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+ <head>
+ <title>
+ L. Annaeus Seneca, on Benefits, by Seneca
+ </title>
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+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of L. Annaeus Seneca On Benefits, by Seneca
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: L. Annaeus Seneca On Benefits
+
+Author: Seneca
+
+Editor: Aubrey Stewart
+
+Release Date: December 3, 2009 [EBook #3794]
+Last Updated: February 6, 2013
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK L. ANNAEUS SENECA ON BENEFITS ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Charles Franks, Robert Rowe, David Widger, and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h1>
+ L. ANNAEUS SENECA, <br /><br />ON BENEFITS
+ </h1>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ By Seneca
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ Edited by Aubrey Stewart
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> <a name="link2H_PREF" id="link2H_PREF">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ PREFACE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Seneca, the favourite classic of the early fathers of the church and of
+ the Middle Ages, whom Jerome, Tertullian, and Augustine speak of as
+ "Seneca noster," who was believed to have corresponded with St. Paul, and
+ upon whom [Footnote: On the "De Clementia," an odd subject for the man who
+ burned Servetus alive for differing with him.] Calvin wrote a commentary,
+ seems almost forgotten in modern times. Perhaps some of his popularity may
+ have been due to his being supposed to be the author of those tragedies
+ which the world has long ceased to read, but which delighted a period that
+ preferred Euripides to Aeschylus: while casuists must have found congenial
+ matter in an author whose fantastic cases of conscience are often worthy
+ of Sanchez or Escobar. Yet Seneca's morality is always pure, and from him
+ we gain, albeit at second hand, an insight into the doctrines of the Greek
+ philosophers, Zeno, Epicurus, Chrysippus, &amp;c., whose precepts and
+ system of religious thought had in cultivated Roman society taken the
+ place of the old worship of Jupiter and Quirinus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Since Lodge's edition (fol. 1614), no complete translation of Seneca has
+ been published in England, though Sir Roger L'Estrange wrote paraphrases
+ of several Dialogues, which seem to have been enormously popular, running
+ through more than sixteen editions. I think we may conjecture that
+ Shakespeare had seen Lodge's translation, from several allusions to
+ philosophy, to that impossible conception "the wise man," and especially
+ from a passage in "All's Well that ends Well," which seems to breathe the
+ very spirit of "De Beneficiis."
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "'Tis pity&mdash;
+ That wishing well had not a body in it
+ Which might be felt: that we, the poorer born,
+ Whose baser stars do shut us up in wishes,
+ Might with effects of them follow our friends
+ And show what we alone must think; which never
+ Returns us thanks."
+
+ "All's Well that ends Well," Act i. sc. 1.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Though, if this will not fit the supposed date of that play, he may have
+ taken the idea from "The Woorke of Lucius Annaeus Seneca concerning
+ Benefyting, that is too say, the dooing, receyving, and requyting of good
+ turnes, translated out of Latin by A. Golding. J. Day, London, 1578." And
+ even during the Restoration, Pepys's ideal of virtuous and lettered
+ seclusion is a country house in whose garden he might sit on summer
+ afternoons with his friend, Sir W. Coventry, "it maybe, to read a chapter
+ of Seneca." In sharp contrast to this is Vahlen's preface to the minor
+ Dialogues, which he edited after the death of his friend Koch, who had
+ begun that work, in which he remarks that "he has read much of this
+ writer, in order to perfect his knowledge of Latin, for otherwise he
+ neither admires his artificial subtleties of thought, nor his childish
+ mannerisms of style" (Vahlen, preface, p. v., ed. 1879, Jena).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet by the student of the history of Rome under the Caesars, Seneca is not
+ to be neglected, because, whatever may be thought of the intrinsic merit
+ of his speculations, he represents, more perhaps even than Tacitus, the
+ intellectual characteristics of his age, and the tone of society in Rome&mdash;nor
+ could we well spare the gossiping stories which we find imbedded in his
+ graver dissertations. The following extract from Dean Merivale's "History
+ of the Romans under the Empire" will show the estimate of him which has
+ been formed by that accomplished writer:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "At Rome, we, have no reason, to suppose that Christianity was only the
+ refuge of the afflicted and miserable; rather, if we may lay any stress on
+ the documents above referred to, it was first embraced by persons in a
+ certain grade of comfort and respectability; by persons approaching to
+ what we should call the MIDDLE CLASSES in their condition, their
+ education, and their moral views. Of this class Seneca himself was the
+ idol, the oracle; he was, so to speak, the favourite preacher of the more
+ intelligent and humane disciples of nature and virtue. Now the writings of
+ Seneca show, in their way, a real anxiety among this class to raise the
+ moral tone of mankind around them; a spirit of reform, a zeal for the
+ conversion of souls, which, though it never rose, indeed, under the
+ teaching of the philosophers, to boiling heat, still simmered with genial
+ warmth on the surface of society. Far different as was their social
+ standing-point, far different as were the foundations and the presumed
+ sanctions of their teaching respectively, Seneca and St. Paul were both
+ moral reformers; both, be it said with reverence, were fellow-workers in
+ the cause of humanity, though the Christian could look beyond the
+ proximate aims of morality and prepare men for a final development on
+ which the Stoic could not venture to gaze. Hence there is so much in their
+ principles, so much even in their language, which agrees together, so that
+ the one has been thought, though it must be allowed without adequate
+ reason, to have borrowed directly from the other. [Footnote: It is hardly
+ necessary to refer to the pretended letters between St. Paul and Seneca.
+ Besides the evidence from style, some of the dates they contain are quite
+ sufficient to condemn them as clumsy forgeries. They are mentioned, but
+ with no expression of belief in their genuineness, by Jerome and
+ Augustine. See Jones, "On the Canon," ii. 80.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But the philosopher, be it remembered, discoursed to a large and not
+ inattentive audience, and surely the soil was not all unfruitful on which
+ his seed was scattered when he proclaimed that God dwells not in temples
+ of wood and stone, nor wants the ministrations of human hands;[Footnote:
+ Sen., Ep. 95, and in Lactantius, Inst. vi.] that He has no delight in the
+ blood of victims:[Footnote: Ep. 116: "Colitur Deus non tauris sed pia et
+ recta voluntate."] that He is near to all His creatures:[Footnote: Ep. 41,
+ 73.] that His Spirit resides in men's hearts:[Footnote: Ep. 46: "Sacer
+ intra nos spiritus sedet."] that all men are truly His
+ offspring:[Footnote: "De Prov," i.] that we are members of one body, which
+ is God or Nature;[Footnote: Ep. 93, 95: "Membra sumus magni corporis."]
+ that men must believe in God before they can approach Him:[Footnote: Ep.
+ 95: "Primus Deorum cultus est Deos credere."] that the true service of God
+ is to be like unto Him:[Footnote: Ep. 95: "Satis coluit quisquis imitatus
+ est."] that all men have sinned, and none performed all the works of the
+ law:[Footnote: Sen. de Ira. i. 14; ii. 27: "Quis est iste qui se
+ profitetur omnibus legibus innocentem?"] that God is no respecter of
+ nations, ranks, or conditions, but all, barbarian and Roman, bond and
+ free, are alike under His all-seeing Providence.[Footnote: "De Benef.,"
+ iii. 18: "Virtus omnes admittit, libertinos, servos, reges." These and
+ many other passages are collected by Champagny, ii. 546, after Fabricius
+ and others, and compared with well-known texts of Scripture. The version
+ of the Vulgate shows a great deal of verbal correspondence. M. Troplong
+ remarks, after De Maistre, that Seneca has written a fine book on
+ Providence, for which there was not even a name at Rome in the time of
+ Cicero.&mdash;"L'Influence du Christianisme," &amp;c., i., ch. 4.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "St. Paul enjoined submission and obedience even to the tyranny of Nero,
+ and Seneca fosters no ideas subversive of political subjection. Endurance
+ is the paramount virtue of the Stoic. To forms of government the wise man
+ was wholly indifferent; they were among the external circumstances above
+ which his spirit soared in serene self-contemplation. We trace in Seneca
+ no yearning for a restoration of political freedom, nor does he even point
+ to the senate, after the manner of the patriots of the day, as a
+ legitimate check to the autocracy of the despot. The only mode, in his
+ view, of tempering tyranny is to educate the tyrant himself in virtue. His
+ was the self-denial of the Christians, but without their anticipated
+ compensation. It seems impossible to doubt that in his highest flights of
+ rhetoric&mdash;and no man ever recommended the unattainable with a finer
+ grace&mdash;Seneca must have felt that he was labouring to build up a
+ house without foundations; that his system, as Caius said of his style,
+ was sand without lime. He was surely not unconscious of the inconsistency
+ of his own position, as a public man and a minister, with the theories to
+ which he had wedded himself; and of the impossibility of preserving in it
+ the purity of his character as a philosopher or a man. He was aware that
+ in the existing state of society at Rome, wealth was necessary to men high
+ in station; wealth alone could retain influence, and a poor minister
+ became at once contemptible. The distributor of the Imperial favours must
+ have his banquets, his receptions, his slaves and freedmen; he must
+ possess the means of attracting if not of bribing; he must not seem too
+ virtuous, too austere, among an evil generation; in order to do good at
+ all he must swim with the stream, however polluted it might be. All this
+ inconsistency Seneca must have contemplated without blenching; and there
+ is something touching in the serenity he preserved amidst the conflict
+ that must have perpetually raged between his natural sense and his
+ acquired principles. Both Cicero and Seneca were men of many weaknesses,
+ and we remark them the more because both were pretenders to unusual
+ strength of character; but while Cicero lapsed into political errors,
+ Seneca cannot be absolved of actual crime. Nevertheless, if we may compare
+ the greatest masters of Roman wisdom together, the Stoic will appear, I
+ think, the more earnest of the two, the more anxious to do his duty for
+ its own sake, the more sensible of the claims of mankind upon him for such
+ precepts of virtuous living as he had to give. In an age of unbelief and
+ compromise he taught that Truth was positive and Virtue objective. He
+ conceived, what never entered Cicero's mind, the idea of improving his
+ fellow-creatures; he had, what Cicero had not, a heart for conversion to
+ Christianity."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To this eloquent account of Seneca's position and of the tendency of his
+ writings I have nothing to add. The main particulars of his life, his
+ Spanish extraction (like that of Lacan and Martial), his father's
+ treatises on Rhetoric, his mother Helvia, his brothers, his wealth, his
+ exile in Corsica, his outrageous flattery of Claudius and his satiric poem
+ on his death&mdash;"The Vision of Judgment," Merivale calls it, after Lord
+ Byron&mdash;his position as Nero's tutor, and his death, worthy at once of
+ a Roman and a Stoic, by the orders of that tyrant, may be read of in "The
+ History of the Romans under the Empire," or in the article "Seneca" in the
+ "Dictionary of Classical Biography," and need not be reproduced here: but
+ I cannot resist pointing out how entirely Grote's view of the "Sophists"
+ as a sort of established clergy, and Seneca's account of the various sects
+ of philosophers as representing the religious thought of the time, is
+ illustrated by his anecdote of Julia Augusta, the mother of Tiberius,
+ better known to English readers as Livia the wife of Augustus, who in her
+ first agony of grief at the loss of her first husband applied to his Greek
+ philosopher, Areus, as to a kind of domestic chaplain, for spiritual
+ consolation. ("Ad Marciam de Consolatione," ch. iv.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I take this opportunity of expressing my gratitude to the Rev. J. E. B.
+ Mayor, Professor of Latin in the University of Cambridge, for his kindness
+ in finding time among his many and important literary labours for reading
+ and correcting the proofs of this work.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The text which I have followed for De Beneficiis is that of Gertz, Berlin
+ (1876.).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ AUBREY STEWART
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ London, March, 1887.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ Contents
+ </h2>
+ <table summary="" style="margin-right: auto; margin-left: auto">
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_PREF"> PREFACE </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_TOC"> DETAILED CONTENTS </a>
+ </p>
+ <br />
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0002"> <b>L. A. SENECA, ON BENEFITS</b> </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0003"> BOOK I. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0004"> BOOK II. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0005"> BOOK III. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0006"> BOOK IV. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0007"> BOOK V. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0008"> BOOK VI. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0009"> BOOK VII. </a>
+ </p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> <a name="link2H_TOC" id="link2H_TOC">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ DETAILED CONTENTS
+ </h2>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>
+ BOOK I. The prevalence of ingratitude&mdash;How a benefit ought to be
+ <br /> bestowed&mdash;The three Graces&mdash;Benefits are the chief bond
+ of human <br /> society&mdash;What we owe in return for a benefit
+ received&mdash;A benefit <br /> consists not of a thing but of the wish
+ to do good&mdash;Socrates and <br /> Aeschines&mdash;What kinds of
+ benefits should be bestowed, and in what <br /> manner&mdash;Alexander
+ and the franchise of Corinth. <br /> BOOK II. Many men give through
+ weakness of character&mdash;We ought to give <br /> before our friends
+ ask&mdash;Many benefits are spoiled by the manner of <br /> the giver&mdash;Marius
+ Nepos and Tiberius&mdash;Some benefits should be given <br /> secretly&mdash;We
+ must not give what would harm the receiver&mdash;Alexander's <br /> gift
+ of a city&mdash;Interchange of benefits like a game of ball&mdash;From
+ <br /> whom ought one to receive a benefit?&mdash;Examples&mdash;How to
+ receive <br /> a benefit&mdash;Ingratitude caused by self-love, by greed,
+ or by <br /> jealousy&mdash;Gratitude and repayment not the same thing&mdash;Phidias
+ and the <br /> statue. <br /> BOOK III. Ingratitude&mdash;Is it worse to
+ be ungrateful for kindness or <br /> not even to remember it?&mdash;Should
+ ingratitude be punished by law?&mdash;Can <br /> a slave bestow a
+ benefit?&mdash;Can a son bestow a benefit upon his <br /> father?&mdash;Examples
+ <br /> BOOK IV. Whether the bestowal of benefits and the return of
+ gratitude <br /> for them are desirable objects in themselves? Does God
+ bestow <br /> benefits?&mdash;How to choose the man to be benefited&mdash;We
+ ought not to look <br /> for any return&mdash;True gratitude&mdash;Of
+ keeping one's promise&mdash;Philip and the <br /> soldier&mdash;Zeno
+ <br /> BOOK V. Of being worsted in a contest of benefits&mdash;Socrates
+ and <br /> Archelaus&mdash;Whether a man can be grateful to himself, or
+ can bestow <br /> a benefit upon himself&mdash;Examples of ingratitude&mdash;Dialogue
+ on <br /> ingratitude&mdash;Whether one should remind one's friends of
+ what one has <br /> done for them&mdash;Caesar and the soldier&mdash;Tiberius.
+ <br /> BOOK VI. Whether a benefit can be taken from one by force&mdash;Benefits
+ <br /> depend upon thought&mdash;We are not grateful for the advantages
+ which we <br /> receive from inanimate Nature, or from dumb animals&mdash;In
+ order to lay me <br /> under an obligation you must benefit me
+ intentionally&mdash;Cleanthes's story <br /> of the two slaves&mdash;Of
+ benefits given in a mercenary spirit&mdash;Physicians <br /> and teachers
+ bestow enormous benefits, yet are sufficiently paid by a <br /> moderate
+ fee&mdash;Plato and the ferryman&mdash;Are we under an obligation to the
+ <br /> sun and moon?&mdash;Ought we to wish that evil may befall our
+ benefactors, in <br /> order that we may show our gratitude by helping
+ them? <br /> BOOK VII. The cynic Demetrius&mdash;his rules of conduct&mdash;Of
+ the truly <br /> wise man&mdash;Whether one who has done everything in
+ his power to return <br /> a benefit has returned it&mdash;Ought one to
+ return a benefit to a bad <br /> man?&mdash;The Pythagorean, and the
+ shoemaker&mdash;How one ought to bear with the <br /> ungrateful. <br />
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> <a name="link2H_4_0002" id="link2H_4_0002">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ L. A. SENECA
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ ON BENEFITS.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ <br /> DEDICATED TO AEBUTIUS LIBERALIS. <a name="link2H_4_0003"
+ id="link2H_4_0003">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ BOOK I.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ I.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Among the numerous faults of those who pass their lives recklessly and
+ without due reflexion, my good friend Liberalis, I should say that there
+ is hardly any one so hurtful to society as this, that we neither know how
+ to bestow or how to receive a benefit. It follows from this that benefits
+ are badly invested, and become bad debts: in these cases it is too late to
+ complain of their not being returned, for they were thrown away when we
+ bestowed them. Nor need we wonder that while the greatest vices are
+ common, none is more common than ingratitude: for this I see is brought
+ about by various causes. The first of these is, that we do not choose
+ worthy persons upon whom to bestow our bounty, but although when we are
+ about to lend money we first make a careful enquiry into the means and
+ habits of life of our debtor, and avoid sowing seed in a worn-out or
+ unfruitful soil, yet without any discrimination we scatter our benefits at
+ random rather than bestow them. It is hard to say whether it is more
+ dishonourable for the receiver to disown a benefit, or for the giver to
+ demand a return of it: for a benefit is a loan, the repayment of which
+ depends merely upon the good feeling of the debtor. To misuse a benefit
+ like a spendthrift is most shameful, because we do not need our wealth but
+ only our intention to set us free from the obligation of it; for a benefit
+ is repaid by being acknowledged. Yet while they are to blame who do not
+ even show so much gratitude as to acknowledge their debt, we ourselves are
+ to blame no less. We find many men ungrateful, yet we make more men so,
+ because at one time we harshly and reproachfully demand some return for
+ our bounty, at another we are fickle and regret what we have given, at
+ another we are peevish and apt to find fault with trifles. By acting thus
+ we destroy all sense of gratitude, not only after we have given anything,
+ but while we are in the act of giving it. Who has ever thought it enough
+ to be asked for anything in an off-hand manner, or to be asked only once?
+ Who, when he suspected that he was going to be asked for any thing, has
+ not frowned, turned away his face, pretended to be busy, or purposely
+ talked without ceasing, in order not to give his suitor a chance of
+ preferring his request, and avoided by various tricks having to help his
+ friend in his pressing need? and when driven into a corner, has not either
+ put the matter off, that is, given a cowardly refusal, or promised his
+ help ungraciously, with a wry face, and with unkind words, of which he
+ seemed to grudge the utterance. Yet no one is glad to owe what he has not
+ so much received from his benefactor, as wrung out of him. Who can be
+ grateful for what has been disdainfully flung to him, or angrily cast at
+ him, or been given him out of weariness, to avoid further trouble? No one
+ need expect any return from those whom he has tired out with delays, or
+ sickened with expectation. A benefit is received in the same temper in
+ which it is given, and ought not, therefore, to be given carelessly, for a
+ man thanks himself for that which he receives without the knowledge of the
+ giver. Neither ought we to give after long delay, because in all good
+ offices the will of the giver counts for much, and he who gives tardily
+ must long have been unwilling to give at all. Nor, assuredly, ought we to
+ give in offensive manner, because human nature is so constituted that
+ insults sink deeper than kindnesses; the remembrance of the latter soon
+ passes away, while that of the former is treasured in the memory; so what
+ can a man expect who insults while he obliges? All the gratitude which he
+ deserves is to be forgiven for helping us. On the other hand, the number
+ of the ungrateful ought not to deter us from earning men's gratitude; for,
+ in the first place, their number is increased by our own acts. Secondly,
+ the sacrilege and indifference to religion of some men does not prevent
+ even the immortal gods from continuing to shower their benefits upon us:
+ for they act according to their divine nature and help all alike, among
+ them even those who so ill appreciate their bounty. Let us take them for
+ our guides as far as the weakness of our mortal nature permits; let us
+ bestow benefits, not put them out at interest. The man who while he gives
+ thinks of what he will get in return, deserves to be deceived. But what if
+ the benefit turns out ill? Why, our wives and our children often
+ disappoint our hopes, yet we marry&mdash;and bring up children, and are so
+ obstinate in the face of experience that we fight after we have been
+ beaten, and put to sea after we have been shipwrecked. How much more
+ constancy ought we to show in bestowing benefits! If a man does not bestow
+ benefits because he has not received any, he must have bestowed them in
+ order to receive them in return, and he justifies ingratitude, whose
+ disgrace lies in not returning benefits when able to do so. How many are
+ there who are unworthy of the light of day? and nevertheless the sun
+ rises. How many complain because they have been born? yet Nature is ever
+ renewing our race, and even suffers men to live who wish that they had
+ never lived. It is the property of a great and good mind to covet, not the
+ fruit of good deeds, but good deeds themselves, and to seek for a good man
+ even after having met with bad men. If there were no rogues, what glory
+ would there be in doing good to many? As it is, virtue consists in
+ bestowing benefits for which we are not certain of meeting with any
+ return, but whose fruit is at once enjoyed by noble minds. So little
+ influence ought this to have in restraining us from doing good actions,
+ that even though I were denied the hope of meeting with a grateful man,
+ yet the fear of not having my benefits returned would not prevent my
+ bestowing them, because he who does not give, forestalls the vice of him
+ who is ungrateful. I will explain what I mean. He who does not repay a
+ benefit, sins more, but he who does not bestow one, sins earlier.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "If thou at random dost thy bounties waste,
+ Much must be lost, for one that's rightly placed."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ II. In the former verse you may blame two things, for one should not cast
+ them at random, and it is not right to waste anything, much less benefits;
+ for unless they be given with judgement, they cease to be benefits, and,
+ may be called by any other name you please. The meaning of the latter
+ verse is admirable, that one benefit rightly bestowed makes amends for the
+ loss of many that have been lost. See, I pray you, whether it be not truer
+ and more worthy of the glory of the giver, that we should encourage him to
+ give, even though none of his gifts should be worthily placed. "Much must
+ be lost." Nothing is lost because he who loses had counted the cost
+ before. The book-keeping of benefits is simple: it is all expenditure; if
+ any one returns it, that is clear gain; if he does not return it, it is
+ not lost, I gave it for the sake of giving. No one writes down his gifts
+ in a ledger, or like a grasping creditor demands repayment to the day and
+ hour. A good man never thinks of such matters, unless reminded of them by
+ some one returning his gifts; otherwise they become like debts owing to
+ him. It is a base usury to regard a benefit as an investment. Whatever may
+ have been the result of your former benefits, persevere in bestowing
+ others upon other men; they will be all the better placed in the hands of
+ the ungrateful, whom shame, or a favourable opportunity, or imitation of
+ others may some day cause to be grateful. Do not grow weary, perform your
+ duty, and act as becomes a good man. Help one man with money, another with
+ credit, another with your favour; this man with good advice, that one with
+ sound maxims. Even wild beasts feel kindness, nor is there any animal so
+ savage that good treatment will not tame it and win love from it. The
+ mouths of lions are handled by their keepers with impunity; to obtain
+ their food fierce elephants become as docile as slaves: so that constant
+ unceasing kindness wins the hearts even of creatures who, by their nature,
+ cannot comprehend or weigh the value of a benefit. Is a man ungrateful for
+ one benefit? perhaps he will not be so after receiving a second. Has he
+ forgotten two kindnesses? perhaps by a third he may be brought to remember
+ the former ones also.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ III. He who is quick to believe that he has thrown away his benefits, does
+ really throw them away; but he who presses on and adds new benefits to his
+ former ones, forces out gratitude even from a hard and forgetful breast.
+ In the face of many kindnesses, your friend will not dare to raise his
+ eyes; let him see you whithersoever he turns himself to escape from his
+ remembrance of you; encircle him with your benefits. As for the power and
+ property of these, I will explain it to you if first you will allow me to
+ glance at a matter which does not belong to our subject, as to why the
+ Graces are three in number, why they are sisters, why hand in hand, and
+ why they are smiling and young, with a loose and transparent dress. Some
+ writers think that there is one who bestows a benefit, one who receives
+ it, and a third who returns it; others say that they represent the three
+ sorts of benefactors, those who bestow, those who repay, and those who
+ both receive and repay them. But take whichever you please to be true;
+ what will this knowledge profit us? What is the meaning of this dance of
+ sisters in a circle, hand in hand? It means that the course of a benefit
+ is from hand to hand, back to the giver; that the beauty of the whole
+ chain is lost if a single link fails, and that it is fairest when it
+ proceeds in unbroken regular order. In the dance there is one, esteemed
+ beyond the others, who represents the givers of benefits. Their faces are
+ cheerful, as those of men who give or receive benefits are wont to be.
+ They are young, because the memory of benefits ought not to grow old. They
+ are virgins, because benefits are pure and untainted, and held holy by
+ all; in benefits there should be no strict or binding conditions,
+ therefore the Graces wear loose flowing tunics, which are transparent,
+ because benefits love to be seen. People who are not under the influence
+ of Greek literature may say that all this is a matter of course; but there
+ can be no one who would think that the names which Hesiod has given them
+ bear upon our subject. He named the eldest Aglaia, the middle one
+ Euphrosyne, the third Thalia. Every one, according to his own ideas,
+ twists the meaning of these names, trying to reconcile them with some
+ system, though Hesiod merely gave his maidens their names from his own
+ fancy. So Homer altered the name of one of them, naming her Pasithea, and
+ betrothed her to a husband, in order that you may know that they are not
+ vestal virgins. [Footnote: i.e. not vowed to chastity.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I could find another poet, in whose writings they are girded, and wear
+ thick or embroidered Phrygian robes. Mercury stands with them for the same
+ reason, not because argument or eloquence commends benefits, but because
+ the painter chose to do so. Also Chrysippus, that man of piercing
+ intellect who saw to the very bottom of truth, who speaks only to the
+ point, and makes use of no more words than are necessary to express his
+ meaning, fills his whole treatise with these puerilities, insomuch that he
+ says but very little about the duties of giving, receiving, and returning
+ a benefit, and has not so much inserted fables among these subjects, as he
+ has inserted these subjects among a mass of fables. For, not to mention
+ what Hecaton borrows from him, Chrysippus tells us that the three Graces
+ are the daughters of Jupiter and Eurynome, that they are younger than the
+ Hours, and rather more beautiful, and that on that account they are
+ assigned as companions to Venus. He also thinks that the name of their
+ mother bears upon the subject, and that she is named Eurynome because to
+ distribute benefits requires a wide inheritance; as if the mother usually
+ received her name after her daughters, or as if the names given by poets
+ were true. In truth, just as with a 'nomenclator' audacity supplies the
+ place of memory, and he invents a name for every one whose name he cannot
+ recollect, so the poets think that it is of no importance to speak the
+ truth, but are either forced by the exigencies of metre, or attracted by
+ sweetness of sound, into calling every one by whatever name runs neatly
+ into verse. Nor do they suffer for it if they introduce another name into
+ the list, for the next poet makes them bear what name he pleases. That you
+ may know that this is so, for instance Thalia, our present subject of
+ discourse, is one of the Graces in Hesiod's poems, while in those of Homer
+ she is one of the Muses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ IV. But lest I should do the very thing which I am blaming, I will pass
+ over all these matters, which are so far from the subject that they are
+ not even connected with it. Only do you protect me, if any one attacks me
+ for putting down Chrysippus, who, by Hercules, was a great man, but yet a
+ Greek, whose intellect, too sharply pointed, is often bent and turned back
+ upon itself; even when it seems to be in earnest it only pricks, but does
+ not pierce. Here, however, what occasion is there for subtlety? We are to
+ speak of benefits, and to define a matter which is the chief bond of human
+ society; we are to lay down a rule of life, such that neither careless
+ openhandedness may commend itself to us under the guise of goodness of
+ heart, and yet that our circumspection, while it moderates, may not quench
+ our generosity, a quality in which we ought neither to exceed nor to fall
+ short. Men must be taught to be willing to give, willing to receive,
+ willing to return; and to place before themselves the high aim, not merely
+ of equalling, but even of surpassing those to whom they are indebted, both
+ in good offices and in good feeling; because the man whose duty it is to
+ repay, can never do so unless he out-does his benefactor; [Footnote: That
+ is, he never comes up to his benefactor unless he leaves him behind: he
+ can only make a dead heat of it by getting a start.] the one class must be
+ taught to look for no return, the other to feel deeper gratitude. In this
+ noblest of contests to outdo benefits by benefits, Chrysippus encourages
+ us by bidding us beware lest, as the Graces are the daughters of Jupiter,
+ to act ungratefully may not be a sin against them, and may not wrong those
+ beauteous maidens. Do thou teach me how I may bestow more good things, and
+ be more grateful to those who have earned my gratitude, and how the minds
+ of both parties may vie with one another, the giver in forgetting, the
+ receiver in remembering his debt. As for those other follies, let them be
+ left to the poets, whose purpose is merely to charm the ear and to weave a
+ pleasing story; but let those who wish to purify men's minds, to retain
+ honour in their dealings, and to imprint on their minds gratitude for
+ kindnesses, let them speak in sober earnest and act with all their
+ strength; unless you imagine, perchance, that by such flippant and
+ mythical talk, and such old wives' reasoning, it is possible for us to
+ prevent that most ruinous consummation, the repudiation of benefits.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ V. However, while I pass over what is futile and irrelevant I must point
+ out that the first thing which we have to learn is, what we owe in return
+ for a benefit received. One man says that he owes the money which he has
+ received, another that he owes a consulship, a priesthood, a province, and
+ so on. These, however, are but the outward signs of kindnesses, not the
+ kindnesses themselves. A benefit is not to be felt and handled, it is a
+ thing which exists only in the mind. There is a great difference between
+ the subject-matter of a benefit, and the benefit itself. Wherefore neither
+ gold, nor silver, nor any of those things which are most highly esteemed,
+ are benefits, but the benefit lies in the goodwill of him who gives them.
+ The ignorant take notice only of that which comes before their eyes, and
+ which can be owned and passed from hand to hand, while they disregard that
+ which gives these things their value. The things which we hold in our
+ hands, which we see with our eyes, and which our avarice hugs, are
+ transitory, they may be taken from us by ill luck or by violence; but a
+ kindness lasts even after the loss of that by means of which it was
+ bestowed; for it is a good deed, which no violence can undo. For instance,
+ suppose that I ransomed a friend from pirates, but another pirate has
+ caught him and thrown him into prison. The pirate has not robbed him of my
+ benefit, but has only robbed him of the enjoyment of it. Or suppose that I
+ have saved a man's children from a shipwreck or a fire, and that
+ afterwards disease or accident has carried them off; even when they are no
+ more, the kindness which was done by means of them remains. All those
+ things, therefore, which improperly assume the name of benefits, are means
+ by which kindly feeling manifests itself. In other cases also, we find a
+ distinction between the visible symbol and the matter itself, as when a
+ general bestows collars of gold, or civic or mural crowns upon any one.
+ What value has the crown in itself? or the purple-bordered robe? or the
+ fasces? or the judgment-seat and car of triumph? None of these things is
+ in itself an honour, but is an emblem of honour. In like manner, that
+ which is seen is not a benefit&mdash;it is but the trace and mark of a
+ benefit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ VI. What, then, is a benefit? It is the art of doing a kindness which both
+ bestows pleasure and gains it by bestowing it, and which does its office
+ by natural and spontaneous impulse. It is not, therefore, the thing which
+ is done or given, but the spirit in which it is done or given, that must
+ be considered, because a benefit exists, not in that which is done or
+ given, but in the mind of the doer or giver. How great the distinction
+ between them is, you may perceive from this, that while a benefit is
+ necessarily good, yet that which is done or given is neither good nor bad.
+ The spirit in which they are given can exalt small things, can glorify
+ mean ones, and can discredit great and precious ones; the objects
+ themselves which are sought after have a neutral nature, neither good nor
+ bad; all depends upon the direction given them by the guiding spirit from
+ which things receive their shape. That which is paid or handed over is not
+ the benefit itself, just as the honour which we pay to the gods lies not
+ in the victims themselves, although they be fat and glittering with gold,
+ [Footnote: Alluding to the practice of gilding the horns of the victims.]
+ but in the pure and holy feelings of the worshippers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus good men are religious, though their offering be meal and their
+ vessels of earthenware; whilst bad men will not escape from their impiety,
+ though they pour the blood of many victims upon the altars.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ VII. If benefits consisted of things, and not of the wish to benefit, then
+ the more things we received the greater the benefit would be. But this is
+ not true, for sometimes we feel more gratitude to one who gives us trifles
+ nobly, who, like Virgil's poor old soldier, "holds himself as rich as
+ kings," if he has given us ever so little with a good will a man who
+ forgets his own need when he sees mine, who has not only a wish but a
+ longing to help, who thinks that he receives a benefit when he bestows
+ one, who gives as though he would receive no return, receives a repayment
+ as though he had originally given nothing, and who watches for and seizes
+ an opportunity of being useful. On the other hand, as I said before, those
+ gifts which are hardly wrung from the giver, or which drop unheeded from
+ his hands, claim no gratitude from us, however great they may appear and
+ may be. We prize much more what comes from a willing hand, than what comes
+ from a full one. This man has given me but little, yet more he could not
+ afford, while what that one has given is much indeed, but he hesitated, he
+ put it off, he grumbled when he gave it, he gave it haughtily, or he
+ proclaimed it aloud, and did it to please others, not to please the person
+ to whom he gave it; he offered it to his own pride, not to me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ VIII. As the pupils of Socrates, each in proportion to his means, gave him
+ large presents, Aeschines, a poor pupil, said, "I can find nothing to give
+ you which is worthy of you; I feel my poverty in this respect alone.
