 Volume 2. The Treatise of Eusebius Against the Life of Apollonius of Teyana. Chapters 1-10. This is a LibriVox recording. All LibriVox recordings are in the public domain. For more information or to volunteer, please visit LibriVox.org. Recording by Andrew Coleman. The Life of Apollonius of Teyana. By Flavius Philostratus. Translated by F. C. Coneybear. Volume 2. The Treatise of Eusebius Against the Life of Apollonius of Teyana. Chapters 1-10. The Treatise of Eusebius. The Son of Pamphilus. Against the Life of Apollonius of Teyana. Written by Philostratus. Written by the parallel drawn by Heracles between him and Christ. Chapter 1. So then, my dear friend, you find worthy of no little admiration the parallel which, embellished with many marvels, this author has drawn between the man of Teyana and our own saviour and teacher. Against the rest of the contents of the Love of Truth, Philolithes, for so he has thought fit to entitle his work against us, it would be useless to take my stand at present, because they are not his own, but have been pilfered in the most shameless manner. Not only I may say in respect of their ideas, but even of their words and syllables from other authorities. Not what these parts also of his treatise call for their refutation in due season. But to all intents and purposes they have, even in advance of any special work that might be written in answer to them, being upset and exposed beforehand, in a work which in as many as eight books, origin composed against the book which Celsus wrote and, even more boastfully than the Love of Truth, entitled True Reason. The work of Celsus is there subjected to an examination in an exhaustive manner, and on the scale above mentioned by the author in question, who, in his comprehensive survey of all that anyone has said, or will ever say on the same topic, has forestalled any solution of your difficulties which I could offer. To this work of origin I must refer those who in good faith in this genuine Love of Truth desire accurately to understand my own position. I will therefore ask you for the present to confine your attention to the comparison of Jesus Christ with Apollonius, which is found in this treatise called the Love of Truth, without insisting on the necessity of our meeting the rest of his arguments, for these are pilfered from other people. We may reasonably confine our attention for the present to the history of Apollonius, because Heracles, of all the writers who have ever attacked us, stands alone in selecting Apollonius, as he has recently done, for the purposes of comparison and contrast with our Saviour. Chapter 2 I need not say with what admiring approval he attributes his Thor meturgic feats, not the tricks of wizardry, but to a divine and mysterious wisdom. And he believes they were truly what he supposes them to have been, though he advances no proof of this contention. Listen then to his very words. In their anxiety to exalt Jesus they run up and down, preting of how he made the blind to see, and worked certain other miracles of the kind. Then, after an interval, he adds as follows, Let us note, however, how much better and more sensible is the view which we take of such matters, and explain the conception which we entertain of men gifted with remarkable powers. And thereupon, after passing heedlessly by Aristius or Prokinesis, and Pythagoras, as somewhat too old, he continues thus, But in the time of our own ancestors, during the reign of Nero, there flourished Apollonius of Tyanna, who from mere boyhood, when he became the priest in Igai of Silicia of Esclapius, the lover of mankind, worked any number of miracles, of which I will omit the greater number, and only mention a few. Then he begins at the beginning, and enumerates the wonders worked by Apollonius, after which he continues in the following words, What then is my reason for mentioning these facts? It was in order that you may be able to contrast our own accurate and well-established judgment on each point, with the easy credulity of the Christians. For whereas we reckon him who roars such feats not a God, but only a man pleasing to the Gods, they, on the strength of a few miracles, proclaim their Jesus a God. To this he adds after a little more the following remark. And this point is also worth noticing, that whereas the tales of Jesus have been vamped up by Peter and Paul, and a few others of the kind, men who were liars and devoid of education and wizards, the history of Apollonius was written by Maximus of Igai, and by Damus, the philosopher who lived constantly with him, and by Philostratus of Athens, men of the highest education, who out of respect for the truth and their love of mankind determined to give the publicity they deserved to the actions of a man at once noble and a friend of the Gods. These are the very words used by Heracles in his treatise Against Us, which he has entitled Lover of Truth. Chapter 3 Now, Damus, who spent so much of his time with Apollonius, was a native of Assyria, where for the first time on his own soil he came into contact with him, and he wrote an account of his intercourse with the person in question from that time onwards. Maximus, however, wrote quite a short account of a portion only of his career. Philostratus, however, the Athenian, tells us that he collected all the accounts that he found in circulation, using both the book of Maximus and that of Damus himself and of other authors, so he compiled the most complete history of any of this person's life, beginning with his birth and ending with his death. Chapter 4 If then we may be permitted to contrast the reckless and easy credulity that he goes out of his way to accuse us of, with the accurate and well-founded judgment on particular points of the Lover of Truth, let us ask at once, not which of them was the more divine, nor in what capacity one worked more wondrous and numerous miracles than the other, nor let us lay stress on the point that our Saviour and Lord Jesus Christ was the only man of whom it was prophesied, thanks to their divine inspiration, by Hebrew sages who lived far back thousands of years ago, that he should once come among mankind, nor on the fact that he converted to his own scheme of divine teaching so many people, nor that he formed a group of genuine and really sincere disciples, of whom almost without exaggeration it can be said that they were prepared to lay down their lives for his teaching at a moment's call, nor that he alone established a school of sober and chaste living which has survived him all along, nor that by his peculiar divinity and virtue he saved the whole inhabited world, and still rallies to his divine teaching races from all sides by tens of thousands, nor that he is the only example of a teacher who, after being treated as an enemy for so many years, I might almost say by all men subjects and rulers alike, has at last triumphed and shown himself far mightier thanks to his divine and mysterious power than the infidels who persecuted him so bitterly, those who for a season rebel against his divine teaching being now easily punished by him, while the divine doctrine which he firmly laid down and handed on has come to prevail for ages without end all over the inhabited world, nor that even now he displays the virtue of his godlike might in the expulsion by the mere invocation of his mysterious name of sundry troublesome and evil demons which beset men's bodies and souls, as from our own experience we know to be the case. To look for such results in the case of Apollonius, or even to ask about them, is absurd. So we will merely examine the work of Flostratus, and by close scrutiny of it, show that Apollonius was not fit to be classed. I will not say among philosophers, but even among men of integrity and good sense, much less to be compared with our Saviour Christ, so far as we can depend on the work of a writer who, though according to the love of truth, he was highly educated, was in any case no respecter of truth. For such is his description of Flostratus, the Athenian among others. In this way we shall easily appreciate the value of the rest of the authorities, who though according to him they were most highly educated, yet never by actual sifting of the facts established them with any accuracy in the case of Apollonius. For when we have thoroughly examined these facts, we shall no doubt obtain a clear demonstration of the solidity, and, as he imagines to himself, of the accuracy in detail, of the condemnation which the lover of truth, who has at the same time taken possession of the supreme courts all over the province, passes on Christians, and at the same time of what they are pleased to call our reckless and facile credulity, for we are accounted by them to be mere foolish and deluded mortals. Chapter 5 Another controversialist, by way of beginning the affray, would without demer abuse and malign the man against whom he directed his arguments. On the ground that he was his enemy and adversary, I, however, my friend, used to regard the man of Teiana as having been, humanly speaking, a kind of sage. And I am still freely disposed to adhere to this opinion. And I would like to set before you, if you ask it, my own personal opinion of him. If any one wishes to class him with any philosopher you like, and to forget all the legends about him, and not bore me with them, I'm quite agreeable. Not so, if any one ventures, whether he be Darmis the Assyrian, or Velostratus, or any other compiler or chronicler, to overleap the bounds of humanity and transcend philosophy, and while repelling the charge of wizardry in word, yet to bind it in act rather than in name upon the man, using the mask of Pythagorean discipline to disguise what he really was. For in that case, his reputation for us as a philosopher will be gone, and we shall have an ass instead concealed in a lion's skin, and we shall detect in him a sophist in the truest sense, catching for arms among the cities, at a wizard, if there ever was one, instead of a philosopher. Chapter 6 Do you ask me what I mean, and what are my reasons for speaking thus? I will tell you. Things of nature which prescribe and circumscribe the existence of the universe in respect of its beginnings and of its continuance and of its end, being limits and rules imposed on everything. By these, this entire mechanism and edifice of the