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The Clouds [10]

By Root 198 0
the moonlight

is beautiful,"-not to name a thousand other benefits. Nevertheless you

do not reckon the days correctly and your calendar is naught but

confusion. Consequently the gods load her with threats each time

they get home and are disappointed of their meal, because the festival

has not been kept in the regular order of time. When you should be

sacrificing, you are putting to the torture or administering

justice. And often, we others, the gods, are fasting in token of

mourning for the death of Memnon or Sarpedon, while you are devoting

yourselves to joyous libations. It is for this, that last year, when

the lot would have invested Hyperbolus with the duty of Amphictyon, we

took his crown from him, to teach him that time must be divided

according to the phases of the moon.

SOCRATES (coming out)

By Respiration, the Breath of Life! By Chaos! By the Air! I have

never seen a man so gross, so inept, so stupid, so forgetful. All

the little quibbles, which I teach him, he forgets even before he

has learnt them. Yet I will not give it up, I will make him come out

here into the open air. Where are you, Strepsiades? Come, bring your

couch out here.

STREPSIADES (from within)

But the bugs will not allow me to bring it.

SOCRATES

Have done with such nonsense! place it there and pay attention.

STREPSIADES (coming out, with the bed)

Well, here I am.

SOCRATES

Good! Which science of all those you have never been taught, do

you wish to learn first? The measures, the rhythms or the verses?

STREPSIADES

Why, the measures; the flour dealer cheated me out of two

choenixes the other day.

SOCRATES

It's not about that I ask you, but which, according to you, is the

best measure, the trimeter or the tetrameter?

STREPSIADES

The one I prefer is the semisextarius.

SOCRATES

You talk nonsense, my good fellow.

STREPSIADES

I will wager your tetrameter is the semisextarius.

SOCRATES

Plague seize the dunce and the fool! Come, perchance you will

learn the rhythms quicker.

STREPSIADES

Will the rhythms supply me with food?

SOCRATES

First they will help you to be pleasant in company, then to know

what is meant by enhoplian rhythm and what by the dactylic.

STREPSIADES

Of the dactyl? I know that quite well.

SOCRATES

What is it then, other than this finger here?

STREPSIADES

Formerly, when a child, I used this one.

SOCRATES

You are as low-minded as you are stupid.

STREPSIADES

But, wretched man, I do not want to learn all this.

SOCRATES

Then what do you want to know?

STREPSIADES

Not that, not that, but the art of false reasoning.

SOCRATES

But you must first learn other things. Come, what are the male

quadrupeds?

STREPSIADES

Oh! I know the males thoroughly. Do you take me for a fool then?

The ram, the buck, the bull, the dog, the pigeon.

SOCRATES

Do you see what you are doing; is not the female pigeon called the

same as the male?

STREPSIADES

How else? Come now!

SOCRATES

How else? With you then it's pigeon and pigeon!

STREPSIADES

That's right, by Posidon! but what names do you want me to give

them?

SOCRATES

Term the female pigeonnette and the male pigeon.

STREPSIADES

Pigeonnette! hah! by the Air! That's splendid! for that lesson

bring out your kneading-trough and I will fill him with flour to the

brim.

SOCRATES

There you are wrong again; you make trough masculine and it should

be feminine.

STREPSIADES

What? if I say, him, do I make the trough masculine?

SOCRATES

Assuredly! would you not say him for Cleonymus?

STREPSIADES

Well?

SOCRATES

Then trough is of the same gender as Cleonymus?

STREPSIADES

My good man! Cleonymus never had a kneading-trough; he used a

round mortar for the
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