Epictetus: The Discourses
Book Three, Chapter 22 About cynicism
When one of his pupils inquired of Epictetus, and he was a
person who appeared to be inclined to Cynism, what kind of person a Cynic ought
to be and what was the notion of the thing, We will inquire, said Epictetus, at
leisure: but I have so much to say to you that he who without God attempts so
great a matter, is hateful to God, and has no other purpose than to act
indecently in public. For in any well-managed house no man comes forward, and
says to himself, "I ought to be manager of the house." If he does so, the master
turns round and, seeing him insolently giving orders, drags him forth and flogs
him. So it is also in this great city; for here also there is a master of the
house who orders everything. "You are the sun; you can by going round make the
year and seasons, and make the fruits grow and nourish them, and stir the winds
and make them remit, and warm the bodies of men properly: go, travel round, and
so administer things from the greatest to the least." "You are a calf; when a
lion shall appear, do your proper business: if you do not, you will suffer."
"You are a bull: advance and fight, for this is your business, and becomes you,
and you can do it." "You can lead the army against Illium; be Agamemnon." "You
can fight in single combat against Hector: be Achilles." But if Thersites came
forward and claimed the command, he would either not have obtained it; or, if he
did obtain it, he would have disgraced himself before many witnesses.
Do you also think about the matter carefully: it is not
what it seems to you. "I wear a cloak now and I shall wear it then: I sleep hard
now, and I shall sleep hard then: I will take in addition a little bag now and a
staff, and I will go about and begin to beg and to abuse those whom I meet; and
if I see any man plucking the hair out of his body, I will rebuke him, or if he
has dressed his hair, or if he walks about in purple." If you imagine the thing
to be such as this, keep far away from it: do not approach it: it is not at all
for you. But if you imagine it to be what it is, and do not think yourself to be
unfit for it, consider what a great thing you undertake.
In the first place in the things which relate to yourself,
you must not be in any respect like what you do now: you must not blame God or
man: you must take away desire altogether, you must transfer avoidance only to
the things which are within the power of the will: you must not feel anger nor
resentment nor envy nor pity; a girl must not appear handsome to you, nor must
you love a little reputation, nor be pleased with a boy or a cake. For you ought
to know that the rest of men throw walls around them and houses and darkness
when they do any such things, and they have many means of concealment. A man
shuts the door, he sets somebody before the chamber: if a person comes, say that
he is out, he is not at leisure. But the Cynic instead of all these things must
use modesty as his protection: if he does not, he will he indecent in his
nakedness and under the open sky. This is his house, his door: this is the slave
before his bedchamber: this is his darkness. For he ought not to wish to hide
anything that he does: and if he does, he is gone, he has lost the character of
a Cynic, of a man who lives under the open sky, of a free man: he has begun to
fear some external thing, he has begun to have need of concealment, nor can he
get concealment when he chooses. For where shall he hide himself and how? And if
by chance this public instructor shall be detected, this pedagogue, what kind of
things will he be compelled to suffer? when then a man fears these things, is it
possible for him to be bold with his whole soul to superintend men? It cannot
be: it is impossible.
In the first place, then, you must make your ruling
faculty pure, and this mode of life also. "Now, to me the matter to work on is
my understanding, as wood is to the carpenter, as hides to the shoemaker; and my
business is the right use of appearances. But the body is nothing to me: the
parts of it are nothing to me. Death? Let it come when it chooses, either death
of the whole or of a part. Fly, you say. And whither; can any man eject me out
of the world? He cannot. But wherever I ever I go, there is the sun, there is
the moon, there are the stars, dreams, omens, and the conversation with Gods."
Then, if he is thus prepared, the true Cynic cannot be
satisfied with this; but he must know that he is sent a messenger from Zeus to
men about good and bad things, to show them that they have wandered and are
seeking the substance of good and evil where it is not, but where it is, they
never think; and that he is a spy, as Diogenes was carried off to Philip after
the battle of Chaeroneia as a spy. For, in fact, a Cynic is a spy of the things
which are good for men and which are evil, and it is his duty to examine
carefully and to come and report truly, and not to be struck with terror so as
to point out as enemies those who are not enemies, nor in any other way to be
perturbed by appearances nor confounded.