+ Therefore I present you with the only thing I possess, myself. I pray that
+ you may take this my present, such as it is, in good part, and may
+ remember that the others, although they gave you much, yet left for
+ themselves more than they gave." Socrates answered, "Surely you have
+ bestowed a great present upon me, unless perchance you set a small value
+ upon yourself. I will accordingly take pains to restore you to yourself a
+ better man than when I received you." By this present Aeschines outdid
+ Alcibiades, whose mind was as great as his Wealth, and all the splendour
+ of the most wealthy youths of Athens.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ IX. You see how the mind even in the straitest circumstances finds the
+ means of generosity. Aeschines seems to me to have said, "Fortune, it is
+ in vain that you have made me poor; in spite of this I will find a worthy
+ present for this man. Since I can give him nothing of yours, I will give
+ him something of my own." Nor need you suppose that he held himself cheap;
+ he made himself his own price. By a stroke of genius this youth discovered
+ a means of presenting Socrates to himself. We must not consider how great
+ presents are, but in what spirit they are given.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A rich man is well spoken of if he is clever enough to render himself easy
+ of access to men of immoderate ambition, and although he intends to do
+ nothing to help them, yet encourages their unconscionable hopes; but he is
+ thought the worse of if he be sharp of tongue, sour in appearance, and
+ displays his wealth in an invidious fashion. For men respect and yet
+ loathe a fortunate man, and hate him for doing what, if they had the
+ chance, they would do themselves.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * * * * * * *
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Men nowadays no longer secretly, but openly outrage the wives of others,
+ and allow to others access to their own wives. A match is thought
+ countrified, uncivilized, in bad style, and to be protested against by all
+ matrons, if the husband should forbid his wife to appear in public in a
+ litter, and to be carried about exposed to the gaze of all observers. If a
+ man has not made himself notorious by a LIAISON with some mistress, if he
+ does not pay an annuity to some one else's wife, married women speak of
+ him as a poor-spirited creature, a man given to low vice, a lover of
+ servant girls. Soon adultery becomes the most respectable form of
+ marriage, and widowhood and celibacy are commonly practised. No one takes
+ a wife unless he takes her away from some one else. Now men vie with one
+ another in wasting what they have stolen, and in collecting together what
+ they have wasted with the keenest avarice; they become utterly reckless,
+ scorn poverty in others, fear personal injury more than anything else,
+ break the peace by their riots, and by violence and terror domineer over
+ those who are weaker than themselves. No wonder that they plunder
+ provinces and offer the seat of judgment for sale, knocking it down after
+ an auction to the highest bidder, since it is the law of nations that you
+ may sell what you have bought.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ X. However, my enthusiasm has carried me further than I intended, the
+ subject being an inviting one. Let me, then, end by pointing out that the
+ disgrace of these crimes does not belong especially to our own time. Our
+ ancestors before us have lamented, and our children after us will lament,
+ as we do, the ruin, of morality, the prevalence of vice, and the gradual
+ deterioration of mankind; yet these things are really stationary, only
+ moved slightly to and fro like the waves which at one time a rising tide
+ washes further over the land, and at another an ebbing one restrains
+ within a lower water mark. At one time the chief vice will be adultery,
+ and licentiousness will exceed all bounds; at another time a rage for
+ feasting will be in vogue, and men will waste their inheritance in the
+ most shameful of all ways, by the kitchen; at another, excessive care for
+ the body, and a devotion to personal beauty which implies ugliness of
+ mind; at another time, injudiciously granted liberty will show itself in
+ wanton recklessness and defiance of authority; sometimes there will be a
+ reign of cruelty both in public and private, and the madness of the civil
+ wars will come upon us, which destroy all that is holy and inviolable.
+ Sometimes even drunkenness will be held in honour, and it will be a virtue
+ to swallow most wine. Vices do not lie in wait for us in one place alone,
+ but hover around us in changeful forms, sometimes even at variance one
+ with another, so that in turn they win and lose the field; yet we shall
+ always be obliged to pronounce the same verdict upon ourselves, that we
+ are and always were evil, and, I unwillingly add, that we always shall be.
+ There always will be homicides, tyrants, thieves, adulterers, ravishers,
+ sacrilegious, traitors: worse than all these is the ungrateful man, except
+ we consider that all these crimes flow from ingratitude, without which
+ hardly any great wickedness has ever grown to full stature. Be sure that
+ you guard against this as the greatest of crimes in yourself, but pardon
+ it as the least of crimes in another. For all the injury which you suffer
+ is this: you have lost the subject-matter of a benefit, not the benefit
+ itself, for you possess unimpaired the best part of it, in that you have
+ given it. Though we ought to be careful to bestow our benefits by
+ preference upon those who are likely to show us gratitude for them, yet we
+ must sometimes do what we have little hope will turn out well, and bestow
+ benefits upon those who we not only think will prove ungrateful, but who
+ we know have been so. For instance, if I should be able to save a man's
+ children from a great danger with no risk to myself, I should not hesitate
+ to do so. If a man be worthy I would defend him even with my blood, and
+ would share his perils; if he be unworthy, and yet by merely crying for
+ help I can rescue him from robbers, I would without reluctance raise the
+ shout which would save a fellow-creature.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XI. The next point to be defined is, what kind of benefits are to be
+ given, and in what manner. First let us give what is necessary, next what
+ is useful, and then what is pleasant, provided that they be lasting. We
+ must begin with what is necessary, for those things which support life
+ affect the mind very differently from, those which adorn and improve it. A
+ man may be nice, and hard to please, in things which he can easily do
+ without, of which he can say, "Take them back; I do not want them, I am
+ satisfied with what I have." Sometimes, we wish not only to, return what
+ we have received, but even to throw it away. Of necessary things, the
+ first class consists of things without which we cannot live; the second,
+ of things without which we ought not to live; and the third, of things
+ without which we should not care to live. The first class are, to be saved
+ from the hands of the enemy, from the anger of tyrants, from proscription,
+ and the various other perils which beset human life. By averting any one
+ of these, we shall earn gratitude proportionate to the greatness of the
+ danger, for when men think of the greatness of the misery from which they
+ have been saved, the terror which they have gone through enhances the
+ value of our services. Yet we ought not to delay rescuing any one longer
+ than we are obliged, solely in order to make his fears add weight to our
+ services. Next come those things without which we can indeed live, but in
+ such a manner that it would be better to die, such as liberty, chastity,
+ or a good conscience. After these are what we have come to hold dear by
+ connexion and relationship and long use and custom, such as our wives and
+ children, our household gods, and so on, to which the mind so firmly
+ attaches itself that separation from them seems worse than death.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After these come useful things, which form a very wide and varied class;
+ in which will be money, not in excess, but enough for living in a moderate
+ style; public office, and, for the ambitious, due advancement to higher
+ posts; for nothing can be more useful to a man than to be placed in a
+ position in which he can benefit himself. All benefits beyond these are
+ superfluous, and are likely to spoil those who receive them. In giving
+ these we must be careful to make them acceptable by giving them at the
+ appropriate time, or by giving things which are not common, but such as
+ few people possess, or at any rate few possess in our times; or again, by
+ giving things in such a manner, that though not naturally valuable, they
+ become so by the time and place at which they are given. We must reflect
+ what present will produce the most pleasure, what will most frequently
+ come under the notice of the possessor of it, so that whenever he is with
+ it he may be with us also; and in all cases we must be careful not to send
+ useless presents, such as hunting weapons to a woman or old man, or books
+ to a rustic, or nets to catch wild animals to a quiet literary man. On the
+ other hand, we ought to be careful, while we wish to send what will
+ please, that we do not send what will insultingly remind our friends of
+ their failings, as, for example, if we send wine to a hard drinker or
+ drugs to an invalid, for a present which contains an allusion to the
+ shortcomings of the receiver, becomes an outrage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XII. If we have a free choice as to what to give, we should above all
+ choose lasting presents, in order that our gift may endure as long as
+ possible; for few are so grateful as to think of what they have received,
+ even when they do not see it. Even the ungrateful remember us by our
+ gifts, when they are always in their sight and do not allow themselves to
+ be forgotten, but constantly obtrude and stamp upon the mind the memory of
+ the giver. As we never ought to remind men of what we have given them, we
+ ought all the more to choose presents that will be permanent; for the
+ things themselves will prevent the remembrance of the giver from fading
+ away. I would more willingly give a present of plate than of coined money,
+ and would more willingly give statues than clothes or other things which
+ are soon worn out. Few remain grateful after the present is gone: many
+ more remember their presents only while they make use of them. If
+ possible, I should like my present not to be consumed; let it remain in
+ existence, let it stick to my friend and share his life. No one is so
+ foolish as to need to be told not to send gladiators or wild beasts to one
+ who has just given a public show, or not to send summer clothing in winter
+ time, or winter clothing in summer. Common sense must guide our benefits;
+ we must consider the time and the place, and the character of the
+ receiver, which are the weights in the scale, which cause our gifts to be
+ well or ill received. How far more acceptable a present is, if we give a
+ man what he has not, than if we give him what he has plenty of! if we give
+ him what he has long been searching for in vain, rather than what he sees
+ everywhere! Let us make presents of things which are rare and scarce
+ rather than costly, things which even a rich man will be glad of, just as
+ common fruits, such as we tire of after a few days, please us if they have
+ ripened before the usual season. People will also esteem things which no
+ one else has given to them, or which we have given to no one else.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XIII. When the conquest of the East had flattered Alexander of Macedon
+ into believing himself to be more than man, the people of Corinth sent an
+ embassy to congratulate him, and presented him with the franchise of their
+ city. When Alexander smiled at this form of courtesy, one of the
+ ambassadors said, "We have never enrolled any stranger among our citizens
+ except Hercules and yourself." Alexander willingly accepted the proffered
+ honour, invited the ambassadors to his table, and showed them other
+ courtesies. He did not think of who offered the citizenship, but to whom
+ they had granted it; and being altogether the slave of glory, though he
+ knew neither its true nature or its limits, had followed in the footsteps
+ of Hercules and Bacchus, and had not even stayed his march where they
+ ceased; so that he glanced aside from the givers of this honour to him
+ with whom he shared it, and fancied that the heaven to which his vanity
+ aspired was indeed opening before him when he was made equal to Hercules.
+ In what indeed did that frantic youth, whose only merit was his lucky
+ audacity, resemble Hercules? Hercules conquered nothing for himself; he
+ travelled throughout the world, not coveting for himself but liberating
+ the countries which he conquered, an enemy to bad men, a defender of the
+ good, a peacemaker both by sea and land; whereas the other was from his
+ boyhood a brigand and desolator of nations, a pest to his friends and
+ enemies alike, whose greatest joy was to be the terror of all mankind,
+ forgetting that men fear not only the fiercest but also the most cowardly
+ animals, because of their evil and venomous nature.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XIV. Let us now return to our subject. He who bestows a benefit without
+ discrimination, gives what pleases no one; no one considers himself to be
+ under any obligation to the landlord of a tavern, or to be the guest of
+ any one with whom he dines in such company as to be able to say, "What
+ civility has he shown to me? no more than he has shown to that man, whom
+ he scarcely knows, or to that other, who is both his personal enemy and a
+ man of infamous character. Do you suppose that he wished to do me any
+ honour? not so, he merely wished to indulge his own vice of profusion." If
+ you wish men to be grateful for anything, give it but seldom; no one can
+ bear to receive what you give to all the world. Yet let no one gather from
+ this that I wish to impose any bonds upon generosity; let her go to what
+ lengths she will, so that she go a steady course, not at random. It is
+ possible to bestow gifts in such a manner that each of those who receive
+ them, although he shares them with many others, may yet feel himself to be
+ distinguished from the common herd. Let each man have some peculiarity
+ about his gift which may make him consider himself more highly favoured
+ than the rest. He may say, "I received the same present that he did, but I
+ never asked for it." "I received the same present, but mine was given me
+ after a few days, whereas he had earned it by long service." "Others have
+ the same present, but it was not given to them with the same courtesy and
+ gracious words with which it was given to me." "That man got it because he
+ asked for it; I did not ask." "That man received it as well as I, but then
+ he could easily return it; one has great expectations from a rich man, old
+ and childless, as he is; whereas in giving the same present to me he
+ really gave more, because he gave it without the hope of receiving any
+ return for it." Just as a courtesan divides her favours among many men, so
+ that no one of her friends is without some proof of her affection, so let
+ him who wishes his benefits to be prized consider how he may at the same
+ time gratify many men, and nevertheless give each one of them some
+ especial mark of favour to distinguish him from the rest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XV. I am no advocate of slackness in giving benefits: the more and the
+ greater they are, the more praise they will bring to the giver. Yet let
+ them be given with discretion; for what is given carelessly and recklessly
+ can please no one. Whoever, therefore, supposes that in giving this advice
+ I wish to restrict benevolence and to confine it to narrower limits,
+ entirely mistakes the object of my warning. What virtue do we admire more
+ than benevolence? Which do we encourage more? Who ought to applaud it more
+ than we Stoics, who preach the brotherhood of the human race? What then is
+ it? Since no impulse of the human mind can be approved of, even though it
+ springs from a right feeling, unless it be made into a virtue by
+ discretion, I forbid generosity to degenerate into extravagance. It is,
+ indeed, pleasant to receive a benefit with open arms, when reason bestows
+ it upon the worthy, not when it is flung hither or thither thoughtlessly
+ and at random; this alone we care to display and claim as our own. Can you
+ call anything a benefit, if you feel ashamed to mention the person who
+ gave it you? How far more grateful is a benefit, how far more deeply does
+ it impress itself upon the mind, never to be forgotten, when we rejoice to
+ think not so much of what it is, as from whom we have received it! Crispus
+ Passienus was wont to say that some men's advice was to be preferred to
+ their presents, some men's presents to their advice; and he added as an
+ example, "I would rather have received advice from Augustus than a
+ present; I would rather receive a present from Claudius than advice." I,
+ however, think that one ought not to wish for a benefit from any man whose
+ judgement is worthless. What then? Ought we not to receive what Claudius
+ gives? We ought; but we ought to regard it as obtained from fortune, which
+ may at any moment turn against us. Why do we separate this which naturally
+ is connected? That is not a benefit, to which the best part of a benefit,
+ that it be bestowed with judgment, is wanting: a really great sum of
+ money, if it be given neither with discernment nor with good will, is no
+ more a benefit than if it remained hoarded. There are, however, many
+ things which we ought not to reject, yet for which we cannot feel
+ indebted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0004" id="link2H_4_0004">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ BOOK II.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ I.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Let us consider, most excellent Liberalis, what still remains of the
+ earlier part of the subject; in what way a benefit should be bestowed. I
+ think that I can point out the shortest way to this; let us give in the
+ way in which we ourselves should like to receive. Above all we should give
+ willingly, quickly, and without any hesitation; a benefit commands no
+ gratitude if it has hung for a long time in the hands of the giver, if he
+ seems unwilling to part with it, and gives it as though he were being
+ robbed of it. Even though some delay should intervene, let us by all means
+ in our power strive not to seem to have been in two minds about giving it
+ at all. To hesitate is the next thing to refusing to give, and destroys
+ all claim to gratitude. For just as the sweetest part of a benefit is the
+ kindly feeling of the giver, it follows that one who has by his very delay
+ proved that he gives unwillingly, must be regarded not as having given
+ anything, but as having been unable to keep it from an importunate suitor.
+ Indeed, many men are made generous by want of firmness. The most
+ acceptable benefits are those which are waiting for us to take them, which
+ are easy to be received, and offer themselves to us, so that the only
+ delay is caused by the modesty of the receiver. The best thing of all is
+ to anticipate a person's wishes; the next, to follow them; the former is
+ the better course, to be beforehand with our friends by giving them what
+ they want before they ask us for it, for the value of a gift is much
+ enhanced by sparing an honest man the misery of asking for it with
+ confusion and blushes. He who gets what he asked for does not get it for
+ nothing, for indeed, as our austere ancestors thought, nothing is so dear
+ as that which is bought by prayers. Men would be much more modest in their
+ petitions to heaven, if these had to be made publicly; so that even when
+ addressing the gods, before whom we can with all honour bend our knees, we
+ prefer to pray silently and within ourselves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ II. It is unpleasant, burdensome, and covers one with shame to have to
+ say, "Give me." You should spare your friends, and those whom you wish to
+ make your friends, from having to do this; however quick he may be, a man
+ gives too late who gives what he has been asked for. We ought, therefore,
+ to divine every man's wishes, and when we have discovered them, to set him
+ free from the hard necessity of asking; you may be sure that a benefit
+ which comes unasked will be delightful and will not be forgotten. If we do
+ not succeed in anticipating our friends, let us at any rate cut them short
+ when they ask us for anything, so that we may appear to be reminded of
+ what we meant to do, rather than to have been asked to do it. Let us
+ assent at once, and by our promptness make it appear that we meant to do
+ so even before we were solicited. As in dealing with sick persons much
+ depends upon when food is given, and plain water given at the right moment
+ sometimes acts as a remedy, so a benefit, however slight and commonplace
+ it may be, if it be promptly given without losing a moment of time, gains
+ enormously in importance, and wins our gratitude more than a far more
+ valuable present given after long waiting and deliberation. One who gives
+ so readily must needs give with good will; he therefore gives cheerfully
+ and shows his disposition in his countenance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ III. Many who bestow immense benefits spoil them by their silence or
+ slowness of speech, which gives them an air of moroseness, as they say
+ "yes" with a face which seems to say "no." How much better is it to join
+ kind words to kind actions, and to enhance the value of our gifts by a
+ civil and gracious commendation of them! To cure your friend of being slow
+ to ask a favour of you, you may join to your gift the familiar rebuke, "I
+ am angry with you for not having long ago let me know what you wanted, for
+ having asked for it so formally, or for having made interest with a third
+ party." "I congratulate myself that you have been pleased to make trial of
+ me; hereafter, if you want anything, ask for it as your right; however,
+ for this time I pardon your want of manners." By so doing you will cause
+ him to value your friendship more highly than that, whatever it may have
+ been, which he came to ask of you. The goodness and kindness of a
+ benefactor never appears so great as when on leaving him one says, "I have
+ to-day gained much; I am more pleased at finding him so kind than if I had
+ obtained many times more of this, of which I was speaking, by some other
+ means; I never can make any adequate return to this man for his goodness."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ IV. Many, however, there are who, by harsh words and contemptuous manner,
+ make their very kindnesses odious, for by speaking and acting disdainfully
+ they make us sorry that they have granted our requests. Various delays
+ also take place after we have obtained a promise; and nothing is more
+ heartbreaking than to be forced to beg for the very thing which you
+ already have been promised. Benefits ought to be bestowed at once, but
+ from some persons it is easier to obtain the promise of them than to get
+ them. One man has to be asked to remind our benefactor of his purpose;
+ another, to bring it into effect; and thus a single present is worn away
+ in passing through many hands, until hardly any gratitude is left for the
+ original promiser, since whoever we are forced to solicit after the giving
+ of the promise receives some of the gratitude which we owe to the giver.
+ Take care, therefore, if you wish your gifts to be esteemed, that they
+ reach those to whom they are promised entire, and, as the saying is,
+ without any deduction. Let no one intercept them or delay them; for no one
+ can take any share of the gratitude due for your gifts without robbing you
+ of it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ V. Nothing is more bitter than long uncertainty; some can bear to have
+ their hopes extinguished better than to have them deferred. Yet many men
+ are led by an unworthy vanity into this fault of putting off the
+ accomplishment of their promises, merely in order to swell the crowd of
+ their suitors, like the ministers of royalty, who delight in prolonging
+ the display of their own arrogance, hardly thinking themselves possessed
+ of power unless they let each man see for a long time how powerful they
+ are. They do nothing promptly, or at one sitting; they are indeed swift to
+ do mischief, but slow to do good. Be sure that the comic poet speaks the
+ most absolute truth in the verses:&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "Know you not this? If you your gifts delay,
+ You take thereby my gratitude away."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ And the following lines, the expression of virtuous pain&mdash;a
+ high-spirited man's misery,&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "What thou doest, do quickly;"
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ and:&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "Nothing in the world
+ Is worth this trouble; I had rather you
+ Refused it to me now."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ When the mind begins through weariness to hate the promised benefit, or
+ while it is wavering in expectation of it, how can it feel grateful for
+ it? As the most refined cruelty is that which prolongs the torture, while
+ to kill the victim at once is a kind of mercy, since the extremity of
+ torture brings its own end with it&mdash;the interval is the worst part of
+ the execution&mdash;so the shorter time a benefit hangs in the balance,
+ the more grateful it is to the receiver. It is possible to look forward
+ with anxious disquietude even to good things, and, seeing that most
+ benefits consist in a release from some form of misery, a man destroys the
+ value of the benefit which he confers, if he has the power to relieve us,
+ and yet allows us to suffer or to lack pleasure longer than we need.
+ Kindness always eager to do good, and one who acts by love naturally acts
+ at once; he who does us good, but does it tardily and with long delays,
+ does not do so from the heart. Thus he loses two most important things:
+ time, and the proof of his good will to us; for a lingering consent is but
+ a form of denial.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ VI. The manner in which things are said or done, my Liberalis, forms a
+ very important part of every transaction. We gain much by quickness, and
+ lose much by slowness. Just as in darts, the strength of the iron head
+ remains the same, but there is an immeasureable difference between the
+ blow of one hurled with the full swing of the arm and one which merely
+ drops from the hand, and the same sword either grazes or pierces according
+ as the blow is delivered; so, in like manner, that which is given is the
+ same, but the manner in which it is given makes the difference. How sweet,
+ how precious is a gift, when he who gives does not permit himself to be
+ thanked, and when while he gives he forgets that he has given! To reproach
+ a man at the very moment that you are doing him a service is sheer
+ madness; it is to mix insult with your favours. We ought not to make our
+ benefits burdensome, or to add any bitterness to them. Even if there be
+ some subject upon which you wish to warn your friend, choose some other
+ time for doing so.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ VII. Fabius Verrucosus used to compare a benefit bestowed by a harsh man
+ in an offensive manner to a gritty loaf of bread, which a hungry man is
+ obliged to receive, but which is painful to eat. When Marius Nepos of the
+ praetorian guard asked Tiberius Caesar for help to pay his debts, Tiberius
+ asked him for a list of his creditors; this is calling a meeting of
+ creditors, not paying debts. When the list was made out, Tiberius wrote to
+ Nepos telling him that he had ordered the money to be paid, and adding
+ some offensive reproaches. The result of this was that Nepos owed no
+ debts, yet received no kindness; Tiberius, indeed, relieved him from his
+ creditors, but laid him under no obligation. Tiberius, however, had some
+ design in doing so; I imagine he did not wish more of his friends to come
+ to him with the same request. His mode of proceeding was, perhaps,
+ successful in restraining men's extravagant desires by shame, but he who
+ wishes to confer benefits must follow quite a different path. In all ways
+ you should make your benefit as acceptable as possible by presenting it in
+ the most attractive form; but the method of Tiberius is not to confer
+ benefits, but to reproach.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ VIII. Moreover, if incidentally I should say what I think of this part of
+ the subject, I do not consider that it is becoming even to an emperor to
+ give merely in order to cover a man with shame. "And yet," we are told,
+ "Tiberius did not even by this means attain his object; for after this a
+ good many persons were found to make the same request. He ordered all of
+ them to explain the reasons of their indebtedness before the senate, and
+ when they did so, granted them certain definite sums of money." This is
+ not an act of generosity, but a reprimand. You may call it a subsidy, or
+ an imperial contribution; it is not a benefit, for the receiver cannot
+ think of it without shame. I was summoned before a judge, and had to be
+ tried at bar before I obtained what I asked for.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ IX. Accordingly, all writers on ethical philosophy tell us that some
+ benefits ought to be given in secret, others in public. Those things which
+ it is glorious to receive, such as military decorations or public offices,
+ and whatever else gains in value the more widely it is known, should be
+ conferred in public; on the other hand, when they do not promote a man or
+ add to his social standing, but help him when in weakness, in want, or in
+ disgrace, they should be given silently, and so as to be known only to
+ those who profit by them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ X. Sometimes even the person who is assisted must be deceived, in order
+ that he may receive our bounty without knowing the source from whence it
+ flows. It is said that Arcesilaus had a friend who was poor, but concealed
+ his poverty; who was ill, yet tried to hide his disorder, and who had not
+ money for the necessary expenses of existence. Without his knowledge,
+ Arcesilaus placed a bag of money under his pillow, in order that this
+ victim of false shame might rather seem to find what he wanted than to
+ receive. "What," say you, "ought he not to know from whom he received it?"
+ Yes; let him not know it at first, if it be essential to your kindness
+ that he should not; afterwards I will do so much for him, and give him so
+ much that he will perceive who was the giver of the former benefit; or,
+ better still, let him not know that he has received any thing, provided I
+ know that I have given it. "This," you say, "is to get too little return
+ for one's goodness." True, if it be an investment of which you are
+ thinking; but if a gift, it should be given in the way which will be of
+ most service to the receiver. You should be satisfied with the approval of
+ your own conscience; if not, you do not really delight in doing good, but
+ in being seen to do good. "For all that," say you, "I wish him to know
+ it." Is it a debtor that you seek for? "For all that, I wish him to know
+ it." What! though it be more useful, more creditable, more pleasant for
+ him not to know his benefactor, will you not consent to stand aside? "I
+ wish him to know." So, then, you would not save a man's life in the dark?
+ I do not deny that, whenever the matter admits of it, one ought to take
+ into consideration the pleasure which we receive from the joy of the
+ receiver of our kindness; but if he ought to have help and is ashamed to
+ receive it&mdash;if what we bestow upon him pains him unless it be
+ concealed&mdash;I forbear to make my benefits public. Why should I not
+ refrain from hinting at my having given him anything, when the first and
+ most essential rule is, never to reproach a man with what you have done
+ for him, and not even to remind him of it. The rule for the giver and
+ receiver of a benefit is, that the one should straightway forget that he
+ has given, the other should never forget that he has received it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XI. A constant reference to one's own services wounds our friend's
+ feelings. Like the man who was saved from the proscription under the
+ triumvirate by one of Caesar's friends, and afterwards found it impossible
+ to endure his preserver's arrogance, they wish to cry, "Give me back to
+ Caesar." How long will you go on saying, "I saved you, I snatched you from
+ the jaws of death?" This is indeed life, if I remember it by my own will,
+ but death if I remember it at yours; I owe you nothing, if you saved me
+ merely in order to have some one to point at. How long do you mean to lead
+ me about? how long do you mean to forbid me to forget my adventure? If I
+ had been a defeated enemy, I should have been led in triumph but once. We
+ ought not to speak of the benefits which we have conferred; to remind men
+ of them is to ask them to return them. We should not obtrude them, or
+ recall the memory of them; you should only remind a man of what you have
+ given him by giving him something else. We ought not even to tell others
+ of our good deeds. He who confers a benefit should be silent, it should be
+ told by the receiver; for otherwise you may receive the retort which was
+ made to one who was everywhere boasting of the benefit which he had
+ conferred: "You will not deny," said his victim, "that you have received a
+ return for it?" "When?" asked he. "Often," said the other, "and in many
+ places, that is, wherever and whenever you have told the story." What need
+ is there for you to speak, and to take the place which belongs to another?
+ There is a man who can tell the story in a way much more to your credit,
+ and thus you will gain glory for not telling it your self. You would think
+ me ungrateful if, through your own silence, no one is to know of your
+ benefit. So far from doing this, even if any one tells the story in our
+ presence, we ought to make answer, "He does indeed deserve much more than
+ this, and I am aware that I have not hitherto done any great things for
+ him, although I wish to do so." This should not be said jokingly, nor yet
+ with that air by which some persons repel those whom they especially wish
+ to attract. In addition to this, we ought to act with the greatest
+ politeness towards such persons. If the farmer ceases his labours after he
+ has put in the seed, he will lose what he has sown; it is only by great
+ pains that seeds are brought to yield a crop; no plant will bear fruit
+ unless it be tended with equal care from first to last, and the same rule
+ is true of benefits. Can any benefits be greater than those which children
+ receive from their parents? Yet these benefits are useless if they be
+ deserted while young, if the pious care of the parents does not for a long
+ time watch over the gift which they have bestowed. So it is with other
+ benefits; unless you help them, you will lose them; to give is not enough,
+ you must foster what you have given. If you wish those whom you lay under
+ an obligation to be grateful to you, you must not merely confer benefits
+ upon them, but you must also love them. Above all, as I said before, spare
+ their ears; you will weary them if you remind them of your goodness, if
+ you reproach them with it you will make them hate you. Pride ought above
+ all things to be avoided when you confer a benefit. What need have you for
+ disdainful airs, or swelling phrases? the act itself will exalt you. Let
+ us shun vain boasting: let us be silent, and let our deeds speak for us. A
+ benefit conferred with haughtiness not only wins no gratitude, but causes
+ dislike.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XII. Gaius Caesar granted Pompeius Pennus his life, that is, if not to
+ take away life be to grant it; then, when Pompeius was set free and
+ returning thanks to him, he stretched out his left foot to be kissed.
+ Those who excuse this action, and say that it was not done through
+ arrogance, say that he wished to show him a gilded, nay a golden slipper
+ studded with pearls. "Well," say they, "what disgrace can there be in a
+ man of consular rank kissing gold and pearls, and what part of Caesar's
+ whole body was it less pollution to kiss?" So, then, that man, the object
+ of whose life was to change a free state into a Persian despotism, was not
+ satisfied when a senator, an aged man, a man who had filled the highest
+ offices in the state, prostrated himself before him in the presence of all
+ the nobles, just as the vanquished prostrate themselves before their
+ conqueror! He discovered a place below his knees down to which he might
+ thrust liberty. What is this but trampling upon the commonwealth, and
+ that, too, with the left foot, though you may say that this point does not
+ signify? It was not a sufficiently foul and frantic outrage for the
+ emperor to sit at the trial of a consular for his life wearing slippers,
+ he must needs push his shoes into a senator's face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XIII. O pride, the silliest fault of great good fortune! how pleasant it
+ is to take nothing from thee! how dost thou turn all benefits into
+ outrages! how dost thou delight in all excess! how ill all things become
+ thee! The higher thou risest the lower thou art, and provest that the good
+ things by which thou art so puffed up profit thee not; thou spoilest all
+ that thou givest. It is worth while to inquire why it is that pride thus
+ swaggers and changes the form and appearance of her countenance, so that
+ she prefers a mask to her own face. It is pleasant to receive gifts when
+ they are conferred in a kindly and gentle manner, when a superior in
+ giving them does not exalt himself over me, but shows as much good feeling
+ as possible, placing himself on a level with me, giving without parade,
+ and choosing a time when I am glad of his help, rather than waiting till I
+ am in the bitterest need. The only way by which you can prevail upon proud
+ men not to spoil their gifts by their arrogance is by proving to them that
+ benefits do not appear greater because they are bestowed with great pomp
+ and circumstance; that no one will think them greater men for so doing,
+ and that excessive pride is a mere delusion which leads men to hate even
+ what they ought to love.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XIV. There are some things which injure those who receive them, things
+ which it is not a benefit to give but to withhold; we should therefore
+ consider the usefulness of our gift rather than the wish of the petitioner
+ to receive it; for we often long for hurtful things, and are unable to
+ discern how ruinous they are, because our judgment is biassed by our
+ feelings; when, however, the longing is past, when that frenzied impulse
+ which masters our good sense has passed away, we abhor those who have
+ given us hurtful gifts. As we refuse cold water to the sick, or swords to
+ the grief-stricken or remorseful, and take from the insane whatever they
+ might in their delirium use to their own destruction, so must we persist
+ in refusing to give anything whatever that is hurtful, although our
+ friends earnestly and humbly, nay, sometimes even most piteously beg for
+ it. We ought to look at the end of our benefits as well as the beginning,
+ and not merely to give what men are glad to receive, but what they will
+ hereafter be glad to have received. There are many who say, "I know that
+ this will do him no good, but what am I to do? he begs for it, I cannot
+ withstand his entreaties. Let him see to it; he will blame himself, not
+ me." Not so: you he will blame, and deservedly; when he comes to his right
+ mind, when the frenzy which now excites him has left him, how can he help
+ hating the man who has assisted him to harm and to endanger himself? It is
+ a cruel kindness to allow one's self to be won over into granting that
+ which injures those who beg for it. Just as it is the noblest of acts to
+ save men from harm against their will, so it is but hatred, under the mask
+ of civility, to grant what is harmful to those who ask for it. Let us
+ confer benefits of such a kind, that the more they are made use of the
+ better they please, and which never can turn into injuries. I never will
+ give money to a man if I know that he will pay it to an adulteress, nor
+ will I be found in connexion with any wicked act or plan; if possible, I
+ will restrain men from crime; if not, at least I will never assist them in
+ it. Whether my friend be driven into doing wrong by anger, or seduced from
+ the path of safety by the heat of ambition, he shall never gain the means
+ of doing mischief except from himself, nor will I enable him one day to
+ say, "He ruined me out of love for me." Our friends often give us what our
+ enemies wish us to receive; we are driven by the unseasonable fondness of
+ the former into the ruin which the latter hope will befall us. Yet, often
+ as it is the case, what can be more shameful than that there should be no
+ difference between a benefit and hatred?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XV. Let us never bestow gifts which may recoil upon us to our shame. As
+ the sum total of friendship consists in making our friends equal to
+ ourselves, we ought to consider the interests of both parties; I must give
+ to him that wants, yet so that I do not want myself; I must help him who
+ is perishing, yet so that I do not perish myself, unless by so doing I can
+ save a great man or a great cause. I must give no benefit which it would
+ disgrace me to ask for. I ought not to make a small benefit appear a great
+ one, nor allow great benefits to be regarded as small; for although it
+ destroys all feeling of gratitude to treat what you give like a creditor,
+ yet you do not reproach a man, but merely set off your gift to the best
+ advantage by letting him know what it is worth. Every man must consider
+ what his resources and powers are, so that we may not give either more or
+ less than we are able. We must also consider the character and position of
+ the person to whom we give, for some men are too great to give small
+ gifts, while others are too small to receive great ones. Compare,
+ therefore, the character both of the giver and the receiver, and weigh
+ that which you give between the two, taking care that what is given be
+ neither too burdensome nor too trivial for the one to give, nor yet such
+ as the receiver will either treat with disdain as too small, or think too
+ great for him to deal with.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XVI. Alexander, who was of unsound mind, and always full of magnificent
+ ideas, presented somebody with a city. When the man to whom he gave it had
+ reflected upon the scope of his own powers, he wished to avoid the
+ jealousy which so great a present would excite, saying that the gift did
+ not suit a man of his position. "I do not ask," replied Alexander, "what
+ is becoming for you to receive, but what is becoming for me to give." This
+ seems a spirited and kingly speech, yet really it is a most foolish one.
+ Nothing is by itself a becoming gift for any one: all depends upon who
+ gives it, to whom he gives it, when, for what reason, where, and so forth,
+ without which details it is impossible to argue about it. Inflated
+ creature! if it did not become him to receive this gift, it could not
+ become thee to give it. There should be a proportion between men's
+ characters and the offices which they fill; and as virtue in all cases
+ should be our measure, he who gives too much acts as wrongly as he who
+ gives too little. Even granting that fortune has raised you so high, that,
+ where other men give cups, you give cities (which it would show a greater
+ mind in you not to take than to take and squander), still there must be
+ some of your friends who are not strong enough to put a city in their
+ pockets.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XVII. A certain cynic asked Antigonus for a talent. Antigonus answered
+ that this was too much for a cynic to ask for. After this rebuff he asked
+ for a penny. Antigonus answered that this was too little for a king to
+ give. "This kind of hair-splitting" (you say) "is contemptible: he found
+ the means of giving neither. In the matter of the penny he thought of the
+ king, in that of the talent he thought of the cynic, whereas with respect
+ to the cynic it would have been right to receive the penny, with respect
+ to the king it would have been right to give the talent. Though there may
+ be things which are too great for a cynic to receive, yet nothing is so
+ small, that it does not become a gracious king to bestow it." If you ask
+ me, I applaud Antigonus; for it is not to be endured that a man who
+ despises money should ask for it. Your cynic has publicly proclaimed his
+ hatred of money, and assumed the character of one who despises it: let him
+ act up to his professions. It is most inconsistent for him to earn money
+ by glorifying his poverty. I wish to use Chrysippus's simile of the game
+ of ball, in which the ball must certainly fall by the fault either of the
+ thrower or of the catcher; it only holds its course when it passes between
+ the hands of two persons who each throw it and catch it suitably. It is
+ necessary, however, for a good player to send the ball in one way to a
+ comrade at a long distance, and in another to one at a short distance. So
+ it is with a benefit: unless it be suitable both for the giver and the
+ receiver, it will neither leave the one nor reach the other as it ought.
