Epictetus: The Discourses
Book Three, Chapter 23 To those who read and discuss for the sake of
ostentation
First say to yourself, who you wish to be: then do
accordingly what you are doing; for in nearly all other things we see this to be
so. Those who follow athletic exercises first determine what they wish to be,
then do accordingly what follows. If a man is a runner in the long course, there
is a certain kind of diet, of walking, rubbing and exercise: if a man is a
runner in the stadium, all these things are different; if he is a Pentathlete,
they are still more different. So you will find it also in the arts. If you are
a carpenter, you will have such and such things: if a worker in metal, such
things. For everything that we do, if we refer it to no end, we shall do it to
no purpose; and if we refer it to the wrong end, we shall miss the mark.
Further, there is a general end or purpose, and a particular purpose. First of
all, we must act as a man. What is comprehended in this? We must not be like a
sheep, though gentle, nor mischievous, like a wild beast. But the particular cud
has reference to each person's mode of life and his will. The lute-player acts
as a lute-player, the carpenter as a carpenter, the philosopher as a
philosopher, the rhetorician as a rhetorician. When then you say, "Come and hear
me read to you": take care first of all that you are not doing this without a
purpose; then, if you have discovered that you are doing this with reference to
a purpose, consider if it is the right purpose. Do you wish to do good or to be
praised? Immediately you hear him saying, "To me what is the value of praise
from the many?" and he says well, for it is of no value to a musician, so far as
he is a musician, nor to a geometrician. Do you then wish to be useful? in what?
tell us that we may run to your audience-room. Now can a man do anything useful
to others, who has not received something useful himself? No, for neither can a
man do anything useful in the carpenter's art, unless he is a carpenter; nor in
the shoemaker's art, unless he is a shoemaker.
Do you wish to know then if you have received any
advantage? Produce your opinions, philosopher. What is the thing which desire
promises? Not to fall in the object. What does aversion promise? Not to fall
into that which you would avoid. Well; do we fulfill their promise? Tell me the
truth; but if you lie, I will tell you. Lately when your hearers came together
rather coldly, and did not give you applause, you went away humbled. Lately
again when you had been praised, you went about and said to all, "What did you
think of me?" "Wonderful, master, I swear by all that is dear to me." "But how
did I treat of that particular matter?" "Which?" "The passage in which I
described Pan and the nymphs?" "Excellently." Then do you tell me that in desire
and in aversion you are acting according to nature? Begone; try to persuade
somebody else. Did you not praise a certain person contrary to your opinion? and
did you not flatter a certain person who was the son of a senator? Would you
wish your own children to be such persons? "I hope not." Why then did you praise
and flatter him? "He is an ingenuous youth and listens well to discourses." How
is this? "He admires me." You have stated your proof. Then what do you think? do
not these very people secretly despise you? When, then, a man who is conscious
that he has neither done any good nor ever thinks of it, finds a philosopher who
says, "You have a great natural talent, and you have a candid and good
disposition," what else do you think that he says except this, "This man has
some need of me?" Or tell me what act that indicates a, great mind has he shown?
Observe; he has been in your company a long time; he has listened to your
discourses, he has heard you reading; has he become more modest? has he been
turned to reflect on himself? has he perceived in what a bad state he is? has he
cast away self-conceit? does he look for a person to teach him? "He does." A man
who will teach him to live? No, fool, but how to talk; for it is for this that
he admires you also. Listen and hear what he says: "This man writes with perfect
art, much better than Dion." This is altogether another thing. Does he say,
"This man is modest, faithful, free from perturbations?" and even if he did say
it, I should say to him, "Since this man is faithful, tell me what this faithful
man is." And if he could not tell me, I should add this, "First understand what
you say, then speak."
You, then, who are in a wretched plight and gaping after
applause and counting your auditors, do you intend to be useful to others?
"To-day many more attended my discourse." "Yes, many; we suppose five hundred."