It is his duty, then, to he able with a loud voice, if the
occasion should arise, and appearing on the tragic stage to say like Socrates:
"Men, whither are you hurrying, what are you doing, wretches? like blind people
you are wandering up and down: you are going by another road, and have left the
true road: you seek for prosperity and happiness where they are not, and if
another shows you where they are, you do not believe him." Why do you seek it
without? In the body? It is not there. If you doubt, look at Myro, look at
Ophellius. In possessions? It is not there. But if you do not believe me, look
at Croesus: look at those who are now rich, with what lamentations their life is
filled. In power? It is not there. If it is, those must be happy who have been
twice and thrice consuls; but they are not. Whom shall we believe in these
matters? you who from without see their affairs and are dazzled by an
appearance, or the men themselves? What do they say? Hear them when they groan,
when they grieve, when on account of these very consulships and glory and
splendour they think that they are more wretched and in greater danger. Is it in
royal power? It is not: if it were, Nero would have been happy, and
Sardanapalus. But neither was Agamemnon happy, though he was a better man than
Sardanapalus and Nero; but while others are snoring what is he doing?
"Much from his head he tore his rooted
hair." And what does he say himself?
"I am perplexed," he says, "and
Disturb'd I am," and "my heart out of
my bosom Is leaping."
Wretch, which of your affairs goes badly? Your
possessions? No. Your body? No. But you are rich in gold and copper. What then
is the matter with you? That part of you, whatever it is, has been neglected by
you and is corrupted, the part with which we desire, with which we avoid, with
which we move toward and move from things. How neglected? He knows not the
nature of good for which he is made by nature and the nature of evil; and what
is his own, and what belongs to another; and when anything that belongs to
others goes badly, he says, "Woe to me, for the Hellenes are in dancer."
Wretched is his ruling faculty, and alone neglected and uncared for. "The
Hellenes are going to die destroyed by the Trojans." And if the Trojans do not
kill them, will they not die? "Yes; but not all at once." What difference, then,
does it make? For if death is an evil, whether men die altogether, or if they
die singly, it is equally an evil. Is anything else then going to happen than
the separation of the soul and the body? Nothing. And if the Hellenes perish, is
the door closed, and is it not in your power to die? "It is." Why then do you
lament "Oh, you who are a king and have the sceptre of Zeus?" An unhappy king
does not exist more than an unhappy god. What then art thou? In truth a
shepherd: for you weep as shepherds do, when a wolf has carried off one of their
sheep: and these who are governed by you are sheep. And why did you come hither?
Was your desire in any danger? was your aversion? was your movement? was your
avoidance of things? He replies, "No; but the wife of my brother was carried
off." Was it not then a great gain to be deprived of an adulterous wife? "Shall
we be despised, then, by the Trojans?" What kind of people are the Trojans, wise
or foolish? If they are wise, why do you fight with them? If they are fools, why
do you care about them.
In what, then, is the good, since it is not in these
things? Tell us, you who are lord, messenger and spy. Where you do not think
that it is, nor choose to seek it: for if you chose to seek it, you would have
found it to he in yourselves; nor would you be wandering out of the way, nor
seeking what belongs to others as if it were your own. Turn your thoughts into
yourselves: observe the preconceptions which you have. What kind of a thing do
you imagine the good to be? "That which flows easily, that which is happy, that
which is not impeded." Come, and do you not naturally imagine it to be great, do
you not imagine it to be valuable? do you not imagine it to be free from harm?
In what material then ought you to seek for that which flows easily, for that
which is not impeded? in that which serves or in that which is free? "In that
which is free." Do you possess the body, then, free or is it in servile
condition? "We do not know." Do you not know that it is the slave of fever, of
gout, ophthalmia, dysentery, of a tyrant, of fire, of iron, of everything which
is stronger? Yes, it is a slave." How, then, is it possible that anything which
belongs to the body can be free from hindrance? and how is a thing great or
valuable which is naturally dead, or earth, or mud? Well then, do you possess
nothing which is free? "Perhaps nothing." And who is able to compel you to
assent to that which appears false? "No man." And who can compel you not to
assent to that which appears true? "No man." By this, then, you see that there
is something in you naturally free. But to desire or to be averse from, or to
move toward an object or to move from it, or to prepare yourself, or to propose
to do anything, which of you can do this, unless he has received an impression
of the appearance of that which is profitable or a duty? "No man." You have,
then, in these thongs also something which is not hindered and is free. Wretched
men, work out this, take care of this, seek for good here.
