And set his mind to learn philosophy.

And then a Cyrenean, as he calls himself,

Named Aristippus, an ingenious sophist,

And far the first of all the men of his time,

But also far the most intemperate,

Was in the city. Him my master sought,

Giving a talent to become his pupil:

He did not learn, indeed, much skill or wisdom,

But got instead a sad complaint on his chest.

And Antiphanes, in his Antæus, speaking of the luxurious habits of the philosophers, says—