Fragment XXXIX

◄Fragment XXXVIII - Fragment XL►

Rufus. From Epictetus on friendship

Who of us does not marvel at the action of Lycurgus the Lacedaemonian? For when he had been blinded in one eye by one of his fellow-citizens and had received the young man at the hands of the people to punish as he saw fit, he did not choose to do this, but trained him instead and made a good man of him, and afterward escorted him to the public theatre. And when the Lacedaemonians regarded him with amazement, he said: "This man I received from you an insolent and violent creature; I return him to you a reasonable man and a good citizen."[1]

◄Fragment XXXVIII - Fragment XL►

1 Cf. Plutarch Lycurgus XI.