whole universe is constantly being brought to perfection, and they are arranged by unbreakable laws and indissoluble bonds, and they guard and observe all wise will of a providence which dispenses and disposes all things. Now no one can change or alter the place and order of anything that has been once arranged, and if any one is so venturesome as to wish to transcend his limits, he is restrained from transgressing divine law by the rule and decree of nature. So it is that the fish that lives in the waters is unable in defiance of nature to change onto dry land and live there. And on the other hand, the creature bred on dry land will not plunge into the waters and embrace their any permanent repose or abode. Nor by any huge leap can any tenet of earth raise himself aloft into the air from a desire to soar about with the eagles. And in turn, although of course the latter can alight upon the earth by depressing and lowering their faculty of flight and by relaxing the working of their winks and renouncing the privilege of nature. For this too is determined by the divine laws, namely that beings able to soar aloft are able to descend from on high. Yet the converse is not possible so that the lowly habitant of earth should ever raise himself into the welkin. In this way then, the mortal race of men while provided with soul and body is yet circumscribed by divine bounds. Consequently he can never traverse the air with his body, however much he scorns to linger upon the paths of earth without instantly paying the penalty of his folly. Nor by spiritual exaltation can he in his thinking attain to the unattainable without falling back into the disease of melancholy. It is wisest then for him on the one hand to transport his body along the ground with the feet given him for the purpose and on the other hand to sustain his soul with education and philosophy. But he may well pray that someone may come to help him from aloft, from the paths of heaven and reveal himself to him as a teacher of the salvation that is there. For the following is a valid example to use as it is right for the physician to visit the sick and for the teacher to accommodate himself to the pupil who is entering upon his studies and for a superior to quit his heights and condescend to the lowly. Yet the converse is not right or possible. It follows then that there is no reason to prevent a divine nature being beneficent and inclined to save and take providential care of things to come from associating itself with men. But this is allowed also by the rule of divine providence. According to Plato, God was good and no good being can ever feel any jealousy of anything. It follows that the controller of this universe, being good, will not care for our bodies alone but much more for our souls upon which he has conferred the privilege of immortality and free will. On these then, as Lord of the entire economy and of gifts of grace his bestowal of which will benefit our nature, he will, they being able to appreciate his bounty bestow plentiously an illumination as it were of the light which streams from him and will dispatch the most intimate of his own messengers from time to time for the salvation and sucker of men here below. Of these messengers anyone so favoured by fortune having cleansed his understanding and dissipated the mist of mortality may well be described as truly divine and as carrying in his soul the image of some great God. Surely so great a personality will stir up the entire human race and illuminate the world of mankind more brightly than the sun and will leave the effects of his eternal divinity for the contemplation of future ages in no lesser degree affording an example of the divine and inspired nature than creations of artists made of lifeless matter. To this extent then human nature can participate in the superhuman but otherwise it cannot lawfully transcend its bounds nor with its wingless body emulate the bird nor being a man must one meddle with what appertains the demons. In what light then, this being so do you envisage for us Apollonius, my good compiler if as a divine being and superior to a philosopher in a word as one superhuman in his nature I would ask you to keep to this point of view throughout your history and point me out effects wrought by his divinity enduring to this day for surely it is an absurdity that the works of carpenters and builders should last on ever so long after the craftsmen are dead and raise as it were an immortal monument to the memory of their constructive ability and yet that a human character claimed to be divine should after shedding its glory upon mankind finish in darkness its short-lived career instead of displaying for ever its power and excellence instead of being so niggardly liberal to some one individual like Darmis and to a few other short-lived men it should surely make its coming among us the occasion of blessings conferred on myriads not only of his contemporaries but also of his posterity this Iween is how the sages of old raised up earnest bands of disciples who continued the tradition of moral excellence sowing in men's hearts a spirit truly immortal of progress and reform if on the other hand you were tribute to this man a mortal nature take care lest by endowing him with gifts which transcend mortality you convict yourself of fallacy and miscalculation Chapter 8 but enough of this his hero is introduced to us as a divine man who assumes from birth the guise and personality of a demon of the sea for he says that to his mother when she was about to bear her child there appeared the figure of a demon of the sea namely Proteus who in the story of Homer ever changes his form but she in no way frightened asked him what she would bring to birth and he replied myself then she asked and who are you? Proteus he replied of Egypt and then he writes about a certain meadow and about swans that assisted the lady to bear her child but without telling us whence he derived this particular for assuredly he does not attribute this story to dumbest the Assyrian writer but a little further on in the same history he represents Apollonius as using in token of his being of a divine nature these very words to dumbest himself I myself my companion understand all languages though I have learned none and again he says to him do not be surprised for I know what men are thinking about even when they are silent and again in the temple of Asclepius he was much honoured by the god and is said to have possessed a certain natural gift of prescience which he did not acquire by learning from very childhood we learn in a word that he was born superior to mankind in general and so he is described from the first moment of his birth throughout his history anyhow on one occasion after he had loosed himself from his bonds his historian adds the remark then dumbest declares he for the first time clearly understood the nature of Apollonius that it was divine and superior to humanity for without offering any sacrifice for how could he offer one in the prison and without offering any prayer without a single word he just laughed at his fetters and at the end of the book we learn that his grave was nowhere to be found on earth but that he went to heaven in his physical body accompanied by hymns and dances naturally if he was so great as he is described in the above he may be said to have wooed philosophy in a more divine manner than Pythagoras or Empedocles or Plato for these reasons we must surely class the man among the gods Chapter 9 Well, we will not grudge him his natural and self-taught gift of understanding all languages but if he possessed it why was he taken to a schoolmaster and if he had never learnt any language whatever why does his historian malign him and declare that not by nature but by dint of close study and application he acquired the Attic dialect for he tells us outright that as he advanced in youth he displayed a knowledge of letters and great power of memory and force of application and that he spoke the Attic dialect we also learn that when he reached his fourteenth year his father took him to Tarsus to Euthydemus of Phoenicia who was a good rator and gave him his education and he is clung to his teacher we further learn that he had as fellow students members of the school of Plato and of Crispus and members of the Peripatetic set that he also diligently listened to the doctrines of Epicurus because he did not despise even them though he grasped the teachings of Pythagoras with a certain indescribable wisdom so varied was the education of one who had never learnt any language and who by his divine power anticipated the thoughts of men even when they are silent Chapter 10 and after an interval our author again expresses his admiration at the ease with which Apollonius understood the language of animals and he goes on to tell us the following and moreover he acquired an understanding of the language of animals and he learnt this too in the course of his travels through Arabia where the inhabitants best know this language and practice it for the Arabians have a way of understanding without difficulty swans and other birds when they presage the future in the same way as oracles and they get to understand the dumb animals by eating so they say some of them the heart in this instance then it seems anyhow to have been the case that the Pythagorean who abstained from animal food and could not even bring himself to sacrifice to the gods devoured the heart and liver of dragons in order to participate in a form of wisdom that was in vogue among the Arabs after learning under such masters how could he attain to their accomplishments otherwise than by imitating their example we must therefore add to the teachers whom we have already enumerated the sages of Arabia who taught him his knowledge of augury and this no doubt inspired him subsequently to foretell what the sparrow meant when he called his fellows to a meal and so to impress the bystanders with the idea that he had worked a mighty miracle and in the same way when he saw the freshly slain lioness with her eight whelps by the side of the road which led into Assyria he immediately conjectured from what he saw the length of their future stay in Persia and made a prophecy thereof end of volume 2 the treatise of Eusebius against the life of Apollonius of Tiana chapters 1 to 10 volume 2 the treatise