Scaife ATLAS

CTS Library / A Literary Prometheus

A Literary Prometheus (4)

urn:cts:greekLit:tlg0062.tlg064.perseus-eng4:4
Refs {'start': {'reference': '4', 'human_reference': 'Section 4'}}
Ancestors []
Children []
prev
plain textXML
next

Ptolemy, son of Lagus, imported two novelties into Egypt; one was a pure black Bactrian camel, the other a piebald man, half absolutely black and half unusually white, the two colours evenly distributed; he invited the Egyptians to the theatre, and concluded a varied show with these two, expecting to bring down the house. The audience, however, was terrified by the camel and almost stampeded; still, it was decked all over with gold, had purple housings and a richly jewelled bridle, the spoil of Darius or Cambyses treasury, if not of Cyrus own. As for the man, a few laughed at him, but most shrank as from a monster. Ptolemy realized that the show was a failure, and the Egyptians proof against mere novelty, preferring harmony and beauty. So he withdrew and ceased to prize them; the camel died forgotten, and the parti-coloured man became the reward of Thespis the fluteplayer for a successfal after-dinner performance.

Tokens

Ptolemy 1 w 7
son 1 w 11
of 1 w 13
Lagus 1 w 18
imported 1 w 27
two 1 w 30
novelties 1 w 39
into 1 w 43
Egypt 1 w 48
one 1 w 52
was 1 w 55
a 3 w 56
pure 1 w 60
black 1 w 65
Bactrian 1 w 73
camel 1 w 78
the 1 w 82
other 1 w 87
a 8 w 88
piebald 1 w 95
man 1 w 98
half 1 w 103
absolutely 1 w 113
black 2 w 118
and 1 w 121
half 2 w 125
unusually 1 w 134
white 1 w 139
the 3 w 143
two 2 w 146
colours 1 w 153
evenly 1 w 159
distributed 1 w 170
he 4 w 173
invited 1 w 180
the 4 w 183
Egyptians 1 w 192
to 3 w 194
the 5 w 197
theatre 1 w 204
and 2 w 208
concluded 1 w 217
a 20 w 218
varied 1 w 224
show 1 w 228
with 1 w 232
these 1 w 237
two 3 w 240
expecting 1 w 250
to 4 w 252
bring 1 w 257
down 1 w 261
the 8 w 264
house 1 w 269
The 1 w 273
audience 1 w 281
however 1 w 289
was 2 w 293
terrified 1 w 302
by 1 w 304
the 9 w 307
camel 2 w 312
and 3 w 315
almost 1 w 321
stampeded 1 w 330
still 1 w 336
it 4 w 339
was 3 w 342
decked 1 w 348
all 2 w 351
over 1 w 355
with 2 w 359
gold 1 w 363
had 1 w 367
purple 1 w 373
housings 1 w 381
and 4 w 384
a 32 w 385
richly 1 w 391
jewelled 1 w 399
bridle 1 w 405
the 10 w 409
spoil 1 w 414
of 2 w 416
Darius 1 w 422
or 2 w 425
Cambyses 1 w 433
treasury 1 w 442
if 2 w 445
not 1 w 448
of 3 w 450
Cyrus 1 w 455
own 2 w 459
As 1 w 462
for 1 w 465
the 11 w 468
man 2 w 471
a 37 w 473
few 1 w 476
laughed 1 w 483
at 2 w 485
him 1 w 488
but 2 w 492
most 2 w 496
shrank 1 w 502
as 5 w 504
from 1 w 508
a 42 w 509
monster 1 w 516
Ptolemy 2 w 524
realized 1 w 532
that 1 w 536
the 12 w 539
show 2 w 543
was 4 w 546
a 46 w 547
failure 1 w 554
and 5 w 558
the 13 w 561
Egyptians 2 w 570
proof 1 w 575
against 1 w 582
mere 1 w 586
novelty 1 w 593
preferring 1 w 604
harmony 1 w 611
and 6 w 614
beauty 1 w 620
So 1 w 623
he 17 w 625
withdrew 1 w 633
and 7 w 636
ceased 1 w 642
to 6 w 644
prize 1 w 649
them 1 w 653
the 15 w 657
camel 3 w 662
died 1 w 666
forgotten 1 w 675
and 8 w 679
the 16 w 682
parti-coloured 1 w 696
man 3 w 699
became 1 w 705
the 17 w 708
reward 1 w 714
of 5 w 716
Thespis 1 w 723
the 18 w 726
fluteplayer 1 w 737
for 3 w 740
a 64 w 741
successfal 1 w 751
after-dinner 1 w 763
performance 1 w 774