+ If we have to do with a practised and skilled player, we shall throw the
+ ball more recklessly, for however it may come, that quick and agile hand
+ will send it back again; if we are playing with an unskilled novice, we
+ shall not throw it so hard, but far more gently, guiding it straight into
+ his very hands, and we shall run to meet it when it returns to us. This is
+ just what we ought to do in conferring benefits; let us teach some men how
+ to do so, and be satisfied if they attempt it, if they have the courage
+ and the will to do so. For the most part, however, we make men ungrateful,
+ and encourage them, to be so, as if our benefits were only great when we
+ cannot receive any gratitude for them; just as some spiteful ball-players
+ purposely put out their companion, of course to the ruin of the game,
+ which cannot be carried on without entire agreement Many men are of so
+ depraved a nature that they had rather lose the presents which they make
+ than be thought to have received a return for them, because they are
+ proud, and like to lay people under obligations: yet how much better and
+ more kindly would it be if they tried to enable the others also to perform
+ their parts, if they encouraged them in returning gratitude, put the best
+ construction upon all their acts, received one who wished to thank them
+ just as cordially as if he came to repay what he had received, and easily
+ lent themselves to the belief that those whom they have laid under an
+ obligation wish to repay it. We blame usurers equally when they press
+ harshly for payment, and when they delay and make difficulties about
+ taking back the money which they have lent; in the same way, it is just as
+ right that a benefit should be returned, as it is wrong to ask any one to
+ return it. The best man is he who gives readily, never asks for any
+ return, and is delighted when the return is made, because, having really
+ and truly forgotten what he gave, he receives it as though it were a
+ present.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XVIII. Some men not only give, but even receive benefit haughtily, a
+ mistake into which we ought not to fall: for now let us cross over to the
+ other side of the subject, and consider how men should behave when they
+ receive benefits. Every function which is performed by two persons makes
+ equal demands upon both: after you have considered what a father ought to
+ be, you will perceive that there remains an equal task, that of
+ considering what a son ought to be: a husband has certain duties, but
+ those of a wife are no less important. Each of these give and take
+ equally, and each require a similar rule of life, which, as Hecaton
+ observes, is hard to follow: indeed, it is difficult for us to attain to
+ virtue, or even to anything that comes near virtue: for we ought not only
+ to act virtuously but to do so upon principle. We ought to follow this
+ guide throughout our lives, and to do everything great and small according
+ to its dictates: according as virtue prompts us we ought both to give and
+ to receive. Now she will declare at the outset that we ought not to
+ receive benefits from every man. "From whom, then, ought we to receive
+ them?" To answer you briefly, I should say, from those to whom we have
+ given them. Let us consider whether we ought not to be even more careful
+ in choosing to whom we should owe than to whom we should give. For even
+ supposing that no unpleasantness should result (and very much always
+ does), still it is a great misery to be indebted to a man to whom you do
+ not wish to be under an obligation; whereas it is most delightful to
+ receive a benefit from one whom you can love even after he has wronged
+ you, and when the pleasure which you feel in his friendship is justified
+ by the grounds on which it is based. Nothing is more wretched for a modest
+ and honourable man than to feel it to be his duty to love one whom it does
+ not please him to love. I must constantly remind you that I do not speak
+ of wise men, who take pleasure in everything that is their duty, who have
+ their feelings under command, and are able to lay down whatever law they
+ please to themselves and keep it, but that I speak of imperfect beings
+ struggling to follow the right path, who often have trouble in bending
+ their passions to their will. I must therefore choose the man from whom I
+ will accept a benefit; indeed, I ought to be more careful in the choice of
+ my creditor for a benefit than for money; for I have only to pay the
+ latter as much as I received of him, land when I have paid it I am free
+ from all obligation; but to the other I must both repay more, and even
+ when I have repaid his kindness we remain connected, for when I have paid
+ my debt I ought again to renew it, while our friendship endures unbroken.
+ Thus, as I ought not to make an unworthy man my friend, so I ought not to
+ admit an unworthy man into that most holy bond of gratitude for benefits,
+ from which friendship arises. You reply, "I cannot always say 'No':
+ sometimes I must receive a benefit even against my will. Suppose I were
+ given something by a cruel and easily offended tyrant, who would take it
+ as an affront if his bounty were slighted? am I not to accept it? Suppose
+ it were offered by a pirate, or a brigand, or a king of the temper of a
+ pirate or brigand. What ought I to do? Such a man is not a worthy object
+ for me to owe a benefit to." When I say that you ought to choose, I except
+ vis major and fear, which destroy all power of choice. If you are free, if
+ it lies with you to decide whether you will or not, then you will turn
+ over in your own mind whether you will take a gift from a man or not; but
+ if your position makes it impossible for you to choose, then be assured
+ that you do not receive a gift, you merely obey orders. No one incurs any
+ obligation by receiving what it was not in his power to refuse; if you
+ want to know whether I wish to take it, arrange matters so that I have the
+ power of saying 'No.' "Yet suppose he gave you your life." It does not
+ matter what the gift was, unless it be given and received with good will:
+ you are not my preserver because you have saved my life. Poison sometimes
+ acts as a medicine, yet it is not on that account regarded as wholesome.
+ Some things benefit us but put us under no obligation: for instance a man
+ who intended to kill a tyrant, cut with his sword a tumour from which he
+ suffered: yet the tyrant did not show him gratitude because by wounding
+ him he had healed a disease which surgeons had feared to meddle with.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XIX. You see that the actual thing itself is not of much importance,
+ because it is not regarded as a benefit at all, if you do good when you
+ intended to do evil; in such a case the benefit is done by chance, the man
+ did harm. I have seen a lion in the amphitheatre, who recognized one of
+ the men who fought with wild beasts, who once had been his keeper, and
+ protected him against the attacks of the other animals. Are we, then, to
+ say that this assistance of the brute was a benefit? By no means, because
+ it did not intend to do it, and did not do it with kindly intentions. You
+ may class the lion and your tyrant together: each of them saved a man's
+ life, yet neither conferred a benefit. Because it is not a benefit to be
+ forced to receive one, neither is it a benefit to be under an obligation
+ to a man to whom we do not wish to be indebted. You must first give me
+ personal freedom of decision, and then your benefit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XX. The question has been raised, whether Marcus Brutus ought to have
+ received his life from the hands of Julius Caesar, who, he had decided,
+ ought to be put to death.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As to the grounds upon which he put him to death, I shall discuss them
+ elsewhere; for to my mind, though he was in other respects a great man, in
+ this he seems to have been entirely wrong, and not to have followed the
+ maxims of the Stoic philosophy. He must either have feared the name of
+ "King," although a state thrives best under a good king, or he must have
+ hoped that liberty could exist in a state where some had so much to gain
+ by reigning, and others had so much to gain by becoming slaves. Or, again,
+ he must have supposed that it would be possible to restore the ancient
+ constitution after all the ancient manners had been lost, and that
+ citizens could continue to possess equal rights, or laws remain inviolate,
+ in a state in which he had seen so many thousands of men fighting to
+ decide, not whether they should be slaves or free, but which master they
+ should serve. How forgetful he seems to have been, both of human nature
+ and of the history of his own country, in supposing that when one despot
+ was destroyed another of the same temper would not take his place, though,
+ after so many kings had perished by lightning and the sword, a Tarquin was
+ found to reign! Yet Brutus did right in receiving his life from Caesar,
+ though he was not bound thereby to regard Caesar as his father, since it
+ was by a wrong that Caesar had come to be in a position to bestow this
+ benefit. A man does not save your life who does not kill you; nor does he
+ confer a benefit, but merely gives you your discharge. [The 'discharge'
+ alluded to is that which was granted to the beaten one of a pair of
+ gladiators, when their duel was not to the death.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXI. It seems to offer more opportunity for debate to consider what a
+ captive ought to do, if a man of abominable vices offers him the price of
+ his ransom? Shall I permit myself to be saved by a wretch? When safe, what
+ recompense can I make to him? Am I to live with an infamous person? Yet,
+ am I not to live with my preserver? I will tell you my opinion. I would
+ accept money, even from such a person, if it were to save my life; yet I
+ would only accept it as a loan, not as a benefit. I would repay him the
+ money, and if I were ever able to preserve him from danger I would do so.
+ As for friendship, which can only exist between equals, I would not
+ condescend to be such a man's friend; nor would I regard him as my
+ preserver, but merely as a money-lender, to whom I am only bound to repay
+ what I borrowed from him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A man may be a worthy person for me to receive a benefit from, but it will
+ hurt him to give it. For this reason I will not receive it, because he is
+ ready to help me to his own prejudice, or even danger. Suppose that he is
+ willing to plead for me in court, but by so doing will make the king his
+ enemy. I should be his enemy, if, when he is willing to risk himself for
+ me, if I were not to risk myself without him, which moreover is easier for
+ me to do.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As an instance of this, Hecaton calls the case of Arcesilaus silly, and
+ not to the purpose. Arcesilaus, he says, refused to receive a large sum of
+ money which was offered to him by a son, lest the son should offend his
+ penurious father. What did he do deserving of praise, in not receiving
+ stolen goods, in choosing not to receive them, instead of returning them?
+ What proof of self-restraint is there in refusing to receive another man's
+ property. If you want an instance of magnanimity, take the case of Julius
+ Graecinus, whom Caius Caesar put to death merely on the ground that he was
+ a better man than it suited a tyrant for anyone to be. This man, when he
+ was receiving subscriptions from many of his friends to cover his expenses
+ in exhibiting public games, would not receive a large sum which was sent
+ him by Fabius Persicus; and when he was blamed for rejecting it by those
+ who think more of what is given than of who gives it, he answered, "Am I
+ to accept a present from a man when I would not accept his offer to drink
+ a glass of wine with him?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When a consular named Rebilius, a man of equally bad character, sent a yet
+ larger sum to Graecinus, and pressed him to receive it. "I must beg,"
+ answered he, "that you will excuse me. I did not take money from Persicus
+ either." Ought we to call this receiving presents, or rather taking one's
+ pick of the senate?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXII. When we have decided to accept, let us accept with cheerfulness,
+ showing pleasure, and letting the giver see it, so that he may at once
+ receive some return for his goodness: for as it is a good reason for
+ rejoicing to see our friend happy, it is a better one to have made him so.
+ Let us, therefore, show how acceptable a gift is by loudly expressing our
+ gratitude for it; and let us do so, not only in the hearing of the giver,
+ but everywhere. He who receives a benefit with gratitude, repays the first
+ instalment of it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXIII. There are some, who only like to receive benefits privately: they
+ dislike having any witnesses and confidants. Such men, we may believe,
+ have no good intentions. As a giver is justified in dwelling upon those
+ qualities of his gift which will please the receiver, so a man, when he
+ receives, should do so publicly; you should not take from a man what you
+ are ashamed to owe him. Some return thanks to one stealthily, in a corner,
+ in a whisper. This is not modesty, but a kind of denying of the debt: it
+ is the part of an ungrateful man not to express his gratitude before
+ witnesses. Some object to any accounts being kept between them and their
+ benefactors, and wish no brokers to be employed or witnesses to be called,
+ but merely to give their own signature to a receipt. Those men do the
+ like, who take care to let as few persons as possible know of the benefits
+ which they have received. They fear to receive them in public, in order
+ that their success may be attributed rather to their own talents than to
+ the help of others: they are very seldom to be found in attendance upon
+ those to whom they owe their lives and their fortunes, and thus, while
+ avoiding the imputation of servility, they incur that of ingratitude.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXIV. Some men speak in the most offensive terms of those to whom they owe
+ most. There are men whom it is safer to affront than to serve, for their
+ dislike leads them to assume the airs of persons who are not indebted to
+ us: although nothing more is expected of them than that they should
+ remember what they owe us, refreshing their memory from time to time,
+ because no one can be grateful who forgets a kindness, and he who
+ remembers it, by so doing proves his gratitude. We ought neither to
+ receive benefits with a fastidious air, nor yet with a slavish humility:
+ for if a man does not care for a benefit when it is freshly bestowed&mdash;a
+ time at which all presents please us most&mdash;what will he do when its
+ first charms have gone off? Others receive with an air of disdain, as much
+ as to say. "I do not want it; but as you wish it so very much, I will
+ allow you to give it to me." Others take benefits languidly, and leave the
+ giver in doubt as to whether they know that they have received them;
+ others barely open their lips in thanks, and would be less offensive if
+ they said nothing. One ought to proportion one's thanks to the importance
+ of the benefit received, and to use the phrases, "You have laid more of us
+ than you think under an obligation," for everyone likes to find his good
+ actions extend further than he expected. "You do not know what it is that
+ you have done for me; but you ought to know how much more important it is
+ than you imagine." It is in itself an expression of gratitude to speak of
+ one's self as overwhelmed by kindness; or "I shall never be able to thank
+ you sufficiently; but, at any rate, I will never cease to express
+ everywhere my inability to thank you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXV. By nothing did Furnius gain greater credit with Augustus, and make it
+ easy for him to obtain anything else for which he might ask, than by
+ merely saying, when at his request Augustus pardoned his father for having
+ taken Antonius's side, "One wrong alone I have received at your hands,
+ Caesar; you have forced me to live and to die owing you a greater debt of
+ gratitude than I can ever repay." What can prove gratitude so well as that
+ a man should never be satisfied, should never even entertain the hope of
+ making any adequate return for what he has received? By these and similar
+ expressions we must try not to conceal our gratitude, but to display it as
+ clearly as possible. No words need be used; if we only feel as we ought,
+ our thankfulness will be shown in our countenances. He who intends to be
+ grateful, let him think how he shall repay a kindness while he is
+ receiving it. Chrysippus says that such a man must watch for his
+ opportunity, and spring forward whenever it offers, like one who has been
+ entered for a race, and who stands at the starting-point waiting for the
+ barriers to be thrown open; and even then he must use great exertions and
+ great swiftness to catch the other, who has a start of him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXVI. We must now consider what is the main cause of ingratitude. It is
+ caused by excessive self-esteem, by that fault innate in all mortals, of
+ taking a partial view of ourselves and our own acts, by greed, or by
+ jealousy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us begin with the first of these. Every one is prejudiced in his own
+ favour, from which it follows that he believes himself to have earned all
+ that he receives, regards it as payment for his services, and does not
+ think that he has been appraised at a valuation sufficiently near his own.
+ "He has given me this," says he, "but how late, after how much toil? how
+ much more might I have earned if I had attached myself to So and so, or to
+ So and so? I did not expect this; I have been treated like one of the
+ herd; did he really think that I only deserved so little? why, it would
+ have been less insulting to have passed me over altogether."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXVII. The augur Cnaeus Lentulus, who, before his freedmen reduced him to
+ poverty, was one of the richest of men, who saw himself in possession of a
+ fortune of four hundred millions&mdash;I say advisedly, "saw," for he
+ never did more than see it&mdash;was as barren and contemptible in
+ intellect as he was in spirit. Though very avaricious, yet he was so poor
+ a speaker that he found it easier to give men coins than words. This man,
+ who owed all his prosperity to the late Emperor Augustus, to whom he had
+ brought only poverty, encumbered with a noble name, when he had risen to
+ be the chief man in Rome, both in wealth and influence, used sometimes to
+ complain that Augustus had interrupted his legal studies, observing that
+ he had not received anything like what he had lost by giving up the study
+ of eloquence. Yet the truth was that Augustus, besides loading him with
+ other gifts, had set him free from the necessity of making himself
+ ridiculous by labouring at a profession in which he never could succeed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Greed does not permit any one to be grateful; for what is given is never
+ equal to its base desires, and the more we receive the more we covet, for
+ avarice is much more eager when it has to deal with great accumulations of
+ wealth, just as the power of a flame is enormously greater in proportion
+ to the size of the conflagration from which it springs. Ambition in like
+ manner suffers no man to rest satisfied with that measure of public
+ honours, to gain which was once the limit of his wildest hope; no one is
+ thankful for becoming tribune, but grumbles at not being at once promoted
+ to the post of praetor; nor is he grateful for this if the consulship does
+ not follow; and even this does not satisfy him if he be consul but once.
+ His greed ever stretches itself out further, and he does not understand
+ the greatness of his success because he always looks forward to the point
+ at which he aims, and never back towards that from which he started.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXVIII. A more violent and distressing vice than any of these is jealousy
+ which disturbs us by suggesting comparisons. "He gave me this, but he gave
+ more to that man, and he gave it to him before me;" after which he
+ sympathises with no one, but pushes his own claims to the prejudice of
+ every one else. How much more straightforward and modest is it to make the
+ most of what we have received, knowing that no man is valued so highly by
+ any one else as by his own, self! "I ought to have received more, but it
+ was not easy for him to give more; he was obliged to distribute his
+ liberality among many persons. This is only the beginning; let me be
+ contented, and by my gratitude encourage him to show me more favour; he
+ has not done as much as he ought, but he will do so the more frequently;
+ he certainly preferred that man to me, but he has preferred me before many
+ others; that man is not my equal either in virtue or in services, but he
+ has some charm of his own: by complaining I shall not make myself deserve
+ to receive more, but shall become unworthy of what I have received. More
+ has been given to those most villainous men than has been given to me;
+ well, what is that to the purpose? how seldom does Fortune show judgment
+ in her choice? We complain every day of the success of bad men; very often
+ the hail passes over the estates of the greatest villains and strikes down
+ the crops of the best of men; every man has to take his chance, in
+ friendship as well as in everything else." There is no benefit so great
+ that spitefulness can pick no holes in it, none so paltry that it cannot
+ be made more of by friendly interpretation. We shall never want a subject
+ for complaint if we look at benefits on their wrong side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXIX. See how unjustly the gifts of heaven are valued even by some who
+ profess themselves philosophers, who complain that we are not as big as
+ elephants, as swift as stags, as light as birds, as strong as bulls; that
+ the skins of seals are stronger, of hinds prettier, of bears thicker, of
+ beavers softer than ours; that dogs excel us in delicacy of scent, eagles
+ in keenness of sight, crows in length of days, and many beasts in ease of
+ swimming. And although nature itself does not allow some qualities, as for
+ example strength and swiftness, to be combined in the same person, yet
+ they call it a monstrous thing that men are not compounded of different
+ and inconsistent good qualities, and call the gods neglectful of us
+ because we have not been given health which even our vices cannot destroy,
+ or knowledge of the future. They scarcely refrain from rising to such a
+ pitch of impudence as to hate nature because we are below the gods, and
+ not on an equality with them. How much better is it to turn to the
+ contemplation of so many great blessings, and to be thankful that the gods
+ have been pleased to give us a place second only to themselves in this
+ most beautiful abode, and that they have appointed us to be the lords of
+ the earth! Can any one compare us with the animals over whom we rule?
+ Nothing has been denied us except what could not have been granted. In
+ like manner, thou that takest an unfair view of the lot of mankind, think
+ what blessings our Father has bestowed upon us, how far more powerful
+ animals than ourselves we have broken to harness, how we catch those which
+ are far swifter, how nothing that has life is placed beyond the reach of
+ our weapons! We have received so many excellencies, so many crafts, above
+ all our mind, which can pierce at once whatever it is directed against,
+ which is swifter than the stars in their courses, for it arrives before
+ them at the place which they will reach after many ages; and besides this,
+ so many fruits of the earth, so much treasure, such masses of various
+ things piled one upon another. You may go through the whole order of
+ nature, and since you find no entire creature which you would prefer to
+ be, you may choose from each, the special qualities which you would like
+ to be given to yourself; then, if you rightly appreciate the partiality of
+ nature for you, you cannot but confess yourself to be her spoiled child.
+ So it is; the immortal gods have unto this day always held us most dear,
+ and have bestowed upon us the greatest possible honour, a place nearest to
+ themselves. We have indeed received great things, yet not too great.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXX. I have thought it necessary, my friend Liberalis, to state these
+ facts, both because when speaking of small benefits one ought to make some
+ mention of the greatest, and because also this shameless and hateful vice
+ (of ingratitude), starting with these, transfers itself from them to all
+ the rest. If a man scorn these, the greatest of all benefits, to whom will
+ he feel gratitude, what gift will he regard as valuable or deserving to be
+ returned: to whom will he be grateful for his safety or his life, if he
+ denies that he has received from the gods that existence which he begs
+ from them daily? He, therefore, who teaches men to be grateful, pleads the
+ cause not only of men, but even of the gods, for though they, being placed
+ above all desires, cannot be in want of anything, yet we can nevertheless
+ offer them our gratitude.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No one is justified in seeking an excuse for ingratitude in his own
+ weakness or poverty, or in saying, "What am I to do, and how? When can I
+ repay my debt to my superiors the lords of heaven and earth?" Avaricious
+ as you are, it is easy for you to give them thanks, without expense; lazy
+ though you be, you can do it without labour. At the same instant at which
+ you received your debt towards them, if you wish to repay it, you have
+ done as much as any one can do, for he returns a benefit who receives it
+ with good will.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXXI. This paradox of the Stoic philosophy, that he returns a benefit who
+ receives it with good will, is, in my opinion, either far from admirable,
+ or else it is incredible. For if we look at everything merely from the
+ point of view of our intentions, every man has done as much as he chose to
+ do; and since filial piety, good faith, justice, and in short every virtue
+ is complete within itself, a man may be grateful in intention even though
+ he may not be able to lift a hand to prove his gratitude. Whenever a man
+ obtains what he aimed at, he receives the fruit of his labour. When a man
+ bestows a benefit, at what does he aim? clearly to be of service and
+ afford pleasure to him upon whom he bestows it. If he does what he wishes,
+ if his purpose reaches me and fills us each with joy, he has gained his
+ object. He does not wish anything to be given to him in return, or else it
+ becomes an exchange of commodities, not a bestowal of benefits. A man
+ steers well who reaches the port for which he started: a dart hurled by a
+ steady hand performs its duty if it hits the mark; one who bestows a
+ benefit wishes it to be received with gratitude; he gets what he wanted if
+ it be well received. "But," you say, "he hoped for some profit also." Then
+ it was not a benefit, the property of which is to think nothing of any
+ repayment. I receive what was given me in the same spirit in which it was
+ given: then I have repaid it. If this be not true, then this best of deeds
+ has this worst of conditions attached to it, that it depends entirely upon
+ fortune whether I am grateful or not, for if my fortune is adverse I can
+ make no repayment. The intention is enough. What then? am I not to do
+ whatever I may be able to repay it, and ought I not ever to be on the
+ watch for an opportunity of filling the bosom [Footnote: Sinus, the fold
+ of the toga over the breast, used as a pocket by the Romans. The great
+ French actor Talma, when dressed for the first time in correct classical
+ costume, indignantly asked where he was to put his snuff-box.] of him from
+ whom I have received any kindness? True; but a benefit is in an evil
+ plight if we cannot be grateful for it even when we are empty-handed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXXII. "A man," it is argued, "who has received a benefit, however
+ gratefully he may have received it, has not yet accomplished all his duty,
+ for there remains the part of repayment; just as in playing at ball it is
+ something to catch the ball cleverly and carefully, but a man is not
+ called a good player unless he can handily and quickly send back the ball
+ which he has caught." This analogy is imperfect; and why? Because to do
+ this creditably depends upon the movement and activity of the body, and
+ not upon the mind: and an act of which we judge entirely by the eye, ought
+ to be all clearly displayed. But if a man caught the ball as he ought to
+ do, I should not call him a bad player for not returning it, if his delay
+ in returning it was not caused by his own fault. "Yet," say you, "although
+ the player is not wanting in skill, because he did one part of his duty,
+ and was able to do the other part, yet in such a case the game is
+ imperfect, for its perfection lies in sending the ball backwards and
+ forwards." I am unwilling to expose this fallacy further; let us think
+ that it is the game, not the player that is imperfect: so likewise in the
+ subject which we are discussing, the thing which is given lacks something,
+ because another equal thing ought to be returned for it, but the mind of
+ the giver lacks nothing, because it has found another mind equal to
+ itself, and as far as intentions go, has effected what it wished.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXXIII. A man bestows a benefit upon me: I receive it just as he wished it
+ to be received: then he gets at once what he wanted, and the only thing
+ which he wanted, and therefore I have proved myself grateful. After this
+ it remains for me to enjoy my own resources, with the addition of an
+ advantage conferred upon me by one whom I have obliged; this advantage is
+ not the remainder of an imperfect service, but an addition to a perfected
+ service. [Footnote: Nothing is wanted to make a benefit, conferred from
+ good motives, perfect: if it is returned, the gratitude is to be counted
+ as net profit.] For example, Phidias makes a statue. Now the product of an
+ art is one thing, and that of a trade is another. It is the business of
+ the art to make the thing which he wished to make, and that of the trade
+ to make it with a profit. Phidias has completed his work, even though he
+ does not sell it. The product, therefore, of his work is threefold: there
+ is the consciousness of having made it, which he receives when his work is
+ completed; there is the fame which he receives; and thirdly, the advantage
+ which he obtains by it, in influence, or by selling it, or otherwise. In
+ like manner the first fruit of a benefit is the consciousness of it, which
+ we feel when we have bestowed it upon the person whom we chose; secondly
+ and thirdly there is the credit which we gain by doing so, and there are
+ those things which we may receive in exchange for it. So when a benefit
+ has been graciously received, the giver has already received gratitude,
+ but has not yet received recompense for it: that which we owe in return is
+ therefore something apart from the benefit itself, for we have paid for
+ the benefit itself when we accept it in a grateful spirit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXXIV. "What," say you, "can a man repay a benefit, though he does
+ nothing?" He has taken the first step, he has offered you a good thing
+ with good feeling, and, which is the characteristic of friendship, has
+ placed you both on the same footing. In the next place, a benefit is not
+ repaid in the same manner as a loan: you have no reason for expecting me
+ to offer you any payment; the account between us depends upon the feelings
+ alone. What I say will not appear difficult, although it may not at first
+ accord with your ideas, if you will do me the favour to remember that
+ there are more things than there are words to express them. There is an
+ enormous mass of things without names, which we do not speak of under
+ distinctive names of their own, but by the names of other things
+ transferred to them. We speak of our own foot, of the foot of a couch, of
+ a sail, or of a poem; we apply the word 'dog' to a hound, a fish, and a
+ star. Because we have not enough words to assign a separate name to each
+ thing, we borrow a name whenever we want one. Bravery is the virtue which
+ rightly despises danger, or the science of repelling, sustaining, or
+ inviting dangers: yet we call a brave man a gladiator, and we use the same
+ word for a good-for-nothing slave, who is led by rashness to defy death.
+ Economy is the science of avoiding unnecessary expenditure, or the art of
+ using one's income with moderation: yet we call a man of mean and narrow
+ mind, most economical, although there is an immeasurable distance between
+ moderation and meanness. These things are naturally distinct, yet the
+ poverty of our language compels us to call both these men economical, just
+ as he who views slight accidents with rational contempt, and he who
+ without reason runs into danger are alike called brave. Thus a benefit is
+ both a beneficent action, and also is that which is bestowed by that
+ action, such as money, a house, an office in the state: there is but one
+ name for them both, though their force and power are widely different.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXXV. Wherefore, give me your attention, and you will soon perceive that I
+ say nothing to which you can object. That benefit which consists of the
+ action is repaid when we receive it graciously; that other, which consists
+ of something material, we have not then repaid, but we hope to do so. The
+ debt of goodwill has been discharged by a return of goodwill; the material
+ debt demands a material return. Thus, although we may declare that he who
+ has received a benefit with good-will has returned the favour, yet we
+ counsel him to return to the giver something of the same kind as that
+ which he has received. Some part of what we have said departs from the
+ conventional line of thought, and then rejoins it by another path. We
+ declare that a wise man cannot receive an injury; yet, if a man hits him
+ with his fist, that man will be found guilty of doing him an injury. We
+ declare that a fool can possess nothing; yet if a man stole anything from
+ a fool, we should find that man guilty of theft. We declare that all men
+ are mad, yet we do not dose all men with hellebore; but we put into the
+ hands of these very persons, whom we call madmen, both the right of voting
+ and of pronouncing judgment. Similarly, we say that a man who has received
+ a benefit with good-will has returned the favour, yet we leave him in debt
+ nevertheless&mdash;bound to repay it even though he has repaid it. This is
+ not to disown benefits, but is an encouragement to us neither to fear to
+ receive benefits, nor to faint under the too great burden of them. "Good
+ things have been given to me; I have been preserved from starving; I have
+ been saved from the misery of abject poverty; my life, and what is dearer
+ than life, my liberty, has been preserved. How shall I be able to repay
+ these favours? When will the day come upon which I can prove my gratitude
+ to him?" When a man speaks thus, the day has already come. Receive a
+ benefit, embrace it, rejoice, not that you have received it, but that you
+ have to owe it and return it; then you will never be in peril of the great
+ sin of being rendered ungrateful by mischance. I will not enumerate any
+ difficulties to you, lest you should despair, and faint at the prospect of
+ a long and laborious servitude. I do not refer you to the future; do it
+ with what means you have at hand. You never will be grateful unless you
+ are so straightway. What, then, will you do? You need not take up arms,
+ yet perhaps you may have to do so; you need not cross the seas, yet it may
+ be that you will pay your debt, even when the wind threatens to blow a
+ gale. Do you wish to return the benefit? Then receive it graciously; you
+ have then returned the favour&mdash;not, indeed, so that you can think
+ yourself to have repaid it, but so that you can owe it with a quieter
+ conscience.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0005" id="link2H_4_0005">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ BOOK III.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ I.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Not to return gratitude for benefits, my AEbutius Liberalis, is both base
+ in itself, and is thought base by all men; wherefore even ungrateful men
+ complain of ingratitude, and yet what all condemn is at the same time
+ rooted in all; and so far do men sometimes run into the other extreme that
+ some of them become our bitterest enemies, not merely after receiving
+ benefits from us, but because they have received them. I cannot deny that
+ some do this out of sheer badness of nature; but more do so because lapse
+ of time destroys their remembrance, for time gradually effaces what they
+ felt vividly at the moment. I remember having had an argument with you
+ about this class of persons, whom you wished to call forgetful rather than
+ ungrateful, as if that which caused a man to be ungrateful was any excuse
+ for his being so, or as if the fact of this happening to a man prevented
+ his being ungrateful, when we know that it only happens to ungrateful men.
+ There are many classes of the ungrateful, as there are of thieves or of
+ homicides, who all have the same fault, though there is a great variety in
+ its various forms. The man is ungrateful who denies that he has received a
+ benefit; who pretends that he has not received it; who does not return it.
+ The most ungrateful man of all is he who forgets it. The others, though
+ they do not repay it, yet feel their debt, and possess some traces of
+ worth, though obstructed by their bad conscience. They may by some means
+ and at some time be brought to show their gratitude, if, for instance,
+ they be pricked by shame, if they conceive some noble ambition such as
+ occasionally rises even in the breasts of the wicked, if some easy
+ opportunity of doing so offers; but the man from whom all recollection of
+ the benefit has passed away can never become grateful. Which of the two do
+ you call the worse&mdash;he who is ungrateful for kindness, or he who does
+ not even remember it? The eyes which fear to look at the light are
+ diseased, but those which cannot see it are blind. It is filial impiety
+ not to love one's parents, but not to recognise them is madness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ II. Who is so ungrateful as he who has so completely laid aside and cast
+ away that which ought to be in the forefront of his mind and ever before
+ him, that he knows it not? It is clear that if forgetfulness of a benefit
+ steals over a man, he cannot have often thought about repaying it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In short, repayment requires gratitude, time, opportunity, and the help of
+ fortune; whereas, he who remembers a benefit is grateful for it, and that
+ too without expenditure. Since gratitude demands neither labour, wealth,
+ nor good fortune, he who fails to render it has no excuse behind which to
+ shelter himself; for he who places a benefit so far away that it is out of
+ his sight, never could have meant to be grateful for it. Just as those
+ tools which are kept in use, and are daily touched by the hand, are never
+ in danger of growing rusty, while those which are not brought before our
+ eyes, and lie as if superfluous, not being required for common use,
+ collect dirt by the mere lapse of time, so likewise that which our
+ thoughts frequently turn over and renew never passes from our memory,
+ which only loses those things to which it seldom directs its eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ III. Besides this, there are other causes which at times erase the
+ greatest services from our minds. The first and most powerful of these is
+ that, being always intent upon new objects of desire, we think, not of
+ what we have, but of what we are striving to obtain. Those whose mind is
+ fixed entirely upon what they hope to gain, regard with contempt all that
+ is their own already. It follows that since men's eagerness for something
+ new makes them undervalue whatever they have received, they do not esteem
+ those from whom they have received it. As long as we are satisfied with
+ the position we have gained, we love our benefactor, we look up to him,
+ and declare that we owe our position entirely to him; then we begin to
+ entertain other aspirations, and hurry forward to attain them after the
+ manner of human beings, who when they have gained much always covet more;
+ straightway all that we used to regard as benefits slip from our memory,
+ and we no longer consider the advantages which we enjoy over others, but
+ only the insolent prosperity of those who have outstripped us. Now no one
+ can at the same time be both jealous and grateful, because those who are
+ jealous are querulous and sad, while the grateful are joyous. In the next
+ place, since none of us think of any time but the present, and but few
+ turn back their thoughts to the past, it results that we forget our
+ teachers, and all the benefits which we have obtained from them, because
+ we have altogether left our childhood behind us: thus, all that was done
+ for us in our youth perishes unremembered, because our youth itself is
+ never reviewed. What has been is regarded by every one, not only as past,
+ but as gone; and for the same reason, our memory is weak for what is about
+ to happen in the future.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ IV. Here I must do Epicurus the justice to say that he constantly
+ complains of our ingratitude for past benefits, because we cannot bring
+ back again, or count among our present pleasures, those good things which
+ we have received long ago, although no pleasures can be more undeniable
+ than those which cannot be taken from us. Present good is not yet
+ altogether complete, some mischance may interrupt it; the future is in
+ suspense, and uncertain; but what is past is laid up in safety. How can
+ any man feel gratitude for benefits, if he skips through his whole life
+ entirely engrossed with the present and the future? It is remembrance that
+ mates men grateful; and the more men hope, the less they remember.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ V. In the same way, my Liberalis, as some things remain in our memory as
+ soon as they are learned, while to know others it is not enough to have
+ learned them, for our knowledge slips away from us unless it be kept up&mdash;I
+ allude to geometry and astronomy, and such other sciences as are Hard to
+ remember because of their intricacy&mdash;so the greatness of some
+ benefits prevents their being forgotten, while others, individually less,
+ though many more in number, and bestowed at different times, pass from our
+ minds, because, as I have stated above, we do not constantly think about
+ them, and do not willingly recognize how much we owe to each of our
+ benefactors. Listen to the words of those who ask for favours. There is
+ not one of them who does not declare that his remembrance will be eternal,
+ who does not vow himself your devoted servant and slave, or find, if he
+ can, some even greater expression of humility with which to pledge
+ himself. After a brief space of time these same men avoid their former
+ expressions, thinking them abject, and scarcely befitting free-born men;
+ afterwards they arrive at the same point to which, as I suppose, the worst
+ and most ungrateful of men come&mdash;that is, they forget. So little does
+ forgetfulness excuse ingratitude, that even the remembrance of a benefit
+ may leave us ungrateful.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ VI. The question has been raised, whether this most odious vice ought to
+ go unpunished; and whether the law commonly made use of in the schools, by
+ which we can proceed against a man for ingratitude, ought to be adopted by
+ the State also, since all men agree that it is just. "Why not?" you may
+ say, "seeing that even cities cast in each other's teeth the services
+ which they have performed to one another, and demand from the children
+ some return for benefits conferred upon their fathers?" On the other hand,
+ our ancestors, who were most admirable men, made demands upon their
+ enemies alone, and both gave and lost their benefits with magnanimity.