of Eusebius chapters 11 to 21 from the life of Apollonius of Tiana this is a LibriVox recording all LibriVox recordings are in the public domain for more information or to volunteer please visit LibriVox.org recording by Andrew Coleman the life of Apollonius of Tiana by Flavius Philostratus translated by FC Coney Bear volume 2 the treatise of Eusebius the treatise of Eusebius the treatise of Eusebius chapters 11 to 21 chapter 11 and in just keeping with his visits to the Arabians were the studies he undertook among the Persians also according to the account given by the same author for after forbidding Darmis so we are told to go to the Magi though Darmis was his only pupil and companion he went alone to school with them and about midnight alone in order not to have as his companion in the study of magic one who was clearly without a taste for such things and again when he came to converse with Varda and the Babylonian king it is related that he addressed him as follows my system of wisdom is that of Pythagoras a man of Seimos who taught me to worship the gods in this way and to recognize them whether they are seen or unseen and to be regular in converse with the gods who can possibly allow this to be true of him seeing that Pythagoras himself has left no scripture of the kind nor any secret writings such that we can even suspect him to have had such resources at his disposal as for his teacher of the Pythagorean philosophy it is testified that he was in no way better than the Epicureans by Philostratus himself who speaks of him as follows he had as a teacher of the system of Pythagoras not a very good man nor one who put his philosophy into practice for he was the slave of his belly and his desires and modelled his life on that of Epicurus and this man was Eucsenas of Heraclia in Pontus but he had a good acquaintance with the tenets of Pythagoras just as birds have of what they learn to say from men what ridiculous nonsense to pretend that Abalonius can have derived from this man his gift of conversing with the gods but let us for the moment admit that there were other expounders of the system from whom he may have learned although the author anyhow gives no hint of any such thing still we must ask was there then ever any one of these teachers that professed either to know himself by having learnt from Pythagoras personally or to teach others how to recognise and frequent in their conversations gods whether seen or unseen why even the famous Plato although more than anyone else he shared in the philosophy of Pythagoras and Architis too and Phil Laus the one man who has handed down to us in writing the conversations of Pythagoras and any others who were disciples of the philosopher and have handed down to his posterity his opinions and tenets in writing none of these ever boasted of any such form of wisdom it follows then that he learnt these things not from Pythagoras but from other sources and with a willful affectation he only labels himself with the philosopher's name but admitting though it is against all probability that he is not lying but telling the truth we are still at a loss to know how he can pretend to have acquired this law from the same in himself above mentioned in as much as the latter deceased some thousand years before him therefore we must reckon among the Arabians this teacher also who communicated to him a knowledge of the gods of so mysterious character as he imagines this to be if then he was of a divine nature it follows that the story of his teachers is a pure fiction on the other hand if the story was true then the legend was false and the allegation in the book that he was divine is devoid of all truth Chapter 12 I have no wish to inquire curiously about the ghost of Proteus or to ask for confirmation of it nor to demand proof of his ridiculous story that swans surrounded his mother and assisted her to bring him into the world equally little do I ask him to produce evidence of his fairy tale about the thunderbolt for as I said before he cannot anyhow claim the authority of darkness for these particulars in as much as the latter joined him much later on in the city of Nineveh of Assyria I am however quite ready to accept all that is probable and has an air of truth about it even though such details may be somewhat exaggerated and highly coloured out of compliment to a good man for I could still bring myself to accept them as long as they are not bewilderingly wonderful and full of nonsense I do not therefore mind the author telling us that Apollonius was of an ancient family and linearly descended from the first settlers and was rich if it were so beyond all other people of that region and that when he was young he not only had the distinguished teachers mentioned but if he likes I will allow that he became himself their teacher and master in learning I grant too in addition he was skillful in ordinary matters and so was able by giving the best of advice to rid of his malady one who had come to the temple of Asclepius in order to be healed for we read that he suggested to a man afflicted with dropsy a regime of abstinence well suited to cure his disease and in that way restored him to health and so far we must needs commend the youthful Apollonius for his good sense on this occasion he very properly excluded from the temple a man who was notorious for his wickedness although he was prepared to offer the most expensive sacrifices for he represents the man in question as the richest and most distinguished of all the people of his region nor would anyone object to his being classed among the temperate in as much as he repelled with insults a lover who designed to corrupt his youth and so as the narrative informs us kept himself throughout pure of intercourse with women we can also believe the story of his keeping silence for five years in the spirit of Pythagoras and the way moreover in which he accomplished this vow of silence was praiseworthy all this and the like is merely human and in no way incongruous with philosophy or with truth I can therefore accept it because I set a very high value upon candor and love of truth nevertheless to suppose that he was a being of superhuman nature and then to contradict this supposition at a moment's warning and to forget it almost as soon as it is made this I regard as reprehensible and calculated to fasten a suspicion not only on the author but yet more on the subject of his memoir Chapter 13 these particulars we have taken from the first book of Philastratus and let us now go on to consider the contents of the second the story takes him on his travels and brings him from Persia to India he next shows a want of good taste by relating as if it were a miracle how Apollonius and his companions saw some sort of demon to which he gives the name of Empusa along the road and of how they drove it away by dint of abuse and bad words and we learn that when some animals were offered them for food he told Domis that he was quite willing to allow him and his companions to eat the flesh for as far as he could see their abstinence from meat had in no way advanced their moral development though in his own case it was imposed by the philosophic profession he had made in childhood and yet is it not incredible to anyone that he should not have hindered Domis as his best friend and as the only disciple and follower of his life that he had and the only one whom he was trying to convert to his philosophy that he should not, I repeat have tried to hinder him from consuming the flesh of living animals that being an unholy food according to Pythagoras and that instead of doing so he should tell him for reasons inexplicable to me that it will do no good to himself and admit that he saw no moral advantage in them produced by such abstinence Chapter 14 in the next place I would have you notice what sort of samples of truth are set before us by this velocitous, terse truthfulness hierarchies the self-styled lover of truth bears witness for we are told that when Apollonius was among the Indians he employed an interpreter and through him held the conversation with Friotes for that was the name of the king of the Indians thus he who just before according to Flostratus had an understanding of all languages now on the contrary according to the same witness is in need of an interpreter and again he who read the thoughts of men and almost like their god Apollo understood the dumb and heard him who spoke not has to ask by means of an interpreter what was the king's way of life and he asks him to supply him with a guide on his journey to the Brahmans and after an interval the other who is king of the Indians and a barbarian to boot of the interpreter and addresses Apollonius in Greek and speaking in that language details to him his education and his wealth of learning but Apollonius nonetheless neglected on this occasion to display as he should have done his own perfect acquaintance with their tongue Chapter 15 on the contrary he is astonished to find the Indian talking Greek as Philostratus consistently it would seem with himself tells us in his book for how could he be astonished there at unless he had regarded him as a barbarian and in spite of his having admired him for what he was he could never have expected him to talk Greek in the sequel as if he were astonished at some exhibition of the miraculous and was still unable to explain it Apollonius says tell me oh king how you came to have such facility in the Greek tongue and where did you get here about the philosophy you possess for I do not think that you can say you owe it to teachers anyhow for it is not likely that the Indians have any teachers of this such other wonderful utterances to which one whose prescience included everything gives vent saying that he had had teachers and he tells him who they were and relates all the particulars of his own history on his father's side next we are told that the Indian had to judge between certain parties about a treasure which had been hunted up in a field the question at issue being whether this field ought to be assigned to the seller or buyer of the place our supreme philosopher and darling of heaven is asked his opinion and rewards it to the purchaser assigning his reason in these words that the gods would never have deprived the one of the land if he had not been a bad man nor would ever have given the other