User Tools

Site Tools


diogenes_of_sinope:apuleius_apologia_22

Differences

This shows you the differences between two versions of the page.

Link to this comparison view

Next revision
Previous revision
diogenes_of_sinope:apuleius_apologia_22 [2012/04/28 14:39] – created frankdiogenes_of_sinope:apuleius_apologia_22 [2014/01/14 23:19] (current) – external edit 127.0.0.1
Line 1: Line 1:
-====== Antisthenes of Athens ====== +====== Diogenes of Sinope | Apuleius, Apologia 22  ======
-===== Apuleius, Apologia 22 =====+
  
-<blockquote>You reproach philosophers for their staff and wallet. You might as well reproach cavalry for their trappings, infantry for their shields, standard-bearers for their banners, triumphant generals for their chariots drawn by four white horses and their cloaks embroidered with palm-leaves. The staff and wallet are not, it is true, carried by the Platonic philosophers, but are the badges of the Cynic school. To Diogenes and **Antisthenes** they were what the crown is to the king, the cloak of purple to the general, the cowl to the priest, the trumpet to the augur.+ 
 +<blockquote>You reproach philosophers for their staff and wallet. You might as well reproach cavalry for their trappings, infantry for their shields, standard-bearers for their banners, triumphant generals for their chariots drawn by four white horses and their cloaks embroidered with palm-leaves. The staff and wallet are not, it is true, carried by the Platonic philosophers, but are the badges of the Cynic school. To **Diogenes** and Antisthenes they were what the crown is to the king, the cloak of purple to the general, the cowl to the priest, the trumpet to the augur. Indeed the Cynic **Diogenes**, when he disputed with Alexander the Great, as to which of the two was the true king, boasted of his staff as the true sceptre. The unconquered Hercules himself, since you despise my instances as drawn from mere mendicancy, Hercules that roamed the whole world, exterminated monsters, and conquered races, god though he was, had but a skin for raiment and a staff for company in the days when he wandered through the earth. And yet but a brief while afterwards he was admitted to heaven as a reward for his virtue. 
 +\\
 \\ \\
-[[http://www.gutenberg.org/files/26294/26294-h/26294-h.htm|Source]]</blockquote>+SourceThe Apologia and Florida of Apuleius of Madaura, HEButler, translator, Oxford Press (1909)</blockquote>
  
diogenes_of_sinope/apuleius_apologia_22.1335641965.txt.gz · Last modified: 2014/01/14 22:43 (external edit)

Except where otherwise noted, content on this wiki is licensed under the following license: Public Domain
Public Domain Donate Powered by PHP Valid HTML5 Valid CSS Driven by DokuWiki