+ With the exception of Macedonia, no nation has ever established an action
+ at law for ingratitude. And this is a strong argument against its being
+ established, because all agree in blaming crime; and homicide, poisoning,
+ parricide, and sacrilege are visited with different penalties in different
+ countries, but everywhere with some penalty; whereas this most common vice
+ is nowhere punished, though it is everywhere blamed. We do not acquit it;
+ but as it would be most difficult to reckon accurately the penalty for so
+ varying a matter, we condemn it only to be hated, and place it upon the
+ list of those crimes which we refer for judgment to the gods.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ VII. Many arguments occur to me which prove that this vice ought not to
+ come under the action of the law. First of all, the best part of a benefit
+ is lost if the benefit can be sued for at law, as in the case of a loan,
+ or of letting and hiring. Indeed, the finest part of a benefit is that we
+ have given it without considering whether we shall lose it or not, that we
+ have left all this to the free choice of him who receives it: if I call
+ him before a judge, it begins to be not a benefit, but a loan. Next,
+ though it is a most honourable thing to show gratitude, it ceases to be
+ honourable if it be forced, for in that case no one will praise a grateful
+ man any more than he praises him who restores the money which was
+ deposited in his keeping, or who pays what he borrowed without the
+ intervention of a judge. We should therefore spoil the two finest things
+ in human life,&mdash;a grateful man and a beneficent man; for what is
+ there admirable in one who does not give but merely lends a benefit, or in
+ one who repays it, not because he wishes, but because he is forced to do
+ so? There is no credit in being grateful, unless it is safe to be
+ ungrateful. Besides this, all the courts would hardly be enough for the
+ action of this one law. Who would not plead under it? Who would not be
+ pleaded against? for every one exalts his own merits, every one magnifies
+ even the smallest matters which he has bestowed upon another. Besides
+ this, those things which form the subject of a judicial inquiry can be
+ distinctly defined, and cannot afford unlimited licence to the judge;
+ wherefore a good cause is in a better position if it before a judge than
+ before an arbitrator, because the words of the law tie down a judge and
+ define certain limits beyond which he may not pass, whereas the conscience
+ of an arbitrator is free and not fettered by any rules, so that he can
+ either give or take away, and can arrange his decision, not according to
+ the precepts of law and justice, but just as his own kindly feeling or
+ compassion may prompt him. An action for ingratitude would not bind a
+ judge, but would place him in the position of an autocrat. It cannot be
+ known what or how great a benefit is; all that would be really important
+ would be, how indulgently the judge might interpret it. No law defines an
+ ungrateful person, often, indeed, one who repays what he has received is
+ ungrateful, and one who has not returned it is grateful. Even an
+ unpractised judge can give his vote upon some matters; for instance, when
+ the thing to be determined is whether something has or has not been done,
+ when a dispute is terminated by the parties giving written bonds, or when
+ the casting up of accounts decides between the disputants. When, however,
+ motives have to be guessed at, when matters upon which wisdom alone can
+ decide, are brought into court, they cannot be tried by a judge taken at
+ random from the list of "select judges," [Footnote: See Smith's "Dict. of
+ Antiq.," s. v] whom property and the inheritance of an equestrian fortune
+ [Footnote: 400,000 sesterces] has placed upon the roll.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ VIII. Ingratitude, therefore, is not only matter unfit to be brought into
+ court, but no judge could be found fit to try it; and this you will not be
+ surprised at, if you examine the difficulties of any one who should
+ attempt to prosecute a man upon such a charge. One man may have given a
+ large sum of money, but he is rich and would not feel it; another may have
+ given it at the cost of his entire inheritance. The sum given is the same
+ in each case, but the benefit conferred is not the same. Add another
+ instance: suppose that to redeem a debtor from slavery one man paid money
+ from his own private means, while another man paid the same sum, but had
+ to borrow it or beg for it, and allow himself to be laid under a great
+ obligation to some one; would you rank the man who so easily bestowed his
+ benefit on an equality with him who was obliged to receive a benefit
+ himself before he could bestow it? Some benefits are great, not because of
+ their amount, but because of the time at which they are bestowed; it is a
+ benefit to give an estate whose fertility can bring down the price of
+ corn, and it is a benefit to give a loaf of bread in time of famine; it is
+ a benefit to give provinces through which flow vast navigable rivers, and
+ it is a benefit, when men are parched with thirst, and can scarcely draw
+ breath through their dry throats, to show them a spring of water. Who will
+ compare these cases with one another, or weigh one against the other? It
+ is hard to give a decision when it is not the thing given, but its
+ meaning, which has to be considered; though what is given is the same, yet
+ if it be given under different circumstances it has a different value. A
+ man may have bestowed a benefit upon me, but unwillingly; he may have
+ complained of having given it; he may have looked at me with greater
+ haughtiness than he was wont to do; he may have been so slow in giving it,
+ that he would have done me a greater service if he had promptly refused
+ it. How could a judge estimate the value of these things, when words,
+ hesitation, or looks can destroy all their claim to gratitude?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ IX. What, again, could he do, seeing that some things are called benefits
+ because they are unduly coveted, whilst others are not benefits at all,
+ according to this common valuation, yet are of even greater value, though
+ not so showy? You call it a benefit to cause a man to be adopted as a
+ member of a powerful city, to get him enrolled among the knights, or to
+ defend one who is being tried for his life: what do you say of him who
+ gives useful advice? of him who holds you back when you would rush into
+ crime? of him who strikes the sword from the hands of the suicide? of him
+ who by his power of consolation brings back to the duties of life one who
+ was plunged in grief, and eager to follow those whom he had lost? of him
+ who sits at the bedside of the sick man, and who, when health and recovery
+ depend upon seizing the right moment, administers food in due season,
+ stimulates the failing veins with wine, or calls in the physician to the
+ dying man? Who can estimate the value of such services as these? who can
+ bid us weigh dissimilar benefits one with another? "I gave you a house,"
+ says one. Yes, but I forewarned you that your own house would come down
+ upon your head. "I gave you an estate," says he. True, but I gave a plank
+ to you when shipwrecked. "I fought for you and received wounds for you,"
+ says another. But I saved your life by keeping silence. Since a benefit is
+ both given and returned differently by different people, it is hard to
+ make them balance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ X. Besides this, no day is appointed for repayment of a benefit, as there
+ is for borrowed money; consequently he who has not yet repaid a benefit
+ may do so hereafter: for tell me, pray, within what time a man is to be
+ declared ungrateful? The greatest benefits cannot be proved by evidence;
+ they often lurk in the silent consciousness of two men only; are we to
+ introduce the rule of not bestowing benefits without witnesses? Next, what
+ punishment are we to appoint for the ungrateful? is there to be one only
+ for all, though the benefits which they have received are different? or
+ should the punishment be varying, greater or less according to the benefit
+ which each has received? Are our valuations to be restricted to pecuniary
+ fines? what are we to do, seeing that in some cases the benefit conferred
+ is life, and things dearer than life? What punishment is to be assigned to
+ ingratitude for these? One less than the benefit? That would be unjust.
+ One equal to it; death? What could be more inhuman than to cause benefits
+ to result in cruelty?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XI. It may be argued, "Parents have certain privileges: these are regarded
+ as exempt from the action of ordinary rules, and so also ought to be the
+ case with other beneficent persons." Nay; mankind has assigned a peculiar
+ sanctity to the position of parents, because it was advantageous that
+ children should be reared, and people had to be tempted into undergoing
+ the toil of doing so, because the issue of their experiment was doubtful.
+ One cannot say to them, as one does to others who bestow benefits, "Choose
+ the man to whom you give: you must only blame yourself if you are
+ deceived; help the deserving." In rearing children nothing depends upon
+ the judgment of those who rear them; it is a matter of hope: in order,
+ therefore, that people may be more willing to embark upon this lottery, it
+ was right that they should be given a certain authority; and since it is
+ useful for youth to be governed, we have placed their parents in the
+ position of domestic magistrates, under whose guardianship their lives may
+ be ruled. Moreover, the position of parents differs from that of other
+ benefactors, for their having given formerly to their children does not
+ stand in the way of their giving now and hereafter; and also, there is no
+ fear of their falsely asserting that they have given: with others one has
+ to inquire not only whether they have received, but whether they have
+ given; but the good deeds of parents are placed beyond doubt. In the next
+ place, one benefit bestowed by parents is the same for all, and might be
+ counted once for all; while the others which they bestow are of various
+ kinds, unlike one to another, differing from one another by the widest
+ possible intervals; they can therefore come under no regular rule, since
+ it would be more just to leave them all unrewarded than to give the same
+ reward to all.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XII. Some benefits cost much to the givers, some are of much value to the
+ receivers but cost the givers nothing. Some are bestowed upon friends,
+ others on strangers: now although that which is given be the same, yet it
+ becomes more when it is given to one with whom you are beginning to be
+ acquainted through the benefits which you have previously conferred upon
+ him. One man may give us help, another distinctions, a third consolation.
+ You may find one who thinks nothing pleasanter or more important than to
+ have some one to save him from distress; you may again find one who would
+ rather be helped to great place than to security; while some consider
+ themselves more indebted to those who save their lives than to those who
+ save their honour. Each of these services will be held more or less
+ important, according as the disposition of our judge inclines to one or
+ the other of them. Besides this, I choose my creditors for myself, whereas
+ I often receive benefits from those from whom I would not, and sometimes I
+ am laid under an obligation without my knowledge. What will you do in such
+ a case? When a man has received a benefit unknown to himself, and which,
+ had he known of it, he would have refused to receive, will you call him
+ ungrateful if he does not repay it, however he may have received it?
+ Suppose that some one has bestowed a benefit upon me, and that the same
+ man has afterwards done me some wrong; am I to be bound by his one bounty
+ to endure with patience any wrong that he may do me, or will it be the
+ same as if I had repaid it, because he himself has by the subsequent wrong
+ cancelled his own benefit? How, in that case, would you decide which was
+ the greater; the present which the man has received, or the injury which
+ has been done him? Time would fail me if I attempted to discuss all the
+ difficulties which would arise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XIII. It may be argued that "we render men less willing to confer benefits
+ by not supporting the claim of those which have been bestowed to meet with
+ gratitude, and by not punishing those who repudiate them." But you would
+ find, on the other hand, that men would be far less willing to receive
+ benefits, if by so doing they were likely to incur the danger of having to
+ plead their cause in court, and having more difficulty in proving their
+ integrity. This legislation would also render us less willing to give: for
+ no one is willing to give to those who are unwilling to receive, but one
+ who is urged to acts of kindness by his own good nature and by the beauty
+ of charity, will give all the more freely to those who need make no return
+ unless they choose. It impairs the credit of doing a service, if in doing
+ it we are carefully protected from loss.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XIV. "Benefits, then, will be fewer, but more genuine: well, what harm is
+ there in restricting people from giving recklessly?" Even those who would
+ have no legislation upon the subject follow this rule, that we ought to be
+ somewhat careful in giving, and in choosing those upon whom we bestow
+ favours. Reflect over and over again to whom you are giving: you will have
+ no remedy at law, no means of enforcing repayment. You are mistaken if you
+ suppose that the judge will assist you: no law will make full restitution
+ to you, you must look only to the honour of the receiver. Thus only can
+ benefits retain their influence, and thus only are they admirable: you
+ dishonour them if you make them the grounds of litigation, "Pay what you
+ owe" is a most just proverb; and one which carries with it the sanction of
+ all nations; but in dealing with benefits it is most shameful. "Pay!" How
+ is a man to pay who owes his life, his position, his safety, or his reason
+ to another? None of the greatest benefits can be repaid. "Yet," it is
+ said, "you ought to give in return for them something of equal value."
+ This is just what I have been saying, that the grandeur of the act is
+ ruined if we make our benefits commercial transactions. We ought hot to
+ encourage ourselves in avarice, in discontent, or in quarrels; the human
+ mind is prone enough to these by nature. As far as we are able, let us
+ check it, and cut off the opportunities for which it seeks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XV. Would that we could indeed persuade men to receive back money which
+ they have lent from those debtors only who are willing to pay! would that
+ no agreement ever bound the buyer to the seller, and that their interests
+ were not protected by sealed covenants and agreements, but rather by
+ honour and a sense of justice! However, men prefer what is needful to what
+ is truly best, and choose rather to force their creditors to keep faith
+ with them than to trust that they will do so. Witnesses are called on both
+ sides; the one, by calling in brokers, makes several names appear in his
+ accounts as his debtors instead of one; the other is not content with the
+ legal forms of question and answer unless he holds the other party by the
+ hand. What a shameful admission of the dishonesty and wickedness of
+ mankind! men trust more to our signet-rings than to our intentions. For
+ what are these respectable men summoned? for what do they impress their
+ seals? it is in order that the borrower may not deny that he has received
+ what he has received. You regard these men, I suppose, as above bribes, as
+ maintainers of the truth: well, these very men will not be entrusted with
+ money except on the same terms. Would it not, then, be more honourable to
+ be deceived by some than to suspect all men of dishonesty? To fill up the
+ measure of avarice one thing only is lacking, that we should bestow no
+ benefit without a surety. To help, to be of service, is the part of a
+ generous and noble mind; he who gives acts like a god, he who demands
+ repayment acts like a money-lender. Why then, by trying to protect the
+ rights of the former class, should we reduce them to the level of the
+ basest of mankind?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XVI. "More men," our opponent argues, "will be ungrateful, if no legal
+ remedy exists against ingratitude." Nay, fewer, because then benefits will
+ be bestowed with more discrimination, In the next place, it is not
+ advisable that it should be publicly known how many ungrateful men there
+ are: for the number of sinners will do away with the disgrace of the sin,
+ and a reproach which applies to all men will cease to be dishonourable. Is
+ any woman ashamed of being divorced, now that some noble ladies reckon the
+ years of their lives, not by the number of the consuls, but by that of
+ their husbands, now that they leave their homes in order to marry others,
+ and marry only in order to be divorced? Divorce was only dreaded as long
+ as it was unusual; now that no gazette appears without it, women learn to
+ do what they hear so much about. Can any one feel ashamed of adultery, now
+ that things have come to such a pass that no woman keeps a husband at all
+ unless it be to pique her lover? Chastity merely implies ugliness. Where
+ will you find any woman so abject, so repulsive, as to be satisfied with a
+ single pair of lovers, without having a different one for each hour of the
+ day; nor is the day long enough for all of them, unless she has taken her
+ airing in the grounds of one, and passes the night with another. A woman
+ is frumpish and old-fashioned if she does not know that "adultery with one
+ paramour is nick-named marriage." Just as all shame at these vices has
+ disappeared since the vice itself became so widely spread, so if you made
+ the ungrateful begin to count their own numbers, you would both make them
+ more numerous, and enable them to be ungrateful with greater impunity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XVII. "What then? shall the ungrateful man go unpunished?" What then, I
+ answer, shall we punish the undutiful, the malicious, the avaricious, the
+ headstrong, and the cruel? Do you imagine that those things which are
+ loathed are not punished, or do you suppose that any punishment is greater
+ than the hate of all men? It is a punishment not to dare receive a benefit
+ from anyone, not to dare to bestow one, to be, or to fancy that you are a
+ mark for all men's eyes, and to lose all appreciation of so excellent and
+ pleasant a matter. Do you call a man unhappy who has lost his sight, or
+ whose hearing has been impaired by disease, and do you not call him
+ wretched who has lost the power of feeling benefits? He fears the gods,
+ the witnesses of all ingratitude; he is tortured by the thought of the
+ benefit which he has misapplied, and, in fine, he is sufficiently punished
+ by this great penalty, that, as I said before, he cannot enjoy the fruits
+ of this most delightful act. On the other hand, he who takes pleasure in
+ receiving a benefit, enjoys an unvarying and continuous happiness, which
+ he derives from consideration, not of the thing given, but of the
+ intention of the giver. A benefit gives perpetual joy to a grateful man,
+ but pleases an ungrateful one only for a moment. Can the lives of such men
+ be compared, seeing that the one is sad and gloomy&mdash;as it is natural
+ that a denier of his debts and a defrauder should be, a man who does not
+ give his parents, his nurses, or his teachers the honour which is their
+ due&mdash;while the other is joyous, cheerful, on the watch for an
+ opportunity of proving his gratitude, and gaining much pleasure from this
+ frame of mind itself? Such a man has no wish to become bankrupt, but only
+ to make the fullest and most copious return for benefits, and that not
+ only to parents and friends, but also to more humble persons; for even if
+ he receives a benefit from his own slave, he does not consider from whom
+ he receives it, but what he receives.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XVIII. It has, however, been doubted by Hecaton and some other writers,
+ whether a slave can bestow a benefit upon his master. Some distinguish
+ between benefits, duties, and services, calling those things benefits
+ which are bestowed by a stranger&mdash;that is, by one who could
+ discontinue them without blame&mdash;while duties are performed by our
+ children, our wives, and those whom relationship prompts and orders to
+ afford us help; and, thirdly, services are performed by slaves, whose
+ position is such that nothing which they do for their master can give them
+ any claim upon him....
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Besides this, he who affirms that a slave does not sometimes confer a
+ benefit upon his master is ignorant of the rights of man; for the question
+ is, not what the station in life of the giver may be, but what his
+ intentions are. The path of virtue is closed to no one, it lies open to
+ all; it admits and invites all, whether they be free-born men, slaves or
+ freed-men, kings or exiles; it requires no qualifications of family or of
+ property, it is satisfied with a mere man. What, indeed, should we have to
+ trust to for defence against sudden misfortunes, what could&mdash;a noble
+ mind promise to itself to keep unshaken, if virtue could be lost together
+ with prosperity? If a slave cannot confer a benefit upon his master, then
+ no subject can confer a benefit upon his king, and no soldier upon his
+ general; for so long as the man is subject to supreme authority, the form
+ of authority can make no difference. If main force, or the fear of death
+ and torture, can prevent a slave from gaining any title to his master's
+ gratitude, they will also prevent the subjects of a king, or the soldiers
+ of a general from doing so, for the same things may happen to either of
+ these classes of men, though under different names.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet men do bestow benefits upon their kings and their generals; therefore
+ slaves can bestow benefits upon their masters. A slave can be just, brave,
+ magnanimous; he can therefore bestow a benefit, for this is also the part
+ of a virtuous man. So true is it that slaves can bestow benefits upon
+ their masters, that the masters have often owed their lives to them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XIX. There is no doubt that a slave can bestow a benefit upon anyone; why,
+ then, not upon his master? "Because," it is argued, "he cannot become his
+ master's creditor if he gives him money. If this be not so, he daily lays
+ his master under an obligation to him; he attends him when on a journey,
+ he nurses him when sick, he works most laboriously at the cultivation of
+ his estate; yet all these, which would be called benefits if done for us
+ by anyone else, are merely called service when done by a slave. A benefit
+ is that which some one bestows who has the option of withholding it:&mdash;now
+ a slave has no power to refuse, so that he does not afford us his help,
+ but obeys our orders, and cannot boast of having done what he could not
+ leave undone." Even under these conditions I shall win the day, and will
+ place a slave in such positions, that for many purposes he will be free;
+ in the meanwhile, tell me, if I give you an instance of a slave fighting
+ for his master's safety without regard to himself, pierced through with
+ wounds, yet spending the last drops of his blood, and gaining time for his
+ master to escape by the sacrifice of his life, will you say that this man
+ did not bestow a benefit upon his master because he was a slave? If I give
+ an instance of one who could not be bribed to betray his master's secrets
+ by any of the offers of a tyrant, who was not terrified by any threats,
+ nor overpowered by any tortures, but who, as far as he was able, placed
+ his questioners upon a wrong scent, and, paid for his loyalty with his
+ life; will you say that this man did not confer a benefit upon his master
+ because he was a slave? Consider, rather, whether an example of virtue in
+ a slave be not all the greater because it is rarer than in free men, and
+ whether it be not all the more gratifying that, although to be commanded
+ is odious, and all submission to authority is irksome, yet in some
+ particular cases love for a master has been more powerful than men's
+ general dislike to servitude. A benefit does not, therefore, cease to be a
+ benefit because it is bestowed by a slave, but is all the greater on that
+ account, because not even slavery could restrain him from bestowing it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XX. It is a mistake to imagine that slavery pervades a man's whole being;
+ the better part of him is exempt from it: the body indeed is subjected and
+ in the power of a master, but the mind is independent, and indeed is so
+ free and wild, that it cannot be restrained even by this prison of the
+ body, wherein it is confined, from following its own impulses, dealing
+ with gigantic designs, and soaring into the infinite, accompanied by all
+ the host of heaven. It is, therefore, only the body which misfortune hands
+ over to a master, and which he buys and sells; this inward part cannot be
+ transferred as a chattel. Whatever comes from this, is free; indeed, we
+ are not allowed to order all things to be done, nor are slaves compelled
+ to obey us in all things; they will not carry out treasonable orders, or
+ lend their hands to an act of crime.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXI. There are some things which the law neither enjoins nor forbids; it
+ is in these that a slave finds the means of bestowing benefits. As long as
+ we only receive what is generally demanded from a slave, that is mere
+ service; when more is given than a slave need afford us, it is a benefit;
+ as soon as what he does begins to partake of the affection of a friend, it
+ can no longer be called service. There are certain things with which a
+ master is bound to provide his slave, such as food and clothing; no one
+ calls this a benefit; but supposing that he indulges his slave, educates
+ him above his station, teaches him arts which free-born men learn, that is
+ a benefit. The converse is true in the case of the slave; anything which
+ goes beyond the rules of a slave's duty, which is done of his own free
+ will, and not in obedience to orders, is a benefit, provided it be of
+ sufficient importance to be called by such a name if bestowed by any other
+ person.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXII. It has pleased Chrysippus to define a slave as "a hireling for
+ life." Just as a hireling bestows a benefit when he does more than he
+ engaged himself to do, so when a slave's love for his master raises him
+ above his condition and urges him to do something noble&mdash;something
+ which would be a credit even to men more fortunate by birth&mdash;he
+ surpasses the hopes of his master, and is a benefit found in the house. Do
+ you think it is just that we should be angry with our slaves when they do
+ less than their duty, and that we should not be grateful to them when they
+ do more? Do you wish to know when their service is not a benefit? When the
+ question can be asked, "What if he had refused to do it?" When he does
+ that which he might have refused to do, we must praise his good will.
+ Benefits and wrongs are opposites; a slave can bestow a benefit upon his
+ master, if he can receive a wrong from his master. Now an official has
+ been appointed to hear complaints of the wrongs done by masters to their
+ slaves, whose duty it is to restrain cruelty and lust, or avarice in
+ providing them with the necessaries of life. What follows, then? Is it the
+ master who receives a benefit from his slave? nay, rather, it is one man
+ who receives it from another. Lastly, he did all that lay in his power; he
+ bestowed a benefit upon his master; it lies in your power to receive or
+ not to receive it from a slave. Yet who is so exalted, that fortune may
+ not make him need the aid even of the lowliest?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXIII. I shall now quote a number of instances of benefits, not all alike,
+ some even contradictory. Some slaves have given their master life, some
+ death; have saved him when perishing, or, as if that were not enough, have
+ saved him by their own death; others have helped their master to die, some
+ have saved his life by stratagem. Claudius Quadrigarius tells us in the
+ eighteenth book of his "Annals," that when Grumentum was being besieged,
+ and had been reduced to the greatest straits, two slaves deserted to the
+ enemy, and did valuable service. Afterwards, when the city was taken, and
+ the victors were rushing wildly in every direction, they ran before every
+ one else along the streets, which they well knew, to the house in which
+ they had been slaves, and drove their mistress before them; when they were
+ asked who she might be, they answered that she was their mistress, and a
+ most cruel one, and that they were leading her away for punishment. They
+ led her outside the walls, and concealed her with the greatest care until
+ the fighting was over; then, as the soldiery, satisfied with the sack of
+ the city, quickly resumed the manners of Romans, they also returned to
+ their own countrymen, and themselves restored their mistress to them. She
+ manumitted each of them on the spot, and was not ashamed to receive her
+ life from men over whom she had held the power of life and death. She
+ might, indeed, especially congratulate herself upon this; for had she been
+ saved otherwise, she would merely have received a common and hackneyed
+ piece of kindness, whereas, by being saved as she was, she became a
+ glorious legend, and an example to two cities. In the confusion of the
+ captured city, when every one was thinking only of his own safety, all
+ deserted her except these deserters; but they, that they might prove what
+ had been their intentions in effecting that desertion, deserted again from
+ the victors to the captive, wearing the masks of unnatural murderers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They thought&mdash;and this was the greatest part of the service which
+ they rendered&mdash;they were content to seem to have murdered their
+ mistress, if thereby their mistress might be saved from murder. Believe
+ me, it is the mark of no slavish soul to purchase a noble deed by the
+ semblance of crime.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Vettius, the praetor of the Marsi, was being led into the presence of
+ the Roman general, his slave snatched a sword from the soldier who was
+ dragging him along, and first slew his master. Then he said, "It is now
+ time for me to look to myself; I have already set my master free," and
+ with these words transfixed himself with one blow. Can you tell me of
+ anyone who saved his master more gloriously?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXIV. When Caesar was besieging Corfinium, Domitius, who was shut up in
+ the city, ordered a slave of his own, who was also a physician, to give
+ him poison. Observing the man's hesitation, he said, "Why do you delay, as
+ though the whole business was in your power? I ask for death with arms in
+ my hands." Then the slave assented, and gave him a harmless drug to drink.
+ When Domitius fell asleep after drinking this, the slave went to his son,
+ and said, "Give orders for my being kept in custody until you learn from
+ the result whether I have given your father poison or no." Domitius lived,
+ and Caesar saved his life; but his slave had saved it before.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXV. During the civil war, a slave hid his master, who had been
+ proscribed, put on his rings and clothes, met the soldiers who were
+ searching for him, and, after declaring that he would not stoop to entreat
+ them not to carry out their orders, offered his neck to their swords. What
+ a noble spirit it shows in a slave to have been willing to die for his
+ master, at a time when few were faithful enough to wish their master to
+ live! to be found kind when the state was cruel, faithful when it was
+ treacherous! to be eager for the reward of fidelity, though it was death,
+ at a time when such rich rewards were offered for treachery!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXVI. I will not pass over the instances which our own age affords. In the
+ reign of Tiberius Caesar, there was a common and almost universal frenzy
+ for informing, which was more ruinous to the citizens of Rome than the
+ whole civil war; the talk of drunkards, the frankness of jesters, was
+ alike reported to the government; nothing was safe; every opportunity of
+ ferocious punishment was seized, and men no longer waited to hear the fate
+ of accused persons, since it was always the same. One Paulus, of the
+ Praetorian guard, was at an entertainment, wearing a portrait of Tiberius
+ Caesar engraved in relief upon a gem. It would be absurd for me to beat
+ about the bush for some delicate way of explaining that he took up a
+ chamber-pot, an action which was at once noticed by Maro, one of the most
+ notorious informers of that time, and the slave of the man who was about
+ to fall into the trap, who drew the ring from the finger of his drunken
+ master. When Maro called the guests to witness that Paulus had dishonoured
+ the portrait of the emperor, and was already drawing up an act of
+ accusation, the slave showed the ring upon his own finger. Such a man no
+ more deserves to be called a slave, than Maro deserved to be called a
+ guest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXVII. In the reign of Augustus men's own words were not yet able to ruin
+ them, yet they sometimes brought them into trouble. A senator named Rufus,
+ while at dinner, expressed a hope that Caesar would not return safe from a
+ journey for which he was preparing, and added that all bulls and calves
+ wished the same thing. Some of those present carefully noted these words.
+ At daybreak, the slave who had stood at his feet during the dinner, told
+ him what he had said in his cups, and urged him to be the first to go to
+ Caesar, and denounce himself. Rufus followed this advice, met Caesar as he
+ was going down to the forum, and, swearing that he was out of his mind the
+ day before, prayed that what he had said might fall upon his own head and
+ that of his children; he then begged Caesar pardon him, and to take him
+ back into favour. When Caesar said that he would do so, he added, "No one
+ will believe that you have taken me back into favour unless you make me a
+ present of something;" and he asked for and obtained a sum of money so
+ large, that it would have been a gift not to be slighted even if bestowed
+ by an unoffended prince. Caesar added: "In future I will take care never
+ to quarrel with you, for my own sake." Caesar acted honourably in
+ pardoning him, and in being liberal as well as forgiving; no one can hear
+ this anecdote without praising Caesar, but he must praise the slave first.
+ You need not wait for me to tell you that the slave who did his master
+ this service was set free; yet his master did not do this for nothing, for
+ Caesar had already paid him the price of the slave's liberty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXVIII. After so many instances, can we doubt that a master may sometimes
+ receive a benefit from a slave? Why need the person of the giver detract
+ from the thing which he gives? why should not the gift add rather to the
+ glory of the giver. All men descend from the same original stock; no one
+ is better born than another, except in so far as his disposition is nobler
+ and better suited for the performance of good actions. Those who display
+ portraits of their ancestors in their halls, and set up in the entrance to
+ their houses the pedigree of their family drawn out at length, with many
+ complicated collateral branches, are they not notorious rather than noble?
+ The universe is the one parent of all, whether they trace their descent
+ from this primary source through a glorious or a mean line of ancestors.
+ Be not deceived when men who are reckoning up their genealogy, wherever an
+ illustrious name is wanting, foist in that of a god in its place. You need
+ despise no one, even though he bears a commonplace name, and owes little
+ to fortune. Whether your immediate ancestors were freedmen, or slaves, or
+ foreigners, pluck up your spirits boldly, and leap over any intervening
+ disgraces of your pedigree; at its source, a noble origin awaits you. Why
+ should our pride inflate us to such a degree that we think it beneath us
+ to receive benefits from slaves, and think only of their position,
+ forgetting their good deeds? You, the slave of lust, of gluttony, of a
+ harlot, nay, who are owned as a joint chattel by harlots, can you call
+ anyone else a slave? Call a man a slave? why, I pray you, whither are you
+ being hurried by those bearers who carry your litter? whither are these
+ men with their smart military-looking cloaks carrying you? is it not to
+ the door of some door-keeper, or to the gardens of some one who has not
+ even a subordinate office? and then you, who regard the salute of another
+ man's slave as a benefit, declare that you cannot receive a benefit from
+ your own slave. What inconsistency is this? At the same time you despise
+ and fawn upon slaves, you are haughty and violent at home, while out of
+ doors you are meek, and as much despised as you despise your slaves; for
+ none abase themselves lower than those who unconscionably give themselves
+ airs, nor are anymore prepared to trample upon others than those who have
+ learned how to offer insults by having endured them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXIX. I felt it my duty to say this, in order to crush the arrogance of
+ men who are themselves at the mercy of fortune, and to claim the right of
+ bestowing a benefit for slaves, in order that I may claim it also for
+ sons. The question arises, whether children can ever bestow upon their
+ parents greater benefits than those which they have received from them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is granted that many sons become greater and more powerful than their
+ parents, and also that they are better men. If this be true, they may give
+ better gifts to their fathers than they have received from them, seeing
+ that their fortune and their good nature are alike greater than that of
+ their father. "Whatever a father receives from his son," our opponent will
+ urge, "must in any case be lees than what the son received from him,
+ because the son owes to his father the very power of giving. Therefore the
+ father can never be surpassed in the bestowal of benefits, because the
+ benefit which surpasses his own is really his." I answer, that some things
+ derive their first origin from others, yet are greater than those others;
+ and a thing may be greater than that from which it took its rise, although
+ without that thing to start from it never could have grown so great. All
+ things greatly outgrow their beginnings. Seeds are the causes of all
+ things, and yet are the smallest part of the things which they produce.
+ Look at the Rhine, or the Euphrates, or any other famous rivers; how small
+ they are, if you only view them at the place from whence they take their
+ rise? they gain all that makes them terrible and renowned as they flow
+ along. Look at the trees which are tallest if you consider their height,
+ and the broadest if you look at their thickness and the spread of their
+ branches; compared with all this, how small a part of them is contained in
+ the slender fibres of the root? Yet take away their roots, and no more
+ groves will arise, nor great mountains be clothed with trees. Temples and
+ cities are supported by their foundations; yet what is built as the
+ foundation of the entire building lies out of sight. So it is in other
+ matters; the subsequent greatness of a thing ever eclipses its origin. I
+ could never have obtained anything without having previously received the
+ boon of existence from my parents; yet it does not follow from this that
+ whatever I obtain is less than that without which I could not obtain it.