riches under the soil unless he had been better than the seller we must conclude then if we are to believe him that men who are comfortably off and richer than their neighbors are to be esteemed thrice happy and beloved of the gods even though they should be the most shameless and abandoned of mankind on the other hand only the poorest say even asocrates or a diogenes or the famous Pythagoras himself or any other of the most temperate and fairest minded of men are to be esteemed ill-starred riches if one follows the reasoning here used to allow that on its showing the gods would never have deprived the poor that is to say the very men who excel others if judged by the standard of philosophy even of a bare living and of the necessities of life unless they had been utterly vile in character and at the same time they have endowed those who are abandoned in their character with a plenty even of things that were not necessary to them unless they prove themselves better than the others just mentioned from which the absurdity of the conclusion is manifest to everyone Chapter 16 after setting before you these incidents out of the second book let us pass on to the third and consider the stories told of the far famed Brahmans for here we shall have to admit that the tales of Thule and any other miraculous legends ever invented by any storytellers turn out to be by comparison with these quite reliable and perfectly true it is anyhow worth our while to examine these because this self-styled lover of truth has not scrupled to fasten on ourselves a charge of reckless credulity and levity of character while claiming for himself and for those like him of judgement well based on an understanding of the fact note then the sort of miracles on which he prides himself when he prefers Philostratus to her own divine evangelists on the ground that he was not only a most highly educated man but most attentive to the truth Chapter 17 to begin with then on the way to the Brahmans Philostratus introduces us to a lady who met Apollonius and who from her head down to her loins was wholly white in colour while the rest of her person was black the mountains again as they went forward on the road to the Brahmans were planted with pepper trees and the apes cultivated the same and then there were certain dragons of extraordinary size from whose heads were thrown off sparks of fire and if you slew one of them they found marvellous stones upon their head rivalling the gem of Gygys as mentioned in Plato and all this was before they reached the hill on which the Brahmans lived and when they reached this we read that they saw there a well of sander-eye full of wonderful water and hard by a crater of fire from which there rose a lead coloured flame and there were two jars there of black stone of which contained rain and the other winds from which the Brahmans supply such people of the country as they are pleased to favour besides this they found among them images of Athene Polyus and of Apollo Pythias and of Dionysus of the lake and of certain other Hellenic gods and the master of them all was named Diatris and they saw him sitting on a very lofty throne in a state of pomp that was far from philosophy but rather appropriate to a satrap and this throne was made of black bronze and was decorated with golden images such as we might of course expect philosophers to fabricate when they take to working like base mechanics at forge and steel even if they do not like conjurers make their handiwork to move by itself but the thrones upon which the rest of them who were inferior teachers to him were sitting were, he says, of bronze but not incised and not so high for I suppose they could not help bestowing upon the teacher of so divine a philosophy the privilege of having images and gold on his throne just as if he were a tyrant Chapter 18 and we are told that Diatris the moment he saw Apollonius addressed him by name in the Greek tongue and asked him for the letter which he brought from priorities for he had already received this by dint of his fore knowledge and by way of parading the inspired character of his prescience he told him before he set eyes on the epistle that it was one letter short namely of a delta and he began at once in a vulgar manner in that very first interview like a man who has got wealth for the first time and does not know how to use it his superiority as a seer by running off the names of Apollonius's father and mother and telling him all about his family and upbringing and education and about his periodical voyages abroad and about his journey thither to himself and about what he had done himself or said to his companions on the road and next this wonderful author tells us that the brahmats after anointing themselves together with Apollonius with an abalike drug took a bath and then standing round as if in chorus struck the earth with their staves and the earth arched itself up and elevated them some two cubits into the air so that they stood there levitated up in the air itself for some considerable length of time and he relates that they drew down fire from the sun without any effort on their part and whenever they chose and the miracle monger adds another marvel to these when he tells that there were four tripods like those of Pytho which wheeled themselves forth moving of their own accord and he goes so far as to compare these to the tripods in Homer and he says that there were set upon them cup-bearers to serve in the banquet for in number and made of blunts and in addition he tells us that the earth too strewed glass beneath them of her own accord and unasked these tripods too he says ran with wine and of the other two the one supplied hot water and the other cold and the cup-bearers of blunts drew for the guests in dune mixture both the wine and the water and pushed round the cups in a circle just as they are handed round in a symposium Chapter 19 such are the stories which hierarchies who has been entrusted to administer the supreme courts of justice all over the province finds true and reliable after due inquiry at the same time that he condemns us for our excessive credulity and frivolity and after himself believing such things when he finds them in Thelostratus he proceeds to brag about himself and says I quote his very words let us anyhow observe how much better and more cautiously we accept such things and what opinion we hold of men gifted with such powers and virtues Chapter 20 it was after such a symposium according to the same Thelostratus that a king who was subjourning in India is introduced to drink with the philosophers and we hear that he took occasion to insult philosophy with drunken jests and that he got so tipsy in their presence as to hold defiance at the sun and brag about himself all this we learn and that Apollonius wants more by means of an interpreter learned his history from him and conversed in turn with him Iarchus interpreting between them surely it may well excite our wonder that so insolent a fellow and so great a buffoon was allowed to get drunk and show off his tipsy wit among such great philosophers when he was unworthy even present at a meeting of philosophers much less at the hearth of men who were equal to gods but what possesses me to call them the peers of gods and chaff them about their dignity why, when Apollonius asked them whom they consider themselves to be gods answer Iarchus who I suppose in his quality as god as little as could be in the style of philosopher save the mark nay surely betraying an equally scant respect for the dignity of the god whom he professed himself to be set the example of drinking to his fellow banqueters by stooping down over the bowl which as our author is careful to tell us supplied plenty of drink for all of them and refreshed itself as do holy and mysterious wells for those who fill their pictures from them Chapter 21 after this there was general conversation and some serious discussion among the philosophers in the course of which Iarchus explained that his own soul had once been in the body of another man who was a king and that in that state he had performed this and that exploit while Apollonius told them that he had once been the pilot of a ship in Egypt and had accomplished all sorts of exploits which he enumerated to them then they put questions to each other and received answers which in the name of wisdom can't title to be recorded at all thus we learn that Apollonius asked if they had any golden water among them what a clever and marvellous question and he also asked about men who live underground and about others called pygmies and shadow-footed men and he asked if they had among them a four-footed animal called a martichora which has a head like that of a man but rivals a lion in size or from its tail projects hairs like thorns a cubic long which it is accustomed to shoot out like arrows at those who hunted such then were the questions which Apollonius put to the sages and Iarchus instructed him about the pygmies and told him that they were indeed people dwelling underground but spent their lives on the other side of the river Ganges but as to the other things which he asked about Iarchus said that they never had existed at all Volume 2 The Treatise of Eusebius chapters 22 to 29 from the life of Apollonius of Tiana this is a LibriVox recording all LibriVox recordings are in the public domain for more information or to volunteer please visit LibriVox.org recording by Andrew Coleman the life of Apollonius of Tiana by Flavius Philostratus translated by FC Connabert Volume 2 The Treatise of Eusebius chapters 22 to 29 Chapter 22 After that Philostratus described a wall which the earth grew for them to supply material for their dress from which we must infer that these philosophers plied the loom and occupied themselves with spinning wall in order to make their raiment for we do not hear of any woman being smuggled into their community but perhaps he means that by a miracle the wall grew of its own initiative into their sacred garments and we hear that each of them carried a staff and a ring which was imbued with mysterious power their followers series of performances on the part of the Brahman how for example he recalled to his senses by means of a letter one who was possessed with a demon how by stroking a man who was lame he healed his dislocated hip how he felt safe to restore