[50] The nature of the plague, as an occurrence beyond all accounting, not only in other respects affected each person more harshly than is humanly bearable but also showed itself in the following way above all to be something completely different from the familiar diseases: all the birds and animals that feed on man either did not approach, even though there were many unburied, or died if they tasted them. And as proof: the absence of birds of this type was unmistakable, and they were seen neither elsewhere nor in this context; dogs, on the other hand, made it more possible to notice the results because they live with men.
"All the birds": the argument is not quite clear; apparently Thucydides means the corpses were toxic enough to kill scavengers, which could be more directly observed of dogs, and inferred of birds by their absence - in which case it is strange that none were seen "in this context," i.e., eating the dead.
[51] The plague, then - to omit many other peculiarities in the way it happened to occur somewhat differently for one person compared with another - was like this in overall character. And during this time none of the usual diseases troubled them, or even if any did it ended in this. Some died in neglect, others, when they had been given a great deal of attention. And no single cure was established, practically speaking, whose application could bring relief; for what had helped one person actually harmed someone else.
"No single cure": It is remarkable that no single cure is described here.
Thucydides The Peloponnesian War Book Two, trans S Lattimore (1998), p99
For myself, I am not quite clear why the argument in [50] is not quite clear or what is strange about a precise claim that Thucydides does not seem anyway to be making; nor why it is remarkable that not one cure is described here when all have variously failed.
But that is one of the joys of a really first-rate edition [insert plug for Hackett Classics ed]: footnotes at the foot of the page which demand footnotes.
Thursday, 1 June 2017
Monday, 29 May 2017
The King of Mercia
VIII
The mad are predators. Too often lately they harbour
against us. A novel heresy exculpates all maimed
souls. Abjure it! I am the King of Mercia, and
I know.
Theatened by phone-calls at midnight, venemous let-
ters, forewarned I have thwarted their imminent
devices.
Today I name them; tomorrow I shall express the new
law. I dedicate my awakening to this matter.
Geoffrey Hill, Mercian Hymns (1971)
Now that's my kind of King of Mercia.
Monday, 6 February 2017
Get Used To It
I can't even say we're getting dangerously close to fascism, because... We're there.Thus one Gregory Locke, confirming the stereotype of Americans as the sort who, for instance, supported the invasion of Iraq because they thought it was a bad place just off Florida and thus a direct threat to the citizens of Knucklehead GA.
Are these shit-for-brains too ignorant to be even faintly aware of the possibility of their own ignorance?
Readers: Yes.
Tuesday, 31 January 2017
Shite Shock
I have given up thinking for instance "another BBC news story? well, that'll be another sluicing of slurry; better find out what, if anything, is really at the bottom lol of this."
Now seems a good time to take up the sousaphone.
Thursday, 22 December 2016
Merry Christmas! Happy New Year!
Sunday, 11 December 2016
It's the End of the World. Again.
Yes indeedy doody, the end of the world... at least according to one A. Chakrabortty writing in the Guardian on Friday.
Tim Worstall restricts himself to pointing out that Wolfgang Streeck, the subject of the piece, is an (economic) sociologist, not - as claimed - a (political) economist.
But I think it is much shittier than that. AC is visiting a Caravaggio exhibition with WS on the morning of Trump's election, indeed an apocalyptic moment as any wag and many a Hillarista will tell you, if they haven't already
Apparently
I might note that the world did not fall apart in 1618, observe that WS and AC are not art historians or any sort of historians at all, and suggest that AC furthermore appears bereft of anything resembling common sense or honesty.
Unkind?
I am not a Guardian reader, having no appreciation of the art of the post-truth, post-fact, post-reality newspaper hack. I doubt, on this showing, the mental capacity of those who are and do.
Tim Worstall restricts himself to pointing out that Wolfgang Streeck, the subject of the piece, is an (economic) sociologist, not - as claimed - a (political) economist.
But I think it is much shittier than that. AC is visiting a Caravaggio exhibition with WS on the morning of Trump's election, indeed an apocalyptic moment as any wag and many a Hillarista will tell you, if they haven't already
In a moment, in the twinkling of an eye, at the last trump: for the trumpet shall sound, and the dead shall be raised incorruptible, and we shall be changed.
1 Corinthians 15:52
Apparently
You don’t merely look at a Caravaggio; you square up to oneand
At a scene of cardsharps he [WS] exclaims, “Feel the decadence! The threat of violence!” He notes how many paintings date from just before the thirty years’ war: “They’re full of the anticipation that the world is about to fall apart.”Caravaggio started his apprenticeship in 1584 and died in 1610, so in fact all of his paintings inevitably date from between 34 and 8 years before the outbreak of the Thirty Years' War in 1618. He was an Italian working in Italy. How his work might relate to events in Hungary, Bohemia, Saxony &c eight years after his death is a mystery to me.
I might note that the world did not fall apart in 1618, observe that WS and AC are not art historians or any sort of historians at all, and suggest that AC furthermore appears bereft of anything resembling common sense or honesty.
Unkind?
This summer, Britons mutinied against their government, their experts and the EU – and consigned themselves to a poorer, angrier future. Such frenzies of collective self-harm were explained by Streeck in the [book you're all crying out to read]Mutinied! Against their Government (who were unanimous in their opposition to any referendum on EU membership or the possibility of Brexit)! Their experts (who are always and undisputedly right)! And against.........................omfg...................... the EU!
I am not a Guardian reader, having no appreciation of the art of the post-truth, post-fact, post-reality newspaper hack. I doubt, on this showing, the mental capacity of those who are and do.
Sunday, 16 October 2016
In the Courts
Serious as the point is, this from the Secret Barrister
We now know that the principal nature of this fresh evidence was as follows:
reminded me of Cocklecarrot's chaotic cases with the twelve red-bearded dwarves.
Nothing like a good hearty laugh to chase the clouds away, eh chums?
We now know that the principal nature of this fresh evidence was as follows:
- A man, O, gave evidence that, two weeks after 29 May 2011, he had been out drinking with X, and had engaged in consensual sexual intercourse, during which she instructed him to penetrate her vaginally from behind, shouting, “Fuck me harder”.
- A second man, S, gave evidence that, on 28 May 2011, X had engaged him in a night of drunken sexual activity, in which she adopted the same sexual position and used words, “Go harder”.
Evans’ case at trial was that X had
acted in the same way on the 29 May 2011, encouraging him to penetrate
her “doggy style” and using the words “fuck me harder”. This, it was
argued, demonstrated that she was consenting, and also supported the
reasonableness of his belief that she was consenting.
reminded me of Cocklecarrot's chaotic cases with the twelve red-bearded dwarves.
Nothing like a good hearty laugh to chase the clouds away, eh chums?
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