"And how is it possible that a man who has nothing, who is
naked, houseless, without a hearth, squalid, without a slave, without a city,
can pass a life that flows easily?" See, God has sent you a man to show you that
it is possible. "Look at me, who am without a city, without a house, without
possessions, without a slave; I sleep on the ground; I have no wife, no
children; no praetorium, but only the earth and heavens, and one poor cloak. And
what do I want? Am I not without sorrow? am I not without fear? Am I not free?
When did any of you see me failing in the object of my desire? or ever falling
into that which I would avoid? did I ever blame God or man? did I ever accuse
any man? did any of you ever see me with sorrowful countenance? And how do I
meet with those whom you are afraid of and admire? Do not I treat them like
slaves? Who, when he sees me, does not think that he sees his king and master?"
This is the language of the Cynics, this their character,
this is their purpose. You say "No": but their characteristic is the little
wallet, and staff, and great jaws: the devouring of all that you give them, or
storing it up, or the abusing unseasonably all whom they meet, or displaying
their shoulder as a fine thing. Do you see how you are going, to undertake so
great a business? First take a mirror: look at your shoulders; observe your
loins, your thighs. You are going, my man, to be enrolled as a combatant in the
Olympic games, no frigid and miserable contest. In the Olympic games a man is
not permitted to be conquered only and to take his departure; but first he must
be disgraced in the sight of all the world, not in the sight of Athenians only,
or of Lacedaemonians or of Nicopolitans; next he must be whipped also if he has
entered into the contests rashly: and before being whipped, he must suffer
thirst and heat, and swallow much dust.
Reflect more carefully, know thyself, consult the
divinity, without God attempt nothing; for if he shall advise you, be assured
that he intends you to become great or to receive many blows. For this very
amusing quality is conjoined to a Cynic: he must be flogged like an ass, and
when he is flogged, he must love those who flog him, as if he were the father of
all, and the brother of all. You say "No"; but if a man flogs you, stand in the
public place and call out, "Caesar, what do I suffer in this state of peace
under thy protection? Let us bring the offender before the proconsul." But what
is Caesar to a Cynic, or what is a proconsul, or what is any other except him
who sent the Cynic down hither, and whom he serves, namely Zeus? Does he call
upon any other than Zeus? Is he not convinced that, whatever he suffers, it is
Zeus who is exercising him? Hercules when he was exercised by Eurystheus did not
think that he was wretched, but without hesitation he attempted to execute all
that he had in hand. And is he who is trained to the contest and exercised by
Zeus going to call out and to be vexed, he who is worthy to bear the sceptre of
Diogenes? Hear what Diogenes says to the passers-by when he is in a fever,
"Miserable wretches, will you not stay? but are you going so long a journey to
Olympia to see the destruction or the fight of athletes; and will you not choose
to see the combat between a fever and a man?" Would such a man accuse God who
sent him down as if God were treating him unworthily, a man who gloried in his
circumstances, and claimed to be an example to those who were passing by? For
what shall he accuse him of? because he maintains a decency of behavior, because
he displays his virtue more conspicuously? Well, and what does he say of
poverty, about death, about pain? How did he compare his own happiness with that
of the Great King? or rather he thought that there was no comparison between
them. For where there are perturbations, and griefs, and fears, and desires not
satisfied, and aversions of things which you cannot avoid, and envies and
jealousies, how is there a road to happiness there? But where there are corrupt
principles, there these things must of necessity be.
When the young man asked, if when a Cynic is sick, and a
friend asks him to come to his house and be taken care of in his sickness, shall
the Cynic accept the invitation, he replied: And where shall you find, I ask, a
Cynic's friend? For the man who invites ought to be such another as the that he
may be worthy of being reckoned the Cynic's friend. He ought to be a partner in
the Cynic's sceptre and his royalty, and a worthy minister, if he intends to be
considered worthy of a Cynic's friendship, as Diogenes was a friend of
Antisthenes, as Crates was a friend of Diogenes. Do you think that, if a man
comes to a Cynic and salutes him, he is the Cynic's friend, and that the Cynic
will think him worthy of receiving a Cynic into his house? So that, if you
please, reflect on this also: rather look round for some convenient dunghill on
which you shall bear your fever and which will shelter you from the north wind
that you may not be chilled. But you seem to me to wish to go into some man's
house and to be well fed there for a time. Why then do you think of attempting
so great a thing?
