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And Anaxilas, in his Neottis, says—

The man whoe'er has loved a courtesan, Will say that no more lawless worthless race Can anywhere be found: for what ferocious Unsociable she-dragon, what Chimæra, Though it breathe fire from its mouth, what Charybdis, What three-headed Scylla, dog o' the sea, Or hydra, sphinx, or raging lioness, Or viper, or winged harpy (greedy race), Could go beyond those most accursed harlots? There is no monster greater. They alone Surpass all other evils put together. And let us now consider them in order:— First there is Plangon; she, like a chimæra, Scorches the wretched barbarians with fire; One knight alone was found to rid the world of her, Who, like a brave man, stole her furniture And fled, and she despairing, disappear'd. Then for Sinope's friends, may I not say That 'tis a hydra they cohabit with? For she is old: but near her age, and like her, Greedy Gnathæna flaunts, a twofold evil. And as for Nannion, in what, I pray, Does she from Scylla differ? Has she not Already swallow'd up two lovers, and Open'd her greedy jaws t' enfold a third? But he with prosp'rous oar escaped the gulf. Then does not Phryne beat Charybdis hollow? Who swallows the sea-captains, ship and all. Is not Theano a mere Siren pluck'd? Their face and voice are woman's, but their legs Are feather'd like a blackbird's. Take the lot, 'Tis not too much to call them Theban Sphinxes. For they speak nothing plain, but only riddles; And in enigmas tell their victims how They love and dote, and long to be caress'd. "Would that I had a quadruped," says one, That may serve for a bed or easy chair "Would that I had a tripod"—"Or a biped," That is, a handmaid. And the hapless fool Who understands these hints, like Œdipus, If saved at all is saved against his will. But they who do believe they're really loved Are much elated, and raise their heads to heaven. And in a word, of all the beasts on earth The direst and most treacherous is a harlot.

7. After Laurentius had said all this, Leonidas, finding fault with the name of wife ([Greek: gametê]), quoted these verses out of the Soothsayers of Alexis—