返回Letter CLXXXVI1

Letter CLXXXVI1

Letter CLXXXVI1


Letter CLXXXVI1

    To Antipater, the governor.2

Philosophy is an excellent thing, if only for this, that it even heals its disciples at small cost; for, in philosophy, the same thing is both dainty and healthy fare. I am told that you have recovered your failing appetite by pickled cabbage. Formerly I used to dislike it, both on account of the proverb,3 and because it reminded me of the poverty that went with it. Now, however, I am driven to change my mind. I laugh at the proverb when I see that cabbage is such a "good nursing mother of men,"4 and has restored our governor to the vigour of youth. For the future I shall think nothing like cabbage, not even Homer's lotus,5 not even that ambrosia,6 whatever it was, which fed the Olympians.



1: Placed in 374.

2: cf. Letter cxxxvii.

3: The Greek proverb was di\j kra/mbh qa/natoj

4: kourotpo/foj . Ithaca is a'gaqh\ kourotro/foj

5: Od . ix. 93.

6: Od . v. 93.