"But," said the young man, "shall marriage and the
procreation of children as a chief duty be undertaken by the Cynic?" If you
grant me a community of wise men, Epictetus replies, perhaps no man will readily
apply himself to the Cynic practice. For on whose account should he undertake
this manner of life? However if we suppose that he does, nothing will prevent
him from marrying and begetting children; for his wife will be another like
himself, and his father-in-law another like himself, and his children will be
brought up like himself. But in the present state of things which is like that
of an army placed in battle order, is it not fit that the Cynic should without
any distraction be employed only on the administration of God, able to go about
among men, not tied down to the common duties of mankind, nor entangled in the
ordinary relations of life, which if he neglects, he will not maintain the
character of an honourable and good man? and if he observes them he will lose
the character of the messenger, and spy and herald of God. For consider that it
is his duty to do something toward his father-in-law, something to the other
kinsfolk of his wife, something to his wife also. He is also excluded by being a
Cynic from looking after the sickness of his own family, and from providing for
their support. And, to say nothing of the rest, he must have a vessel for
heating water for the child that he may wash it in the bath; wool for his wife
when she is delivered of a child, oil, a bed, a cup: so the furniture of the
house is increased. I say nothing of his other occupations and of his
distraction. Where, then, now is that king, he who devotes himself to the public
interests, The people's guardian and so
full of cares. whose duty it is to look after others, the married and those
who have children; to see who uses his wife well, who uses her badly; who
quarrels; what family is well administered, what is not; going about as a
physician does and feels pulses? He says to one, "You have a fever," to another,
"You have a headache, or the gout": he says to one, "Abstain from food"; to
another he says, "Eat"; or "Do not use the bath"; to another, "You require the
knife, or the cautery." How can he have time for this who is tied to the duties
of common life? is it not his duty to supply clothing to his children, and to
send them to the schoolmaster with writing tablets, and styles. Besides, must he
not supply them with beds? for they cannot be genuine Cynics as soon as they are
born. If he does not do this, it would be better to expose the children as soon
as they are born than to kill them in this way. Consider what we are bringing
the Cynic down to, how we are taking his royalty from him. "Yes, but Crates took
a wife." You are speaking of a circumstance which arose from love and of a woman
who was another Crates. But we are inquiring about ordinary marriages and those
which are free from distractions, and making this inquiry we do not find the
affair of marriage in this state of the world a thing which is especially suited
to the Cynic.
"How, then, shall a man maintain the existence of
society?" In the name of God, are those men greater benefactors to society who
introduce into the world to occupy their own places two or three grunting
children, or those who superintend as far as they can all mankind, and see what
they do, how they live, what they attend to, what they neglect contrary to their
duty? Did they who left little children to the Thebans do them more good than
Epaminondas who died childless? And did Priamus, who begat fifty worthless sons,
or Danaus or AEolus contribute more to the community than Homer? then shall the
duty of a general or the business of a writer exclude a man from marriage or the
begetting of children, and such a man shall not be judged to have accepted the
condition of childlessness for nothing; and shall not the royalty of a Cynic be
considered an equivalent for the want of children? Do we not perceive his
grandeur and do we not justly contemplate the character of Diogenes; and do we,
instead of this, turn our eyes to the present Cynics, who are dogs that wait at
tables and in no respect imitate the Cynics of old except perchance in breaking
wind, but in nothing else? For such matters would not have moved us at all nor
should we have wondered if a Cynic should not marry or beget children. Man, the
Cynic is the father of all men; the men are his sons, the women are his
daughters: he so carefully visits all, so well does he care for all. Do you
think that it is from idle impertinence that he rebukes those whom he meets? He
does it as a father, as a brother, and as the minister of the father of all, the
minister of Zeus.
If you please, ask me also if a Cynic shall engage in the
administration of the state. Fool, do you seek a greater form of administration
than that in which he is engaged? Do you ask if he shall appear among the
Athenians and say something about the revenues and the supplies, he who must
talk with all men, alike with Athenians, alike with Corinthians, alike with
Romans, not about supplies, nor yet about revenues, nor about peace or war, but
about happiness and unhappiness, about good fortune and bad fortune, about
slavery and freedom? When a man has undertaken the administration of such a
state, do you ask me if he shall engage in the administration of a state? ask me
also if he shall govern: again I will say to you: Fool, what greater government
shall he exercise than that which he exercises now?
