutions of Questions concerning Homer; one on Speculations;
one, the Three Tragedians; one volume of Characters;
one dialogue on Poetry and the Poets; one on Conjecture;
one on Foresight; four, being Explanations of Heraclitus; one,
Explanations with reference to Democritus; two books of
Solutions of Disputed Points; one, the Axiom; one on
Species; one book of Solutions; one of Suppositions; one
addressed to Dionysius.
Of rhetorical works, there is the dialogue on the being an
Orator, or the Protagoras.
Of historical dialogues, there are some on the Pythagoreans,
and on Inventions. Of these, some he has drawn up after the
manner of Comic writers; as, for instance, the one about
Pleasure, and that about Temperance. And some in the style
of the Tragedians, as, for instance, the dialogues on the State
of Things in the Shades below; and one on Piety, and that
on Supremacy. And his style is a conversational and moderate
one, suited to the characters of philosophers and men occupied
in the military or political affairs conversing together. Some
of his works also are on Geometry, and on Dialectics; and in
all of them he displays a very varied and elevated style; and
he has great powers of persuasion.
V. He appears to have delivered his country when it was
under the yoke of tyrants, by slaying the monarch, as Demetrius
of Magnesia tells us, in his treatise on People of the
Same Name.
VI. And he gives the following account of him. That he
brought up a young serpent, and kept it till it grew large;
and that when he was at the point of death, he desired one of
his faithful friends to hide his body, and to place the serpent
in his bed, that he might appear to have migrated to the
Gods. And all this was done; and while the citizens were
all attending his funeral and extolling his character, the
serpent hearing the noise, crept out of his clothes and threw
the multitude into confusion. And afterwards everything was
revealed, and Heraclides was seen, not as he hoped to have
been, but as he really was. And we have written an epigram
on him which runs thus:—
You wish’d, O Heraclides, when you died,
To leave a strange belief among mankind,
That you, when dead, a serpent had become.
But all your calculations were deceived,
For this your serpent was indeed a beast,
And you were thus discovered and pronounced another.
And Hippobotus gives the same account.
But Hermippus says that once, when a famine oppressed
the land, the people of Heraclea consulted the Pythian oracle
for the way to get rid of it; and that Heraclides corrupted
the ambassadors who were sent to consult the oracle, and also
the priestess, with bribes; and that she answered that they
would obtain a deliverance from their distresses, if Heraclides,
the son of Euthyphron, was presented by them with a golden
crown, and if when he was dead they paid him honours as a
hero. Accordingly, this answer was brought back from the
oracle to Heraclea, but they who brought it got no advantage
from it; for as soon as Heraclides had been crowned in the
theatre, he was seized with apoplexy, and the ambassadors
who had been sent to consult the oracle were stoned, and so
put to death; and at the very same moment the Pythian
priestess was going down to the inner shrine, and while
standing there was bitten by a serpent, and died immediately.
This then is the account given of his death.
VII. And Aristoxenus the musician says, that he composed
tragedies, and inscribed them with the name of Thespis. And
Chamæleon says, that he stole essays from him on the subject
of Homer and Hesiod, and published them as his own. And
Autodorus the Epicurean reproaches him, and contradicts
all the arguments which he advanced in his treatise on
Justice. Moreover, Dionysius, called the Deserter, or as some
say Spintharus, wrote a tragedy called Parthenopæus, and
forged the name of Sophocles to it. And Heraclides was so
much deceived that he took some passages out of one of his
works, and cited them as the words of Sophocles; and Dionysius,
when he perceived it, gave him notice of the real truth;
and as he would not believe it, and denied it, he sent him
word to examine the first letters of the first verses of the
book, and they formed the name of Pancalus, who was a friend
of Dionysius. And as Heraclides still refused to believe it,
and said that it was possible that such a thing might happen
by chance, Dionysius sent him back word once more, “You
will find this passage too:—
“An aged monkey is not easily caught;
He’s caught indeed, but only after a time.”
And he added, “Heraclides knows nothing of letters, and has
no shame.”
VIII. And there were fourteen persons of the name of
Heraclides. First, this man of whom we are speaking; the
second was a fellow citizen of his, who composed songs for
Pyrrhic dances, and other trifles; the third was a native of
Cumæ, who wrote a history of the Persian war in five books;
the fourth was also a citizen of Cumæ, who was an orator, and
wrote a treatise on his art; the fifth was a native of Calatia
or Alexandria, who wrote a Succession in six books, and a
treatise on Ships, from which he was called Lembos; the
sixth was an Alexandrian, who wrote an account of the
peculiar habits of the Persians; the seventh was a dialectician
of Bargyleia, who wrote against Epicurus; the eighth was a
physician, a pupil of Hicesius; the ninth was a physician of
Tarentum, a man of great skill; the tenth was a poet, who
wrote Precepts; the eleventh was a sculptor of Phocæa; the
twelfth was an Epigrammatic poet of considerable beauty; the
thirteenth was a Magnesian, who wrote a history of the reign
of Mithridates; the fourteenth was an astronomer, who wrote
a treatise on Astronomy.
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