Pythagoras Emerging from the Underworld by Salvator Rosa 1662

"This is what Heraclides of Pontus tells us he (Pythagoras) used to say about himself: that he had once been Aethalides and was accounted to be Hermes' son, and Hermes told him he might choose any gift he liked except immortality; so he asked to retain through life and through death a memory of his experiences. Hence in life he could recall everything, and when he died he still kept the same memories. Afterwards in course of time his soul entered into Euphorbus and he was wounded by Menelaus. Now Euphorbus used to say that he had once been Aethalides and obtained this gift from Hermes, and then he told of the wanderings of his soul, how it migrated hither and thither, into how many plants and animals it had come, and all that it underwent in Hades, and all that the other souls there have to endure.

When Euphorbus died, his soul passed into Hermotimus, and he also, wishing to authenticate the story, went up to the temple of Apollo at Branchidae, where he identified the shield which Menelaus, on his voyage home from Troy, had dedicated to Apollo, so he said: the shield being now so rotten through and through that the ivory facing only was left. When Hermotimus died, he became Pyrrhus, a fisherman of Delos, and again he remembered everything, how he was first Aethalides, then Euphorbus, then Hermotimus, and then Pyrrhus. But when Pyrrhus died, he became Pythagoras, and still remembered all the facts mentioned."

-Diogenes Laertius, Lives of the Philosophers 8.4-8.5

 

Pythagoras Emerging from the Underworld by Salvator Rosa 1662

Detail of Pythagoras.

Source:

https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Rosa_Pythagoras_Emerging_from_the_Underworld_Kimbell_detail.jpg

https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Salvator_Rosa_-_Pythagoras_Emerging_from_the_Underworld_-_Google_Art_Project.jpg

 

Quote:

https://topostext.org/work/221#8.4

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