It is necessary also for such a man to have a certain
habit of body: for if he appears to be consumptive, thin and pale, his testimony
has not then the same weight. For he must not only by showing the qualities of
the soul prove to the vulgar that it is in his power independent of the things
which they admire to be a good man, but he must also show by his body that his
simple and frugal way of living in the open air does not injure even the body.
"See," he says, "I am a proof of this, and my own body also is." So Diogenes
used to do, for he used to go about fresh-looking, and he attracted the notice
of the many by his personal appearance. But if a Cynic is an object of
compassion, he seems to a beggar: all persons turn away from him, all are
offended with him; for neither ought he to appear dirty so that he shall not
also in this respect drive away men; but his very roughness ought to be clean
and attractive.
There ought also to belong to the Cynic much natural grace
and sharpness; and if this is not so, he is a stupid fellow, and nothing else;
and he must have these qualities that he may be able readily and fitly to be a
match for all circumstances that may happen. So Diogenes replied to one who
said, "Are you the Diogenes who does not believe that there are gods?" "And,
how," replied Diogenes, "can this be when I think that you are odious to the
gods?" On another occasion in reply to Alexander, who stood by him when he was
sleeping, and quoted Homer's line, A
man a councilor should not sleep all night, he answered, when he was
half-asleep, The people's guardian and
so full of cares.
But before all the Cynic's ruling faculty must be purer
than the sun; and, if it is not, he must be a cunning knave and a fellow of no
principle, since while he himself is entangled in some vice he will reprove
others. For see how the matter stands: to these kings and tyrants their guards
and arms give the power of reproving some persons, and of being able even to
punish those who do wrong though they are themselves bad; but to a Cynic instead
of arms and guards it is conscience which gives this power. When he knows that
be has watched and labored for mankind, and has slept pure, and sleep has left
him still purer, and that he thought whatever he has thought as a friend of the
gods, as a minister, as a participator of the power of Zeus, and that on all
occasions he is ready to say Lead me, O
Zeus, and thou O Destiny; and also, "If so it pleases the gods, so let it
be"; why should he not have confidence to speak freely to his own brothers, to
his children, in a word to his kinsmen? For this reason he is neither
overcurious nor a busybody when he is in this state of mind: for he is not a
meddler with the affairs of others when he is superintending human affairs, but
he is looking after his own affairs. If that is not so, you may also say that
the general is a busybody, when he inspects his soldiers, and examines them, and
watches them, and punishes the disorderly. But if, while you have a cake under
your arm, you rebuke others, I will say to you: "Will you not rather go away
into a corner and eat that which you have stolen"; what have you to do with the
affairs of others? For who are you? are you the bull of the herd, or the queen
of the bees? Show me the tokens of your supremacy, such as they have from
nature. But if you are a drone claiming the sovereignty over the bees, do you
not suppose that your fellow citizens will put you down as the bees do the
drones?
The Cynic also ought to have such power of endurance as to
seem insensible to the common sort and a stone: no man reviles him, no man
strikes him, no man insults him, but he gives his body that any man who chooses
may do with it what he likes. For he bears in mind that the inferior must be
overpowered by the superior in that in which it is inferior; and the body is
inferior to the many, the weaker to the stronger. He never then descends into
such a contest in which he can be overpowered; but he immediately withdraws from
things which belong to others, he claims not the things which are servile. where
there is will and the use of appearances, there you will see how many eyes he
has so that you may say, "Argus was blind compared with him." Is his assent ever
hasty, his movement rash, does his desire ever fall in its object, does that
which he would avoid befall him, is his purpose unaccomplished, does he ever
find fault, is he ever humiliated, is he ever envious? To these he directs all
his attention and energy; but as to everything else he snores supine. All is
peace; there is no robber who takes away his will, no tyrant. But what say you
as to his body? I say there is. And as to magistracies and honours? What does he
care for them? When then any person would frighten him through them, he says to
him, "Begone, look for children: masks are formidable to them; but I know that
they are made of shell, and they have nothing inside."
About such a matter as this you are deliberating.
Therefore, if you please, I urge you in God's name, defer the matter, and first
consider your preparation for it. For see what Hector says to Andromache,
"Retire rather," he says, "into the house and weave:
War is the work of men
Of all indeed, but specially 'tis mine.
So he was conscious of his own qualification, and knew her weakness.
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23: To those who read and discuss for the sake of ostentation
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