"Among the sages of this description, to whose useful labors the world is so much indebted, none held a more deservedly conspicuous rank than Pythagoras […] Quitting the land of his nativity […] his zeal for the acquisition of knowledge led him first to Egypt […] Having at this celebrated fountain of learning exhausted the supply without diminishing his thirst, he sought the further means of slaking it, in the then almost unexplored peninsula of India, whence he returned, bringing back with him the doctrine of Metempsychosis, the prejudices against animal diet, the mysterious notions respecting the powers of numbers, and other visionary and fanciful tenets of the East."
January 1, 1970
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Pythagoras