a man's hand that was withered and to a blind man gave sight our blessings on an author who saves us so much trouble can we doubt that these stories are true when his very insistence on the truth of his earlier tales I refer to those of lightning and wind kept in jars and of tripods of stone walking about of their own accord and of cup-bearers of blondes passing round the cups in a circle fully betrays and exposes the mythical character of everything else which he has to tell us Philonstratus moreover declares that Darmis related how carefully Apollonius excluded himself from being present at the philosophical sessions which he held with Iarchus and he says that Apollonius was given by the latter seven rings which were called after the stars and that he wore these one by one upon the days respectively called by their names though we learn this much on this occasion from a gentleman who is esteemed by the love of truth who had a respectful facts further on in his book as if by way of condemning the wizardry of the Brahmans and as if he was anxious to acquit Apollonius of the charge of having dabbled therein he adds the following remark which I repeat textually but when he saw among the engines the tripods and the cup-bearers and the other figures which I have said entered of their own accord he did not either ask how they were contrived or desire to learn but although he prized them he disclaimed any wish to imitate them and how my good fellow did he disclaim any wish of the kind is this the man who was careful to exclude Darmus from the philosophical séances he held with them and who thought it his duty to conceal from his only companion all that he had done in those séances and how could he have disclaimed any wish to imitate them when he accepted the seven rings named after the stars and held it needful to wear these all through the rest of his life upon the days severally named after them and that although as you say yourself they had a secret power in them even if we grant that he did not aspire to imitate these inventions it is clear that his disclaimer was not due to their being uncanny how then could he prized things which he disdained to imitate if he prized them as being divinely operated why did he not imitate things so prized worthy to crown all on his return after he had stayed with them we learn that he arrived with his companions at the country of the Oratai where he found the rocks and the sand and the dust which the rivers bring down to the sea all alike made of bronze chapter 23 all this is contained in the third book of Velostratus and let us now pass on to those which follow we learn that when he had returned from the country of the Indians to the land of Helas the gods themselves proclaimed him to be the companion of the gods in as much as they sent on to him the sick to be healed and indeed as if his visit to the Arabs and to the Magi and to the Indians had turned him into some miraculous and divine being our author now that he has got him home again plunges straight into a lengthy description of his miracles and yet one might fairly argue that if he had been of a diviner the merely human nature he ought long before and not only now after entering into relation with other teachers to have begun his career of wonder-working and it was superfluous for him to take so much trouble to acquire the multifarious law of Arabs and of Magi and of Indians if he was really what the initial assumption made by Velostratus assumes him to have been but anyhow according to this truth-loving author we have now got him back again ready to show off the wisdom which he has acquired from so great masters and as one fresh from Arabia and equipped with the science of augury and vogue among the inhabitants of that country he begins by interpreting to the bystanders what the sparrow wanted and intended when it summoned its fellows to their dinner next he has a presentiment and warns the citizens of what is coming and he himself sets before us in his apology to Domitian the explanation of this presentiment for when the latter asked him what was the ground of his prediction he answered because my prince I use a very light diet I was the first to sent the danger and then he relates a third miracle of him which was nothing less than that of his averting the plague although the author has been careful not to include this story in the final counts retained against Apollonius probably because it was impossible for him to rebut a charge founded upon it by any defence which he could offer we nevertheless will publish the story and give it full publicity because our doing so will render any further criticism of it for if anybody feels the shadow of doubt about the matter the very manner in which the story is told will convince him that fraud and make-believe was in this case everything and that if ever anything wreaked of wizardry this did for he pretends that the plague was seen in the form of an aged man a beggar and dressed in rags and Apollonius ordered the mob to stone him began by shooting fire from his eyes but afterwards when he had been overwhelmed by the stones thrown at him he appeared as a dog all crushed and vomiting foam as mad dogs do and he writes that Apollonius mentioned this episode also in the defence he addressed to the autocrat demission as follows for the form of the plague which resembled an aged beggar was both seen by me and when I saw it I overcame it not by staying the course of the disease but by utterly destroying it who I would ask after reading this would not laugh heartily at the miracle mongering of this thormeterge for we learn that the nature of the plague was a living creature and as such exposed at once to the eyes of the bystanders and to the showers of stones they held at it and that it was crushed by men and vomited foam when all the time a plague is nothing in the world but a corruption and vitiation of the atmosphere the circumambient air being changed into a morbid condition composed of noxious and evil exhalations as medical theory teaches us and on other grounds too this story of the phantom plague can be exploded for the story tells us that it only afflicted the city of Ephesus and did not visit the neighbouring populations and how could this not have been the case if the surrounding atmosphere had undergone vitiation for the infection could not have been confined to one spot nor have beset the air of the loam chapter 24 the fourth wonder which he relates is how the soul of Achilles appeared close by his own sepulchre dressed the first time in a tunic and five cubits high and subsequently growing till it was twelve cubits in stature and accusing the Thessalians for not continuing according to custom to offer him the due funeral months and furthermore still nursing Roth against the Trocians for the longs which they had committed against him and bidding Apollonius ask him questions on five topics such as he himself might desire to learn about and the fates permit him to know of we next learn that the omniscient one who boasted of his prescience of future events was still ignorant of whether Achilles had been buried and of whether the muses and nereids had bestowed their dirges upon him and accordingly he asked Achilles about these matters and inquires most earnestly whether Polluxena had been slain of his tomb and whether Helen had really come to Troy questions surely of a most solemn kind and such as to stimulate others to lead the philosophical life of the hero besides being in themselves of much importance thereupon he falls to wondering if there had ever been among the Helens so many heroes all at one time and whether Palamedes had ever reached Troy surely it was disgraceful in the extreme that one who was the companion of gods whether seen or unseen should know so little of such matters as to need to ask questions again and again about them unless indeed because in this scene he is introduced as associating with the dead the author intentionally gives a frigid turn to his questions in order to avert the suspicion of his having irreligiously pried into the secrets of magic for we may notice he represents him as arguing in his apology that there was no colour of necromancy in the manner in which the spectre appeared to him and says for without digging any trench like a disuse and without tempting the souls of the dead with the blood of lambs I managed to converse with Achilles merely by using the prayers which the Indians declare we ought to make use of in addressing heroes this is how Apollonius now brags to his companion although our author testifies he had learned nothing from the Indians nor felt attracted by their wisdom Chapter 25 what then is the reason my good fellow supposing that there was no devilish curiosity here at work why he would not allow Darmis whom you admit to have been his soul and genuine and single companion to share with him in this marvellous vision and interview and why too was he not able to do all this by daytime instead of doing it in the dead of night and alone why too did the mere cry of the cox drive away the soul of the hero for he says it vanished with a mild flash of lightning for indeed the cox were already beginning to crow I cannot but think that evil demons would have found such an hour unseasonable and appropriate for their devilish interviews rather than the soul of a hero which having been freed from the crass matter of the body must necessarily be good and unsullied in any case the demon conjured up on this occasion is represented as of a malignant and envious disposition both rancorous and mean in humour for how else can we characterise someone who drove away Antisthenes a poor youth so serious that he was endeavouring to become a follower of the philosopher Apollonius for Achilles insists that he shall not initiate him in his philosophy and he adds the reason for, says he he is too much of a descendant of Pliam and the praise of Hector is never out of his mouth and how could he be other than rancorous and mean if he was roth with the Thessalians for not sacrificing to him and still refused to be reconciled to the Trojans because thousands of years before they had sinned against him and that although the latter were continually sacrificing and pouring out libations to him the only exception is that he ordered Apollonius to restore the tomb of Palamedes which together