+ If my nurse had not fed me when I was a child, I should not have been able
+ to conduct any of those enterprises which I now carry on, both with my
+ head and with my hand, nor should I ever have obtained the fame which is
+ due to my labours both in peace and war; would you on that account argue
+ that the services of a nurse were more valuable than the most important
+ undertakings? Yet is not the nurse as important as the father, since
+ without the benefits which I have received from each of them alike, I
+ should have been alike unable to effect anything? If I owe all that I now
+ can do to my original beginning, I cannot regard my father or my
+ grandfather as being this original beginning; there always will be a
+ spring further back, from which the spring next below is derived. Yet no
+ one will argue that I owe more to unknown and forgotten ancestors than to
+ my father; though really I do owe them more, if I owe it to my ancestors
+ that my father begat me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXX. "Whatever I have bestowed upon my father," says my opponent, "however
+ great it may be, yet is less valuable than what my father has bestowed
+ upon me, because if he had not begotten me, it never could have existed at
+ all." By this mode of reasoning, if a man has healed my father when ill,
+ and at the point of death, I shall not be able to bestow anything upon him
+ equivalent to what I have received from him; for had my father not been
+ healed, he could not have begotten me. Yet think whether it be not nearer
+ the truth to regard all that I can do, and all that I have done, as mine,
+ due to my own powers and my own will? Consider what the fact of my birth
+ is in itself; you will see that it is a small matter, the outcome of which
+ is dubious, and that it may lead equally to good or to evil; no doubt it
+ is the first step to everything, but because it is the first, it is not on
+ that account more important than all the others. Suppose that I have saved
+ my father's life, raised him to the highest honours, and made him the
+ chief man in his city, that I have not merely made him illustrious by my
+ own deeds, but have furnished him himself with an opportunity of
+ performing great exploits, which is at once important, easy, and safe, as
+ well as glorious; that I have loaded him with appointments, wealth, and
+ all that attracts men's minds; still, even when I surpass all others, I am
+ inferior to him. Now if you say, "You owe to your father the power of
+ doing all this," I shall answer, "Quite true, if to do all this it is only
+ necessary to be born; but if life is merely an unimportant factor in the
+ art of living well, and if you have bestowed upon me only that which I
+ have in common with wild beasts and the smallest, and some of the foulest
+ of creatures, do not claim for yourself what did not come into being in
+ consequence of the benefits which you bestowed, even though it could not
+ have come into being without them."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXXI. Suppose, father, that I have saved your life, in return for the life
+ which I received from you: in this case also I have outdone your benefit,
+ because I have given life to one who understands what I have done, and
+ because I understood what I was doing, since I gave you your life not for
+ the sake of, or by the means of my own pleasure; for just as it is less
+ terrible to die before one has time to fear death, so it is a much greater
+ boon to preserve one's life than to receive it. I have given life to one
+ who will at once enjoy it, you gave it to one who knew not if he should
+ ever live; I have given life to one who was in fear of death, your gift of
+ life merely enables me to die; I have given you a life complete, perfect;
+ you begat me without intelligence, a burden upon others. Do you wish to
+ know how far from a benefit it was to give life under such conditions? You
+ should have exposed me as a child, for you did me a wrong in begetting me.
+ What do I gather from this? That the cohabitation of a father and mother
+ is the very least of benefits to their child, unless in addition this
+ beginning of kindnesses be followed up by others, and confirmed by other
+ services. It is not a good thing to live, but to live well. "But," say
+ you, "I do live well." True, but I might have lived ill; so that your part
+ in me is merely this, that I live. If you claim merit to yourself for
+ giving me mere life, bare and helpless, and boast of it as a great boon,
+ reflect that this you claim merit for giving me is a boon which I possess
+ in common with flies and worms. In the next place, if I say no more than
+ that I have applied myself to honourable pursuits, and have guided the
+ course of my life along the path of rectitude, then you have received more
+ from your benefit than you gave; for you gave me to myself ignorant and
+ unlearned, and I have returned to you a son such as you would wish to have
+ begotten.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXXII. My father supported me. If I repay this kindness, I give him more
+ than I received, because he has the pleasure, not only of being supported,
+ but of being supported by a son, and receives more delight from my filial
+ devotion than from the food itself, whereas the food which he used to give
+ me merely affected my body. What? if any man rises so high as to become
+ famous among nations for his eloquence, his justice, or his military
+ skill, if much of the splendour of his renown is shed upon his father
+ also, and by its clear light dispels the obscurity of his birth, does not
+ such a man confer an inestimable benefit upon his parents? Would anyone
+ have heard of Aristo and Gryllus except through Xenophon and Plato, their
+ sons? Socrates keeps alive the memory of Sophroniscus. It would take long
+ to recount the other men whose names survive for no other reason than that
+ the admirable qualities of their sons have handed them down to posterity.
+ Did the father of Marcus Agrippa, of whom nothing was known, even after
+ Agrippa became famous, confer the greater benefit upon his son, or was
+ that greater which Agrippa conferred upon his father when he gained the
+ glory, unique in the annals of war, of a naval crown, and when he raised
+ so many vast buildings in Rome, which not only surpassed all former
+ grandeur, but have been surpassed by none since? Did Octavius confer a
+ greater benefit upon his son, or the Emperor Augustus upon his father,
+ obscured as he was by the intervention of an adoptive father? What joy
+ would he have experienced, if, after the putting down of the civil war, he
+ had seen his son ruling the state in peace and security? He would not have
+ recognized the good which he had himself bestowed, and would hardly have
+ believed, when he looked back upon himself, that so great a man could have
+ been born in his house. Why should I go on to speak of others who would
+ now be forgotten, if the glory of their sons had not raised them from
+ obscurity, and kept them in the light until this day? In the next place,
+ as we are not considering what son may have given back to his father
+ greater benefits than he received from him, but whether a son can give
+ back greater benefits, even if the examples which I have quoted are not
+ sufficient, and such benefits do not outweigh the benefits bestowed by the
+ parents, if no age has produced. an actual example, still it is not in the
+ nature of things impossible. Though no solitary act can outweigh the
+ deserts of a parent, yet many such acts combined by one son may do so.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXXIII. Scipio, while under seventeen years of age, rode among the enemy
+ in battle, and saved his father's life. Was it not enough, that in order
+ to reach his father he despised so many dangers when they were pressing
+ hardest upon the greatest generals, that he, a novice in his first battle,
+ made his way through so many obstacles, over the bodies of so many veteran
+ soldiers, and showed strength and courage beyond his years? Add to this,
+ that he also defended his father in court, and saved him from a plot of
+ his powerful enemies, that he heaped upon him a second and a third
+ consulship and other posts which were coveted even by consulars, that when
+ his father was poor he bestowed upon him the plunder which he took by
+ military licence, and that he made him rich with the spoils of the enemy,
+ which is the greatest honour of a soldier. If even this did not repay his
+ debt, add to it that he caused him to be constantly employed in the
+ government of provinces and in special commands, add, that after he had
+ destroyed the greatest cities, and became without a rival either in the
+ east or in the west, the acknowledged protector and second founder of the
+ Roman Empire, he bestowed upon one who was already of noble birth the
+ higher title of "the father of Scipio;" can we doubt that the commonplace
+ benefit of his birth was outdone by his exemplary conduct, and by the
+ valour which was at once the glory and the protection of his country?
+ Next, if this be not enough, suppose that a son were to rescue his father
+ from the torture, or to undergo it in his stead. You can suppose the
+ benefits returned by the son as great as you please, whereas the gift he
+ received from his father was of one sort only, was easily performed, and
+ was a pleasure to the giver; that he must necessarily have given the same
+ thing to many others, even to some to whom he knows not that he has given
+ it, that he had a partner in doing so, and that he had in view the law,
+ patriotism, the rewards bestowed upon fathers of families by the state,
+ the maintenance of his house and family: everything rather than him to
+ whom he was giving life. What? supposing that any one were to learn
+ philosophy and teach it to his father, could it be any longer disputed
+ that the son had given him something greater than he had received from
+ him, having returned to his father a happy life, whereas he had received
+ from him merely life?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXXIV. "But," says our opponent, "whatever you do, whatever you are able
+ to give to your father, is part of his benefit bestowed upon you." So it
+ is the benefit of my teacher that I have become proficient in liberal
+ studies; yet we pass on from those who taught them to us, at any rate from
+ those who taught us the alphabet; and although no one can learn anything
+ without them, yet it does not follow that whatsoever success one
+ subsequently obtains, one is still inferior to those teachers. There is a
+ great difference between the beginning of a thing and its final
+ development; the beginning is not equal to the thing at its greatest,
+ merely upon the ground that, without the beginning, it could never have
+ become so great.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXXV. It is now time for me to bring forth something, so to speak, from my
+ own mint. So long as there is something better than the benefit which a
+ man bestows, he may be outdone. A father gives life to his son; there is
+ something better than life; therefore a father may be outdone, because
+ there is something better than the benefit which he has bestowed. Still
+ further, he who has given any one his life, if he be more than once saved
+ from peril of death by him, has received a greater benefit than he
+ bestowed. Now, a father has given life to his son: if, therefore, he be
+ more than once saved from peril by his son, he can receive a greater
+ benefit than he gave. A benefit becomes greater to the receiver in
+ proportion to his need of it. Now he who is alive needs life more than he
+ who has not been born, seeing that such a one can have no need at all;
+ consequently a father, if his life is saved by his son, receives a greater
+ benefit than his son received from him by being born. It is said, "The
+ benefits conferred by fathers cannot be outdone by those returned by their
+ sons." Why? "Because the son received life from his father, and had he not
+ received it, he could not have returned any benefits at all." A father has
+ this in common with all those who have given any men their lives; it is
+ impossible that these men could repay the debt if they had not received
+ their life. Then I suppose one cannot overpay one's debt to a physician,
+ for a physician gives life as well as a father; or to a sailor who has
+ saved us when shipwrecked? Yet the benefits bestowed by these and by all
+ the others who give us life in whatever fashion, can be outdone:
+ consequently those of our fathers can be outdone. If any one bestows upon
+ me a benefit which requires the help of benefits from many other persons,
+ whereas I give him what requires no one to help it out, I have given more
+ than I have received; now a father gave to his son a life which, without
+ many accessories to preserve it, would perish; whereas a son, if he gives
+ life to his father, gives him a life which requires no assistance to make
+ it lasting; therefore the father who receives life from his son, receives
+ a greater benefit than he himself bestowed upon his son.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXXVI. These considerations do not destroy the respect due to parents, or
+ make their children behave worse to them, nay, better; for virtue is
+ naturally ambitious, and wishes to outstrip those who are before it.
+ Filial piety will be all the more eager, if, in returning a father's
+ benefits, it can hope to outdo them; nor will this be against the will or
+ the pleasure of the father, since in many contests it is to our advantage
+ to be outdone. How does this contest become so desirable? How comes it to
+ be such happiness to parents that they should confess themselves outdone
+ by the benefits bestowed by their children? Unless we decide the matter
+ thus, we give children an excuse, and make them less eager to repay their
+ debt, whereas we ought to spur them on, saying, "Noble youths, give your
+ attention to this! You are invited to contend in an honourable strife
+ between parents and children, as to which party has received more than it
+ has given. Your fathers have not necessarily won the day because they are
+ first in the field: only take courage, as befits you, and do not give up
+ the contest; you will conquer if you wish to do so. In this honourable
+ warfare you will have no lack of leaders who will encourage you to perform
+ deeds like their own, and bid you follow in their footsteps upon a path by
+ which victory has often before now been won over parents."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXXVII. AEneas conquered his father in well doing, for he himself had been
+ but a light and a safe burden for him when he was a child, yet he bore his
+ father, when heavy with age, through the midst of the enemy's lines and
+ the crash of the city which was falling around him, albeit the devout old
+ man, who bore the sacred images and the household gods in his hands,
+ pressed him with more than his own weight; nevertheless (what cannot
+ filial piety accomplish!) AEneas bore him safe through the blazing city,
+ and placed him in safety, to be worshipped as one of the founders of the
+ Roman Empire. Those Sicilian youths outdid their parents whom they bore
+ away safe, when Aetna, roused to unusual fury, poured fire over cities and
+ fields throughout a great part of the island. It is believed that the
+ fires parted, and that the flames retired on either side, so as to leave a
+ passage for these youths to pass through, who certainly deserved to
+ perform their daring task in safety. Antigonus outdid his father when,
+ after having conquered the enemy in a great battle, he transferred the
+ fruits of it to him, and handed over to him the empire of Cyprus. This is
+ true kingship, to choose not to be a king when you might. Manlius
+ conquered his father, imperious [Footnote: There is an allusion to the
+ surname of both the father and the son, "Imperiosus" given them on account
+ of their severity.] though he was, when, in spite of his having previously
+ been banished for a time by his father on, account of his dulness and
+ stupidity as a boy, he came to an interview which he had demanded with the
+ tribune of the people, who had filed an action against his father. The
+ tribune had granted him the interview, hoping that he would betray his
+ hated father, and believed that he had earned the gratitude of the youth,
+ having, amongst other matters, reproached old Manlius with sending him
+ into exile, treating it as a very serious accusation; but the youth,
+ having caught him alone, drew a sword which he had hidden in his robe, and
+ said, "Unless you swear to give up your suit against my father, I will run
+ you through with this sword. It is in your power to decide how my father
+ shall be freed from his prosecutor." The tribune swore, and kept his oath;
+ he related the reason of his abandonment of his action to an assembly at
+ the Rostra. No other man was ever permitted to put down a tribune with
+ impunity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXXVIII. There are instances without number of men who have saved their
+ parents from danger, have raised them from the lowest to the highest
+ station, and, taking them from the nameless mass of the lower classes,
+ have given them a name glorious throughout all ages. By no force of words,
+ by no power of genius, can one rightly express how desirable, how
+ admirable, how never to be erased from human memory it is to be able to
+ say, "I obeyed my parents, I gave way to them, I was submissive to their
+ authority whether it was just, or unjust and harsh; the only point in
+ which I resisted them was, not to be conquered by them in benefits."
+ Continue this struggle, I beg of you, and even though weary, yet re-form
+ your ranks. Happy are they who conquer, happy they who are conquered. What
+ can be more glorious than the youth who can say to himself&mdash;it would
+ not be right to say it to another&mdash;"I have conquered my father with
+ benefits"? What is more fortunate than that old man who declares
+ everywhere to everyone that he has been conquered in benefits by his son?
+ What, again, is more blissful than to be overcome in such a contest?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0006" id="link2H_4_0006">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ BOOK IV.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ I.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Of all the matters which we have discussed, Aebutius Liberalis, there is
+ none more essential, or which, as Sallust says, ought to be stated with
+ more care than that which is now before us: whether the bestowal of
+ benefits and the return of gratitude for them are desirable objects in
+ themselves. Some men are found who act honourably from commercial motives,
+ and who do not care for unrewarded virtue, though it can confer no glory
+ if it brings any profit. What can be more base than for a man to consider
+ what it costs him to be a good man, when virtue neither allures by gain
+ nor deters by loss, and is so far from bribing any one with hopes and
+ promises, that on the other hand she bids them spend money upon herself,
+ and often consists in voluntary gifts? We must go to her, trampling what
+ is merely useful under our feet: whithersoever she may call us or send us
+ we must go, without any regard for our private fortunes, sometimes without
+ sparing even our own blood, nor must we ever refuse to obey any of her
+ commands. "What shall I gain," says my opponent, "if I do this bravely and
+ gratefully?" You will gain the doing of it&mdash;the deed itself is your
+ gain. Nothing beyond this is promised. If any advantage chances to accrue
+ to you, count it as something extra. The reward of honourable dealings
+ lies in themselves. If honour is to be sought after for itself, since a
+ benefit is honourable, it follows that because both of these are of the
+ same nature, their conditions must also be the same. Now it has frequently
+ and satisfactorily been proved, that honour ought to be sought after for
+ itself alone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ II. In this part of the subject we oppose the Epicureans, an effeminate
+ and dreamy sect who philosophize in their own paradise, amongst whom
+ virtue is the handmaid of pleasures, obeys them, is subject to them, and
+ regards them as superior to itself. You say, "there is no pleasure without
+ virtue." But wherefore is it superior to virtue? Do you imagine that the
+ matter in dispute between them is merely one of precedence? Nay, it is
+ virtue itself and its powers which are in question. It cannot be virtue if
+ it can follow; the place of virtue is first, she ought to lead, to
+ command, to stand in the highest rank; you bid her look for a cue to
+ follow. "What," asks our opponent, "does that matter to you? I also
+ declare that happiness is impossible without virtue. Without virtue I
+ disapprove of and condemn the very pleasures which I pursue, and to which
+ I have surrendered myself. The only matter in dispute is this, whether
+ virtue be the cause of the highest good, or whether it be itself the
+ highest good." Do you suppose, though this be the only point in question,
+ that it is a mere matter of precedence? It is a confusion and obvious
+ blindness to prefer the last to the first. I am not angry at virtue being
+ placed below pleasure, but at her being mixed up at all with pleasure,
+ which she despises, whose enemy she is, and from which she separates
+ herself as far as possible, being more at home with labour and sorrow,
+ which are manly troubles, than with your womanish good things.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ III. It was necessary to insert this argument, my Liberalis, because it is
+ the part of virtue to bestow those benefits which we are now discussing,
+ and it is most disgraceful to bestow benefits for any other purpose than
+ that they should be free gifts. If we give with the hope of receiving a
+ return, we should give to the richest men, not to the most deserving:
+ whereas we prefer a virtuous poor man to an unmannerly rich one. That is
+ not a benefit, which takes into consideration the fortune of the receiver.
+ Moreover, if our only motive for benefiting others was our own advantage,
+ those who could most easily distribute benefits, such as rich and powerful
+ men, or kings, and persons who do not stand in need of the help of others,
+ ought never to do so at all; the gods would not bestow upon us the
+ countless blessings which they pour upon us unceasingly by night and by
+ day, for their own nature suffices them in all respects, and renders them
+ complete, safe, and beyond the reach of harm; they will, therefore, never
+ bestow a benefit upon any one, if self and self interest be the only cause
+ for the bestowal of benefits. To take thought, not where your benefit will
+ be best bestowed, but where it may be most profitably placed at interest,
+ from whence you will most easily get it back, is not bestowal of benefits,
+ but usury. Now the gods have nothing to do with usury; it follows,
+ therefore, that they cannot be liberal; for if the only reason for giving
+ is the advantage of the giver, since God cannot hope to receive any
+ advantages from us, there is no cause why God should give anything.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ IV. I know what answer may be made to this. "True; therefore God does not
+ bestow benefits, but, free from care and unmindful of us, He turns away
+ from our world and either does something else, or else does nothing, which
+ Epicurus thought the greatest possible happiness, and He is not affected
+ either by benefits or by injuries." The man who says this cannot surely
+ hear the voices of worshippers, and of those who all around him are
+ raising their hands to heaven and praying for the success both of their
+ private affairs and those of the state; which certainly would not be the
+ case, all men would not agree in this madness of appealing to deaf and
+ helpless gods, unless we knew that their benefits are sometimes bestowed
+ upon us unasked, sometimes in answer to our prayers, and that they give us
+ both great and seasonable gifts, which shield us from the most terrible
+ dangers. Who is there so poor, so uncared for, born to sorrow by so unkind
+ a fate, as never to have felt the vast generosity of the Gods? Look even
+ at those who complain and are discontented with their lot; you will find
+ that they are not altogether without a share in the bounty of heaven, that
+ there is no one upon whom something has not been shed from that most
+ gracious fount. Is the gift which is bestowed upon all alike, at their
+ birth, not enough? However unequally the blessings of after life may be
+ dealt out to us, did nature give us too little when she gave us herself?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ V. It is said, "God does not bestow benefits." Whence, then, comes all
+ that you possess, that you give or refuse to give, that you hoard or
+ steal? whence come these innumerable delights of our eyes, our ears, and
+ our minds? whence the plenty which provides us even with luxury&mdash;for
+ it is not our bare necessities alone against which provision is made; we
+ are loved so much as actually to be pampered&mdash;whence so many trees
+ bearing various fruits, so many wholesome herbs, so many different sorts
+ of food distributed throughout the year, so that even the slothful may
+ find sustenance in the chance produce of the earth? Then, too, whence come
+ the living creatures of all kinds, some inhabiting the dry land, others
+ the waters, others alighting from the sky, that every part of nature may
+ pay us some tribute; the rivers which encircle our meadows with most
+ beauteous bends, the others which afford a passage to merchant fleets as
+ they flow on, wide and navigable, some of which in summer time are subject
+ to extraordinary overflowings in order that lands lying parched under a
+ glowing sun may suddenly be watered by the rush of a midsummer torrent?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What of the fountains of medicinal waters? What of the bursting forth of
+ warm waters upon the seashore itself? Shall I
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "Tell of the seas round Italy that flow,
+ Which laves her shore above, and which below;
+ Or of her lakes, unrivalled Larius, thee,
+ Or thee, Benacus, roaring like a sea?"
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ VI. If any one gave you a few acres, you would say that you had received a
+ benefit; can you deny that the boundless extent of the earth is a benefit?
+ If any one gave you money, and filled your chest, since you think that so
+ important, you would call that a benefit. God has buried countless mines
+ in the earth, has poured out from the earth countless rivers, rolling
+ sands of gold; He has concealed in every place huge masses of silver,
+ copper and iron, and has bestowed upon you the means of discovering them,
+ placing upon the surface of the earth signs of the treasures hidden below;
+ and yet do you say that you have received no benefit? If a house were
+ given you, bright with marble, its roof beautifully painted with colours
+ and gilding, you would call it no small benefit. God has built for you a
+ huge mansion that fears no fire or ruin, in which you see no flimsy
+ veneers, thinner than the very saw with which they are cut, but vast
+ blocks of most precious stone, all composed of those various and different
+ substances whose paltriest fragments you admire so much; he has built a
+ roof which glitters in one fashion by day, and in another by night; and
+ yet do you say that you have received no benefit? When you so greatly
+ prize what you possess, do you act the part of an ungrateful man, and
+ think that there is no one to whom you are indebted for them? Whence comes
+ the breath which you draw? the light by which you arrange and perform all
+ the actions of your life? the blood by whose circulation your vital warmth
+ is maintained? those meats which excite your palate by their delicate
+ flavour after your hunger is appeased? those provocatives which rouse you
+ when wearied with pleasure? that repose in which you are rotting and
+ mouldering? Will you not, if you are grateful, say&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "'Tis to a god that this repose I owe,
+ For him I worship, as a god below.
+ Oft on his altar shall my firstlings bleed,
+ See, by his bounty here with rustic reed
+ I play the airs I love the livelong day,
+ The while my oxen round about me stray."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The true God is he who has placed, not a few oxen, but all the herds on
+ their pastures throughout the world; who furnishes food to the flocks
+ wherever they wander; who has ordained the alternation of summer and
+ winter pasturage, and has taught us not merely to play upon a reed, and to
+ reduce to some order a rustic and artless song, but who has invented so
+ many arts and varieties of voice, so many notes to make music, some with
+ our own breath, some with instruments. You cannot call our inventions our
+ own any more than you call our growth our own, or the various bodily
+ functions which correspond to each stage of our lives; at one time comes
+ the loss of childhood's teeth, at another, when our age is advancing and
+ growing into robuster manhood, puberty and the last wisdom-tooth marks the
+ end of our youth. "We have implanted in us the seeds of all ages, of all
+ arts, and God our master brings forth our intellects from obscurity."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ VII. "Nature," says my opponent, "gives me all this." Do you not perceive
+ when you say this that you merely speak of God under another name? for
+ what is nature but God and divine reason, which pervades the universe and
+ all its parts? You may address the author of our world by as many
+ different titles as you please; you may rightly call him Jupiter, Best and
+ Greatest, and the Thunderer, or the Stayer, so called, not because, as the
+ historians tell us, he stayed the flight of the Roman army in answer to
+ the prayer of Romulus, but because all things continue in their stay
+ through his goodness. If you were to call this same personage Fate, you
+ would not lie; for since fate is nothing more than a connected chain of
+ causes, he is the first cause of all upon which all the rest depend. You
+ will also be right in applying to him any names that you please which
+ express supernatural strength and power: he may have as many titles as he
+ has attributes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ VIII. Our school regards him as Father Liber, and Hercules, and Mercurius:
+ he is Father Liber because he is the parent of all, who first discovered
+ the power of seed, and our being led by pleasure to plant it; he is
+ Hercules, because his might is unconquered, and when it is wearied after
+ completing its labours, will retire into fire; he is Mercurius, because in
+ him is reasoning, and numbers, and system, and knowledge. Whither-soever
+ you turn yourself you will see him meeting you: nothing is void of him, he
+ himself fills his own work. Therefore, most ungrateful of mortals, it is
+ in vain that you declare yourself indebted, not to God, but to nature,
+ because there can be no God without nature, nor any nature without God;
+ they are both the same thing, differing only in their functions. If you
+ were to say that you owe to Annaeus or to Lucius what you received from
+ Seneca, you would not change your creditor, but only his name, because he
+ remains the same man whether you use his first, second, or third name. So
+ whether you speak of nature, fate, or fortune, these are all names of the
+ same God, using his power in different ways. So likewise justice, honesty,
+ discretion, courage, frugality, are all the good qualities of one and the
+ same mind; if you are pleased with any one of these, you are pleased with
+ that mind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ IX. However, not to drift aside into a distinct controversy, God bestows
+ upon us very many and very great benefits without hope of receiving any
+ return; since he does not require any offering from us, and we are not
+ capable of bestowing anything upon him: wherefore, a benefit is desirable
+ in itself. In it the advantage of the receiver is all that is taken into
+ consideration: we study this without regarding our own interests. "Yet,"
+ argues our opponent, "you say that we ought to choose with care the
+ persons upon whom we bestow benefits, because neither do husbandmen sow
+ seed in the sand: now if this be true, we follow our own interest in
+ bestowing benefits, just as much as in ploughing and sowing: for sowing is
+ not desirable in itself. Besides this you inquire where and how you ought
+ to bestow a benefit, which would not need to be done if the bestowal of a
+ benefit was desirable in itself: because in whatever place and whatever
+ manner it might be bestowed, it still would be a benefit." We seek to do
+ honourable acts, solely because they are honourable; yet even though we
+ need think of nothing else, we consider to whom we shall do them, and
+ when, and how; for in these points the act has its being. In like manner,
+ when I choose upon whom I shall bestow a benefit, and when I aim at making
+ it a benefit; because if it were bestowed upon a base person, it could
+ neither be a benefit nor an honourable action.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ X. To restore what has been entrusted to one is desirable in itself; yet I
+ shall not always restore it, nor shall I do so in any place or at any time
+ you please. Sometimes it makes no difference whether I deny that I have
+ received it, or return it openly. I shall consider the interests of the
+ person to whom I am to return it, and shall deny that I have received a
+ deposit, which would injure him if returned. I shall act in the same
+ manner in bestowing a benefit: I shall consider when to give it, to whom,
+ in what manner, and on what grounds. Nothing ought to be done without a
+ reason: a benefit is not truly so, if it be bestowed without a reason,
+ since reason accompanies all honorable action. How often do we hear men
+ reproaching themselves for some thoughtless gift, and saying, "I had
+ rather have thrown it away than have given it to him!" What is
+ thoughtlessly given away is lost in the most discreditable manner, and it
+ is much worse to have bestowed a benefit badly than to have received no
+ return for it; that we receive no return is the fault of another; that we
+ did not choose upon whom we should bestow it, is our own. In choosing a
+ fit person, I shall not, as you expect, pay the least attention to whether
+ I am likely to get any return from him, for I choose one who will be
+ grateful, not one who will return my goodness, and it often happens that
+ the man who makes no return is grateful, while he who returns a benefit is
+ ungrateful for it. I value men by their hearts alone, and, therefore, I
+ shall pass over a rich man if he be unworthy, and give to a good man
+ though he be poor; for he will be grateful however destitute he may be,
+ since whatever he may lose, his heart will still be left him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XI. I do not fish for gain, for pleasure, or for credit, by bestowing
+ benefits: satisfied in doing so with pleasing one man alone, I shall give
+ in order to do my duty. Duty, however, leaves one some choice; do you ask
+ me, how I am to choose? I shall choose an honest, plain, man, with a good
+ memory, and grateful for kindness; one who keeps his hands off other men's
+ goods, yet does not greedily hold to his own, and who is kind to others;
+ when I have chosen such a man, I shall have acted to my mind, although
+ fortune may have bestowed upon him no means of returning my kindness. If
+ my own advantage and mean calculation made me liberal, if I did no one any
+ service except in order that he might in turn do a service to me, I should
+ never bestow a benefit upon one who was setting out for distant and
+ foreign countries, never to return; I should not bestow a benefit upon one
+ who was so ill as to be past hope of recovery, nor should I do so when I
+ myself was failing, because I should not live long enough to receive any
+ return. Yet, that you may know that to do good is desirable in itself, we
+ afford help to strangers who put into our harbour only to leave it
+ straightway; we give a ship and fit it out for a shipwrecked stranger to
+ sail back in to his own country. He leaves us hardly knowing who it was
+ who saved him, and, as he will never return to our presence, he hands over
+ his debt of gratitude to the gods, and beseeches them to fulfil it for
+ him: in the meanwhile we rejoice in the barren knowledge that we have done
+ a good action. What? when we stand upon the extreme verge of life, and
+ make our wills, do we not assign to others benefits from which we
+ ourselves shall receive no advantage? How much time we waste, how long we
+ consider in secret how much property we are to leave, and to whom! What
+ then? does it make any difference to us to whom we leave our property,
+ seeing that we cannot expect any return from any one? Yet we never give
+ anything with more care, we never take such pains in deciding upon our
+ verdict, as when, without any views of personal advantage, we think only
+ of what is honourable, for we are bad judges of our duty as long as our
+ view of it is distorted by hope and fear, and that most indolent of vices,
+ pleasure: but when death has shut off all these, and brought us as
+ incorrupt judges to pronounce sentence, we seek for the most worthy men to
+ leave our property to, and we never take more scrupulous care than in
+ deciding what is to be done with what does not concern us. Yet, by
+ Hercules, then there steals over us a great satisfaction as we think, "I
+ shall make this man richer, and by bestowing wealth upon that man I shall
+ add lustre to his high position." Indeed, if we never give without
+ expecting some return, we must all die without making our wills.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XII. It may be said, "You define a benefit as a loan which cannot be
+ repaid: now a loan is not a desirable thing in itself." When we speak of a
+ loan, we make use of a figure, or comparison, just as we speak of law as;
+ the standard of right and wrong, although a standard is not a thing to be
+ desired for its own sake. I have adopted this phrase in order to
+ illustrate my subject: when I speak of a loan, I must be understood to
+ mean something resembling a loan. Do you wish to know how it differs from
+ one? I add the words "which cannot be repaid," whereas every loan both can
+ and ought to be repaid. It is so far from being right to bestow a benefit
+ for one's own advantage, that often, as I have explained, it is one's duty
+ to bestow it when it involves one's own loss and risk: for instance, if I
+ assist a man when beset by robbers, so that he gets away from them safely,
+ or help some victim of power, and bring upon myself the party spite of a
+ body of influential men, very, probably incurring myself the same disgrace
+ from which I saved him, although I might have taken the other side, and
+ looked on with safety at struggles with which I have nothing to do: if I
+ were to give bail for one who has been condemned, and when my friend's
+ goods were advertised for sale I were to give a bond to the effect that I
+ would make restitution to the creditors, if, in order to save a proscribed
+ person I myself run the risk of being proscribed. No one, when about to
+ buy a villa at Tusculum or Tibur, for a summer retreat, because of the
+ health of the locality, considers how many years' purchase he gives for
+ it; this must be looked to by the man who makes a profit by it. The same
+ is true with benefits; when you ask what return I get for them, I answer,
+ the consciousness of a good action. "What return does one get for
+ benefits?" Pray tell me what return one gets for righteousness, innocence,
+ magnanimity, chastity, temperance? If you wish for anything beyond these
+ virtues, you do not wish for the virtues themselves. For what does the
+ order of the universe bring round the seasons? for what does the sun make
+ the day now longer and now shorter? all these things are benefits, for
+ they take place for our good. As it is the duty of the universe to
+ maintain the round of the seasons, as it is the duty of the sun to vary
+ the points of his rising and setting, and to do all these things by which
+ we profit, without any reward, so is it the duty of man, amongst other
+ things, to bestow benefits. Wherefore then does he give? He gives for fear
+ that he should not give, lest he might lose an opportunity of doing a good
+ action.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XIII. You Epicureans take pleasure in making a study of dull torpidity, in
+ seeking for a repose which differs little from sound sleep, in lurking
+ beneath the thickest shade, in amusing with the feeblest possible trains
+ of thought that sluggish condition of your languid minds which you term
+ tranquil contemplation, and in stuffing with food and drink, in the
+ recesses of your gardens, your bodies which are pallid with want of
+ exercise; we Stoics, on the other hand, take pleasure in bestowing
+ benefits, even though they cost us labour, provided that they lighten the
+ labours of others; though they lead us into danger, provided that they
+ save others, though they straiten our means, if they alleviate the poverty
+ and distresses of others. What difference does it make to me whether I
+ receive benefits or not? even if I receive them, it is still my duty to
+ bestow them. A benefit has in view the advantage of him upon whom we
+ bestow it, not our own; otherwise we merely bestow it upon ourselves. Many
+ things, therefore, which are of the greatest possible use to others lose
+ all claim to gratitude by being paid for. Merchants are of use to cities,
+ physicians to invalids, dealers to slaves; yet all these have no claim to
+ the gratitude of those whom they benefit, because they seek their own
+ advantage through that of others. That which is bestowed with a view to
+ profit is not a benefit. "I will give this in order that I may get a
+ return for it" is the language of a broker.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XIV. I should not call a woman modest, if she rebuffed her lover in order
+ to increase his passion, or because she feared the law or her husband; as
+ Ovid says:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "She that denies, because she does not dare
+ To yield, in spirit grants her lover's prayer."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Indeed, the woman who owes her chastity, not to her own virtue, but to
+ fear, may rightly be classed as a sinner. In the same manner, he who
+ merely gave in order that he might receive, cannot be said to have given.
+ Pray, do we bestow benefits upon animals when we feed them for our use or
+ for our table? do we bestow benefits upon trees when we tend them that
+ they may not suffer from drought or from hardness of ground? No one is
+ moved by righteousness and goodness of heart to cultivate an estate, or to
+ do any act in which the reward is something apart from the act itself; but
+ he is moved to bestow benefits, not by low and grasping motives, but by a
+ kind and generous mind, which even after it has given is willing to give
+ again, to renew its former bounties by fresh ones, which thinks only of
+ how much good it can do the man to whom it gives; whereas to do any one a
+ service because it is our interest to do so is a mean action, which
+ deserves no praise, no credit. What grandeur is there in loving oneself,
+ sparing oneself, gaining profit for oneself? The true love of giving calls
+ us away from all this, forcibly leads us to put up with loss, and foregoes
+ its own interest, deriving its greatest pleasure from the mere act of
+ doing good.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XV. Can we doubt that the converse of a benefit is an injury? As the
+ infliction of injuries is a thing to be avoided, so is the bestowal of
+ benefits to be desired for its own sake. In the former, the disgrace of
+ crime outweighs all the advantages which incite us to commit it; while we
+ are urged to the latter course by the appearance of honour, in itself a
+ powerful incentive to action, which attends it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I should not lie if I were to affirm that every one takes pleasure in the
+ benefits which he has bestowed, that everyone loves best to see the man
+ whom he has most largely benefited. Who does not thinks that to have
+ bestowed one benefit is a reason for bestowing a second? and would this be
+ so, if the act of giving did not itself give us pleasure? How often you
+ may hear a man say, "I cannot bear to desert one whose life I have
+ preserved, whom I have saved from danger. True, he asks me to plead his
+ cause against men of great influence. I do not wish to do so, yet what am
+ I to do? I have already helped him once, nay twice." Do you not perceive
+ how very powerful this instinct must be, if it leads us to bestow benefits
+ first because it is right to do so, and afterwards because we have already
+ bestowed somewhat? Though at the outset a man may have had no claim upon
+ us, we yet continue to give to him because we have already given to him.
