Noctes Atticae
Gellius, Aulus
Gellius, Aulus. The Attic Nights of Aulus Gellius. Rolfe, John C., translator. Cambridge, Mass.; London: Harvard University Press; William Heinemann, 1927 (printing).
Diverse views of eminent philosophers as to the nature and character of pleasure; and the words in which the philosopher Hierocles attacked the principles of Epicurus.
As to pleasure the philosophers of old expressed varying opinions. Epicurus makes pleasure the highest good, but defines it [*](Fr. 28, Usener.) as sarko\s eu)staqe\s kata/sthma, or
a well-balanced condition of body.Antisthenes the Socratic calls it the greatest evil; for this is the expression he uses: [*](F.P. G. ii. 286. 65.) manei/hn ma=llon h)\ h(sqei/hn; that is to say,
may I go mad rather than feel pleasure.Speusippus and all the old Academy declare [*](F.P. G. iii. 92. 169.) that pleasure and pain are two evils opposed to each other, but that what lay midway between the two was the good. Zeno thought [*](p. 169, Pearson; i. 195, Arn.) that pleasure was indifferent, that is neutral, neither good nor evil, that,
Pleasure an end, a harlot's creed; there is no Providence, not even a harlot's creed.
With what quantity the first syllable of the frequentative verb from ago should be pronounced.
FROM ago and egi are derived the verbs actito and actitavi, which the grammarians call
frequentatives.[*](Most modern grammarians prefer the more comprehensive term intensives.) These verbs I have heard some men, and those not without learning, pronounce with a shortening of the first syllable, and give as their reason that the first letter of the primitive ago is pronounced short. Why then do we make the first vowel long in the frequentative forms esito and unctito, which are derived from edo and ungo, in which the first letter is short;
That the leaves of the olive tree turn over at the summer and the winter solstice, and that the lyre at that same season produces sounds from other strings than those that are struck.
IT is commonly both written and believed that at the winter and the summer solstice the leaves of olive trees turn over, and that the side which had been underneath and hidden becomes uppermost and is exposed to sight and to the sun. And 1 myself was led to test this statement more than once, and found it to be almost exactly true.
But about the lyre there is an assertion that is less often made and is even more remarkable. And this both other learned men and also Suetonius Tranquillus, in the first book of his History of the Games, [*](The title as given in full by Suidas is On the Festivals and Games of the Romans, two books. See Fr. 181, Reiff.)
That it is inevitable that one who has much should need much, with a brief and graceful aphorism of the philosopher Favorinus on that subject.
THAT is certainly true which wise men have said as the result of observation and experience, that he who has much is in need of much, and that great want arises from great abundance and not from great lack; for many things are wanted to maintain the many things that you have. Whoever then, having much, desires to provide and take precaution that nothing may fail or be lacking, needs to lose, not gain, and must have less in order to want less.
I recall that Favorinus once, amid loud and general applause, rounded off this thought, putting it into the fewest possible words: [*](Fr. 81, Marres. We may compare Hor. Epist. i. 6. 40 ff.)
It is not possible for one who wants fifteen thousand cloaks not to want more things; [*](ad ea quae habet tuenda; see § 1.) for if I want more than I possess, by taking away from what I have I shall be contented with what remains.