with his statue had fallen into decay the fifth and sixth miracles however in this book do not stand in need of much argument and discussion so thoroughly do they prove our writer's easy credulity for Apollonius as they say drives out one demon with the help of another the first of the demons is expelled from an incorrigible youth while the second disguises itself by assuming the form of a woman and the latter are clever author caused by no other names than those of Empusa and Lamia as for the damsel whom he has said subsequently to have brought back again to life in Rome after she had died the story clearly impressed Velosteritas himself as being extremely incredible and we may safely reject it anyhow he hesitates and doubts whether after all a spark of life might have not lingered on in the girl unnoticed by her attendance for he says that according to report it was raining at the time and a vapour exiled from the face of the girl anyhow if such a miracle had really been wrought in Rome itself it could not have escaped the notice first of the emperor and after him the subordinate magistrates and least of all the philosopher Euphrates who at the time was in the country and was staying in Rome who indeed as we learn later on is related to have launched against Apollonius the accusation of being no other than a wizard it would certainly too had it actually occurred have been included by the accuser among the other charges leveled against him just these and no more are the more particular and special achievements of Apollonius although there are a myriad other cases in the book in which his sussayings and prophecies are set down to his gift of foreknowledge and we learn that at Athens when he desired to be initiated in the yellow sinian mysteries the priest there would not admit him and declared that he would never initiate a wizard or throw open the yellow sinian mysteries to a man who was addicted to impure rights we also hear about a lewd fellow who went begging about Rome rehearsing the songs of Nero on his lyre for pay and we are told that this most philosophic of teachers out of fear of Nero ordered his companions to bestow arms on him in recognition of his clever accomplishments Chapter 27 such are the contents of the fourth book and in the fifth book of his history after a few remarks about his gift of prescience our author is so lost in admiration as to add the following remark which I repeat textually that then he was enabled to make such forecasts by some divine impulse and that it is no sound inference to suppose as some people do that Apollonius was a wizard is clear from what I have said but let us consider the following facts wizards whom for my part I reckon to be the most unfortunate of mankind claim to alter the course of destiny either by tormenting the ghosts whom they encounter or by means of barbaric sacrifices or by means of certain incantations or anointings but Apollonius himself was admitted to the decrees of the fates and foretold that they must needs come to pass and his foreknowledge was not due to wizardry but derived from what the gods revealed to him and when among the Indians he beheld their tripods and their dumb waiters and other automata which I described as entering the room of their own accord he neither asked how they were contrived nor wished to learn he only praised them not a spar to imitate them such a passage as the above clearly exhibits in the light of wizards the famous philosophers of India for notice that when he is arguing about wizards he mentions them too and says that their marvels were cleverly contrived indeed but that his hero held himself carefully aloof from such their contrivances on the ground that they were not moral if therefore we find Apollonius calling these Indians gods and enrolling himself as their disciple we have no alternative but to bring him also under the imputation under which his teachers lay and accordingly he is introduced as saying among the so called naked sages of the Egyptians the following I quote his very words it is then not unreasonable on my part I think to have yielded myself to a philosophy so highly elaborated to a philosophy which if I may use a metaphor from the stage the Indians mount as it deserved to be mounted upon a lofty and divine mechanism before they wheel it out upon the stage and that I was right to admire them and that I am right in considering them wise and blessed it is now time to learn and after a little he says for they are not only gods but are adorned with all the gifts of the Pythian prophetess and he is introduced to the mission with these words on his lips what war have you with Iarchus or with Friotis both of them Indians whom I consider to be the only men that are really gods and that deserve this abolition are other passages also in which this history of Lostritus recognises the persons above mentioned as gods and teachers of the sage and admits him to have accepted rings from them but now he forgets all about it and does not see that in maligning the teachers he maligns the disciple Chapter 28 at a little lower down in the book explains a flute player upon the stage and he relates at length how Apollonius delivered himself with great gravity of long essays upon the different modes of playing the flute as if it were the most important and clever of the sciences and he relates how the emperor of Vespasian offered him prayers just as if he were a god for we learn that Vespasian said in a tone of prayer do thou make me emperor and Apollonius answered I have made you so what else can anyone do but loathe this utterance for its boastfulness so nearly does it approach downright madness for one who was the pilot of a ship in Egypt to boast of being himself a god already and a maker of kings for Apollonius himself has informed us a little before in the course of his conversation with the Indian that his soul had previously been that of a pilot chapter 29 and to the same emperor when the latter asks him to notify to him those whom he most approved of among philosophers as advisors and counsellors of his policy Apollonius replies in these words these gentlemen here are also good advisors in such matters as he pointed to Dion and Euphrates because he had not yet quarrelled with the latter and again he said my sovereign Euphrates and Dion have long been known to you and they are at your door and are much concerned for your welfare some of them also therefore to your confidence for they are both of them wise whereupon Vespasian answered I throw my doors open wide to wise men what can we think of the prescience of our hero on this occasion Euphrates is both good and wise because he has not yet quarrelled with him but when he has and before long he is going to then see how the same person writes to the emperor de mission and yet if you want to know how much a philosopher may attain by flattery of the mighty you have only to look at the case of Euphrates for in his case why do I speak of wealth from that source why he has perfect fountains of wealth and already at the banks he discusses prices as a merchant might or a huckster or a tax-gatherer or a low money-changer for all these roles are his if there is anything to buy or sell and he clings like a limpet to the doors of the mighty I understand to get them more regularly than any doorkeeper would do indeed he is often caught by the doorkeepers just as greedy dogs might be but he never yet bestowed a farthing on a philosopher but he walls up all his wealth within his house only supporting this egyptian out of other people's money and sharpening his tongue against me when it ought to be cut out however you will leave Euphrates to yourself or unless you approve of flatterers you will find the fellow worse than I represent him surely one who first bears witness to the space in the father that Euphrates is a wise and good man and then invades against him in this style to his son is openly convicted of praising and blaming the same person was it then the case that this man who was endowed with knowledge of the future did not know what the character of Euphrates was nor what it was going to be for it is not now the first time but already in the case of Vespasian himself he is inclined to accuse him of being the worst of characters how then is it that he recommended such a person to the sovereign so warmly that in consequence of his recommendation the latter threw open wide the doors of his palace to him why is it not clear to a blind man as they say that in the matter of foreknowledge the fellow is reduced by his own historian though on other ground he might be regarded as an honest man if we could suppose that originally and before he learned by experience he wished to gain access to the palace as freely for his friends Euphrates included as for himself but was afterwards moved by his quarrel to use such language of him I have no wish in thus arguing to accuse Apollonius of having falsely blamed Euphrates who was the most distinguished philosopher of all the men of his age so much so that his praises are still on the lips of students of philosophy not but what anyone who was minded to do so could take this as a palmery example of slander and backbiting and use it against Apollonius for if Euphrates be really by their admission a leader in all philosophy it is proper to credit him with aversion to navery when he denounces the strange performances of his rival and proper for the latter to be invested with an evil reputation because he was thus attacked by him for pursuing that was the accusation a life so little satisfactory to a philosopher end of volume 2 the treatise of Eusebius chapters 22 to 29 volume 2 the treatise of Eusebius chapters 30 to 40 from the life of Apollonius of Tyanna this is a LibriVox recording all LibriVox recordings are in the public domain for more information or to volunteer please visit LibriVox.org recording by Andrew Coleman the life of Apollonius of Tyanna by Flavius Velostratus translated by FC Coneybear volume 2 the treatise of Eusebius chapters 30 to 40 chapter 30 in the sixth book our storyteller resumes his tale of miracles for he brings his hero together with his companions on camelback to see those whom he calls the naked philosophers of Egypt here then at the bidding of one of these sages an elm tree we are told spoke to Apollonius in an articulate but feminine