<TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:py="http://codespeak.net/lxml/objectify/pytype" py:pytype="TREE"><text xml:lang="eng"><body><div type="translation" xml:lang="eng" n="urn:cts:greekLit:tlg0007.tlg072.perseus-eng3"><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="6"><p rend="indent">There may be, then, so much that is profitable and useful in reviling one’s enemy; but no less profit lies in the alternative of being reviled oneself and ill spoken of by one’s enemies. Hence Antisthenes <note place="unspecified" anchored="true">Diogenes is given as the author of this saying twice elsewhere in the <title rend="italic" xml:lang="lat">Moralia</title>, 74 C and 82 A. One MS. gives Diogenes here.</note> was quite right in saying that, as a matter of self-preservation, men have need of true friends or else of ardent enemies; for the first by admonition, and the second by reviling, turn them from error. But since friendship’s voice has nowadays become thin and weak when it comes to frank speaking, while its flattery is voluble and its admonition mute, we have to depend upon our enemies to hear the truth. For as Telephus,<note place="unspecified" anchored="true">Among the many references to this story, it is perhaps sufficient to cite <title rend="italic" xml:lang="lat">Moralia</title>, 46 F; Propertius, ii. 1. 63; Ovid, <title rend="italic">Tristia</title>v. 1. 15.</note> unable to find a suitable physician, subjected his wound to his enemy’s spear, so those who are cut off from benevolent admonition must submit with patience to the remarks of a malevolent enemy if he exposes and reprehends their vice, and they must give consideration to the facts only, and not to what is in the mind of the detractor. Another parallel is the case of the man who, with intent to kill the Thessalian Prometheus, <note place="unspecified" anchored="true">Apparetly a sort of nickname of Jason of Pherae; at any rate this story is told of Jason by Cicero, <title rend="italic" xml:lang="lat">De natura deorum</title>, iii. 28 (70); Pliny, <title rend="italic">Nat. Hist.</title> vii. 51; and Valerius Maximus, i. 8, ext. 6. <foreign xml:lang="lat">Cf.</foreign> Xenophon, <title rend="italic">Hellenica</title>, ii. 3. 36.</note> smote with his sword a tumour which Prometheus had, and opened it so that the man’s life <pb xml:id="v.2.p.23"/> was saved, and he obtained relief from his tumour through its bursting; so oftentimes reviling launched upon a man by the prompting of anger or enmity cures some evil in his soul which either was not recognized or was disregarded by him. But most persons on being reviled do not stop to think whether the reproach is applicable to themselves, but they try to think what other form of reproach is applicable to the reviler, and, just as wrestlers do not wipe the dust from off their own bodies, so these persons do not wipe off the revilings from themselves, but they besmear one another, and in consequence get besmirched and begrimed by each other as they grapple together. But it is more imperative that the man who is ill spoken of by an enemy should rid himself of the attribute in question, than that he should get rid of a stain on his clothes to which his attention has been called; and if anybody mentions things which are not really attributes of ours, we should nevertheless seek to learn the cause which has given rise to such slanderous assertions, and we must exercise vigilance, for fear that we unwittingly commit some error either approximating or resembling the one mentioned. For example, an unwarranted suspicion of unmanliness was aroused against Lacydes, king of the Argives, by a certain arrangement of his hair and a mincing gait, and Pompey <note place="unspecified" anchored="true">Mention of this habit of Pompey’s is found also in the <title rend="italic" xml:lang="lat">Moralia</title>, 800 D, in the <title rend="italic">Life of Pompey</title>, chap. xlviii. (p. 645 A), and in the <title rend="italic">Life of Caesar</title> chap. iv. (p. 709 B).</note> suffered in the same way on account of his habit of scratching his head with one finger, although he was very far removed from effeminacy and licentiousness. Crassus <note place="unspecified" anchored="true">The story is told more fully in the <title rend="italic">Life of Crassus</title>, chap. i. (p. 543 B).</note> incurred the charge of being too intimate with one of the Vestal virgins, when he only wanted to buy from her a piece of good land, and for this reason had many private <pb xml:id="v.2.p.25"/> interviews with her and paid her much attention. Again, Postumia’s <note place="unspecified" anchored="true">A Vestal Virgin; <foreign xml:lang="lat">cf.</foreign> Livy, iv. 44.</note> ready laughter and overbold talk in men’s company put her under unjust suspicion, so that she was tried for unchastity. She was found innocent of the charge, but in dismissing her the Poritifex Maximus, Spurius Minucius, reminded her that the language she used should have no less dignity than her life. And again Pausanias inflicted on Themistocles, <note place="unspecified" anchored="true">Thucydides, i. 135; <foreign xml:lang="lat">cf.</foreign> also Plutarch, <title rend="italic">Life of Themistocles</title>, chap. xxiii. (p. 123 c).</note> who was doing nothing wrong, the suspicion of treason by treating him as a friend, and by writing and sending messages to him continually. </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="7"><p rend="indent">Whenever, then, anything untrue has been said, you must not despise and disregard it just because it is false, but rather consider what word or act of yours, which of your pursuits or associations, has given colour to the calumny, and then be studiously careful to avoid it. For if others by becoming involved in undesired situations thereby learn a useful lesson—just as Merope says that <quote rend="blockquote">Inconstant Fortune took from me, To pay her fee, the dearest that I had, But she for that hath made me wise—<note place="unspecified" anchored="true">From the <title rend="italic">Cresphontes</title> of Euripides; Nauck, <title rend="italic" xml:lang="lat">Trag. Graec. Frag., Euripides,</title> No. 458.</note> </quote> what is to hinder a man from taking his enemy as his teacher without fee, and profiting thereby, and thus learning, to some extent, the things of which he was unaware ? For there are many things which an enemy is quicker to perceive than a friend (for Love is blind regarding the loved one, as Plato <note place="unspecified" anchored="true">Plato, <title rend="italic">Laws</title>, p. 731 E. The quotation is repeated a few pages farther on (92 E), and also in the <title rend="italic" xml:lang="lat">Moralia</title>, 48 E and 1000 A.</note> says), and inherent in hatred, along with curiosity, is the inability to hold one’s tongue. Hiero <note place="unspecified" anchored="true">The story is repeated in the <title rend="italic" xml:lang="lat">Moralia</title>, 175 B, and elsewhere by other writers. One author tells it of Gelon.</note> was reviled by <note place="unspecified" anchored="true">The story is repeated in the <title rend="italic" xml:lang="lat">Moralia,</title> 175 b, and elsewhere by other writers. One author tells it of Gelon.</note> <pb xml:id="v.2.p.27"/> one of his enemies for his offensive breath; so when he went home he said to his wife, <q>What do you mean ? Even you never told me of this.</q> But she being virtuous and innocent said, <q>I supposed that all men smelt so.</q> Thus it is that things which are perceptible, material, and evident to all the world, may sooner be learned from our enemies than from our friends and close associates. </p></div></div></body></text></TEI>