Diogenes or On Tyranny

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Diogenes or On Tyranny (

Persian king, the prototypical tyrant. In contrasting "the 'free' wandering of Diogenes with the anxious, unsettled flitting of the Persian kin, [the speech] impliciting assimilat[es] Dio to Diogenes and Domitian to the king"[1]

Background

Statue of an unknown Cynic philosopher from the Capitoline Museums in Rome.[2]
Bust of the Emperor Domitian, who lies behind Dio's characterisation of the Persian king.

The fourth-century BC philosopher Diogenes founded the Cynic school of

philosophy after being exiled from his hometown of Sinope. He was famous for his very ascetic lifestyle, living outdoors and going without shoes or clothes. Dio Chrysostom was exiled by the Emperor Domitian in AD 82 and, according to his 13th oration, On his Banishment
, he then adopted the guise of a Cynic philosopher and travelled Greece and the Black Sea, delivering orations like this one.

Summary

The speech opens with the announcement that Diogenes used to compare himself to the Persian king, since he was accustomed to travel from Athens to Corinth depending on the season, just as the Persian king travelled from Babylon to his summer palace in Ecbatana (sections 1–3).

Diogenes

This leads into the first half of the speech, in which Dio explains how Diogenes' ascetic lifestyle was more healthy and pleasant than a comfortable lifestyle (4-33). He lives in tune with the natural order and because he only eats or drinks when he is hungry, he enjoys the experience more than someone who gorges themselves (8-13). He is control of his desires and desires the right things: water rather than fancy wines, the temple and

prostitutes
.

Diogenes' lifestyle is like that of an animal and this leads to an excursus on how animals are better than people (21-29), since they are healthy up to the moment of death, while people are always sick. People are not naturally incapable of living like animals, because of a lack of hair and claws, but become so as a result of their lifestyle. For example, the rich live like infants in swaddling clothes (15). These people use the special human characteristic of wisdom (sophia) to achieve pleasure (hedone), instead of manly bravery (andreia) and justice (dikaiosyne) (29).

Diogenes' lifestyle is summarised (30-33), as the avoidance of expense (polydapane) and business (pragmateia) and the use of things that strengthen his body and meet the demands of his appetite. In so acting, he "imitated the life of the gods."

Persian king

In the second half of the speech, Dio turns to the lifestyle of the Persian king, explaining that whereas Diogenes was "the only free man in the world" the king was "the most wretched man in the world" (34-59).

The king is wretched primarily because his constant fear of losing his pleasurable lifestyle means that he cannot enjoy it. The anticipation of suffering is worse than the actual experience of suffering, and the king is constantly anticipating the worst forms of death (42-45). The king's lifestyle is characterised by the greatest absurdity (atopotaton): he is most wretched because he is considered the most blessed; the constant stream of pleasurable things in his life leaves him dulled to pleasure, but the constant stream of worries only wears him out (45-48). All states are undesirable to him - war or peace, prosperity or hard times - since they all could lead to threats to his regime and life (50-53). Dio elaborates on the image of

Damocles' sword
- the king is like a man locked in a box, with a sword dangling over his head and countless swords poking at him from all sides (54-55). While the tyrant of a single town could flee this state, a king who rules the whole world has no prospect of escape (56-57). To the king, all feedback from others is hateful or suspicious or insulting: praise or blame, frankness or flattery (57-59).

Conclusion

Cornel berries.

A brief conclusion, delivered in the voice of Diogenes, returns to the excellence of his lifestyle (60-62). Because he is beneath notice, he is free to go wherever he likes, without fear of armies or bandits. If disaster should befall the world, he will be able to live comfortably in the wilderness:

For all the food I need will be provided by apples, millet, barley, vetch, the cheapest lentils, acorns in the ashes, and the cornel berries, with which Homer says Circe feasted Odysseus' companions, which is enough to feed even the largest animals.

Analysis

The opposition of the Cynic philosopher with the monarch was probably already a topos of earlier Cynic literature. Seneca draws a similar contrast in De Clementia 1.8.[3] Dio gives the theme a contemporary dimension by assimilating the figures of Diogenes and the Persian king to himself and Domitian.[1]

Editions

References

  1. ^ a b Whitmarsh 2001, p. 290.
  2. ^ Christopher H. Hallett, (2005), The Roman Nude: Heroic Portrait Statuary 200 BC–AD 300, p. 294. Oxford University Press
  3. ^ Degli'Innocenti Pierini 2014, p. 182.

Bibliography

External links