CHAP. 23. (23.)—INSTANCES OF ENDURANCE OF PAIN.
Of patience in enduring pain, that being too frequently the
lot of our calamitous fate, we have innumerable instances related. One of the most remarkable instances among the female
sex is that of the courtesan Leæna, who, although put to the
torture, refused to betray the tyrant-slayers, Harmodius and
Aristogiton.[1] Among those of men, we have that of Anaxarchus, who, when put to the torture for a similar reason, bit
off his tongue and spit it into the face of the tyrant, thus
destroying the only hope[2] of his making any betrayal.
1. This circumstance is mentioned by Pausanias, in his Attica. She was
an Athenian hetæra, or courtesan, beloved by Aristogiton, or, according to
Athenæus, by Harmodius. On the murder of Hipparchus, the son of Pisistratus, she was put to the torture, being supposed to have been privy
to the conspiracy; but she died under her sufferings without making any
disclosure, and, according to one account, bit off her tongue, that no secret
might be betrayed by her. The Athenians erected in her honour a bronze
statue of a lioness (in reference to her name), without a tongue, in the
vestibule of the Acropolis.
2. This story is related by Val. Maximus, B. iii. c. 3, it is also alluded
to by Cicero, Tus. Quæst. B. ii. c. 22, and De Nat. Deor. B. ii. c. 33; but
he only speaks of his tortures, without mentioning what Pliny states of his
biting off his tongue.—B. He was a philosopher of Abdera, of the school
of Democritus, and flourished about B.C. 340. Towards Alexander the
Great, whom he accompanied into Asia, he acted the part of a base
flatterer. He was pounded to death in a mortar, by order of Nicocreon,
king of Cyprus.