+ So untrue is it that we are urged to bestow benefits by our own interest,
+ that even when our benefits prove failures we continue to nurse them and
+ encourage them out of sheer love of benefiting, which has a natural
+ weakness even for what has been ill-bestowed, like that which we feel for
+ our vicious children.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XVI. These same adversaries of ours admit that they are grateful, yet not
+ because it is honourable, but because it is profitable to be so. This can
+ be proved to be untrue all the more easily, because it can be established
+ by the same arguments by which we have established that to bestow a
+ benefit is desirable for its own sake. All our arguments start from this
+ settled point, that honour is pursued for no reason except because it is
+ honour. Now, who will venture to raise the question whether it be
+ honourable to be grateful? who does not loathe the ungrateful man, useless
+ as he is even to himself? How do you feel when any one is spoken of as
+ being ungrateful for great benefits conferred upon him by a friend? Is it
+ as though he had done something base, or had merely neglected to do
+ something useful and likely to be profitable to himself? I imagine that
+ you think him a bad man, and one who deserves punishment, not one who
+ needs a guardian; and this would not be the case, unless gratitude were
+ desirable in itself and honourable. Other qualities, it may be, manifest
+ their importance less clearly, and require an explanation to prove whether
+ they be honourable or no; this is openly proved to be so in the sight of
+ all, and is too beautiful for anything to obscure or dim its glory. What
+ is more praiseworthy, upon what are all men more universally agreed, than
+ to return gratitude for good offices?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XVII. Pray tell me, what is it that urges us to do so? Is it profit? Why,
+ unless a man despises profit, he is not grateful. Is it ambition? why,
+ what is there to boast of in having paid what you owe? Is it fear? The
+ ungrateful man feels none, for against this one crime we have provided no
+ law, as though nature had taken sufficient precautions against it. Just as
+ there is no law which bids parents love and indulge their children, seeing
+ that it is superfluous to force us into the path which we naturally take,
+ just as no one needs to be urged to love himself, since self-love begins
+ to act upon him as soon as he is born, so there is no law bidding us to
+ seek that which is honourable in itself; for such things please us by
+ their very nature, and so attractive is virtue that the disposition even
+ of bad men leads them to approve of good rather than of evil. Who is there
+ who does not wish to appear beneficent, who does not even when steeped in
+ crime and wrong-doing strive after the appearance of goodness, does not
+ put some show of justice upon even his most intemperate acts, and
+ endeavour to seem to have conferred a benefit even upon those whom he has
+ injured? Consequently, men allow themselves to be thanked by those whom
+ they have ruined, and pretend to be good and generous, because they cannot
+ prove themselves so; and this they never would do were it not that a love
+ of honour for its own sake forces them to seek a reputation quite at
+ variance with their real character, and to conceal their baseness, a
+ quality whose fruits we covet, though we regard it itself with dislike and
+ shame. No one has ever so far rebelled against the laws of nature and put
+ off human feeling as to act basely for mere amusement. Ask any of those
+ who live by robbery whether he would not rather obtain what he steals and
+ plunders by honest means; the man whose trade is highway robbery and the
+ murder of travellers would rather find his booty than take it by force;
+ you will find no one who would not prefer to enjoy the fruits of
+ wickedness without acting wickedly. Nature bestows upon us all this
+ immense advantage, that the light of virtue shines into the minds of all
+ alike; even those who do not follow her, behold her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XVIII. A proof that gratitude is desirable for itself lies in the fact
+ that ingratitude is to be avoided for itself, because no vice more
+ powerfully rends asunder and destroys the union of the human race. To what
+ do we trust for safety, if not in mutual good offices one to another? It
+ is by the interchange of benefits alone that we gain some measure of
+ protection for our lives, and of safety against sudden disasters. Taken
+ singly, what should we be? a prey and quarry for wild beasts, a luscious
+ and easy banquet; for while all other animals have sufficient strength to
+ protect themselves, and those which are born to a wandering solitary life
+ are armed, man is covered by a soft skin, has no powerful teeth or claws
+ with which to terrify other creatures, but weak and naked by himself is
+ made strong by union.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ God has bestowed upon him two gifts, reason and union, which raise him
+ from weakness to the highest power; and so he, who if taken alone would be
+ inferior to every other creature, possesses supreme dominion. Union has
+ given him sovereignty over all animals; union has enabled a being born
+ upon the earth to assume power over a foreign element, and bids him be
+ lord of the sea also; it is union which has checked the inroads of
+ disease, provided supports for our old age, and given us relief from pain;
+ it is union which makes us strong, and to which we look for protection
+ against the caprices of fortune. Take away union, and you will rend
+ asunder the association by which the human race preserves its existence;
+ yet you will take it away if you succeed in proving that ingratitude is
+ not to be avoided for itself, but because something is to be feared for
+ it; for how many are there who can with safety be ungrateful? In fine, I
+ call every man ungrateful who is merely made grateful by fear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XIX. No sane man fears the gods; for it is madness to fear what is
+ beneficial, and no man loves those whom he fears. You, Epicurus, ended by
+ making God unarmed; you stripped him of all weapons, of all power, and,
+ lest anyone should fear him, you banished him out of the world. There is
+ no reason why you should fear this being, cut off as he is, and separated
+ from the sight and touch of mortals by a vast and impassable wall; he has
+ no power either of rewarding or of injuring us; he dwells alone half-way
+ between our heaven and that of another world, without the society either
+ of animals, of men, or of matter, avoiding the crash of worlds as they
+ fall in ruins above and around him, but neither hearing our prayers nor
+ interested in us. Yet you wish to seem to worship this being just as a
+ father, with a mind, I suppose, full of gratitude; or, if you do not wish
+ to seem grateful, why should you worship him, since you have received no
+ benefit from him, but have been put together entirely at random and by
+ chance by those atoms and mites of yours? "I worship him," you answer,
+ "because of his glorious majesty and his unique nature." Granting that you
+ do this, you clearly do it without the attraction of any reward, or any
+ hope; there is therefore something which is desirable for itself, whose
+ own worth attracts you, that is, honour. Now what is more honourable than
+ gratitude? the means of practising this virtue are as extensive as life
+ itself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XX. "Yet," argues he, "there is also a certain amount of profit inherent
+ in this virtue." In what virtue is there not? But that which we speak of
+ as desirable for itself is such, that although it may possess some
+ attendant advantages, yet it would be desirable even if stripped of all
+ these. It is profitable to be grateful; yet I will be grateful even though
+ it harm me. What is the aim of the grateful man? is it that his gratitude
+ may win for him more friends and more benefits? What then? If a man is
+ likely to meet with affronts by showing his gratitude, if he knows that
+ far from gaining anything by it, he must lose much even of what he has
+ already acquired, will he not cheerfully act to his own disadvantage? That
+ man is ungrateful who, in returning a kindness, looks forward to a second
+ gift&mdash;who hopes while he repays. I call him ungrateful who sits at
+ the bedside of a sick man because he is about to make a will, when he is
+ at leisure to think of inheritances and legacies. Though he may do
+ everything which a good and dutiful friend ought to do, yet, if any hope
+ of gain be floating in his mind, he is a mere legacy-hunter, and is
+ angling for an inheritance. Like the birds which feed upon carcases, which
+ come close to animals weakened by disease, and watch till they fall, so
+ these men are attracted by death and hover around a corpse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXI. A grateful mind is attracted only by a sense of the beauty of its
+ purpose. Do you wish to know this to be so, and that it is not bribed by
+ ideas of profit? There are two classes of grateful men: a man is called
+ grateful who has made some return for what he received; this man may very
+ possibly display himself in this character, he has something to boast of,
+ to refer to. We also call a man grateful who receives a benefit with
+ goodwill, and owes it to his benefactor with goodwill; yet this man's
+ gratitude lies concealed within his own mind. What profit can accrue to
+ him from this latent feeling? yet this man, even though he is not able to
+ do anything more than this, is grateful; he loves his benefactor, he feels
+ his debt to him, he longs to repay his kindness; whatever else you may
+ find wanting, there is nothing wanting in the man. He is like a workman
+ who has not the tools necessary for the practice of his craft, or like a
+ trained singer whose voice cannot be heard through the noise of those who
+ interrupt him. I wish to repay a kindness: after this there still remains
+ something for me to do, not in order that I may become grateful, but that
+ I may discharge my debt; for, in many cases, he who returns a kindness is
+ ungrateful for it, and he who does not return it is grateful. Like all
+ other virtues, the whole value of gratitude lies in the spirit in which it
+ is done; so, if this man's purpose be loyal, any shortcomings on his part
+ are due not to himself, but to fortune. A man who is silent may,
+ nevertheless, be eloquent; his hands may be folded or even bound, and he
+ may yet be strong; just as a pilot is a pilot even when upon dry land,
+ because his knowledge is complete, and there is nothing wanting to it,
+ though there may be obstacles which prevent his making use of it. In the
+ same way, a man is grateful who only wishes to be so, and who has no one
+ but himself who can bear witness to his frame of mind. I will go even
+ further than this: a man sometimes is grateful when he appears to be
+ ungrateful, when ill-judging report has declared him to be so. Such a man
+ can look to nothing but his own conscience, which can please him even when
+ overwhelmed by calumny, which contradicts the mob and common rumour,
+ relies only upon itself, and though it beholds a vast crowd of the other
+ way of thinking opposed to it, does not count heads, but wins by its own
+ vote alone. Should it see its own good faith meet with the punishment due
+ to treachery, it will not descend from its pedestal, and will remain
+ superior to its punishment. "I have," it says, "what I wished, what I
+ strove for. I do not regret it, nor shall I do so; nor shall fortune,
+ however unjust she may be, ever hear me say, 'What did I want? What now is
+ the use of having meant well?'" A good conscience is of value on the rack,
+ or in the fire; though fire be applied to each of our limbs, gradually
+ encircle our living bodies, and burst our heart, yet if our heart be
+ filled with a good conscience, it will rejoice in the fire which will make
+ its good faith shine before the world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXII. Now let that question also which has been already stated be again
+ brought forward; Why is it that we should wish to be grateful when we are
+ dying, that we should carefully weigh the various services rendered us by
+ different individuals, and carefully review our whole life, that we may
+ not seem to have forgotten any kindness? Nothing then remains for us to
+ hope for; yet when on the very threshold, we wish to depart from human
+ life as full of gratitude as possible. There is in truth an immense reward
+ for this thing merely in doing it, and what is honourable has great power
+ to attract men's minds, which are overwhelmed by its beauty and carried
+ off their balance, enchanted by its brilliancy and splendour. "Yet,"
+ argues our adversary, "from it many advantages take their rise, and good
+ men obtain a safer life and love, and the good opinion of the better
+ class, while their days are spent in greater security when accompanied by
+ innocence and gratitude."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Indeed, nature would have been most unjust had she rendered this great
+ blessing miserable, uncertain, and fruitless. But consider this point,
+ whether you would make your way to that virtue, to which it is generally
+ safe and easy to attain, even though the path lay over rocks and
+ precipices, and were beset with fierce beasts and venomous serpents. A
+ virtue is none the less to be desired for its own sake, because it has
+ some adventitious profit connected with it: indeed, in most cases the
+ noblest virtues are accompanied by many extraneous advantages, but it is
+ the virtues that lead the way, and these merely follow in their train.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXIII. Can we doubt that the climate of this abode of the human race is
+ regulated by the motion of the sun and moon in their orbits? that our
+ bodies are sustained, the hard earth loosened, excessive moisture reduced,
+ and the surly bonds of winter broken by the heat of the one, and that
+ crops are brought to ripeness by the effectual all-pervading warmth of the
+ other? that the fertility of the human race corresponds to the courses of
+ the moon? that the sun by its revolution marks out the year, and that the
+ moon, moving in a smaller orbit, marks out the months? Yet, setting aside
+ all this, would not the sun be a sight worthy to be contemplated and
+ worshipped, if he did no more than rise and set? would not the moon be
+ worth looking at, even if it passed uselessly through the heavens? Whose
+ attention is not arrested by the universe itself, when by night it pours
+ forth its fires and glitters with innumerable stars? Who, while he admires
+ them, thinks of their being of use to him? Look at that great company
+ gliding over our heads, how they conceal their swift motion under the
+ semblance of a fixed and immovable work. How much takes place in that
+ night which you make use of merely to mark and count your days! What a
+ mass of events is being prepared in that silence! What a chain of destiny
+ their unerring path is forming! Those which you imagine to be merely
+ strewn about for ornament are really one and all at work. Nor is there any
+ ground for your belief that only seven stars revolve, and that the rest
+ remain still: we understand the orbits of a few, but countless divinities,
+ further removed from our sight, come and go; while the greater part of
+ those whom our sight reaches move in a mysterious manner and by an unknown
+ path.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXIV. What then? would you not be captivated by the sight of such a
+ stupendous work, even though it did not cover you, protect you, cherish
+ you, bring you into existence and penetrate you with its spirit? Though
+ these heavenly bodies are of the very first importance to us, and are,
+ indeed, essential to our life, yet we can think of nothing but their
+ glorious majesty, and similarly all virtue, especially that of gratitude,
+ though it confers great advantages upon us, does not wish to be loved for
+ that reason; it has something more in it than this, and he who merely
+ reckons it among useful things does not perfectly comprehend it. A man,
+ you say, is grateful because it is to his advantage to be so. If this be
+ the case, then his advantage will be the measure of his gratitude. Virtue
+ will not admit a covetous lover; men must approach her with open purse.
+ The ungrateful man thinks, "I did wish to be grateful, but I fear the
+ expense and danger and insults to which I should expose myself: I will
+ rather consult my own interest." Men cannot be rendered grateful and
+ ungrateful by the same line of reasoning: their actions are as distinct as
+ their purposes. The one is ungrateful, although it is wrong, because it is
+ his interest; the other is grateful, although it is not his interest,
+ because it is right.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXV. It is our aim to live in harmony with the scheme of the universe, and
+ to follow the example of the gods. Yet in all their acts the gods have no
+ object in view other than the act itself, unless you suppose that they
+ obtain a reward for their work in the smoke of burnt sacrifices and the
+ scent of incense. See what great things they do every day, how much they
+ divide amongst us, with how great crops they fill the earth, how they move
+ the seas with convenient winds to carry us to all shores, how by the fall
+ of sudden showers they soften the ground, renew the dried-up springs of
+ fountains, and call them into new life by unseen supplies of water. All
+ this they do without reward, without any advantage accruing to themselves.
+ Let our line of conduct, if it would not depart from its model, preserve
+ this direction, and let us not act honourably because we are hired to do
+ so. We ought to feel ashamed that any benefit should have a price: we pay
+ nothing for the gods.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXVI. "If," our adversary may say, "you wish to imitate the gods, then
+ bestow benefits upon the ungrateful as well as the grateful; for the sun
+ rises upon the wicked as well as the good, the seas are open even to
+ pirates." By this question he really asks whether a good man would bestow
+ a benefit upon an ungrateful person, knowing him to be ungrateful. Allow
+ me here to introduce a short explanation, that we may not be taken in by a
+ deceitful question. Understand that according to the system of the Stoics
+ there are two classes of ungrateful persons. One man is ungrateful because
+ he is a fool; a fool is a bad man; a man who is bad possesses every vice:
+ therefore he is ungrateful. In the same way we speak of all bad men as
+ dissolute, avaricious, luxurious, and spiteful, not because each man has
+ all these vices in any great or remarkable degree, but because he might
+ have them; they are in him, even though they be not seen. The second form
+ of ungrateful person is he who is commonly meant by the term, one who is
+ inclined by nature to this vice. In the case of him who has the vice of
+ ingratitude just as he has every other, a wise man will bestow a benefit,
+ because if he sets aside all such men there will be no one left for him to
+ bestow it on. As for the ungrateful man who habitually misapplies benefits
+ and acts so by choice, he will no more bestow a benefit upon him than he
+ would lend money to a spendthrift, or place a deposit in the hands of one
+ who had already often refused to many persons to give up the property with
+ which they had entrusted him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXVII. We call some men timid because they are fools: in this they are
+ like the bad men who are steeped in all vices without distinction.
+ Strictly speaking, we call those persons timid who are alarmed even at
+ unmeaning noises. A fool possesses all vices, but he is not equally
+ inclined by nature to all; one is prone to avarice, another to luxury, and
+ another to insolence. Those persons, therefore, are mistaken, who ask the
+ Stoics, "What do you say, then? is Achilles timid? Aristides, who received
+ a name for justice, is he unjust? Fabius, who 'by delays retrieved the
+ day,' is he rash? Does Decius fear death? Is Mucius a traitor? Camillus a
+ betrayer?" We do not mean that all vices are inherent in all men in the
+ same way in which some especial ones are noticeable in certain men, but we
+ declare that the bad man and the fool possess all vices; we do not even
+ acquit them of fear when they are rash, or of avarice when they are
+ extravagant. Just as a man has all his senses, yet all men have not on
+ that account as keen a sight as Lynceus, so a man that is a fool has not
+ all vices in so active and vigorous a form as some persons have spine of
+ them, yet he has them all. All vices exist in all of them, yet all are not
+ prominent in each individual. One man is naturally prone to avarice,
+ another is the slave of wine, a third of lust; or, if not yet enslaved by
+ these passions, he is so fashioned by nature that this is the direction in
+ which his character would probably lead him. Therefore, to return to my
+ original proposition, every bad man is ungrateful, because he has the
+ seeds of every villainy in him; but he alone is rightly so called who is
+ naturally inclined to this vice. Upon such a person as this, therefore, I
+ shall not bestow a benefit. One who betrothed his daughter to an
+ ill-tempered man from whom many women had sought a divorce, would be held
+ to have neglected her interests; a man would be thought a bad father if he
+ entrusted the care of his patrimony to one who had lost his own family
+ estate, and it would be the act of a madman to make a will naming as the
+ guardian of one's son a man who had already defrauded other wards. So will
+ that man be said to bestow benefits as badly as possible, who chooses
+ ungrateful persons, in whose hands they will perish.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXVIII. "The gods," it may be said, "bestow much, even upon the
+ ungrateful." But what they bestow they had prepared for the good, and the
+ bad have their share as well, because they cannot be separated. It is
+ better to benefit the bad as well, for the sake of benefiting the good,
+ than to stint the good for fear of benefiting the bad. Therefore the gods
+ have created all that you speak of, the day, the sun, the alternations of
+ winter and summer, the transitions through spring and autumn from one
+ extreme to the other, showers, drinking fountains, and regularly blowing
+ winds for the use of all alike; they could not except individuals from the
+ enjoyment of them. A king bestows honours upon those who deserve them, but
+ he gives largesse to the undeserving as well. The thief, the bearer of
+ false witness, and the adulterer, alike receive the public grant of corn,
+ and all are placed on the register without any examination as to
+ character; good and bad men share alike in all the other privileges which
+ a man receives, because he is a citizen, not because he is a good man. God
+ likewise has bestowed certain gifts upon the entire human race, from which
+ no one is shut out. Indeed, it could not be arranged that the wind which
+ was fair for good men should be foul for bad ones, while it is for the
+ good of all men that the seas should be open for traffic and the kingdom
+ of mankind be enlarged; nor could any law be appointed for the showers, so
+ that they should not fall upon the fields of wicked and evil men. Some
+ things are given to all alike: cities are founded for good and bad men
+ alike; works of genius reach, by publication, even unworthy men; medicine
+ points out the means of health even to the wicked; no one has checked the
+ making up of wholesome remedies for fear that the undeserving should be
+ healed. You must seek for examination and preference of individuals in
+ such things as are bestowed separately upon those who are thought to
+ deserve them; not in these, which admit the mob to share them without
+ distinction. There is a great difference between not shutting a man out
+ and choosing him. Even a thief receives justice; even murderers enjoy the
+ blessings of peace; even those who have plundered others can recover their
+ own property; assassins and private bravoes are defended against the
+ common enemy by the city wall; the laws protect even those who have sinned
+ most deeply against them. There are some things which no man could obtain
+ unless they were given to all; you need not, therefore, cavil about those
+ matters in which all mankind is invited to share. As for things which men
+ receive or not at my discretion, I shall not bestow them upon one whom I
+ know to be ungrateful.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXIX. "Shall we, then," argues he, "not give our advice to an ungrateful
+ man when he is at a loss, or refuse him a drink of water when he is
+ thirsty, or not show him the path when he has lost his way? or would you
+ do him these services and yet not give him anything?" Here I will draw a
+ distinction, or at any rate endeavour to do so. A benefit is a useful
+ service, yet all useful service is not a benefit; for some are so trifling
+ as not to claim the title of benefits. To produce a benefit two conditions
+ must concur. First, the importance of the thing given; for some things
+ fall short of the dignity of a benefit. Who ever called a hunch of bread a
+ benefit, or a farthing dole tossed to a beggar, or the means of lighting a
+ fire? yet sometimes these are of more value than the most costly benefits;
+ still their cheapness detracts from their value even when, by the exigency
+ of time, they are rendered essential. The next condition, which is the
+ most important of all, must necessarily be present, namely, that I should
+ confer the benefit for the sake of him whom I wish to receive it, that I
+ should judge him worthy of it, bestow it of my own free will, and receive
+ pleasure from my own gift, none of which conditions are present in the
+ cases of which we have just now spoken; for we do not bestow such things
+ as those upon these who are worthy of them, but we give them carelessly,
+ as trifles, and do not give them so much to a man as to humanity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXX. I shall not deny that sometimes I would give even to the unworthy,
+ out of respect for others; as, for instance, in competition for public
+ offices, some of the basest of men are preferred on account of their noble
+ birth, to industrious men of no family, and that for good reasons; for the
+ memory of great virtues is sacred, and more men will take pleasure in
+ being good, if the respect felt for good men does not cease with their
+ lives. What made Cicero's son a consul, except his father? What lately
+ brought Cinna [Footnote: See Seneca on "Clemency," book i., ch. ix.] out
+ of the camp of the enemy and raised him to the consulate? What made Sextus
+ Pompeius and the other Pompeii consuls, unless it was the greatness of one
+ man, who once was raised so high that, by his very fall, he sufficiently
+ exalted all his relatives. What lately made Fabius Persicus a member of
+ more than one college of priests, though even profligates avoided his
+ kiss? Was it not Verrucosus, and Allobrogicus, and the three hundred who
+ to serve their country blocked the invader's path with the force of a
+ single family? It is our duty to respect the virtuous, not only when
+ present with us, but also when removed from our sight: as they have made
+ it their study not to bestow their benefits upon one age alone, but to
+ leave them existing after they themselves have passed away, so let us not
+ confine our gratitude to a single age. If a man has begotten great men, he
+ deserves to receive benefits, whatever he himself may be: he has given us
+ worthy men. If a man descends from glorious ancestors, whatever he himself
+ may be, let him find refuge under the shadow of his ancestry. As mean
+ places are lighted up by the rays of the sun, so let the degenerate shine
+ in the light of their forefathers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXXI. In this place, my Liberalis, I wish to speak in defence of the gods.
+ We sometimes say, "What could Providence mean by placing an Arrhidaeus
+ upon the throne?" Do you suppose that the crown was given to Arrhidaeus?
+ nay, it was given to his father and his brother. Why did Heaven bestow the
+ empire of the world upon Caius Caesar, the most bloodthirsty of mankind,
+ who was wont to order blood to be shed in his presence as freely as if he
+ wished to drink of it? Why, do you suppose that it was given to him? It
+ was given to his father, Germanicus, to his grandfather, his great
+ grandfather, and to others before them, no less illustrious men, though
+ they lived as private citizens on a footing of equality with others. Why,
+ when you yourself were making Mamercus Scaurus consul, were you ignorant
+ of his vices? did he himself conceal them? did he wish to appear decent?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Did you admit a man who was so openly filthy to the fasces and the
+ tribunal? Yes, it was because you were thinking of the great old Scaurus,
+ the chief of the Senate, and were unwilling that his descendant should be
+ despised.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXXII. It is probable that the gods act in the same manner, that they show
+ greater indulgence to some for the sake of their parents and their
+ ancestry, and to others for the sake of their children and grandchildren,
+ and a long line of descendants beyond them; for they know the whole course
+ of their works, and have constant access to the knowledge of all that
+ shall hereafter pass through their hands. These things come upon us from
+ the unknown future, and the gods have foreseen and are familiar with the
+ events by which we are startled. "Let these men," says Providence, "be
+ kings, because their ancestors were good kings, because they regarded
+ righteousness and temperance as the highest rule of life, because they did
+ not devote the state to themselves, but devoted themselves to the state.
+ Let these others reign, because some one of their ancestors before them
+ was a good man, who bore a soul superior to fortune, who preferred to be
+ conquered rather than to conquer in civil strife, because it was more to
+ the advantage of the state. [Footnote: Gertz, "Stud. Crit," p. 159, note.]
+ It was not possible to make a sufficient return to him for this during so
+ long a time; let this other, therefore, out of regard for him, be chief of
+ the people, not because he knows how, or is capable, but because the other
+ has earned it for him. This man is misshapen, loathsome to look upon, and
+ will disgrace the insignia of his office. Men will presently blame me,
+ calling me blind and reckless, not knowing upon whom I am conferring what
+ ought to be given to the greatest and noblest of men; but I know that, in
+ giving this dignity to one man, I am paying an old debt to another. How
+ should the men of to-day know that ancient hero, who so resolutely avoided
+ the glory which pressed upon him, who went into danger with the same look
+ which other men wear when they have escaped from danger, who never
+ regarded his own interest as apart from that of the commonwealth?"
+ "Where," you ask, "or who is he? whence does he come?" "You know him not;
+ it lies with me to balance the debit and credit account in such cases as
+ these; I know how much I owe to each man; I repay some after a long
+ interval, others beforehand, according as my opportunities and the
+ exigencies of my social system permit." I shall, therefore, sometimes
+ bestow somewhat upon an ungrateful man, though not for his own sake.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXXIII. "What," argues he, "if you do not know whether your man be
+ ungrateful or grateful&mdash;will you wait until you know, or will you not
+ lose the opportunity of bestowing a benefit? To wait is a long business&mdash;for,
+ as Plato says, it is hard to form an opinion about the human mind,&mdash;not
+ to wait, is rash." To this objector we shall answer, that we never should
+ wait for absolute knowledge of the whole case, since the discovery of
+ truth is an arduous task, but should proceed in the direction in which
+ truth appeared to direct us. All our actions proceed in this direction: it
+ is thus that we sow seed, that we sail upon the sea, that we serve in the
+ army, marry, and bring up children. The result of all these actions is
+ uncertain, so we take that course from which we believe that good results
+ may be hoped for. Who can guarantee a harvest to the sower, a harbour to
+ the sailor, victory to the soldier, a modest wife to the husband, dutiful
+ children to the father? We proceed in the way in which reason, not
+ absolute truth, directs us. Wait, do nothing that will not turn out well,
+ form no opinion until you have searched but the truth, and your life will
+ pass in absolute in action. Since it is only the appearance of truth, not
+ truth itself, which leads me hither or thither, I shall confer benefits
+ upon the man who apparently will be grateful.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXXIV. "Many circumstances," argues he, "may arise which may enable a bad
+ man to steal into the place of a good one, or may cause a good man to be
+ disliked as though he were a bad one; for appearances, to which we trust,
+ are deceptive." Who denies it? Yet I can find nothing else by which to
+ guide my opinion. I must follow these tracks in my search after truth, for
+ I have none more trustworthy than these; I will take pains to weigh the
+ value of these with all possible care, and will not hastily give my assent
+ to them. For instance, in a battle, it may happen that my hand may be
+ deceived by some mistake into turning my weapon against my comrade, and
+ sparing my enemy as though he were on my side; but this will not often
+ take place, and will not take place through any fault of mine, for my
+ object is to strike the enemy, and defend my countryman. If I know a man
+ to be ungrateful, I shall not bestow a benefit upon him. But the man has
+ passed himself off as a good man by some trick, and has imposed upon me.
+ Well, this is not at all the fault of the giver, who gave under the
+ impression that his friend was grateful. "Suppose," asks he, "that you
+ were to promise to bestow a benefit, and afterwards were to learn that
+ your man was ungrateful, would you bestow it or not? If you do, you do
+ wrong knowingly, for you give to one to whom you ought not; if you refuse,
+ you do wrong likewise, for you do not give to him to whom you promised to
+ give. This case upsets your consistency, and that proud assurance of yours
+ that the wise man never regrets his actions, or amends what he has done,
+ or alters his plans." The wise man never changes his plans while the
+ conditions under which he formed them remain the same; therefore, he never
+ feels regret, because at the time nothing better than what he did could
+ have been done, nor could any better decision have been arrived at than
+ that which was made; yet he begins everything with the saving clause, "If
+ nothing shall occur to the contrary." This is the reason why we say that
+ all goes well with him, and that nothing happens contrary to his
+ expectation, because he bears in mind the possibility of something
+ happening to prevent the realization of his projects. It is an imprudent
+ confidence to trust that fortune will be on our side. The wise man
+ considers both sides: he knows how great is the power of errors, how
+ uncertain human affairs are, how many obstacles there are to the success
+ of plans. Without committing himself, he awaits the doubtful and
+ capricious issue of events, and weighs certainty of purpose against
+ uncertainty of result. Here also, however, he is protected by that saving
+ clause, without which he decides upon nothing, and begins nothing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXXV. When I promise to bestow a benefit, I promise it, unless something
+ occurs which makes it my duty not to do so. What if, for example, my
+ country orders me to give to her what I had promised to my friend? or if a
+ law be passed forbidding any one to do what I had promised to do for him?
+ Suppose that I have promised you my daughter in marriage, that then you
+ turn out to be a foreigner, and that I have no right of intermarriage with
+ foreigners; in this case, the law, by which I am forbidden to fulfil my
+ promise, forms my defence. I shall be treacherous, and hear myself blamed
+ for inconsistency, only if I do not fulfil, my promise when all conditions
+ remain the same as when I made it; otherwise, any change makes me free to
+ reconsider the entire case, and absolves me from my promise. I may have
+ promised to plead a cause; afterwards it appears that this cause is
+ designed to form a precedent for an attack upon my father. I may have
+ promised to leave my country, and travel abroad; then news comes that the
+ road is beset with robbers. I was going to an appointment at some
+ particular place; but my son's illness, or my wife's confinement,
+ prevented me. All conditions must be the same as they were when I made the
+ promise, if you mean to hold me bound in honour to fulfil it. Now what
+ greater change can take place than that I should discover you to be a bad
+ and ungrateful man? I shall refuse to an unworthy man that which I had
+ intended to give him supposing him to be worthy, and I shall also have
+ reason to be angry with him for the trick which he has put upon me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXXVI. I shall nevertheless look into the matter, and consider what the
+ value of the thing promised may be. If it be trifling, I shall give it,
+ not because you are worthy of it, but because I promised it, and I shall
+ not give it as a present, but merely in order to make good my words and
+ give myself a twitch of the ear. I will punish my own rashness in
+ promising by the loss of what I gave. "See how grieved you are; mind you
+ take more care what you say in future." As the saying is, I will take
+ tongue money from you. If the matter be important, I will not, as Maecenas
+ said, let ten million sesterces reproach me. I will weigh the two sides of
+ the question one against the other: there is something in abiding by what
+ you have promised; on the other hand, there is a great deal in not
+ bestowing a benefit upon one who is unworthy of it. Now, how great is this
+ benefit? If it is a trifling one, let us wink and let it pass; but if it
+ will cause me much loss or much shame to give it, I had rather excuse
+ myself once for refusing it than have to do so ever after for giving it.
+ The whole point, I repeat, depends upon how much the thing given is worth:
+ let the terms of my promise be appraised. Not only shall I refuse to give
+ what I may have promised rashly, but I shall also demand back again what I
+ may have wrongly bestowed: a man must be mad who keeps a promise made
+ under a mistake.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXXVII. Philip, king of the Macedonians, had a hardy soldier whose
+ services he had found useful in many campaigns. From time to time he made
+ this man presents of part of the plunder as the reward of his valour, and
+ used to excite his greedy spirit by his frequent gifts. This man was cast
+ by shipwreck upon the estate of a certain Macedonian, who as soon as he
+ heard the news hastened to him, restored his breath, removed him to his
+ own farmhouse, gave up his own bed to him, nursed him out of his weakened
+ and half-dead condition, took care of him at his own expense for thirty
+ days, restored him to health and gave him a sum of money for his journey,
+ as the man kept constantly saying, "If only I can see my chief, I will
+ repay your kindness." He told Philip of his shipwreck, said nothing about
+ the help which he had received, and at once demanded that a certain man's
+ estate should be given to him. The man was a friend of his: it was that
+ very man by whom he had been rescued and restored to health. Sometimes,
+ especially in time of war, kings bestow many gifts with their eyes shut.
+ One just man cannot deal with such a mass of armed selfishness. It is not
+ possible for any one to be at the same time a good man and a good general.
