Life of Secundus | Writing from circa 2nd-3rd century CE | Web Publication by Mountain Man Graphics, Australia
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Life of Secundus the Philosopher |
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Then Hadrian said to him, "Speak, philosopher, so we may come to know you.
It is not possible to observe the wisdom in you when you say nothing."
But in spite of this, Secundus kept still. And Hadrian said, "Secundus, before I came to you it was a good thing for you to maintain silence, since you had no listener more distinguished than yourself, nor one who could converse with you on equal terms. But now I am here before you, and I demand it of you; speak out, bring forth your eloquence to the top level of its quality."
Still Secundus was not abashed, nor afraid of the emperor. Then Hadrian, losing all patience, said to one of his followers, a tribune, "Make the philosopher say a word to us." The tribune answered according to the truth by saying, "It is possible to persuade lions and leopards and other wild beasts to speak with human voices, but not a philosopher against his will." Then he summoned an executioner, who was a Greek, and said to him, "I do not want any man to live who refuses to speak to the emperor Hadrian. Take him away and punish him." Hadrian, however, called the executioner aside privately and said to him, "When you are leading the philosopher away, talk to him along the road and encourage him to speak. If you persuade him to make an answer, cut off his head; but if he does not answer, bring him back here unharmed."
Secundus was led away in silence, and the executioner taking him in charge proceeded down to the Piraeus, for that was the place where men customarily were punished. And the executioner said to him, "Secundus, why do you die by persisting in silence? Speak, and you shall live. Grant yourself the gift of life by a word. Behold, the swan sings near the end of his life, and all the other winged creatures give forth sound with the voice that nature has given them. There is no living thing that does not have a voice. So reconsider, and change your purpose. The time that you will have gained thereby will be ample for your silence." With these and many other words he sought to encourage Secundus and to lure him into the trap. But Secundus despised life itself and silently waited for death, unmoved by what had been said to him. After bringing him to the customary place the executioner said, "Secundus, hold out your neck and receive the sword through it." Secundus held out his neck and took leave of life in silence. Then the executioner showed him the naked sword and said, "Secundus, buy off your death with speech." But Secundus did not speak.
Thereupon the executioner took him and went back to Hadrian and said, "My lord Caesar, I have brought back Secundus to you the same as he was when you handed him over to me, silent unto death." Hadrian marveled at the philosopher's strength of purpose and rising up said, "Secundus, in observing silence you have imposed upon yourself a kind of law, and that law of yours I was unable to break down. Now, therefore, take this tablet, write on it, and converse with me by means of your hands." Secundus took the tablet and wrote as follows:
What is the universe?
Again Secundus wrote down his reply.
But you, Hadrian, as it happens, are full of fears and apprehensions. In the bellowing wind of winter you are disturbed too much by cold and shivering, and in the summer time you are too much oppressed by the heat. You are puffed up and full of holes, like a sponge. For you have termites in your body and herds of lice, that draw furrows through your entrails; and grooves have been burned into you, as it were, like the lines made by the fire of encaustic painters. Being a short-lived creature and full of infirmities, you foresee yourself being cut and torn apart, roasted by the sun and chilled by the wintry wind. Your laughter is only the preface to grief, for it turns about and passes into tears.
What about the necessity that controls our lives? Is it destiny decreed by Heaven or the whimsy of personal luck? We know not whence it comes. Today is already passing us by, and what the morrow will be we do not know. Think not lightly, therefore, O Hadrian, of what I am saying. Boast not that you alone have encircled the world in your travels, for it is only the sun and the moon and the stars that really make the journey around it.
Moreover, do not think of yourself as being beautiful and great and rich and the ruler of the inhabited world. Know you not that, being a man, you were born to be Life's plaything, helpless in the hands of Fortune and Destiny, sometimes exalted, sometimes humbled lower than the grave? Will you not be able to learn what life is, Hadrian, in the light of many examples? Consider how rich with his golden nails was the king of the Lydians.
Great as a commander of armies was the king of the Danaans, Agamemnon; daring and hardy was Alexander, king of the Macedonians. Heracles was fearless, the Cyclops wild and untamed, Odysseus shrewd and subtle, and Achilles beautiful to look upon. If Fortune took away from these men the distinctions that were peculiarly their own, how much more likely is she to take them away from you? For you are not beautiful like Achilles, nor shrewd as was Odysseus, nor untamed like the Cyclops, nor fearless like Heracles, nor hardy and daring like Alexander, nor such a commander of armies as Agamemnon, nor yet rich like Gyges, the king of the Lydians.
What is the Universe? |
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What is the Ocean? |
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What is God? |
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What is the Day? |
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What is the Sun? |
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What is the Moon? |
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What is the Earth? |
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What is Man? |
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What is Beauty? |
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What is Woman? |
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What is a Friend? |
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What is a Farmer? |
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What is a Gladiator? |
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What is a Boat? |
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What is a Sailor? |
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What is Wealth? |
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What is Poverty? |
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What is Old Age? |
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What is Sleep? |
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What is Death? |
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Thereupon Hadrian, after reading these things, and after learning the reason why he had made silence a philosophical practice, gave orders that his books should be deposited in the sacred library under the name of Secundus the Philosopher.
--- Translated by Ben Edwin Perry