voice and this is the sort of thing which the lover of truth tells us to believe then he has a story of pygmies who live on the other side of their country and of man-eaters and of shadow-footed men and of a satyr whom Apollonius made drunk from these sages Apollonius is brought back again to Helas where he renews his interviews and his prophecies to Titus then we hear about a youth who was bitten by a mad dog he is rescued from his distress who forthwith proceeds to divine whose soul it was that the dog had incited and we learn that it was that of Amasis a former king of Egypt for the sages humanity extended to dogs Chapter 31 these then are the achievements which preceded his accusation and it behoves us to notice throughout the treatise that even if we admit the author to tell the truth in his stories of miracles he yet clearly shows that they were severely performed by Apollonius with the cooperation of a demon for his presentment of the plague though it might not seem to be magical and uncanny if he owed it as he himself said to the lightness and purity of his diet yet might quite as well have been a premonition imparted to him in intercourse with a demon for though the other stories of his have been grasped and fought of the future by virtue of his prescience can be refuted by a thousand arguments which velocitas his own text supplies nevertheless if we allow this particular story to be true I should certainly say that his apprehension of futurity was anyhow in some cases though it was not so in all due to some uncanny contrivance of a demon that was his familiar this is clearly proved by the fact that he did not retain his gift of foreknowledge uniformly and in all cases but was at fault in most cases and had through ignorance to make inquiries as he would not have needed to do if he had been endowed with divine power and virtue and the very cessation of the plague according to the particular turn given to the drama has already been shown to have been a delusion and nothing more moreover the soul of Achilles should not have been lingering about his own monument quitting the islands of the blessed and the places of repose as people would probably say in this case too it was surely a demon that appeared to Apollonius and in whose presence he found himself then again the licentious youth was clearly the victim of an indwelling demon and both it and the impuser and the lamia which is said to have played off its mad pranks on Manipus were probably driven out by him with the help of a more important demon the same is true also of the youth who have been driven out of his mind by the mad dog and the frenzy dog itself was restored to its senses by the same method you must then as I said regard the whole series of miracles wrought by him as having been accomplished through a ministry of demons for the resuscitation of the girl must be divested of any miraculous character if she was really alive all the time and still bore in herself a vital spark as the author says and if a vapour rose over her face for it is impossible as I said before that such a miracle should have been passed over in silence in Rome itself if it happened when the sovereign was close by chapter 32 there are a thousand other examples then which we may select from the same books where the narrative refutes itself by its very incongruities so enabling us to detect its mythical and miracle mongering character at the same time we need not devote too much attention and study to the gentleman's career seeing that those of our contemporaries among whom his memory survives at all are so far from classing him among divine and extraordinary and wonderful beings that they do not even rank him among philosophers this being so let us be content with the remarks we have made and proceed to consider the seventh book of his history chapter 33 here then we find him categorically accused of being a wizard next we find Demetrius the philosopher trying to dissuade him from going on to Rome and Apollonius rejects his advice in words which are full of vulgar effrontery and fulsome praise of himself they are as follows but I know most human affairs seeing that I know everything at the same time I reserve my knowledge partly for good men partly for the wise partly for myself partly for the gods and yet the man who in these words brags about his omniscience before he goes much further is accused by the text itself of an ignorance in certain matters next Apollonius disguises for the latter conceals the fact of his being a philosopher because he is afraid of death listen then to the words in which our author apologizes for him this was the reason then of Damos's putting off his Pythagorean dress for he says that it was not cowardice that led him to make the change nor regret at having worn it but he did it because the device recommended itself as suggested by the expedience of the moment chapter 34 after this Philostratus sets forth four counts of the indictment which he imagines it will be easy for his hero to defend himself from and he admits that he has collected these out of a great many others of these the first was what induced him to wear a different robe from everybody else and the second was it that meant esteemed him to be a god the third how had he managed to predict the plague to the Ephesians and last of all in whose behoof had he gone to a certain field and cut up the Arcadian boy to meet these then he alleges Apollonius to have written an apology but first of all he relates how he was cast into prison and the miracle which he wrote there for we hear that Darmus was extremely downcast at the misfortunes which he imagined had befallen his teacher whereupon Apollonius showed him his leg released without effort from the chain then having thus alleviated his follower's grief he put his foot back again into its former condition and habit after that he was brought to trial before the Emperor Domitian and we read that he was quitted on the charges and that after being so acquitted he with curious inopportuneness as it seems to me cried out in the court exactly as follows accord me too if you will an opportunity to speak but if not then send someone to take my body for my soul you cannot take nay you cannot even take my body for thou shalt not slay me since I tell thee I am not mortal and then in this utterance we are told that he vanished from the court and this is the conclusion of the whole drama Chapter 35 now in regard to the miracle in the prison which it seems was an illusion imposed on the eyes of Darmus by the familiar demon our author adds the following remark Darmus says that it was then for the first time that he truly understood the nature of the Babylonius to wit that it was divine and superhuman for without offering any sacrifice and how indeed in prison could he have offered one and without a single prayer without even a word he quietly laughed at the fetters and then inserting his leg in them afresh he comported himself like any other prisoner I should be the last to accuse his pupil of being a dull witted man because after being with him all his life and witnessing him work miracles by means of certain uncanny agencies he failed to regard him as in any way superior to the rest of mortal men but now after such a display of thormaturgic energy as the above he is still ignorant of his true character and taking him to be a mere man he is full of anxiety as in that case he might well be and full of apprehension in his behalf lest any affliction should come upon him against his own wish and will but if indeed it was now for the first time after having passed so longer time with him that he realised that he was indeed divine and superior to the rest of the human race then it behoves us to scrutinise the reason that the other alleges for his doing so in these words for without any sacrifice and without a single prayer and without uttering a single mysterious word he saw that he had wrought this miracle it follows that the fellow's earlier feats were accomplished by the help of some uncanny trick and that is why as he says Darmis was not astounded at these things nor filled with wonder by them naturally then he now for the first time experienced these feelings because he felt that his master had accomplished something which was quite unusual and contrary to his habitual performances in reference however to the phantom chains shown to Darmis and to his departure from the law courts I will quote the words which Apollonius himself addresses to Domitian for when the monarch ordered him to be thrown into chains Apollonius with perfect consistency argued as follows if you think me a wizard how will you bind me and if you bind me how can you say that I am a wizard surely one may invert this argument and use it against him somewhat as follows keeping to his own premises if you are not a wizard then how was your leg liberated from the chains and if it was liberated then how are you not a wizard and if because he submits to the chains he is not a wizard then if he does not submit to them he is a wizard by his own admission and again if because he submitted to be brought to trial he was not a wizard he was yet clearly revealed as such when he ran off and eluded the court and retinue of the emperor I mean of course the bodyguard that stood round him now I believe that our author is aware of this and endeavors to glows over the fact when he pretends that this miracle was exhibited without sacrifice or any sort of incantation by some ineffable and superhuman power Chapter 36 Moreover we have not got to go far before a fresh test of his character is supplied to us for presently a messenger presents himself and says Oh Apollonius the emperor releases you from these chains and permits you to reside in the jail where prisoners are not bound whereupon Apollonius who is superior to mankind and has foreknowledge of what is coming and according to the poet has understanding of the dumb and here with him who speaks not is so overjoyed as well he might be at the news that he suddenly drops out of his gift of foreknowledge and asks outright who then will get me out of this place and the messenger replied I myself so follow me Chapter 37 Next this most divine of men composes in the most careful of manners and harangue in defence of himself quite unaware that after all his composition would prove a mere waste