Buyer Be off with you! Your ways are foul and unnatural. Diogones But the easiest, at least, sirrah, and handy for every one to pursue; for they will not ask education of you, or oratory, or nonsense. No; this road is a short cut to fame; for even if you are a private citizen, a tanner, or a fishmonger, or a carpenter, or a cabinet-maker, nothing prevents your being a wonder if only you are shameless and bold, and have acquired the art of skilful abuse. Buyer I do not want your services in that line, but you might perhaps be convenient as a sailor or a gardener-particularly if the vendor is willing to sell you for not more than five cents. Hermes Take him; we shall be glad to get rid of him. He is a nuisance, yelling and abusing everybody generally with his foul tongue. Zeus Call another, the Cyrenaic, the one in the purple robe with the garland on his head. Hermes Come now, attention, all! This article is expensive, and only for the rich. This is a life of sweetness, a thrice-blessed life! Who wants luxury? Who will buy the daintiest thing going? Buyer Step forward, you, and tell me what you happen to know. I will buy you if you are useful. Hermes Do not annoy him, my good fellow, or ask him questions. He is drunk and cannot answer you, for his tongue is thick, as you perceive. Buyer And who in his senses would buy such an abandoned, dissipated slave? How he reeks of perfumes, and how reeling and uncertain his gait is! But tell me yourself, Hermes, if need be, what his points are, and what his pursuits. Hermes Primarily he is a clever man to live with you, able to drink with you, and just the man to go with a flute-girl on the revels of an amorous and spendthrift master. Moreover, he is a connoisseur of made dishes, a most experienced cook, and a complete professor of the art of pleasant living. In fact, he was educated at Athens, and also served various despots in Sicily, and is highly esteemed by them. This is the substance of his principles: to despise everything, make use of everything, and gather pleasure from every source. Buyer You had better cast your eye on some one of these rich men with full purses. Certainly for buying a gay life I am not your man. Hermes It looks, Zeus, as though this one would be left on your hands. Zeus Set him aside and put up another. These two, for choice, the laugher from Abdera and the weeper from Ephesus, for I should like to sell the two together. Hermes Let them come down into full view. I offer the noblest lives; we announce the sagest of all! Buyer Heavens, what a contrast! The one never stops laughing, and the other seems to be in grief for somebody. He is consumed with weeping. What is the matter, fellow? Why are you laughing? Demokritos What a question! Because all your doings and you yourselves strike me as so funny! Buyer What? You are laughing at us all, and don't take our doings seriously? Demokritos Even so, for there is nothing serious in them. They are all empty, a whirl of atoms, the infinite. Buyer By no means; it is you that are really empty and infinitesimal. What impudence! Will you not stop laughing? But what are you weeping for, my good fellow? I imagine it will be much pleasanter to talk with you. Herakleitos Because, friend, I deem human life a lamentable thing, worthy of tears, so soon passeth it all away. Therefore, I pity you and bewail your lot. The present does not strike me as important, and what is to come hereafter is unmixed woe-I mean the final conflagration and the catastrophe of the universe. These are the things I lament. Nothing is steadfast, but all things are somehow pressed together into an olla-podrĂ¯da and the same thing is a joyless joy, a knowing without knowledge, a great littleness, drifting up and down and changing at the caprice of the playful Aeon. Buyer What may the Aeon be? Herakleitos A child at play, moving the chessmen, changing them by hazard. Buyer What, then, are men? Herakleitos Mortal gods. Buyer And what are the gods? Herakleitos Immortal men. Buyer Are you talking in riddles, fellow, or setting me conundrums? You make your meaning as dim, actually, as Apollo does. Herakleitos Because I am at no pains about you. Buyer Very well; neither will any but a lunatic buy you. Herakleitos I bid each of you go to the devil from his youth up, whether he purchase or purchase not. Buyer His affliction is not much removed from melancholia. For my part, I am not going to buy either of them. Hermes These two are left on our hands. Zeus Put up another! Hermes That Athenian there, the chatterbox? Zeus By all means. Hermes Come here, you! We offer a good, sensible life. Who buys the most holy? Buyer Tell me, just what do you happen to know? Sokrates I am a lover and wise in the science of love. Buyer Then how in the world could I buy you? For what I want is a tutor for my pretty boy. Sokrates Well, who could be a better man than I to associate with the fair? It is beautiful souls that I love, not bodies.