ἱστορίαι Historiai
D.L. 7.28-30 Lives of Eminent Philosophers, Volume II (Books VI-X), Diogenes Laertius; served verbatim
last. Persaeus, however, in his ethical lectures makes him die at the age of seventy-two, having come to Athens at the age of twenty-two. But Apollonius says that he presided over the school for fifty-eight years. The manner of his death was as follows. As he was leaving the school he tripped and fell, breaking a toe. Striking the ground with his fist, he quoted the line from the Xiobe a : I come, I come, why dost thou call for me ? and died on the spot through holding his breath. The Athenians buried him in the Ceramicus and honoured him in the decrees already cited above, adding their testimony of his goodness. Here is the epitaph composed for him by Antipater of Sidon b : Here lies great Zeno, dear to Citium, who scaled high Olympus, though he piled not Pelion on Ossa, nor toiled at the labours of Heracles, but this was the path he found out to the stars — the way of temperance alone. Here too is another by Zenodotus the Stoic, a pupil of Diogenes c : Thou madest self-sufficiency thy rule, Eschewing haughty wealth, O godlike Zeno, With aspect grave and hoary brow serene. A manly doctrine thine : and by thy prudence With much toil thou didst found a great new school, Chaste parent of unfearing liberty. And if thy native country was Phoenicia, What need to slight thee ? came not Cadmus thence, Who gave to Greece her books and art of writing ? And Athenaeus the epigrammatist speaks of all the Stoics in common as follows d :

The Greek stands ready in the workroom; the English is served. Both faces will read together.

← D.L. 7.26-28 contents D.L. 7.30-32 →

Filed here — the addresses this episode attests; counted by the house’s first pass
Apollonius — a candidate entry Athenaeus — a candidate entry Citium — a candidate entry Diogenes — a candidate entry Zeno — a candidate entry

Lives of Eminent Philosophers, Volume II (Books VI-X), Diogenes Laertius — translated by R. D. Hicks, 1925
Apparatus shelf — Diogenes Laertius, Lives of Eminent Philosophers, vol. II (R. D. Hicks translation, Loeb L185) · R. D. Hicks, Loeb Classical Library, London: William Heinemann / New York: G. P. Putnam's Sons, MCMXXV (1925)
license: public-domain (US: published 1925, pre-1930 — the MCMXXV title page verified from the scan itself; only the English rectos are served, Hicks's translation)