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TO SCAEVA.

Horace

_That a life of business is preferable to a private and inactive one;

the friendship of great men is a laudable acquisition, yet their favors

are ever to be solicited with modesty and caution_.

 

 

Though, Scaeva, you have sufficient prudence of your own, and well know

how to demean yourself toward your superiors; [yet] hear what are the

sentiments of your old crony, who himself still requires teaching, just

as if a blind man should undertake to show the way: however see, if even

I can advance any thing, which you may think worth your while to adopt

as your own.

 

If pleasant rest, and sleep till seven o'clock, delight you; if dust and

the rumbling of wheels, if the tavern offend you, I shall order you off

for Ferentinum. For joys are not the property of the rich alone: nor

has he lived ill, who at his birth and at his death has passed

unnoticed. If you are disposed to be of service to your friends, and to

treat yourself with somewhat more indulgence, you, being poor, must pay

your respects to the great. Aristippus, if he could dine to his

satisfaction on herbs, would never frequent [the tables] of the great.

If he who blames me, [replies Aristippus,] knew how to live with the

great, he would scorn his vegetables. Tell me, which maxim and conduct

of the two you approve; or, since you are my junior, hear the reason why

Aristippus' opinion is preferable; for thus, as they report, he baffled

the snarling cynic: "I play the buffoon for my own advantage, you [to

please] the populace. This [conduct of mine] is better and far more

honorable; that a horse may carry and a great man feed me, pay court to

the great: you beg for refuse, an inferior to the [poor] giver; though

you pretend you are in want of nothing." As for Aristippus, every

complexion of life, every station and circumstance sat gracefully upon

him, aspiring in general to greater things, yet equal to the present: on

the other hand, I shall be much surprised, if a contrary way of life

should become [this cynic], whom obstinacy clothes with a double rag.

The one will not wait for his purple robe; but dressed in any thing,

will go through the most frequented places, and without awkwardness

support either character: the other will shun the cloak wrought at

Miletus with greater aversion than [the bite of] dog or viper; he will

die with cold, unless you restore him his ragged garment; restore it,

and let him live like a fool as he is. To perform exploits, and show the

citizens their foes in chains, reaches the throne of Jupiter, and aims

at celestial honors. To have been acceptable to the great, is not the

last of praises. It is not every man's lot to gain Corinth. He

[prudently] sat still who was afraid lest he should not succeed: be it

so; what then? Was it not bravely done by him, who carried his point?

Either here therefore, or nowhere, is what we are investigating. The one

dreads the burden, as too much for a pusillanimous soul and a weak

constitution; the other under takes, and carries it through. Either

virtue is an empty name, or the man who makes the experiment deservedly

claims the honor and the reward.

 

Those who mention nothing of their poverty before their lord, will gain

more than the importunate. There is a great difference between modestly

accepting, or seizing by violence But this was the principle and source

of every thing [which I alleged]. He who says, "My sister is without a

portion, my mother poor, and my estate neither salable nor sufficient

for my support," cries out [in effect], "Give me a morsel of bread:"

another whines, "And let the platter be carved out for me with half a

share of the bounty." But if the crow could have fed in silence, he

would have had better fare, and much less of quarreling and of envy.

 

A companion taken [by his lord] to Brundusium, or the pleasant

Surrentum, who complains of the ruggedness of the roads and the bitter

cold and rains, or laments that his chest is broken open and his

provisions stolen; resembles the well-known tricks of a harlot, weeping

frequently for her necklace, frequently for a garter forcibly taken from

her; so that at length no credit is given to her real griefs and losses.

Nor does he, who has been once ridiculed in the streets, care to lift up

a vagrant with a [pretended] broken leg; though abundant tears should

flow from him; though, swearing by holy Osiris, he says, "Believe me, I

do not impose upon you; O cruel, take up the lame." "Seek out for a

stranger," cries the hoarse neighborhood.

 

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