Lucian, Volume IV
 9780674991798, 0674991796

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THE LOEB CLASSICAL LIBRARY FOUNDED BY JAMES LOEB,

LL.D.

EDITED BY fT. E. PAGE,

tE. CAPPS, L. A.

POST,

L.H.D. E.

H.

C.H., LITT.D.

fW. H.

PH.D., LL.D.

D.

WARMINGTON,

LUCIAN IV

ROUSE,

litt.d.

m.a., f.b.hist.soc.

LUCIAN WITH AN ENGLISH TRANSLATION BY A. M. HARMON or YALE CNIVKKSITT

IN EIGHT VOLUMES

IV

LONDON

WILLIAM HEINEMANN LTD CAMBRIDGE, MASSACHUSETTS

HARVARD UNIVERSITY PRESS MCMLXI

First printed 1925

Reprinted 1953, 1961

Printed in Great Britain

CONTENTS FAOB

NOTE LIST OF LUCIAN's

vi

WORKS

VU

ANACHABSIS, OB ATHLETICS MBNIPPUS, OE THE DESCENT INTO HADES

1

....

71

ON FtJNERALS {Dt Luctu)

Ill

A PROFESSOR OF PUBLIC SPEAKING (RhetoTum prueceptor)

133

ALEXANDER THE FALSE PROPHET

173

ESSAYS IN PORTRAITURE (Imagines)

255

ESSAYS IS POBTRAITUBE DEFENDED (Pro Imoginibus)

.

297

THE OODDBS8E OF SUBRYE (De Syria Dea)

.

337

INDEX

.

.

413

NOTE In the constitution of this volume there are two

departures from the order in which Lucian's writings are

presented

Asinus, left

in

the Codex Vaticanus 90.

out of this volume and relegated to the last

and Pro Imaginibus, which by

six

pieces

in the

MS.

is

separated

from Imagines, has been brought

forward and placed directly after

vi

The

which there follows the Menippus, has been

it.

LIST OF LUCIAN'S

WORKS

SHOWING THEIR DIVISION INTO VOLUMES IN THIS EDITION Volume

I

Bath — Dionysus I and II — —Amber or The Swans—The Fly— Nigrinus Demonax—The Hall—My Native Land— Octogenarians— True Story and II—Slander—The Consonants at Law—The Hippias or the

Phalaris

Heracles

I

Carousal or The Lapiths.

VOLXTMK II

— —

The Downward Journey or The Tyrant Zeus Catechized Zeus Rants The Dream or The Cock Prometheus Icaromenippus or The Sky-man Timon or The Misanthrope Charon or The Inspector Philosophies for Sale.



— —





Volume

III

—The Double —The Ignorant Book Collector—The Dream or Lucian's Career—The Parasite —The Lover of Lies—The Judgement of the Goddesses— On The Dead Come

to Life or

Indictment or Trials by Jury

The Fisherman

—On

Sacrifices

Salaried Posts in Great Houses.

Volume IV

— — — — Portraiture Defended — The Goddess of Surrye.

Anacharsis or Athletics Menippus or The Descent into Hades On Funerals A Professor of Public Speaking Alexander the False Prophet Essays in Portraiture Essays



in

OF LUCIAN'S WORKS

LIST

Volume

V





The Passing of Peregrinus The Runaways Toxaris or Friendship The Dance Lexiphanes The Eunuch Astrology The Mistaken Critic The Parliament of the Gods The Tyrannicide Disowned.















Volume VI

—Dipsades—Saturnalia— Herodotus—Zeuxis—Pro Lapsu —Apologia—Harmonides—Hesiodus—Scytha—Hermotimus— Prometheus Es—Navigium. Historia

Volume VII Dialogues

of

the

—Dialogues

Dead

of

the

Dialogues of the Gods (exc. Deorura Judicium Dialogues of the Courtesans.

cf.

Sea-Gods Vol. Ill)

Volume VIII

—Lucius or the Ass—Amores—Halcyon—Demosthenes — Podagra — Ocypus — Cyniscus — Philopatria — ChariSoloecista

demus

via

—Nero.

THE WORKS OF LUCIAN ANACHARSIS, OR ATHLETICS Taking us back to the early sixtli century, Lucian lets us about Greek athletics between Solon, the Athenian lawgiver, and that legendary figure, the Scythian Anacharsis, who came to Greece in the quest of wisdom just as Solon himself had gone to Egypt and Lycurgus of Sparta to Crete. K. G. Jacob, who tried to make out that Lucian was an ardent reformer, laid great stress on this dialogue as a tract designed to restore the importance of athletics in Greek education by recalling how much they meant in the good old days But Lucian, who in any case was no laudator temporis acti, says nothing of any significance elsewhere to indicate either that he thought athletics especiallj' in need of reform or that he felt any particular interest in them and if the Anacharsis had been written for any such purpose, surely it would have ended with the conversion of the Scythian to the standpoint listen to a conversation

;

of the Greek.

Let us say rather that Lucian, who was especially interested in Anacharsis and Solon, as we see from his Scythian, wished, perhaps for the edification of an Athenian audience, to present them in conversation, and shrewdly picks athletics for their theme as that feature of Greek civilization which would be most striking and least intelligible to the foreigner, the ' child of Nature.' The conversation takes place in the Lyceum at Athens The opening sentence assumes that Anacharsis has just been enquiring about something else, and now turns to a

new

topic.

ANAXAP^IS H HEPI TTMNAtmN ANAXAP2I2

TavTU

8e vfuv,

TTOLoOcriv; ol fiev

(o

^oXcov, rivot ?peKa ol veoi

avrcov irepLirXeKOfievoi aWrjXov^

VTTOcTKeki^ovcnv, ol Se a'^'yovcn kcu \vyi,t!ova-i koI iv tQ> irrfKo) cTVvava