In this area there is so much scientific sophistication that earlier solar eclipses are calculated from this day (recorded by Ennius and the Major Annals * ) right back to the one which occurred on July the seventh in the reign of Romulus. * In that darkness nature carried Romulus * off to a normal death; yet we are told that on account of his valour he was raised to heaven.
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TUBERO : Do you realize, Africanus, that not long ago you thought otherwise …
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[One leaf is missing. When the text resumes, the speaker is Scipio.]
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SCIPIO : … which the rest may see. Moreover, what can seem impressive in human affairs to one who has contemplated those divine realms, or long lasting to one who has comprehended eternity, or glorious to one who has perceived the smallness of the earth (both as a whole and in the areas inhabited by human beings) and to how tiny a part of it we are confined, and how countless nations have never heard of us, in spite of our hopes that our fame flits and wanders far and wide? As for estates, buildings, herds, and huge amounts of silver and gold—how blessed should we count that man who does not think or speak of such things as ‘goods’, because he regards their enjoyment as frivolous, their usefulness slight, and their ownership precarious, and observes that the worst kind of person often has them in measureless quantities! He alone can truly claim everything as his in virtue, not of the citizen’s, but of the wise man’s right, * not by the guarantee of civil law, but by the universal law of nature. (For nature decrees that nothing belongs to anyone except the person who can handle and use it.) Such a man considers that our military commands and consulships belong to the class of necessary rather than desirable things, * that they should be undertaken from a sense of duty, not coveted for the sake of glory or rewards. Such a man, finally, can say of himself what, according to Cato, my grandfather Africanus used to say: that he was never doing more than when he was doing nothing, and was never less alone than when alone.
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Who can really believe that when Dionysius, by every conceivable exertion, deprived his citizens of their liberty, he did more than his fellow-citizen Archimedes, when the latter, by apparently doing nothing, * constructed the aforementioned globe? Again, who believes that people who can find no one to talk to in the crowded forum are not more alone than those who, with no one present, either converse with themselves or share the company, as it were, of the greatest minds by enjoying their discoveries and writings? Who would think anyone richer than the man who lacks nothing—nothing, at least, that is required by nature, or anyone more powerful than the man who obtains all he desires, or anyone more blessed than the man who is free from emotional disturbance, or anyone more secure in his prosperity than the man who possesses everything that he could, as they say, take with him from a shipwreck? What power, what office, what kingdom can be more desirable than the ability to look down on all things human, ranking them lower than wisdom, and never turn over in one’s mind anything except what is divine and eternal, or the conviction that, while others are called men, only those who are skilled in the specifically human arts are worthy of the name? That remark of Plato’s (or whoever made it) strikes me as very apt. When he had been driven by a storm at sea to an unknown land and cast up on a lonely shore, and the others were in terror because they knew nothing of the place, he is supposed to have noticed some geometric figures drawn in the sand. On seeing them he cried ‘Take heart! I see the traces of men!’ He drew this conclusion, evidently, not from any crops which he saw growing in the fields, but from the signs of intellectual activity. That is why, Tubero, I have always valued learning, and educated men, and those interests of yours.
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LAELIUS : I hesitate to say, Scipio, that you or Philus or 30 Manilius are so (devoted) to those questions … [One leaf is lost in which Laelius said that while he is not hostile to physics and astronomy he regards them as less important than legal and political matters. | … that friend of ours, who was related to him * on his father’s side, is well worth taking as his model; I mean
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Aelius
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Sextus, a shrewd and very able man,
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who was called ‘shrewd’ and ‘very able’ by Ennius, not because he sought for things which he could never find, but because he gave answers which relieved his clients’ anxiety and worry. When he spoke against the astronomical interests of Gaius, he would always quote the famous words of Achilles in Iphigenia: *
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Why should diviners seek celestial signs? When goat or scorpion or some other beast Comes up, then no one sees what lies before His feet; they scan the regions of the sky.
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Yet this same man would say (for I have often listened to him— yes, with pleasure) that Pacuvius’ Zethus * was too antagonistic to culture. He approved more of Ennius’ Neoptolemus, who said he wanted to practise philosophy ‘fitfully’, not ‘totally’. But if you are so keen on the interests of the Greeks, there are other, less limiting and more wide-ranging, subjects, which can be applied to practical life and even to the conduct of politics. If your skills are good for anything, it is for sharpening up a bit and, as it were, provoking the minds of youngsters, to help them learn more important things more easily.
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TUBERO : I don’t disagree with you, Laelius; but I wonder what more important things you have in mind.
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LAELIUS : Well then, I’ll tell you, at the risk of incurring your derision. You asked Scipio about those celestial phenomena, whereas I should regard what happens before our very eyes as more worthy of study. Why, I ask you, does the grandson of Lucius Paulus, and the nephew of our friend here, born into an illustrious family and this far-famed country, enquire how two suns can have been seen, but does not enquire why in one country there are now two senates and almost two nations? As you realize, the death of Tiberius Gracchus and, even before that, the whole policy of his tribunate, split a single people into two camps. The critics and opponents of Scipio were initially inspired by Publius Crassus and Appius Claudius. Now that those two are dead the critics still ensure that one section of the Senate, led by Quintus Metellus and Publius Mucius, is opposed to you. They have stirred up the allies and our Latin comrades; they have broken treaties; every day the three commissioners * contrive some new act of sedition; and the one man, here, who is capable of rectifying this dangerous situation is not allowed to do so. Take my advice, then, my young friends, and don’t worry about the second sun. It may not exist at all; or, as it has been seen, let it exist provided it does no harm. In any case we can know nothing of such things, and even if we come to know a great deal, that kind of knowledge will not make us better or happier people. To have one Senate and one citizen body is achievable; if it isn’t achieved, we are in serious trouble. The opposite is obviously true at present, and we can see that if unity is brought about we shall live better and happier lives.
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