"That is nothing; suppose that there were a thousand." "Dion never had so many
hearers." "How could he?" "And they understand what is said beautifully." "What
is fine, master, can move even a stone." See, these are the words of a
philosopher. This is the disposition of a man who will do good to others; here
is a man who has listened to discourses, who has read what is written about
Socrates as Socratic, not as the compositions of Lysias and Isocrates. "I have
often wondered by what arguments." Not so, but "by what argument": this is more
exact than that. What, have you read the words at all in a different way from
that in which you read little odes? For if you read them as you ought, you would
not have been attending to such matters, but you would rather have been looking
to these words: "Anytus and Meletus are able to kill me, but they cannot harm
me": and "I am always of such a disposition as to pay regard to nothing of my
own except to the reason which on inquiry seems to me the best." Hence who ever
heard Socrates say, "I know something and I teach"; but he used to send
different people to different teachers. Therefore they used to come to him and
ask to be introduced to philosophy by him; and he would take them and recommend
them. Not so; but as he accompanied them he would say, "Hear me to-day
discoursing in the house of Quadratus." Why should I hear you? Do you wish to
show me that you put words together cleverly? You put them together, man; and
what good will it do you? "But only praise me." What do you mean by praising?
"Say to me, "Admirable, wonderful." Well, I say so. But if that is praise
whatever it is which philosophers mean by the name of good, what have I to
praise in you? If it is good to speak well, teach me, and will praise you. "What
then? ought a man to listen to such things without pleasure?" I hope not. For my
part I do not listen even to a lute-player without pleasure. Must I then for
this reason stand and play the lute? Hear what Socrates says, "Nor would it be
seemly for a man of my age, like a young man composing addresses, to appear
before you." "Like a young man," he says. For in truth this small art is an
elegant thing, to select words, and to put them together, and to come forward
and gracefully to read them or to speak, and while he is reading to say, "There
are not many who can do these things, I swear by all that you value."
Does a philosopher invite people to hear him? As the sun
himself draws men to him, or as food does, does not the philosopher also draw to
him those who will receive benefit? What physician invites a man to be treated
by him? Indeed I now hear that even the physicians in Rome do invite patients,
but when I lived there, the physicians were invited. "I invite you to come and
hear that things are in a bad way for you, and that you are taking care of
everything except that of which you ought to take care, and that you are
ignorant of the good and the bad and are unfortunate and unhappy." A fine kind
of invitation: and yet if the words of the philosopher do not produce this
effect on you, he is dead, and so is the speaker. Rufus was used to say: "If you
have leisure to praise me, I am speaking to no purpose." Accordingly he used to
speak in such a way that every one of us who were sitting there supposed that
some one had accused him before Rufus: he so touched on what was doing, he so
placed before the eyes every man's faults.
The philosopher's school, ye men, is a surgery: you ought
not to go out of it with pleasure, but with pain. For you are not in sound
health when you enter: one has dislocated his shoulder, another has an abscess,
a third a fistula, and a fourth a headache. Then do I sit and utter to you
little thoughts and exclamations that you may praise me and go away, one with
his shoulder in the same condition in which he entered, another with his head
still aching, and a third with his fistula or his abscess just as they were? Is
it for this then that young men shall quit home, and leave their parents and
their friends and kinsmen and property, that they may say to you, "Wonderful!"
when you are uttering your exclamations. Did Socrates do this, or Zeno, or
Cleanthes?
What then? is there not the hortatory style? Who denies
it? as there is the style of refutation, and the didactic style. Who, then, ever
reckoned a fourth style with these, the style of display? What is the hortatory
style? To be able to show both to one person and to many the struggle in which
they are engaged, and that they think more about anything than about what they
really wish. For they wish the things which lead to happiness, but they look for
them in the wrong place. In order that this may be done, a thousand seats must
be placed and men must be invited to listen, and you must ascend the pulpit in a
fine robe or cloak and describe the death of Achilles. Cease, I entreat you by
the gods, to spoil good words and good acts as much as you can. Nothing can have
more power in exhortation than when the speaker shows to the hearers that he has
need of them. But tell me who when he hears you reading or discoursing is
anxious about himself or turns to reflect on himself? or when he has gone out
says, "The philosopher hit me well: I must no longer do these things." But does
he not, even if you have a great reputation, say to some person, "He spoke
finely about Xerxes"; and another says, "No, but about the battle of
Thermopylae"? Is this listening to a philosopher?
Last reading: Chapter
22: About cynicism Next reading: Chapter
24: That we ought not to be moved by a desire of those things which are not
in our power
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