SOCRATES:
Why have you come?
STREPSIADES:
I want to learn to argue.
I’m being pillaged—ruined by
interest
[240]
and by creditors I can’t pay off—
290
they’re slapping liens on all my
property.
SOCRATES:
How come you got in such a pile of debt
without your knowledge?
STREPSIADES:
I’ve been ravaged
by disease—I’m horse sick. It’s draining me
in the most dreadful way. But please
teach me
one of your two styles of arguing,
the one
which never has to discharge any
debt.
Whatever payment you want me to
make,
I promise you I’ll pay—by all the gods.
SOCRATES:
What gods do you intend to swear
by?
300
To start with, the gods hold no
currency with us.
STREPSIADES:
Then, what currency do you use to swear?
Is it iron coin, like in Byzantium?
SOCRATES:
Do you want to know the truth of things
divine,
[250]
the way they really are?
STREPSIADES:
Yes, by god, I do,
if that’s possible.
SOCRATES:
And to commune and talk
with our own deities the Clouds?
STREPSIADES:
Yes, I do.
SOCRATES:
Then sit down on the sacred couch.
STREPSIADES:
All right.
I’m sitting down.
SOCRATES:
Take this wreath.
Aristophanes Clouds 423 BC
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