Consider
what a man Socrates was when he dressed himself in a skin, after Xanthippe had
taken his cloak and gone out, and what Socrates said to his friends who were
ashamed of him and drew back from him when they saw him dressed thus.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 11.28 (tr
Long)
What a
delightful story! I have no idea if it ever happened, and I don’t know where
the tradition came from, but I can imagine it right now. It reminds me of a
country music song by Vince Gill, where the wife hides the husband’s car keys
to keep him from going to the honky-tonk, but he outwits her by taking his John
Deere tractor instead.
Xanthippe,
Socrates’ wife, is only mentioned rarely by sources like Plato or Xenophanes,
and she is usually described as loving and faithful to her husband, but also
occasionally as stubborn and headstrong. I see no contradiction between the
two, as I married a fine woman with much the same qualities. I wouldn’t have it
any other way.
Sadly,
many later accounts describe her as a nagging and jealous shrew, and her very
name is often associated with that unfortunate label.
Yet I
suppose Xanthippe is hardly the point here, is she? I should look rather at
what Socrates did, and not be so shallow as to blame it all on his wife. He was
quite glad to go out of the house, dressed rather improperly, and looking like
a fool. What did his companions say to him? What did Socrates say right back to
them?
I would
consider the question a truly worthy exercise in philosophy, and at one point I
even assigned it as a paper topic to some reluctant college students: “Offer an
account of the conversation between Socrates, wearing an animal skin out on the
town, and his rather embarrassed friends.”
That, I
think, is the sort of thing philosophy should be about. I was met only with
vacant stares, and after some students complained about the unorthodox
assignment, my Chairman told me to never do anything like that ever again.
I
created my own faux Platonic dialogue in my own head, and I remain convinced
that any thoughtful and creative person is able to offer a fine reflection on
what might have been said. Perhaps one day I will write it down, and it will
gather dust, along with all my other attempts at writing.
“What am
I wearing? Is a man what he wears? Is worth to be found on the outside, or on
the inside? If the former, leave me at the bar without a ride, because you are
ashamed. If the latter, be my friend, and care nothing for how I look. . . .
“Oh, you
worry about what other people will think of me? Or are you really worried about
what other people will think of you, because they associate you with me? If you
believe, as we just discussed, that merit is in the man, and not in his
trappings, you will surely care little for such vanities. . . .
“Now
don’t you roll your eyes at me, young man!”
Written in 6/2009
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