Satire blends with comic art in Lucian's tales, fantasies, and dialogues. With ebullient wit he mocks teachers of literature, the various philosophical schools, popular religions, historians and writers, the Olympian gods, and the foibles of mortals. In The Dream he jocularly recounts his own career. Native of Samosata on the Euphrates, Lucian traveled widely in the Roman Empire as far as Gaul. His 80 extant works (published here in 8 volumes) offer insight on the intellectual world of the second century CE along with mischievous and sophisticated entertainment.
From Lucian comes a comic view of the Greek symposium, in his piece titled Carousal in Harmon's translation. The great satirist crowds into his dinner party Stoics, Epicureans, Peripatetics, and Cynics‒but there is as much high-spirited clowning as philosophy to be relished here. This first of the eight-volume edition of Lucian contains fourteen other pieces, including one of the earliest examples of science fiction, A True Story, the tallest of tall stories about a voyage to the moon.
- List of Lucian’s Works vii
- Introduction ix
- Bibliography xiii
- Phalaris 1
- Hippias or the Bath 33
- Dionysus 47
- Heracles 61
- Amber or the Swans 73
- The Fly 81
- Nigrinus 97
- Demonax 141
- The Hall 175
- My Native Land 209
- Octogenarians 221
- A True Story 247
- Slander 359
- The Consonants at Law 395
- The Carousal (Symposium) or The Lapiths 411