thus in the -Prometheus Liber- the hero after the loosing
of his chains opens a manufactory of men, in which
Goldshoe the rich (-Chrysosandalos-) bespeaks for
himself a maiden, of milk and finest wax, such as
the Milesian bees gather from various flowers, a maiden
without bones and sinews, without skin or hair, pure
and polished, slim, smooth, tender, charming.
The life-breath of this poetry is polemics—
not so much the political warfare of party, such as
Lucilius and Catullus practised, but the general moral
antagonism of the stern elderly man to the unbridled
and perverse youth, of the scholar living in the midst
of his classics to the loose and slovenly, or at any
rate in point of tendency reprobate, modern poetry,(24)
of the good burgess of the ancient type to the new
Rome in which the Forum, to use Varro’s language,
was a pigsty and Numa, if he turned his eyes towards
his city, would see no longer a trace of his wise
regulations. In the constitutional struggle Varro
did what seemed to him the duty of a citizen; but
his heart was not in such party-doings—
“why,” he complains on one occasion, “do
ye call me from my pure life into the filth of your
senate-house?” He belonged to the good old
time, when the talk savoured of onions and garlic,
but the heart was sound. His polemic against
the hereditary foes of the genuine Roman spirit, the
Greek philosophers, was only a single aspect of this
old-fashioned opposition to the spirit of the new
times; but it resulted both from the nature of the
Cynical philosophy and from the temperament of Varro,
that the Menippean lash was very specially plied round
the cars of the philosophers and put them accordingly
into proportional alarm—it was not without
palpitation that the philosophic scribes of the time
transmitted to the “severe man” their newly-issued
treatises. Philosophizing is truly no art.
With the tenth part of the trouble with which a master
rears his slave to be a professional baker, he trains
himself to be a philosopher; no doubt, when the baker
and the philosopher both come under the hammer, the
artist of pastry goes off a hundred times dearer than
the sage. Singular people, these philosophers!
One enjoins that corpses be buried in honey—
it is a fortunate circumstance that his desire is not
complied with, otherwise where would any honey-wine
be left? Another thinks that men grow out of
the earth like cresses. A third has invented
a world-borer (—Kosmotorounei—)
by which the earth will some day be destroyed.
-Postremo, nemo aegrotus quicquam
somniat
Tam infandum, quod non aliquis dicat
philosophus-.
It is ludicrous to observe how a Long-beard—by
which is meant an etymologizing Stoic—cautiously
weighs every word in goldsmith’s scales; but
there is nothing that surpasses the genuine philosophers’
quarrel—a Stoic boxing-match far excels
any encounter of athletes. In the satire -Marcopolis-,
—peri archeis—, when Marcus
created for himself a Cloud-Cuckoo-Home after his own
heart, matters fared, just as in the Attic comedy,
well with the peasant, but ill with the philosopher;
the -Celer- — -di’-enos- -leimmatos-logos—,
son of Antipater the Stoic, beats in the skull of his
opponent— evidently the philosophic -Dilemma—–with
the mattock.