Life of Alcibiades, 3

Plutarch  translated by Bernadotte Perrin

« Plut. Alc. 2 | Plut. Alc. 3 | Plut. Alc. 4 | About This Work »

3Among the calumnies which Antiphon[10] heaps upon him it is recorded that, when he was a boy, he ran away from home to Democrates, one of his lovers, and that Ariphron was all for having him proclaimed by town crier as a castaway. But Pericles would not suffer it. “If he is dead,” said he, “we shall know it only a day the sooner for the proclamation; whereas, if he is alive, he will, in consequence of it, be as good as dead for the rest of his life.” Antiphon says also that with a blow of his stick he slew one of his attendants in the palaestra of Sibyrtius. But these things are perhaps unworthy of belief, coming as they do from one who admits that he hated Alcibiades, and abused him accordingly.

« Plut. Alc. 2 | Plut. Alc. 3 | Plut. Alc. 4 | About This Work »

Notes

  • [10] An abusive oration of Antiphon the Rhamnusian against Alcibiades, cited in Athenaeus, p. 525 b, was probably a fabrication and falsely attributed to him. It is not extant.

Version menu

Table of contents