+ How are so many thousands of insatiable men to be satiated? What would
+ they have, if every man had his own? Thus Philip reasoned with himself
+ while he ordered the man to be put in possession of the property which he
+ asked for. However, the other, when driven out of his estate, did not,
+ like a peasant, endure his wrongs in silence, thankful that he himself was
+ not given away also, but sent a sharp and outspoken letter to Philip, who,
+ on reading it, was so much enraged that he straightway ordered Pausanias
+ to restore the property to its former owner, and to brand that wickedest
+ of soldiers, that most ungrateful of guests, that greediest of shipwrecked
+ men, with letters bearing witness to his ingratitude. He, indeed, deserved
+ to have the letters not merely branded but carved in his flesh, for having
+ reduced his host to the condition in which he himself had been when he lay
+ naked and shipwrecked upon the beach; still, let us see within what limits
+ one ought to keep in punishing him. Of course what he had so villainously
+ seized ought to be taken from him. But who would be affected by the
+ spectacle of his punishment? The crime which he had committed would
+ prevent his being pitied even by any humane person.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXXVIII. Will Philip then give you a thing because he has promised to give
+ it, even though he ought not to do so, even though he will commit a wrong
+ by doing so, nay, a crime, even though by this one act he will make it
+ impossible for shipwrecked men to reach the shore? There is no
+ inconsistency in giving up an intention which we have discovered to be
+ wrong and have condemned as wrong; we ought candidly to admit, "I thought
+ that it was something different; I have been deceived." It is mere pride
+ and folly to persist, "what I once have said, be it what it may, shall
+ remain unaltered and settled." There is no disgrace in altering one's
+ plans according to circumstances. Now, if Philip had left this man in
+ possession of that seashore which he obtained by his shipwreck, would he
+ not have practically pronounced sentence of banishment against all
+ unfortunates for the future? "Rather," says Philip, "do thou carry upon
+ thy forehead of brass those letters, that they may be impressed upon the
+ eyes of all throughout my kingdom. Go, let men see how sacred a thing is
+ the table of hospitality; show them your face, that upon it they may read
+ the decree which prevents its being a capital crime to give refuge to the
+ unfortunate under one's roof. The order will be more certainly respected
+ by this means than if I had inscribed it upon tablets of brass."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXXIX. "Why then," argues our adversary, "did your Stoic philosopher Zeno,
+ when he had promised a loan of five hundred denarii to some person, whom
+ he afterwards discovered to be of doubtful character, persist in lending
+ it, because of his promise, though his friends dissuaded him from doing
+ so?" In the first place a loan is on a different footing to a benefit.
+ Even when we have lent money to an undesirable person we can recall it; I
+ can demand payment upon a certain day, and if he becomes bankrupt, I can
+ obtain my share of his property; but a benefit is lost utterly and
+ instantly. Besides, the one is the act of a bad man, the other that of a
+ bad father of a family. In the next place, if the sum had been a larger
+ one, not even Zeno would have persisted in lending it. It was five hundred
+ denarii; the sort of sum of which one says, "May he spend it in sickness,"
+ and it was worth paying so much to avoid breaking his promise. I shall go
+ out to supper, even though the weather be cold, because I have promised to
+ go; but I shall not if snow be falling. I shall leave my bed to go to a
+ betrothal feast, although I may be suffering from indigestion; but I shall
+ not do so if I am feverish. I will become bail for you, because I
+ promised; but not if you wish me to become bail in some transaction of
+ uncertain issue, if you expose me to forfeiting my money to the state.
+ There runs through all these cases, I argue, an implied exception; if I am
+ able, provided it is right for me to do so, if these things be so and so.
+ Make the position the same when you ask me to fulfil my promise, as it was
+ when I gave it, and it will be mere fickleness to disappoint you; but if
+ something new has taken place in the meanwhile, why should you wonder at
+ my intentions being changed when the conditions under which I gave the
+ promise are changed? Put everything back as it was, and I shall be the
+ same as I was. We enter into recognizances to appear, yet if we fail to do
+ so an action will not in all cases lie against us, for we are excused for
+ making default if forced to do so by a power which we cannot resist.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XL. You may take the same answer to the question as to whether we ought in
+ all cases to show gratitude for kindness, and whether a benefit ought in
+ all cases to be repaid. It is my duty to show a grateful mind, but in some
+ cases my own poverty, in others the prosperity of the friend to whom I owe
+ some return, will not permit me to give it. What, for instance, am I, a
+ poor man, to give to a king or a rich man in return for his kindness,
+ especially as some men regard it as a wrong to have their benefits repaid,
+ and are wont to pile one benefit upon another? In dealing with such
+ persons, what more can I do than wish to repay them? Yet I ought not to
+ refuse to receive a new benefit, because I have not repaid the former one.
+ I shall take it as freely as it is given, and will offer myself to my
+ friend as a wide field for the exercise of his good nature: he who is
+ unwilling to receive new benefits must be dissatisfied with what he has
+ already received. Do you say, "I shall not be able to return them?" What
+ is that to the purpose? I am willing enough to do so if opportunity or
+ means were given me. He gave it to me, of course, having both opportunity
+ and means: is he a good man or a bad one? if he is a good man, I have a
+ good case against him, and I will not plead if he be a bad one. Neither do
+ I think it right to insist on making repayment, even though it be against
+ the will of those whom we repay, and to press it upon them however
+ reluctant they may be; it is not repayment to force an unwilling man to
+ resume what you were once willing to take. Some people, if any trifling
+ present be sent to them, afterwards send back something else for no
+ particular reason, and then declare that they are under no obligation; to
+ send something back at once, and balance one present by another, is the
+ next thing to refusing to receive it. On some occasions I shall not return
+ a benefit, even though I be able to do so. When? When by so doing I shall
+ myself lose more than he will gain, or if he would not notice any
+ advantage to himself in receiving that which it would be a great loss to
+ me to return. The man who is always eager to repay under all
+ circumstances, has not the feeling of a grateful man, but of a debtor;
+ and, to put it shortly, he who is too eager to repay, is unwilling to be
+ in his friend's debt; he who is unwilling, and yet is in his friend's
+ debt, is ungrateful.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0007" id="link2H_4_0007">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ BOOK V.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ I.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ In the preceding books I seem to have accomplished the object which I
+ proposed to myself, since in them I have discussed how a benefit ought to
+ be bestowed, and how it ought to be received. These are the limits of this
+ action; when I dwell upon it further I am not obeying the orders, but the
+ caprices of my subject which ought to be followed whither it leads, not
+ whither it allures us to wander; for now and then something will arise,
+ which, although it is all but unconnected with the subject, instead of
+ being a necessary part of it, still thrills the mind with a certain charm.
+ However, since you wish it to be so, let us go on, after having completed
+ our discussion of the heads of the subject itself, to investigate those
+ matters which, if you wish for truth, I must call adjacent to it, not
+ actually connected with it; to examine which carefully is not one worth
+ one's while, and yet is not labour in vain. No praise, however, which I
+ can give to benefits does justice to you, Aebutius Liberalis, a man of
+ excellent disposition and naturally inclined to bestow them. Never have I
+ seen any one esteem even the most trifling services more kindly; indeed,
+ your good-nature goes so far as to regard whatever benefit is bestowed
+ upon anyone as bestowed upon yourself; you are prepared to pay even what
+ is owed by the ungrateful, that no one may regret having bestowed
+ benefits. You yourself are so far from any boastfulness, you are so eager
+ at once to free those whom you serve from any feeling of obligation to
+ you, that you like, when giving anything to any one, to seem not so much
+ to be giving a present as returning one; and therefore what you give in
+ this manner will all the more fully he repaid to you: for, as a rule,
+ benefits come to one who does not demand repayment of them; and just as
+ glory follows those who avoid it, so men receive a more plentiful harvest
+ in return for benefits bestowed upon those who had it in their power to be
+ ungrateful. With you there is no reason why those who have received
+ benefits from you should not ask for fresh ones; nor would you refuse to
+ bestow others, to overlook and conceal what you have given, and to add to
+ it more and greater gifts, since it is the aim of all the best men and the
+ noblest dispositions to bear with an ungrateful man until you make him
+ grateful. Be not deceived in pursuing this plan; vice, if you do not too
+ soon begin to hate it, will yield to virtue.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ II. Thus it is that you are especially pleased with what you think the
+ grandly-sounding phrase, "It is disgraceful to be worsted in a contest of
+ benefits." Whether this be true or not deserves to be investigated, and it
+ means something quite different from what you imagine; for it is never
+ disgraceful to be worsted in any honourable contest, provided that you do
+ not throw down your arms, and that even when conquered you wish to
+ conquer. All men do not strive for a good object with the same strength,
+ resources, and good fortune, upon which depend at all events the issues of
+ the most admirable projects, though we ought to praise the will itself
+ which makes an effort in the right direction. Even though another passes
+ it by with swifter pace, yet the palm of victory does not, as in
+ publicly-exhibited races, declare which is the better man; though even in
+ the games chance frequently brings an inferior man to the front. As far as
+ loyalty of feeling goes, which each man wishes to be possessed in the
+ fullest measure on his own side, if one of the two be the more powerful,
+ if he have at his disposal all the resources which he wishes to use, and
+ be favoured by fortune in his most ambitious efforts, while the other,
+ although equally willing, can only return less than he receives, or
+ perhaps can make no return at all, but still wishes to do so and is
+ entirely devoted to this object; then the latter is no more conquered than
+ he who dies in arms, whom the enemy found it easier to slay than to turn
+ back. To be conquered, which you consider disgraceful, cannot happen to a
+ good man; for he will never surrender, never give up the contest, to the
+ last day of his life he will stand prepared and in that posture he will
+ die, testifying that though he has received much, yet that he had the will
+ to repay as much as he had received.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ III. The Lacedaemonians forbid their young men to contend in the
+ pancratium, or with the caestus, in which games the defeated party has to
+ acknowledge himself beaten. The winner of a race is he who first reaches
+ the goal; he outstrips the others in swiftness, but not in courage. The
+ wrestler who has been thrown three times loses the palm of victory, but
+ does not yield it up. Since the Lacedaemonians thought it of great
+ importance that their countrymen should be invincible, they kept them away
+ from those contests in which victory is assigned, not by the judge, or by
+ the issue of the contest itself, but by the voice of the vanquished
+ begging the victor to spare him as he falls. This attribute of never being
+ conquered, which they so jealously guard among their citizens, can be
+ attained by all men through virtue and goodwill, because even when all
+ else is vanquished, the mind remains unconquered. For this cause no one
+ speaks of the three hundred Fabii as conquered, but slaughtered. Regulus
+ was taken captive by the Carthaginians, not conquered; and so were all
+ other men who have not yielded in spirit when overwhelmed by the strength
+ and weight of angry fortune.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So is it with benefits. A man may have received more than he gave, more
+ valuable ones, more frequently bestowed; yet is he not vanquished. It may
+ be that, if you compare the benefits with one another, those which he has
+ received will outweigh those which he has bestowed; but if you compare the
+ giver and the receiver, whose intentions also ought to be considered
+ apart, neither will prove the victor. It often happens that even when one
+ combatant is pierced with many wounds, while the other is only slightly
+ injured, yet they are said to have fought a drawn battle, although the
+ former may appear to be the worse man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ IV. No one, therefore, can be conquered in a contest of benefits, if he
+ knows how to owe a debt, if he wishes to make a return for what he has
+ received, and raises himself to the same level with his friend in spirit,
+ though he cannot do so in material gifts. As long as he remains in this
+ temper of mind, as long as he has the wish to declare by proofs that he
+ has a grateful mind, what difference does it make upon which side we can
+ count the greater number of presents? You are able to give much; I can do
+ nothing but receive. Fortune abides with you, goodwill alone with me; yet
+ I am as much on an equality with you as naked or lightly armed men are
+ with a large body armed to the teeth. No one, therefore, is worsted by
+ benefits, because each man's gratitude is to be measured by his will. If
+ it be disgraceful to be worsted in a contest of benefits, you ought not to
+ receive a benefit from very powerful men whose kindness you cannot return,
+ I mean such as princes and kings, whom fortune has placed in such a
+ station that they can give away much, and can only receive very little and
+ quite inadequate returns for what they give. I have spoken of kings and
+ princes, who alone can cause works to be accomplished, and whose
+ superlative power depends upon the obedience and services of inferiors;
+ but some there are, free from all earthly lusts, who are scarcely affected
+ by any human objects of desire, upon whom fortune herself could bestow
+ nothing. I must be worsted in a contest of benefits with Socrates, or with
+ Diogenes, who walked naked through the treasures of Macedonia, treading
+ the king's wealth under his feet. In good sooth, he must then rightly have
+ seemed, both to himself and to all others whose eyes were keen enough to
+ perceive the real truth, to be superior even to him at whose feet all the
+ world lay. He was far more powerful, far richer even than Alexander, who
+ then possessed everything; for there was more that Diogenes could refuse
+ to receive than that Alexander was able to give.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ V. It is not disgraceful to be worsted by these men, for I am not the less
+ brave because you pit me against an invulnerable enemy, nor does fire not
+ burn because you throw into it something over which flames have no power,
+ nor does iron lose its power of cutting, though you may wish to cut up a
+ stone which is hard, impervious to blows, and of such a nature that hard
+ tools are blunted upon it. I give you the same answer about gratitude. A
+ man is not disgracefully worsted in a contest of benefits if he lays
+ himself under an obligation to such persons as these, whose enormous
+ wealth or admirable virtue shut out all possibility of their benefits
+ being returned. As a rule we are worsted by our parents; for while we have
+ them with us, we regard them as severe, and do not understand what they do
+ for us. When our age begins to bring us a little sense, and we gradually
+ perceive that they deserve our love for those very things which used to
+ prevent our loving them, their advice, their punishments, and the careful
+ watch which they used to keep over our youthful recklessness, they are
+ taken from us. Few live to reap any real fruit from children; most men
+ feel their sons only as a burden. Yet there is no disgrace in being
+ worsted by one's parent in bestowing benefits; how should there be, seeing
+ that there is no disgrace in being worsted by anyone. We are equal to some
+ men, and yet not equal; equal in intention, which is all that they care
+ for, which is all that we promise to be, but unequal in fortune. And if
+ fortune prevents any one from repaying a kindness, he need not, therefore,
+ blush, as though he were vanquished; there is no disgrace in failing to
+ reach your object, provided you attempt to reach it. It often is
+ necessary, that before making any return for the benefits which we have
+ received, we should ask for new ones; yet, if so, we shall not refrain
+ from asking for them, nor shall we do so as though disgraced by so doing,
+ because, even if we do not repay the debt, we shall owe it; because, even
+ if something from without befalls us to prevent our repaying it, it will
+ not be our fault if we are not grateful. We can neither be conquered in
+ intention, nor can we be disgraced by yielding to what is beyond our
+ strength to contend with.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ VI. Alexander, the king of the Macedonians, used to boast that he had
+ never been worsted by anybody in a contest of benefits. If so, it was no
+ reason why, in the fulness of his pride, he should despise the
+ Macedonians, Greeks, Carians, Persians, and other tribes of whom his army
+ was composed, nor need he imagine that it was this that gave him an empire
+ reaching from a corner of Thrace to the shore of the unknown sea. Socrates
+ could make the same boast, and so could Diogenes, by whom Alexander was
+ certainly surpassed; for was he not surpassed on the day when, swelling as
+ he was beyond the limits of merely human pride, he beheld one to whom he
+ could give nothing, from whom he could take nothing? King Archelaus
+ invited Socrates to come to him. Socrates is reported to have answered
+ that he should be sorry to go to one who would bestow benefits upon him,
+ since he should not be able to make him an adequate return for them. In
+ the first place, Socrates was at liberty not to receive them; next,
+ Socrates himself would have been the first to bestow a benefit, for he
+ would have come when invited, and would have given to Archelaus that for
+ which Archelaus could have made no return to Socrates. Even if Archelaus
+ were to give Socrates gold and silver, if he learned in return for them to
+ despise gold and silver, would not Socrates be able to repay Archelaus?
+ Could Socrates receive from him as much value as he gave, in displaying to
+ him a man skilled in the knowledge of life and of death, comprehending the
+ true purpose of each? Suppose that he had found this king, as it were,
+ groping his way in the clear sunlight, and had taught him the secrets of
+ nature, of which he was so ignorant, that when there was an eclipse of the
+ sun, he up his palace, and shaved his son's head, [Footnote: Gertz very
+ reasonably conjectures that he shaved his own head which reading would
+ require a very trifling alteration of the text.] which men are wont to do
+ in times of mourning and distress. What a benefit it would have been if he
+ had dragged the terror-stricken king out of his hiding-place, and bidden
+ him be of good cheer, saying, "This is not a disappearance of the sun, but
+ a conjunction of two heavenly bodies; for the moon, which proceeds along a
+ lower path, has placed her disk beneath the sun, and hidden it by the
+ interposition of her own mass. Sometimes she only hides a small portion of
+ the sun's disk, because she only grazes it in passing; sometimes she hides
+ more, by placing more of herself before it; and sometimes she shuts it out
+ from our sight altogether, if she passes in an exactly even course between
+ the sun and the earth. Soon, however, their own swift motion will draw
+ these two bodies apart; soon the earth will receive back again the light
+ of day. And this system will continue throughout centuries, having certain
+ days, known beforehand, upon which the sun cannot display all rays,
+ because of the intervention of the moon. Wait only for a short time; he
+ will soon emerge, he will soon leave that seeming cloud, and freely shed
+ abroad his light without any hindrances." Could Socrates not have made an
+ adequate return to Archelaus, if he had taught him to reign? as though
+ Socrates would not benefit him sufficiently, merely by enabling him to
+ bestow a benefit upon Socrates. Why, then, did Socrates say this? Being a
+ joker and a speaker in parables&mdash;a man who turned all, especially the
+ great, into ridicule&mdash;he preferred giving him a satirical refusal,
+ rather than an obstinate or haughty one, and therefore said that he did
+ not wish to receive benefits from one to whom he could not return as much
+ as he received. He feared, perhaps, that he might be forced to receive
+ something which he did not wish, he feared that it might be something
+ unfit for Socrates to receive. Some one may say, "He ought to have said
+ that he did not wish to go." But by so doing he would have excited against
+ himself the anger of an arrogant king, who wished everything connected
+ with himself to be highly valued. It makes no difference to a king whether
+ you be unwilling to give anything to him or to accept anything from him;
+ he is equally incensed at either rebuff, and to be treated with disdain is
+ more bitter to a proud spirit than not to be feared. Do you wish to know
+ what Socrates really meant? He, whose freedom of speech could not be borne
+ even by a free state, was not willing of his own choice to become a slave.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ VII. I think that we have sufficiently discussed this part of the subject,
+ whether it be disgraceful to be worsted in a contest of benefits. Whoever
+ asks this question must know that men are not wont to bestow benefits upon
+ themselves, for evidently it could not be disgraceful to be worsted by
+ oneself. Yet some of the Stoics debate this question, whether any one can
+ confer a benefit upon himself, and whether one ought to return one's own
+ kindness to oneself. This discussion has been raised in consequence of our
+ habit of saying, "I am thankful to myself," "I can complain of no one but
+ myself," "I am angry with myself," "I will punish myself," "I hate
+ myself," and many other phrases of the same sort, in which one speaks of
+ oneself as one would of some other person. "If," they argue, "I can injure
+ myself, why should I not be able also to bestow a benefit upon myself?
+ Besides this, why are those things not called benefits when I bestow them
+ upon myself which would be called benefits if I bestowed them upon
+ another? If to receive a certain thing from another would lay me under an
+ obligation to him, how is it that if I give it to myself, I do not
+ contract an obligation to myself? why should I be ungrateful to my own
+ self, which is no less disgraceful than it is to be mean to oneself, or
+ hard and cruel to oneself, or neglectful of oneself?" The procurer is
+ equally odious whether he prostitutes others or himself. We blame a
+ flatterer, and one who imitates another man's mode of speech, or is
+ prepared to give praise whether it be deserved or not; we ought equally to
+ blame one who humours himself and looks up to himself, and so to speak is
+ his own flatterer. Vices are not only hateful when outwardly practised,
+ but also when they are repressed within the mind. Whom would you admire
+ more than he who governs himself and has himself under command? It is
+ easier to rule savage nations, impatient of foreign control, than to
+ restrain one's own mind and keep it under one's own control. Plato, it is
+ argued, was grateful to Socrates for having been taught by him; why should
+ not Socrates be grateful to himself for having taught himself? Marcus Cato
+ said, "Borrow from yourself whatever you lack;" why, then, if I can lend
+ myself anything, should I be unable to give myself anything? The instances
+ in which usage divides us into two persons are innumerable; we are wont to
+ say, "Let me converse with myself," and, "I will give myself a twitch of
+ the ear;" [Footnote: See book iv. ch. xxxvi.] and if it be true that one
+ can do so, then a man ought to be grateful to himself, just as he is angry
+ with himself; as he blames himself, SO he ought to praise himself; since
+ he can impoverish himself, he can also enrich himself. Injuries and
+ benefits are the converse of one another: if we say of a man, 'he has done
+ himself an injury,' we can also say 'he has bestowed upon himself a
+ benefit?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ VIII. It is natural that a man should first incur an obligation, and then
+ that he should return gratitude for it; a debtor cannot exist without a
+ creditor, any more than a husband without a wife, or a son without a
+ father; someone must give in order that some one may receive. Just as no
+ one carries himself, although he moves his body and transports it from
+ place to place; as no one, though he may have made a speech in his own
+ defence, is said to have stood by himself, or erects a statue to himself
+ as his own patron; as no sick man, when by his own care he has regained
+ his health, asks himself for a fee; so in no transaction, even when a man
+ does what is useful to himself, need he return thanks to himself, because
+ there is no one to whom he can return them. Though I grant that a man can
+ bestow a benefit upon himself, yet at the same time that he gives it, he
+ also receives it; though I grant that a man may receive a benefit from
+ himself, yet he receives it at the same time that he gives it. The
+ exchange takes place within doors, as they say, and the transfer is made
+ at once, as though the debt were a fictitious one; for he who gives is not
+ a different person to he who receives, but one and the same. The word "to
+ owe" has no meaning except as between two persons; how then can it apply
+ to one man who incurs an obligation, and by the same act frees himself
+ from it? In a disk or a ball there is no top or bottom, no beginning or
+ end, because the relation of the parts is changed when it moves, what was
+ behind coming before, and what went down on one side coming up on the
+ other, so that all the parts, in whatever direction they may move, come
+ back to the same position. Imagine that the same thing takes place in a
+ man; into however many pieces you may divide him, he remains one. If he
+ strikes himself, he has no one to call to account for the insult; if he
+ binds himself and locks himself up, he cannot demand damages; if he
+ bestows a benefit upon himself, he straightway returns it to the giver. It
+ is said that there is no waste in nature, because everything which is
+ taken from nature returns to her again, and nothing can perish, because it
+ cannot fall out of nature, but goes round again to the point from whence
+ it started. You ask, "What connection has this illustration with the
+ subject?" I will tell you. Imagine yourself to be ungrateful, the benefit
+ bestowed upon you is not lost, he who gave it has it; suppose that you are
+ unwilling to receive it, it still belongs to you before it is returned.
+ You cannot lose anything, because what you take away from yourself, you
+ nevertheless gain yourself. The matter revolves in a circle within
+ yourself; by receiving you give, by giving you receive.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ IX. "It is our duty," argues our adversary, "to bestow benefits upon
+ ourselves, therefore we ought also to be grateful to ourselves." The
+ original axiom, upon which the inference depends, is untrue, for no one
+ bestows benefits upon himself, but obeys the dictates of his nature, which
+ disposes him to affection for himself, and which makes him take the
+ greatest pains to avoid hurtful things, and to follow after those things
+ which are profitable to him. Consequently, the man who gives to himself is
+ not generous, nor is he who pardons himself forgiving, nor is he who is
+ touched by his own misfortunes tender-hearted; it is natural to do those
+ things to oneself which when done to others become generosity, clemency,
+ and tenderness of heart. A benefit is a voluntary act, but to do good to
+ oneself is an instinctive one. The more benefits a man bestows, the more
+ beneficent he is, yet who ever was praised for having been of service to
+ himself? or for having rescued himself from brigands? No one bestows a
+ benefit upon himself any more than he bestows hospitality upon himself; no
+ one gives himself anything, any more than he lends himself anything. If
+ each man bestows benefits upon himself, is always bestowing them, and
+ bestows them without any cessation, then it is impossible for him to make
+ any calculation of the number of his benefits; when then can he show his
+ gratitude, seeing that by the very act of doing so he would bestow a
+ benefit? for what distinction can you draw between giving himself a
+ benefit or receiving a benefit for himself, when the whole transaction
+ takes place in the mind of the same man? Suppose that I have freed myself
+ from danger, then I have bestowed a benefit upon myself; suppose I free
+ myself a second time, by so doing do I bestow or repay a benefit? In the
+ next place, even if I grant the primary axiom, that we can bestow benefits
+ upon ourselves, I do not admit that which follows; for even if we can do
+ so, we ought not to do so. Wherefore? Because we receive a return for them
+ at once. It is right for me to receive a benefit, then to lie under an
+ obligation, then to repay it; now here there is no time for remaining
+ under an obligation, because we receive the return without any delay. No
+ one really gives except to another, no one owes except to another, no one
+ repays except to another. An act which always requires two persons cannot
+ take place within the mind of one.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ X. A benefit means the affording of something useful, and the word
+ AFFORDING implies other persons. Would not a man be thought mad if he said
+ that he had sold something to himself, because selling means alienation,
+ and the transferring of a thing and of one's rights in that thing to
+ another person? Yet giving, like selling anything, consists in making it
+ pass away from you, handing over what you yourself once owned into the
+ keeping of some one else.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If this be so, no one ever gave himself a benefit, because no one gives to
+ himself; if not, two opposites coalesce, so that it becomes the same thing
+ to give and to receive. Yet there is a great difference between giving and
+ receiving; how should there not be, seeing that these words are the
+ converse of one another? Still, if any one can give himself a benefit,
+ there can be no difference between giving and receiving. I said a little
+ before that some words apply only to other persons, and are so constituted
+ that their whole meaning lies apart from ourselves; for instance, I am a
+ brother, but a brother of some other man, for no one is his own brother; I
+ am an equal, but equal to somebody else, for who is equal to himself? A
+ thing which is compared to another thing is unintelligible without that
+ other thing; a thing which is joined to something else does not exist
+ apart from it; so that which is given does not exist without the other
+ person, nor can a benefit have any existence without another person. This
+ is clear from the very phrase which describes it, 'to do good,' yet no one
+ does good to himself, any more than he favours himself or is on his own
+ side. I might enlarge further upon this subject and give many examples.
+ Why should benefits not be included among those acts which require two
+ persons to perform them? Many honourable, most admirable and highly
+ virtuous acts cannot take place without a second person. Fidelity is
+ praised and held to be one of the chief blessings known among men, yet was
+ any one ever on that account said to have kept faith with himself?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XI. I come now to the last part of this subject. The man who returns a
+ kindness ought to expend something, just as he who repays expends money;
+ but the man who returns a kindness to himself expends nothing, just as he
+ who receives a benefit from himself gains nothing. A benefit and gratitude
+ for it must pass to and fro between two persons; their interchange cannot
+ take place within one man. He who returns a kindness does good in his turn
+ to him from whom he has received something; but the man who returns his
+ own kindness, to whom does he do good? To himself? Is there any one who
+ does not regard the returning of a kindness, and the bestowal of a
+ benefit, as distinct acts? 'He who returns a kindness to himself does good
+ to himself.' Was any man ever unwilling to do this, even though he were
+ ungrateful? nay, who ever was ungrateful from any other motive than this?
+ "If," it is argued, "we are right in thanking ourselves, we ought to
+ return our own kindness;" yet we say, "I am thankful to myself for having
+ refused to marry that woman," or "for having refused to join a partnership
+ with that man." When we speak thus, we are really praising ourselves, and
+ make use of the language of those who return thanks to approve our own
+ acts. A benefit is something which, when given, may or may not be
+ returned. Now, he who gives a benefit to himself must needs receive what
+ he gives; therefore, this is not a benefit. A benefit is received at one
+ time, and is returned at another; (but when a man bestows a benefit upon
+ himself, he both receives it and returns it at the same time). In a
+ benefit, too, what we commend and admire is, that a man has for the time
+ being forgotten his own interests, in order that he may do good to
+ another; that he has deprived himself of something, in order to bestow it
+ upon another. Now, he who bestows a benefit upon himself does not do this.
+ The bestowal of a benefit is an act of companionship&mdash;it wins some
+ man's friendship, and lays some man under an obligation; but to bestow it
+ upon oneself is no act of companionship&mdash;it wins no man's friendship,
+ lays no man under an obligation, raises no man's hopes, or leads him to
+ say, "This man must be courted; he bestowed a benefit upon that person,
+ perhaps he will bestow one upon me also." A benefit is a thing which one
+ gives not for one's own sake, but for the sake of him to whom it is given;
+ but he who bestows a benefit upon himself, does so for his own sake;
+ therefore, it is not a benefit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XII. Now I seem to you not to have made good what I said at the beginning
+ of this book. You say that I am far from doing what is worth any one's
+ while; nay, that in real fact I have thrown away all my trouble. Wait, and
+ soon you will be able to say this more truly, for I shall lead you into
+ covert lurking-places, from which when you have escaped, you will have
+ gained nothing except that you will have freed yourself from difficulties
+ with which you need never have hampered yourself. What is the use of
+ laboriously untying knots which you yourself have tied, in order that you
+ might untie them? Yet, just as some knots are tied in fun and for
+ amusement, so that a tyro may find difficulty in untying them, which knots
+ he who tied them can loose without any trouble, because he knows the
+ joinings and the difficulties of them, and these nevertheless afford us
+ some pleasure, because they test the sharpness of our wits, and engross,
+ our attention; so also these questions, which seem subtle and tricky,
+ prevent our intellects becoming careless and lazy, for they ought at one
+ time to have a field given them to level, in order that they may wander
+ about it, and at another to have some dark and rough passage thrown in
+ their way for them to creep through, and make their way with caution. It
+ is said by our opponent that no one is ungrateful; and this is supported
+ by the following arguments: "A benefit is that which does good; but, as
+ you Stoics say, no one can do good to a bad man; therefore, a bad man does
+ not receive a benefit. (If he does not receive it, he need not return it;
+ therefore, no bad man is ungrateful.) Furthermore, a benefit is an
+ honourable and commendable thing. No honourable or commendable thing can
+ find any place with a bad man; therefore, neither can a benefit. If he
+ cannot receive one, he need not repay one; therefore, he does not become
+ ungrateful. Moreover, as you say, a good man does everything rightly; if
+ he does everything rightly, he cannot be ungrateful. A good man returns a
+ benefit, a bad man does not receive one. If this be so, no man, good or
+ bad, can be ungrateful. Therefore, there is no such thing in nature as an
+ ungrateful man: the word is meaningless." We Stoics have only one kind of
+ good, that which is honourable. This cannot come to a bad man, for he
+ would cease to be bad if virtue entered into him; but as long as he is
+ bad, no one can bestow a benefit upon him, because good and bad are
+ contraries, and cannot exist together. Therefore, no one can do good to
+ such a man, because whatever he receives is corrupted by his vicious way
+ of using it. Just as the stomach, when disordered by disease and secreting
+ bile, changes all the food which it receives, and turns every kind of
+ sustenance into a source of pain, so whatever you entrust to an
+ ill-regulated mind becomes to it a burden, an annoyance, and a source of
+ misery. Thus the most prosperous and the richest men have the most
+ trouble; and the more property they have to perplex them, the less likely
+ they are to find out what they really are. Nothing, therefore, can reach
+ bad men which would do them good; nay, nothing which would not do them
+ harm. They change whatever falls to their lot into their own evil nature;
+ and things which elsewhere would, if given to better men, be both
+ beautiful and profitable, are ruinous to them. They cannot, therefore,
+ bestow benefits, because no one can give what he does not possess, and,
+ therefore, they lack the pleasure of doing good to others.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XIII. But, though this be so, yet even a bad man can receive some things
+ which resemble benefits, and he will be ungrateful if he does not return
+ them. There are good things belonging to the mind, to the body, and to
+ fortune. A fool or a bad man is debarred from the first&mdash;those, that
+ is, of the mind; but he is admitted to a share in the two latter, and, if
+ he does not return them, he is ungrateful. Nor does this follow from our
+ (Stoic) system alone the Peripatetics, also, who widely extend the
+ boundaries of human happiness, declare that trifling benefits reach bad
+ men, and that he who does not return them is ungrateful. We therefore do
+ not agree that things which do not tend to improve the mind should be
+ called benefits, yet do not deny that these things are convenient and
+ desirable. Such things as these a bad man may bestow upon a good man, or
+ may receive from him&mdash;such, for example, as money, clothes, public
+ office, or life; and, if he makes no return for these, he will come under
+ the denomination of ungrateful. "But how can you call a man ungrateful for
+ not returning that which you say is not a benefit?" Some things, on
+ account of their similarity, are included under the same designation,
+ although they do not really deserve it. Thus we speak of a silver or
+ golden box; ["The original word is 'pyx,' which means a box made of
+ box-wood."] thus we call a man illiterate, although he may not be utterly
+ ignorant, but only not acquainted with the higher branches of literature;
+ thus, seeing a badly-dressed ragged man we say that we have seen a naked
+ man. These things of which we spoke are not benefits, but they possess the
+ appearance of benefits. "Then, just as they are quasi-benefits, so your
+ man is quasi-ungrateful, not really ungrateful." This is untrue, because
+ both he who gives and he who receives them speaks of them as benefits; so
+ he who fails to return the semblance of a real benefit is as much an
+ ungrateful man as he who mixes a sleeping draught, believing it to be
+ poison, is a poisoner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XIV. Cleanthes speaks more impetuously than this. "Granted," says he,
+ "that what he received was not a benefit, yet he is ungrateful, because he
+ would not have returned a benefit if he had received one." So he who
+ carries deadly weapons and has intentions of robbing and murdering, is a
+ brigand even before he has dipped his hands in blood; his wickedness
+ consists and is shown in action, but does not begin thereby. Men are
+ punished for sacrilege, although no one's hands can reach to the gods.
+ "How," asks our opponent, "can any one be ungrateful to a bad man, since a
+ bad man cannot bestow a benefit?" In the same way, I answer, because that
+ which he received was not a benefit, but was called one; if any one
+ receives from a bad man any of those things which are valued by the
+ ignorant, and of which bad men often possess great store, it becomes his
+ duty to make a return in the same kind, and to give back as though they
+ were truly good those things which he received as though they were truly
+ good. A man is said to be in debt, whether he owes gold pieces or leather
+ marked with a state stamp, such as the Lacedaemonians used, which passes
+ for coined money. Pay your debts in that kind in which you incurred them.
+ You have nothing to do with the definition of benefits, or with the
+ question whether so great and noble a name ought to be degraded by
+ applying it to such vulgar and mean matters as these, nor do we seek for
+ truth that we may use it to the disadvantage of others; do you adjust your
+ minds to the semblance of truth, and while you are learning what is really
+ honourable, respect everything to which the name of honour is applied.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XV. "In the same way," argues our adversary, "that your school proves that
+ no one is ungrateful, you afterwards prove that all men are ungrateful.
+ For, as you say, all fools are bad men; he who has one vice has all vices;
+ all men are both fools and bad men; therefore all men are ungrateful."
