C.D. Warner, et al., comp. The Library of the World’s Best Literature.
An Anthology in Thirty Volumes. 1917.
Trimalchios Reminiscences
By Petronius (c. 2766)
T
When Agamemnon had begun, “Two men, one rich and one poor, were enemies—” “What is poor?” demands Trimalchio. “Neat point!” exclaims Agamemnon, and went on to give some sort of a learned dissertation. Presently Trimalchio interrupted him. “If the subject in hand,” says he, “be fact, there is no room for argument; if not fact, then it is nothing at all.”
As we received these and such-like statements with the warmest expressions of approval, he proceeded: “Pray, my dear Agamemnon, do you remember by any chance the twelve labors of Hercules, or anything about the story of Ulysses,—as for example, how the Cyclops dislocated his thumb with a paint-brush? I used to read Homer when I was a boy, and at Cumæ I saw with my own eyes the Sibyl hung up in a glass bottle; and when the boys said to her, ‘What do you want, Sibyl?’ she used to answer, ‘I want to die.’