<TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:py="http://codespeak.net/lxml/objectify/pytype" py:pytype="TREE"><text><body><div type="translation" n="urn:cts:greekLit:tlg0010.tlg021.perseus-eng2" xml:lang="eng"><div n="16" subtype="section" type="textpart"><p> But why wonder at those who are by nature envious of all superior excellence, when
          certain even of those who regard themselves as superior and who seek to emulate me and
          imitate my work are more hostile to me than is the general public? And yet where in the
          world could you find men more reprehensible—for I shall speak my mind even at the risk of
          appearing to some to discourse with more vehemence and rancor than is becoming to my
          age—where, I say, could you find men more reprehensible than these, who are not able to
          put before their students even a fraction of what I have set forth in my teaching but use
          my discourses as models and make their living from so doing, and yet are so far from being
          grateful to me on this account that they are not even willing to let me alone but are
          always saying disparaging things about me? </p></div><div n="17" subtype="section" type="textpart"><p> Nevertheless, as long as they confined themselves to abusing my discourses, reading them
          in the worst possible manner side by side with their own, dividing them at the wrong
          places, mutilating them, and in every way spoiling their effect, I paid no heed to the
          reports which were brought to me, but possessed myself in patience. However, a short time
          before the Great Panathenaia,<note resp="editor">The Panathenaic festival was
            celebrated in <placeName key="perseus,Athens">Athens</placeName> each year but with
            special magnificence every fourth year, when it was called the Great Panathenaia.</note>
          they stirred me to great indignation. </p></div><div n="18" subtype="section" type="textpart"><p>For some of my friends met me and related to me how, as they were sitting together in the
            Lyceum,<note resp="editor">A sacred enclosure on the right bank of the
              <placeName key="tgn,7010825">Ilissus</placeName>, dedicated to Apollo—a gymnasium and
            exercise ground, but was also frequented by philosophers. Here Aristotle and his pupils
            were wont to gather.</note> three or four of the sophists of no repute— men who claim to
          know everything and are prompt to show their presence everywhere—were discussing the
          poets, especially the poetry of Hesiod and Homer, saying nothing original about them, but
          merely chanting their verses and repeating from memory the cleverest things which certain
          others had said about them in the past.<note resp="editor">Other sophists made
            much of the study and elucidation of the poets, but there is no evidence that Isocrates
            did. See Blass, <title>Die attische Beredsamkeit</title> 2, pp. 46 ff.</note>
        </p></div><div n="19" subtype="section" type="textpart"><p>It seems that the bystanders applauded their performance, whereupon one of these
          sophists, the boldest among them, attempted to stir up prejudice against me, saying that I
          hold all such things in contempt and that I would do away with all the learning and the
          teaching of others, and that I assert that all men talk mere drivel except those who
          partake of my instruction. And these aspersions, according to my friends, were effective
          in turning a number of those present against me. </p></div><div n="20" subtype="section" type="textpart"><p> Now I could not possibly convey to you how troubled and disturbed I was on hearing that
          some accepted these statements as true. For I thought that it was so well known that I was
          waging war against the false pretenders to wisdom and that I had spoken so moderately, nay
          so modestly, about my own powers that no one could be credited for a moment who asserted
          that I myself resorted to such pretensions. </p></div></div></body></text></TEI>