<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:tlg0062.tlg042.perseus-eng2" xml:lang="eng"><div type="textpart" xml:base="urn:cts:greekLit:tlg0062.tlg042.perseus-eng2" subtype="section" n="16"><p>
“He left home, then, for the second time, to roam
about, possessing an ample source of funds in the
Christians, through whose ministrations he lived in
unalloyed prosperity. For a time he battened himself thus; but then, after he had transgressed in some
way even against them—he was seen, I think,
eating some of the food that is forbidden them<note xml:lang="eng" n="v.5.p.19.n.2"><p>In Acts 15, 29 the apostles and the elder brethren prescribe abstaining “from sacrifices offered to idols, and from blood, and from things strangled’? (eidoAd8ura kat alya Kat amucrd). Probably what Lucian has in mind is pagan sacrificial meats. This may be just a guess, from the way he puts it; but if so, it is highly plausible on account of the </p></note>—
they no longer accepted him, and so, being at a loss,
he thought he must sing a palinode and demand his
possessions back from his city. Submitting a petition, he expected to recover them by order of the
Emperor. Then, as the city sent representatives to
oppose the claim, he achieved nothing, but was
directed to abide by what he had once for all determined, under no compulsion from anyone.
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“Thereafter he went away a third time, to Egypt,
to visit Agathobulus,<note xml:lang="eng" n="v.5.p.19.n.3"><p>In Demonax, 3, Lucian alludes to Agathobulus as one of those with whom Demonax had studied. The teacher of Peregrinus was therefore reputable as well as famous. </p></note> where he took that wonderful
course of training in asceticism, shaving one half of
his head, daubing his face with mud, and demonstrating what they call‘ indifference’ by erecting his
notorious indifference of the Cynics towards what they ate.
Peregrinus may have signalised his relapse to Cynicism by
sampling a “dinner of Hecate” at the cross-roads.





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yard amid a thronging mob of bystanders,<note xml:lang="eng" n="v.5.p.21.n.1"><p>The allusion is to that variety of “indifferent” action (.e. neither good nor bad) ascribed to Diogenes himself by Dio Chrysostom VI, 16-20 (pp. 203-204 z). </p></note> besides
giving and taking blows on the back-sides with a
stalk of fennel, and playing the mountebank even
more audaciously in many other ways.
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“From there, thus equipped, he set sail for Italy
and immediately after disembarking he fell to abusing
everyone, and in particular the Emperor,<note xml:lang="eng" n="v.5.p.21.n.2"><p>Antoninus Pius. </p></note> knowing
him to be mild and gentle, so that he was safe in
making bold. The Emperor, as one would expect,
cared little for his libels and did not think fit to punish
for mere words a man who only used philosophy as a
cloak, and above all, a man who had made a profession of abusiveness. But in our friend’s case, even
from this his reputation grew, among simple folk anyhow, and he was a cynosure for his recklessness, until
finally the city prefect, a wise man, packed him off for
immoderate indulgence in the thing, saying that the
city had no need of any such philosopher. However,
this too made for his renown, and he was on everybody’s lips as the philosopher who had been banished
for his frankness and excessive freedom, so that in this
respect he approached Musonius, Dio, Epictetus, and
anyone else who has been in a similar predicament.
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“Coming at last to Greece under these circumstances, at one moment he abused the Eleans, at
another he counselled the Greeks to take up arms
against the Romans,<note xml:lang="eng" n="v.5.p.21.n.3"><p>The life of Antoninus Pius (Script. Hist. Aug.), § 5, notes suppression of a rebellion in Achaia, </p></note> and at another he libelled a man
outstanding in literary attainments and position
because he had been a benefactor to Greece in many




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ways, and particularly because he had brought water
to Olympia and prevented the visitors to the festival
from dying of thirst, maintaining that he was making
the Greeks effeminate, for the spectators of the
Olympic games ought to endure their thirst—yes,
by Heaven, and even to lose their lives, no doubt,
many of them, through the frequent distempers
which formerly ran riot in the vast crowd on account
of the dryness of the place!<note xml:lang="eng" n="v.5.p.23.n.1"><p>The man was the famous Herodes Atticus. For the aqueduct built by him at Olympia see Frazer’s Pausanias, Vol. IV, pp. 72 ff. Philostratus (Vit. Soph. II, 1, 33) records that Herodes was often berated by Proteus, to whom on one occasion he hinted that it might at least be done in Greek. </p></note> And he said this while
he drank that same water!
When they almost killed him with stones, mobbing
him with one accord, he managed to escape death at
the moment by fleeing to Zeus for sanctuary (stout
fellow!),

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and afterwards, at the next Olympiad, he
gave the Greeks a speech which he had composed
during the four years that had intervened, praising
the man who had brought in the water and defending
himself for running away at that time.
“At last he was disregarded by all and no longer
so admired; for all his stuff was stale and he could
not turn out any further novelty with which to
surprise those who came in his way and make them
marvel and stare at him—a thing for which he had a
fierce craving from the first. So he devised this
ultimate venture of the pyre, and spread a report
among the Greeks immediately after the last
Olympic games that he would burn himself up at the
next festival.

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