of effort for he imagines that the emperor will listen to his defence of his case and on that assumption he arranges his apology along extremely plausible lines but the latter by refusing to wait renders all his trouble useless and unnecessary I would ask you then to listen to the following for what he says is a refutation of himself but in as much as he had composed an oration which he meant to deliver in defence of himself by the clock only the tyrant confined him to the questions which I have enumerated I have determined to publish this oration also notes then how utterly at fault this entirely divineist of beings was about the future if he took so much trouble to prepare to proportion the length of his apology to the time allowed him by the water clock Chapter 38 but we must not omit to pass him review the defence which he so vainly composed for it contains among many examples of the arrogance with which he addressed a mission the following utterance to wit when he says as Vespasian made you emperor so I made him what braggadocio no ordinary person anyhow nor any real philosopher either transcending the rest of mankind could indulge in such highfaluting bombast without exposing himself in the eyes of sensible men to a charge of being mad next in trying to rid himself of the suspicion which weighed upon him he holds the following language concerning magicians and wizards but I call wizards men of false wisdom for with them the unreal is made real and the real becomes incredible one may learn then from the whole treatise and from the particular episodes set forth therein whether we ought to rank him among divine and philosophic men or among wizards we have only to observe what he himself has said about wizards mostly wise men together with what is published in his own history for when oak trees and elms talk in articulate and feminine tones and tripods move of their own accord and waiters of copper serve at table and jars are filled with showers and with winds and water of Sandorak and all the other things of the kind are introduced among those who may did not hesitate to entitle his teachers of whom else are all these things characteristic except of people who can exhibit the unreal as real and the real as incredible in himself calling the latter wizards he shows that they are people whose wisdom is false is it then on the strength of these things that this divine man endowed with all virtue and the darling of the gods is to bind on his brow the prize of wisdom and to be accounted truly more divine than Pythagoras and his successors and to be considered far more blessed than he is he not rather to be found guilty of false wisdom and carry off the first prize for riches Chapter 39 in the same book we are told that he had reasoned in Ionia about the power of the fates and had taught that the threads they spin are so immutable that if they decree a kingdom to another which already belongs to someone then even if that other was slain by the possessor for fear less he should ever have it taken away by him the latter would yet be raised from the dead and live again in fulfilment of the decrees of the fates and he continues in these very words he who is destined to become a carpenter will become one even though his hands have been cut off and he who has been predestined to carry off the prize for running in the Olympic Games will never fail to win even though he break his leg and the man to whom the fates have decreed that he shall be an eminent archer will not miss the mark even though he lose his eyesight and then by way of flattering the sovereign he adds the following and in drawing my examples from royalty I had reference I admit to the Ecrissie and the House of Lyas and to Astiages the Mead and to many other monarchs who thought that they were making good provision in such cases that they had slain their own children and others their descendants yet were deprived by them of their thrones when they grew up and issued forth against them out of obscurity in accordance with destiny well, if I were inclined to flattery I should have said that I had your own history in my mind when you were blockaded by Vitelius and the temple of Jupiter was burnt on the brow of the hill overlooking the city and Vitelius declared that his own fortune was assured so long as you did not escape him although you were at the time quite a stripling and not the man you are now and yet because the fates had decreed otherwise he perished with all his councils while you are now in possession of his throne however, since I are poor the forced concords of flattery it seems to me that they are everything that is out of time and out of tune let me at once cut this string out of my lyre and request you to consider that on that occasion I had not your fortunes in my mind in this passage a treatise written ostensibly in the interest of truth draws a picture of a man who was at once a flatterer and a liar and anything rather than a philosopher for after invading so bitterly on the earlier occasion against a mission he now flatters him generous fellow that he is and pretends that the doctrines he mooted in Ionia about the fates and necessity so far from being directed against him rather told in his favour take then your history my author and regaining your sobriety after your fit of drunkenness read out loud and in a truth loving tone the passages you wrote on a former occasion without concealing anything read how when he was staying in Ephesus he did his best to alienate his friends from the mission and encourage them to espouse the cause of the safety of all and as it occurred to him that intercourse with them by letter was dangerous to them he would take now one and now another of the most discreet of his own companions aside and say to them the most important secret business to entrust yourselves so you must take yourself to Rome to such and such persons and converse with them and of how he delivered a discourse on the subject of the fates and necessity and argued that not even timents can overpower the decrees of the fates and how directing the attention of his audience to a brazen statue of the mission produced by that of the melees he said how much art thou mistaken in thy views of necessity and of the fates for even if thou should slay the man who is fated to be despot after thyself he shall come to life again the man then who after holding such language as this proceeds to flatter the tyrant and cynically pretends that none of this language can be written how can we judge him other than capable of all villainy and meanness unless indeed you assume that the authors who have handed down to us these details of him were lying fellows who meant to accuse their hero and not true historians but in that case what becomes to use the language of the love of truth of those who were historians most highly educated and respectful of the truth namely Darmis the philosopher who even lived with the man in question and Philostratus the Athenian for these are the authors who lay these facts before us and they are clearly convicted by the light of truth since they thus contradict themselves of being vaporing braggarts and nothing else convicted by their inconsistencies of being downright liars men devoid of education and charlatans Chapter 40 the story proceeds to tell us that after all this Apollonius liberated from the court made up his mind to descend into the cave of Traphonius in Lebedia but the people there would not allow him to do so because they too regarded him as a wizard surely it is legitimate in us to be puzzled when one compares what one reads at the beginning of the book of Lostratus I mean the passage where he owns that he is puzzled at people having regarded his hero as a wizard and expresses his surprise at the circumstances remarking with all that although empedocles and Pythagoras and democratus had consorted with the same magi without ever stooping to the magic art and Plato had derived much from the priests and prophets in Egypt and had mingled their ideas with his own discourses without ever being held by anyone to be a magician yet men so far had fell to recognize his hero as one inspired by the purest wisdom but had long since accounted him a magician and still did so because he had consorted with the magi of Babylon and the brahmans of India the naked sages of Egypt what answer then can we make to him except this my good fellow what was your hero up to in this line for him alone to have been regarded both long ago and now as a wizard in contrast with these great men who though as you admit they had made trial of the same teachers as he yet were eminent both in the age in which they flourished and also bequeathed posterity in their philosophy a gift of such excellence that its prezes are still sunk is such a contrast possible unless he was caught by men of good sense meddling with things that were unlawful there are still among our contemporaries those who say that they have found superstitious devices dedicated in the name of this man though I admit I have no wish to pay attention to them however as regards his death although Philostratus follows in his book the accounts of earlier writers he declares that he knows nothing of the truth for he says that people in Ephesus related that Apollonius died there while others said that he died in Lindus after entering the temple of Athene and others in Crete after shedding so much doubt on the manner of his end he yet inclines to believe that he went to heaven body and all for he says that after he had run into the temple the gates were closed and a strange hymn of maidens was heard to issue from the building and the words of their song were come, come to heaven, come but he says that he had never come across any sepulchre or cenotaph of his hero although he had visited the greater part of the whole earth but what he would like us to believe is that his hero never encountered death at all for on a former occasion when he is canvassing the manner in which he died he adds the proviso if he did die but in a later passage he declares in so many words that he went to heaven this is why he avows no less in the podium of his book than throughout it that it was by reason of his being such as he was that he wooed philosophy in a diviner manner than Pythagoras and Empedocles end of volume 2 the treatise of Eusebius chapters 30 to 40