A thing that met with especial approval among them was their so-called black broth, so much so that the older men did not require a bit of meat, but gave up all of it to the young men. It is said that Dionysius, the despot of Sicily, Plutarch, in his Life of Lycurgus , says one of the kings of Pontus. for the sake of this bought a slave who had been a Spartan cook, and ordered him to prepare the broth for him, sparing no expense; but when the king tasted it he spat it out in disgust; whereupon the cook said, Your Majesty, it is necessary to have exercised in the Spartan manner, and to have bathed in the Eurotas, in order to relish this broth. Cf. Plutarch’s Life of Lycurgus , chap. xii. (46 e), when a slightly different version is given, as also in Cicero, Tusculan Disputations , v. 34 (98), and Stobaeus, Florilegium , xxix. 100.