+ Well, what then? Are they not? Is not this the universal reproach of the
+ human race? is there not a general complaint that benefits are thrown
+ away, and that there are very few men who do not requite their benefactors
+ with the basest ingratitude? Nor need you suppose that what we say is
+ merely the grumbling of men who think every act wicked and depraved which
+ falls short of an ideal standard of righteousness. Listen! I know not who
+ it is who speaks, yet the voice with which he condemns mankind proceeds,
+ not from the schools of philosophers, but from the midst of the crowd:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "Host is not safe from guest;
+ Father-in-law from son; but seldom love
+ Exists 'twixt brothers; wives long to destroy
+ Their husbands; husbands long to slay their wives."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ This goes even further: according to this, crimes take the place of
+ benefits, and men do not shrink from shedding the blood of those for whom
+ they ought to shed their own; we requite benefits by steel and poison. We
+ call laying violent hands upon our own country, and putting down its
+ resistance by the fasces of its own lictors, gaining power and great
+ place; every man thinks himself to be in a mean and degraded position if
+ he has not raised himself above the constitution; the armies which are
+ received from the state are turned against her, and a general now says to
+ his men, "Fight against your wives, fight against your children, march in
+ arms against your altars, your hearths and homes!" Yes, [Footnote: I
+ believe, in spite of Gertz, that this is part of the speech of the Roman
+ general, and that the conjecture of Muretus, "without the command of the
+ senate," gives better sense.] you, who even when about to triumph ought
+ not to enter the city at the command of the senate, and who have often,
+ when bringing home a victorious army, been given an audience outside the
+ walls, you now, after slaughtering your countrymen, stained with the blood
+ of your kindred, march into the city with standards erect. "Let liberty,"
+ say you, "be silent amidst the ensigns of war, and now that wars are
+ driven far away and no ground for terror remains, let that people which
+ conquered and civilized all nations be beleaguered within its own walls,
+ and shudder at the sight of its own eagles."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XVI. Coriolanus was ungrateful, and became dutiful late, and after
+ repenting of his crime; he did indeed lay down his arms, but only in the
+ midst of his unnatural warfare. Catilina was ungrateful; he was not
+ satisfied with taking his country captive without overturning it, without
+ despatching the hosts of the Allobroges against it, without bringing an
+ enemy from beyond the Alps to glut his old inborn hatred, and to offer
+ Roman generals as sacrifices which had been long owing to the tombs of the
+ Gaulish dead. Caius Marius was ungrateful, when, after being raised from
+ the ranks to the consulship, he felt that he would not have wreaked his
+ vengeance upon fortune, and would sink to his original obscurity, unless
+ he slaughtered Romans as freely as he had slaughtered the Cimbri, and not
+ merely gave the signal, but was himself the signal for civil disasters and
+ butcheries. Lucius Sulla was ungrateful, for he saved his country by using
+ remedies worse than the perils with which it was threatened, when he
+ marched through human blood all the way from the citadel of Praeneste to
+ the Colline Gate, fought more battles and caused more slaughter afterwards
+ within the city, and most cruelly after the victory was won, most wickedly
+ after quarter had been promised them, drove two legions into a corner and
+ put them to the sword, and, great gods! invented a proscription by which
+ he who slew a Roman citizen received indemnity, a sum of money, everything
+ but a civic crown! Cnaeus Pompeius was ungrateful, for the return which he
+ made to his country for three consulships, three triumphs, and the
+ innumerable public offices into most of which he thrust himself when under
+ age, was to lead others also to lay hands upon her under the pretext of
+ thus rendering his own power less odious; as though what no one ought to
+ do became right if more than one person did it. Whilst he was coveting
+ extraordinary commands, arranging the provinces so as to have his own
+ choice of them, and dividing the whole state with a third person,
+ [Footnote: Crassus.] in such a manner as to leave two-thirds of it in the
+ possession of his own family, [Footnote: Pompey was married to Caesar's
+ daughter. Cf. Virg., "Aen.," vi., 831, sq., and Lucan's beautiful verses,
+ "Phars.," i., 114.] he reduced the Roman people to such a condition that
+ they could only save themselves by submitting to slavery. The foe and
+ conqueror [Footnote: Seneca is careful to avoid the mention of Caesar's
+ name, which might have given offence to the emperors under whom he lived,
+ who used the name as a title.] of Pompeius was himself ungrateful; he
+ brought war from Gaul and Germany to Rome, and he, the friend of the
+ populace, the champion of the commons, pitched his camp in the Circus
+ Flaminus, nearer to the city than Porsena's camp had been. He did, indeed,
+ use the cruel privileges of victory with moderation; as was said at the
+ time, he protected his countrymen, and put to death no man who was not in
+ arms. Yet what credit is there in this? Others used their arms more
+ cruelly, but flung them away when glutted with blood, while he, though he
+ soon sheathed the sword, never laid it aside. Antonius was ungrateful to
+ his dictator, who he declared was rightly slain, and whose murderers he
+ allowed to depart to their commands in the provinces; as for his country,
+ after it had been torn to pieces by so many proscriptions, invasions, and
+ civil wars, he intended to subject it to kings, not even of Roman birth,
+ and to force that very state to pay tribute to eunuchs, [Footnote: The
+ allusion is to Antonius's connection with Cleopatra. Cf. Virg. "Aen.,"
+ viii., 688.] which had itself restored sovereign rights, autonomy, and
+ immunities, to the Achaeans, the Rhodians, and the people of many other
+ famous cities.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XVII. The day would not be long enough for me to enumerate those who have
+ pushed their ingratitude so far as to ruin their native land. It would be
+ as vast a task to mention how often the state has been ungrateful to its
+ best and most devoted lovers, although it has done no less wrong than it
+ has suffered. It sent Camillus and Scipio into exile; even after the death
+ of Catiline it exiled Cicero, destroyed his house, plundered his property,
+ and did everything which Catiline would have done if victorious; Rutilius
+ found his virtue rewarded with a hiding-place in Asia; to Cato the Roman
+ people refused the praetorship, and persisted in refusing the consulship.
+ We are ungrateful in public matters; and if every man asks himself, you
+ will find that there is no one who has not some private ingratitude to
+ complain of. Yet it is impossible that all men should complain, unless all
+ were deserving of complaint, therefore all men are ungrateful. Are they
+ ungrateful alone? nay, they are also all covetous, all spiteful, and all
+ cowardly, especially those who appear daring; and, besides this, all men
+ fawn upon the great, and all are impious. Yet you need not be angry with
+ them; pardon them, for they are all mad. I do not wish to recall you to
+ what is not proved, or to say, "See how ungrateful is youth! what young
+ man, even if of innocent life, does not long for his father's death? even
+ if moderate in his desires, does not look forward to it? even if dutiful,
+ does not think about it? How few there are who fear the death even of the
+ best of wives, who do not even calculate the probabilities of it. Pray,
+ what litigant, after having been successfully defended, retains any
+ remembrance of so great a benefit for more than a few days?" All agree
+ that no one dies without complaining. Who on his last day dares to say,
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "I've lived, I've done the task which Fortune set me."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Who does not leave the world with reluctance, and with lamentations? Yet
+ it is the part of an ungrateful man not to be satisfied with the past.
+ Your days will always be few if you count them. Reflect that length of
+ time is not the greatest of blessings; make the best of your time, however
+ short it may be; even if the day of your death be postponed, your
+ happiness will not be increased, for life is merely made longer, not
+ pleasanter, by delay. How much better is it to be thankful for the
+ pleasures which one has received, not to reckon up the years of others,
+ but to set a high value upon one's own, and score them to one's credit,
+ saying, "God thought me worthy of this; I am satisfied with it; he might
+ have given me more, but this, too, is a benefit." Let us be grateful
+ towards both gods and men, grateful to those who have given us anything,
+ and grateful even to those who have given anything to our relatives.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XVIII. "You render me liable to an infinite debt of gratitude," says our
+ opponent, "when you say 'even to those who have given any thing to our
+ relations,' so fix some limit. He who bestows a benefit upon the son,
+ according to you, bestows it likewise upon the father: this is the first
+ question I wish to raise. In the next place I should like to have a clear
+ definition of whether a benefit, if it be bestowed upon your friend's
+ father as well as upon himself, is bestowed also upon his brother? or upon
+ his uncle? or his grandfather? or his wife and his father-in-law? tell me
+ where I am to stop, how far I am to follow out the pedigree of the
+ family?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SENECA. If I cultivate your land, I bestow a benefit upon you; if I
+ extinguish your house when burning, or prop it so as to save it from
+ falling, I shall bestow a benefit upon you; if I heal your slave, I shall
+ charge it to you; if I save your son's life, will you not thereby receive
+ a benefit from me?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XIX. THE ADVERSARY. Your instances are not to the purpose, for he who
+ cultivates my land, does not benefit the land, but me; he who props my
+ house so that it does not fall, does this service to me, for the house
+ itself is without feeling, and as it has none, it is I who am indebted to
+ him; and he who cultivates my land does so because he wishes to oblige me,
+ not to oblige the land. I should say the same of a slave; he is a chattel
+ owned by me; he is saved for my advantage, therefore I am indebted for
+ him. My son is himself capable of receiving a benefit; so it is he who
+ receives it; I am gratified at a benefit which comes so near to myself,
+ but am not laid under any obligation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SE. Still I should like you, who say that you are under no obligation, to
+ answer me this. The good health, the happiness, and the inheritance of a
+ son are connected with his father; his father will be more happy if he
+ keeps his son safe, and more unhappy if he loses him. What follows, then?
+ when a man is made happier by me and is freed from the greatest danger of
+ unhappiness, does he not receive a benefit?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ AD. No, because there are some things which are bestowed upon others, and
+ yet flow from them so as to reach ourselves; yet we must ask the person
+ upon whom it was bestowed for repayment; as for example, money must be
+ sought from the man to whom it was lent, although it may, by some means,
+ have come into my hands. There is no benefit whose advantages do not
+ extend to the receiver's nearest friends, and sometimes even to those less
+ intimately connected with him; yet we do not enquire whither the benefit
+ has proceeded from him to whom it was first given, but where it was first
+ placed. You must demand repayment from the defendant himself personally.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SE. Well, but I pray you, do you not say, "you have preserved my son for
+ me; had he perished, I could not have survived him?" Do you not owe a
+ benefit for the life of one whose safety you value above your own?
+ Moreover, should I save your son's life, you would fall down before my
+ knees, and would pay vows to heaven as though you yourself had been saved;
+ you would say, "It makes no difference whether you have saved mine or me;
+ you have saved us both, yet me more than him." Why do you say this, if you
+ do not receive a benefit?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A.D. Because, if my son were to contract a loan, I should pay his
+ creditor, yet I should not, therefore, be indebted to him; or if my son
+ were taken in adultery, I should blush, yet I should not, therefore, be an
+ adulterer. I say that I am under an obligation to you for saving my son,
+ not because I really am, but because I am willing to constitute myself
+ your debtor of my own free will. On the other hand I have derived from his
+ safety the greatest possible pleasure and advantage, and I have escaped
+ that most dreadful blow, the loss of my child. True, but we are not now
+ discussing whether you have done me any good or not, but whether you have
+ bestowed a benefit upon me; for animals, stones, and herbs can do one
+ good, but do not bestow benefits, which can only be given by one who
+ wishes well to the receiver. Now you do not wish well to the father, but
+ only to the son; and sometimes you do not even know the father. So when
+ you have said, "Have I not bestowed a benefit upon the father by saving
+ the son?" you ought to meet this with, "Have I, then, bestowed a benefit
+ upon a father whom I do not know, whom I never thought of?" And what will
+ you say when, as is sometimes the case, you hate the father, and yet save
+ his son? Can you be thought to have bestowed a benefit upon one whom you
+ hated most bitterly while you were bestowing it?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ However, if I were to lay aside the bickering of dialogue, and answer you
+ as a lawyer, I should say that you ought to consider the intention of the
+ giver, you must regard his benefit as bestowed upon the person upon whom
+ he meant to bestow it. If he did it in honour of the father, then the
+ father received the benefit; if he thought only of the son, then the
+ father is not laid under any obligation: by the benefit which was
+ conferred upon the son, even though the father derives pleasure from it.
+ Should he, however, have an opportunity, he will himself wish to give you
+ something, yet not as though he were forced to repay a debt, but rather as
+ if he had grounds for beginning an exchange of favours. No return for a
+ benefit ought to be demanded from the father of the receiver; if he does
+ you any kindness in return for it, he should be regarded as, a righteous
+ man, but not as a grateful one. For there is no end to it; if I bestow a
+ benefit on the receiver's father, do I likewise bestow it upon his mother,
+ his grandfather, his maternal uncle, his children, relations, friends,
+ slaves, and country? Where, then, does a benefit begin to stop? for there
+ follows it this endless chain of people, to whom it is hard to assign
+ bounds, because they join it by degrees, and are always creeping on
+ towards it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XX. A common question is, "Two brothers are at variance. If I save the
+ life of one, do I confer a benefit upon the other, who will be sorry that
+ his hated brother did not perish?" There can be no doubt that it is a
+ benefit to do good to a man, even against that man's will, just as he, who
+ against his own will does a man good, does not bestow a benefit upon him.
+ "Do you," asks our adversary, "call that by which he is displeased and
+ hurt a benefit?" Yes; many benefits have a harsh and forbidding
+ appearance, such as cutting or burning to cure disease, or confining with
+ chains. We must not consider whether a man is grieved at receiving a
+ benefit, but whether he ought to rejoice: a coin is not bad because it is
+ refused by a savage who is unacquainted with its proper stamp. A man
+ receives a benefit even though he hates what is done, provided that it
+ does him good, and that the giver bestowed it in order to do him good. It
+ makes no difference if he receives a good thing in a bad spirit. Consider
+ the converse of this. Suppose that a man hates his brother, though it is
+ to his advantage to have a brother, and I kill this brother, this is not a
+ benefit, though he may say that it is, and be glad of it. Our most artful
+ enemies are those whom we thank for the wrongs which they do us.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I understand; a thing which does good is a benefit, a thing which does
+ harm is not a benefit. Now I will suggest to you an act which neither does
+ good nor harm, and yet is a benefit. Suppose that I find the corpse of
+ some one's father in a wilderness, and bury it, then I certainly have done
+ him no good, for what difference could it make to him in what manner his
+ body decayed? Nor have I done any good to his son, for what advantage does
+ he gain by my act?" I will tell you what he gains. He has by my means
+ performed a solemn and necessary rite; I have performed a service for his
+ father which he would have wished, nay, which it would have been his duty
+ to have performed himself. Yet this act is not a benefit, if I merely
+ yielded to those feelings of pity and kindliness which would make me bury
+ any corpse whatever, but only if I recognized this body, and buried it,
+ with the thought in my mind that I was doing this service to the son; but,
+ by merely throwing earth over a dead stranger, I lay no one under an
+ obligation for an act performed on general principles of humanity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It may be asked, "Why are you so careful in inquiring upon whom you bestow
+ benefits, as though some day you meant to demand repayment of them? Some
+ say that repayment should never be demanded; and they give the following
+ reasons. An unworthy man will not repay the benefit which he has received,
+ even if it be demanded of him, while a worthy man will do so of his own
+ accord. Consequently, if you have bestowed it upon a good man, wait; do
+ not outrage him by asking him for it, as though of his own accord he never
+ would repay it. If you have bestowed it upon a bad man, suffer for it, but
+ do not spoil your benefit by turning it into a loan. Moreover the law, by
+ not authorizing you, forbids you, by implication, to demand the repayment
+ of a benefit." All this is nonsense. As long as I am in no pressing need,
+ as long as I am not forced by poverty, I will lose my benefits rather than
+ ask for repayment; but if the lives of my children were at stake, if my
+ wife were in danger, if my regard for the welfare of my country and for my
+ own liberty were to force me to adopt a course which I disliked, I should
+ overcome my delicacy, and openly declare that I had done all that I could
+ to avoid the necessity of receiving help from an ungrateful man; the
+ necessity of obtaining repayment of one's benefit will in the end overcome
+ one's delicacy about asking for it. In the next place, when I bestow a
+ benefit upon a good man, I do so with the intention of never demanding
+ repayment, except in case of absolute necessity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXI. "But," argues he, "by not authorizing you, the law forbids you to
+ exact repayment." There are many things which are not enforced by any law
+ or process, but which the conventions of society, which are stronger than
+ any law, compel us to observe. There is no law forbidding us to divulge
+ our friend's secrets; there is no law which bids us keep faith even with
+ an enemy; pray what law is there which binds us to stand by what we have
+ promised? There is none. Nevertheless I should remonstrate with one who
+ did not keep a secret, and I should be indignant with one who pledged his
+ word and broke it. "But," he argues, "you are turning a benefit into a
+ loan." By no means, for I do not insist upon repayment, but only demand
+ it; nay, I do not even demand it, but remind my friend of it. Even the
+ direst need will not bring me to apply for help to one with whom I should
+ have to undergo a long struggle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If there be any one so ungrateful that it is not sufficient to remind him
+ of his debt, I should pass him over, and think that he did not deserve to
+ be made grateful by force. A money-lender does not demand repayment from
+ his debtors if he knows they have become bankrupt, and, to their shame,
+ have nothing but shame left to lose; and I, like him, should pass over
+ those who are openly and obstinately ungrateful, and would demand
+ repayment only from those who were likely to give it me, not from those
+ from whom I should have to extort it by force.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXII. There are many who cannot deny that they have received a benefit,
+ yet cannot return it&mdash;men who are not good enough to be termed
+ grateful, nor yet bad enough to be termed ungrateful; but who are dull and
+ sluggish, backward debtors, though not defaulters. Such men as these I
+ should not ask for repayment, but forcibly remind them of it, and, from a
+ state of indifference, bring them back to their duty. They would at once
+ reply, "Forgive me; I did not know, by Hercules, that you missed this, or
+ I would have offered it of my own accord, I beg that you will not think me
+ ungrateful; I remember your goodness to me." Why need I hesitate to make
+ such men as these better to themselves and to me? I would prevent any one
+ from doing wrong, if I were able; much more would I prevent a friend, both
+ lest he should do wrong, and lest he should do wrong to me in particular.
+ I bestow a second benefit upon him by not permitting him to be ungrateful;
+ and I should not reproach him harshly with what I had done for him, but
+ should speak as gently as I could. In order to afford him an opportunity
+ of returning my kindness, I should refresh his remembrance of it, and ask
+ for a benefit; he would understand that I was asking for repayment.
+ Sometimes I would make use of somewhat severe language, if I had any hope
+ that by it he might be amended; though I would not irritate a hopelessly
+ ungrateful man, for fear that I might turn him into an enemy. If we spare
+ the ungrateful even the affront of reminding them of their conduct, we
+ shall render them' more backward in returning benefits; and although some
+ might be cured of their evil ways, and be made into good men, if their
+ consciences were stung by remorse, yet we shall allow them to perish for
+ want of a word of warning, with which a father sometimes corrects his son,
+ a wife brings back to herself an erring husband, or a man stimulates the
+ wavering fidelity of his friend.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXIII. To awaken some men, it is only necessary to stir them, not to
+ strike them; in like manner, with some men, the feeling of honour about
+ returning a benefit is not extinct, but slumbering. Let us rouse it. "Do
+ not," they will say, "make the kindness you have done me into a wrong: for
+ it is a wrong, if you do not demand some return from me, and so make me
+ ungrateful. What if I do not know what sort of repayment you wish for? if
+ I am so occupied by business, and my attention is so much diverted to
+ other subjects that I have not been able to watch for an opportunity of
+ serving you? Point out to me what I can do for you, what you wish me to
+ do. Why do you despair, before making a trial of me? Why are you in such
+ haste to lose both your benefit and your friend? How can you tell whether
+ I do not wish, or whether I do not know how to repay you: whether it be in
+ intention or in opportunity that I am wanting? Make a trial of me." I
+ would therefore remind him of what I had done, without bitterness, not in
+ public, or in a reproachful manner, but so that he may think that he
+ himself has remembered it rather than that it has been recalled to him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXIV. One of Julius Caesar's veterans was once pleading before him against
+ his neighbours, and the cause was going against him. "Do you remember,
+ general," said he, "that in Spain you dislocated your ankle near the river
+ Sucro [Footnote: Xucar]?" When Caesar said that he remembered it, he
+ continued, "Do you remember that when, during the excessive heat, you
+ wished to rest under a tree which afforded very little shade, as the
+ ground in which that solitary tree grew was rough and rocky, one of your
+ comrades spread his cloak under you?" Caesar answered, "Of course, I
+ remember; indeed, I was perishing with thirst; and since was unable to
+ walk to the nearest spring, I would have crawled thither on my hands and
+ knees, had not my comrade, a brave and active man, brought me water in his
+ helmet." "Could you, then, my general, recognize that man or that helmet?"
+ Caesar replied that he could not remember the helmet, but that he could
+ remember the man well; and he added, I fancy in anger at being led away to
+ this old story in the midst of a judicial enquiry, "At any rate, you are
+ not he." "I do not blame you, Caesar," answered the man, "for not
+ recognizing me; for when this took place, I was unwounded; but afterwards,
+ at the battle of Munda, my eye was struck out, and the bones of my skull
+ crushed. Nor would you recognize that helmet if you saw it, for it was
+ split by a Spanish sword." Caesar would not permit this man to be troubled
+ with lawsuits, and presented his old soldier with the fields through which
+ a village right of way had given rise to the dispute.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXV. In this case, what ought he to have done? Because his commander's
+ memory was confused by a multitude of incidents, and because his position
+ as the leader of vast armies did not permit him to notice individual
+ soldiers, ought the man not to have asked for a return for the benefit
+ which he had conferred? To act as he did is not so much to ask for a
+ return as to take it when it lies in a convenient position ready for us,
+ although we have to stretch out our hands in order to receive it. I shall
+ therefore ask for the return of a benefit, whenever I am either reduced to
+ great straits, or where by doing so I shall act to the advantage of him
+ from whom I ask it. Tiberius Caesar, when some one addressed him with the
+ words, "Do you remember....?" answered, before the man could mention any
+ further proofs of former acquaintance, "I do not remember what I was." Why
+ should it not be forbidden to demand of this man repayment of former
+ favours? He had a motive for forgetting them: he denied all knowledge of
+ his friends and comrades, and wished men only to see, to think, and to
+ speak of him as emperor. He regarded his old friend as an impertinent
+ meddler.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We ought to be even more careful to choose a favorable opportunity when we
+ ask for a benefit to be repaid to us than when we ask for one to be
+ bestowed upon us. We must be temperate in our language, so that the
+ grateful may not take offence, or the ungrateful pretend to do so. If we
+ lived among wise men, it would be our duty to wait in silence until our
+ benefits were returned. Yet even to wise men it would be better to give
+ some hint of what our position required. We ask for help even from the
+ gods themselves, from whose knowledge nothing is hid, although our prayers
+ cannot alter their intentions towards us, but can only recall them to
+ their minds. Homer's priest, [Il. i. 39 sqq.] I say, recounts even to the
+ gods his duteous conduct and his pious care of their altars. The second
+ best form of virtue is to be willing and able to take advice.[Hes. Op.
+ 291.] A horse who is docile and prompt to obey can be guided hither and
+ thither by the slightest movement of the reins. Very few men are led by
+ their own reason: those who come next to the best are those who return to
+ the right path in consequence of advice; and these we must not deprive of
+ their guide. When our eyes are covered they still possess sight; but it is
+ the light of day which, when admitted to them, summons them to perform
+ their duty: tools lie idle, unless the workman uses them to take part in
+ his work. Similarly men's minds contain a good feeling, which, however,
+ lies torpid, either through luxury and disuse, or through ignorance of its
+ duties. This we ought to render useful, and not to get into a passion with
+ it, and leave it in its wrong doing, but bear with it patiently, just as
+ schoolmasters bear patiently with the blunders of forgetful scholars; for
+ as by the prompting of a word or two their memory is often recalled to the
+ text of the speech which they have to repeat, so men's goodwill can be
+ brought to return kindness by reminding them of it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0008" id="link2H_4_0008">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ BOOK VI.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ I.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ There are some things, my most excellent Liberalis, which lie completely
+ outside of our actual life, and which we only inquire into in order to
+ exercise our intellects, while others both give us pleasure while we are
+ discovering them, and are of use when discovered. I will place all these
+ in your hands; you, at your own discretion, may order them either to be
+ investigated thoroughly, or to be reserved, and be used as agreeable
+ interludes. Something will be gained even by those which you dismiss at
+ once, for it is advantageous even to know what subjects are not worth
+ learning. I shall be guided, therefore, by your face: according to its
+ expression, I shall deal with some questions at greater length, and drive
+ others out of court, and put an end to them at once.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ II. It is a question whether a benefit can be taken away from one by
+ force. Some say that it cannot, because it is not a thing, but an act. A
+ gift is not the same as the act of giving, any more than a sailor is the
+ same as the act of sailing. A sick man and a disease are not the same
+ thing, although no one can be ill without disease; and, similarly, a
+ benefit itself is one thing, and what any of us receive through a benefit
+ is another. The benefit itself is incorporeal, and never becomes invalid;
+ but its subject-matter changes owners, and passes from hand to hand. So,
+ when you take away from anyone what you have given him, you take away the
+ subject-matter only of the benefit, not the benefit itself. Nature herself
+ cannot recall what she has given. She may cease to bestow benefits, but
+ cannot take them away: a man who dies, yet has lived; a man who becomes
+ blind, nevertheless has seen. She can cut off her blessings from us in the
+ future, but she cannot prevent our having enjoyed them in the past. We are
+ frequently not able to enjoy a benefit for long, but the benefit is not
+ thereby destroyed. Let Nature struggle as hard as she please, she cannot
+ give herself retrospective action. A man may lose his house, his money,
+ his property&mdash;everything to which the name of benefit can be given&mdash;yet
+ the benefit itself will remain firm and unmoved; no power can prevent his
+ benefactor's having bestowed them, or his having received them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ III. I think that a fine passage in Rabirius's poem, where M. Antonius,
+ seeing his fortune deserting him, nothing left him except the privilege of
+ dying, and even that only on condition that he used it promptly, exclaims,
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "What I have given, that I now possess!"
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ How much he might have possessed, had he chosen! These are riches to be
+ depended upon, which through all the turmoil of human life will remain
+ steadfast; and the greater they are, the less envy they will attract. Why
+ are you sparing of your property, as though it were your own? You are but
+ the manager of it. All those treasures, which make you swell with pride,
+ and soar above mere mortals, till you forget the weakness of your nature;
+ all that which you lock up in iron-grated treasuries, and guard in arms,
+ which you win from other men with their lives, and defend at the risk of
+ your own; for which you launch fleets to dye the sea with blood, and shake
+ the walls of cities, not knowing what arrows fortune may be preparing for
+ you behind your back; to gain which you have so often violated all the
+ ties of relationship, of friendship, and of colleagueship, till the whole
+ world lies crushed between the two combatants: all these are not yours;
+ they are a kind of deposit, which is on the point of passing into other
+ hands: your enemies, or your heirs, who are little better, will seize upon
+ them. "How," do you ask, "can you make them your own?" "By giving them
+ away." Do, then, what is best for your own interests, and gain a sure
+ enjoyment of them, which cannot be taken from you, making them at once
+ more certainly yours, and more honorable to you. That which you esteem so
+ highly, that by which you think that you are made rich and powerful, owns
+ but the shabby title of "house," "slave," or "money;" but when you have
+ given it away, it becomes a benefit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ IV. "You admit," says our adversary, "that we sometimes are under no
+ obligation to him from whom we have received a benefit. In that case it
+ has been taken by force." Nay, there are many things which would cause us
+ to cease to feel gratitude for a benefit, not because the benefit has been
+ taken from me, but because it has been spoiled. Suppose that a man has
+ defended me in a lawsuit, but has forcibly outraged my wife; he has not
+ taken away the benefit which he conferred upon me, but by balancing it
+ with an equivalent wrong, he has set me free from my debt; indeed, if he
+ has injured me more than he had previously benefited me, he not only puts
+ an end to my gratitude, but makes me free to revenge myself upon him, and
+ to complain of him, when the wrong outweighs the benefit; in such a case
+ the benefit is not taken away, but is overcome. Why, are not some fathers
+ so cruel and so wicked that it is right and proper for their sons to turn
+ away from them, and disown them? Yet, pray, have they taken away the life
+ which they gave? No, but their unnatural conduct in later years has
+ destroyed all the gratitude which was due to them for their original
+ benefit. In these cases it is not a benefit itself, but the gratitude
+ owing for a benefit which is taken away, and the result is, not that one
+ does not possess the benefit, but that one is not laid under any
+ obligation by it. It is as though a man were to lend me money, and then
+ burn my house down; the advantage of the loan is balanced by the damage
+ which he has caused: I do not repay him, and yet I am not in his debt. In
+ like manner any one who may have acted kindly and generously to me, and
+ who afterwards has shown himself haughty, insulting, and cruel, places me
+ in just the same position as though I never had received anything from
+ him: he has murdered his own benefits. Though the lease may remain in
+ force, still a man does not continue to be a tenant if his landlord
+ tramples down his crops, or cuts down his orchard; their contract is at an
+ end, not because the landlord has received the rent which was agreed upon,
+ but because he has made it impossible that he should receive it. So, too,
+ a creditor often has to pay money to his debtor, should he have taken more
+ property from him in other transactions than he claims as having lent him.
+ The judge does not sit merely to decide between debtor and creditor, when
+ he says, "You did lend the man money; but then, what followed? You have
+ driven away his cattle, you have murdered his slave, you have in your
+ possession plate which you have not paid for. After valuing what each has
+ received, I order you, who came to this court as a creditor, to leave it
+ as a debtor." In like manner a balance is struck between benefits and
+ injuries. In many cases, I repeat, a benefit is not taken away from him
+ who receives it, and yet it lays him under no obligation, if the giver has
+ repented of giving it, called himself unhappy because he gave it, sighed
+ or made a wry face while he gave it; if he thought that he was throwing it
+ away rather than giving it, if he gave it to please himself, or to please
+ any one except me, the receiver; if he persistently makes himself
+ offensive by boasting of what he has done, if he brags of his gift
+ everywhere, and makes it a misery to me, then indeed the benefit remains
+ in my hands, but I owe him nothing for it, just as sums of money to which
+ a creditor has no legal right are owed to him, but cannot be claimed by
+ him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ V. Though you have bestowed a benefit upon me, yet you have since done me
+ a wrong; the benefit demanded gratitude, the wrong required vengeance: the
+ result is that I do not owe you gratitude, nor do you owe me compensation&mdash;each
+ is cancelled by the other. When we say, "I returned him his benefit," we
+ do not mean that we restored to him the very thing which we had received,
+ but something else in its place. To return is to give back one thing
+ instead of another, because, of course, in all repayment it is not the
+ thing itself, but its equivalent which is returned. We are said to have
+ returned money even though we count out gold pieces instead of silver
+ ones, or even if no money passes between us, but the transaction be
+ effected verbally by the assignment of a debt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I think I see you say, "You are wasting your time; of what use is it to me
+ to know whether what I do not owe to another still remains in my hands or
+ not? These are like the ingenious subtleties of the lawyers, who declare
+ that one cannot acquire an inheritance by prescription, but can only
+ acquire those things of which the inheritance consists, as though there
+ were any difference between the heritage and the things of which it
+ consists. Rather decide this point for me, which may be of use. If the
+ same man confers a benefit upon me, and afterwards does me a wrong, is it
+ my duty to return the benefit to him, and nevertheless to avenge myself
+ upon him, having, as it were, two distinct accounts open with him, or to
+ mix them both together, and do nothing, leaving the benefit to be wiped
+ out by the injury, the injury by the benefit? I see that the former course
+ is adopted by the law of the land; you know best what the law may be among
+ you Stoic philosophers in such a case. I suppose that you keep the action
+ which I bring against another distinct from that which he Strings against
+ me, and the two processes are not merged into one? For instance, if a man
+ entrusts me with money, and afterwards robs me, I shall bring an action
+ against him for theft, and he will bring one against me for unlawfully
+ detaining his property?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ VI. The cases which you have mentioned, my Liberalis, come under
+ well-established laws, which it is necessary for us to follow. One law
+ cannot be merged in another: each one proceeds its own way. There is a
+ particular action which deals with deposits just as there is one which
+ deals with theft. A benefit is subject to no law; it depends upon my own
+ arbitration. I am at liberty to contrast the amount of good or harm which
+ any one may have done me, and then to decide which of us is indebted to
+ the other. In legal processes we ourselves have no power, we must go
+ whither they lead us; in the case of a benefit the supreme power is mine,
+ I pronounce sentence. Consequently I do not separate or distinguish
+ between benefits and wrongs, but send them before the same judge. Unless I
+ did so, you would bid me love and hate, give thanks and make complaints at
+ the same time, which human nature does not admit of. I would rather
+ compare the benefit and the injury with one another, and see whether there
+ were any balance in my favour. If anybody puts lines of other writing upon
+ my manuscript he conceals, though he does not take away, the letters which
+ were there before, and in like manner a wrong coming after a benefit does
+ not allow it to be seen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ VII. Your face, by which I have agreed to be guided, now becomes wrinkled
+ with frowns, as though I were straying too widely from the subject. You
+ seem to say to me:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "Why steer to seaward?
+ Hither bend thy course,
+ Hug close the shore..."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ I do hug it as close as possible. So now, if you think that we have dwelt
+ sufficiently upon this point, let us proceed to the consideration of the
+ next&mdash;that is, whether we are at all indebted to any one who does us
+ good without wishing to do so. I might have expressed this more clearly,
+ if it were not right that the question should be somewhat obscurely
+ stated, in order that by the distinction immediately following it may be
+ shown that we mean to investigate the case both of him who does us good
+ against his will, and that of him who does us good without knowing it.
+ That a man who does us good by acting under compulsion does not thereby
+ lay us under any obligation, is so clear, that no words are needed to
+ prove it. Both this question, and any other of the like character which
+ may be raised, can easily be settled if in each case we bear in mind that,
+ for anything to be a benefit, it must reach us in the first place through
+ some thought, and secondly through the thought of a friend and
+ well-wisher. Therefore we do not feel any gratitude towards rivers, albeit
+ they may bear large ships, afford an ample and unvarying stream for the
+ conveyance of merchandise, or flow beauteously and full of fish through
+ fertile fields. No one conceives himself to be indebted for a benefit to
+ the Nile, any more than he would owe it a grudge if its waters flooded his
+ fields to excess, and retired more slowly than usual; the wind does not
+ bestow benefits, gentle and favorable though it may be, nor does wholesome
+ and useful food; for he who would bestow a benefit upon me, must not only
+ do me good, but must wish to do so. No obligation can therefore be
+ incurred towards dumb animals; yet how many men have been saved from peril
+ by the swiftness of a horse!&mdash;nor yet towards trees&mdash;yet how
+ many sufferers from summer heat have been sheltered by the thick foliage
+ of a tree! What difference can it make, whether I have profited by the act
+ of one who did not know that he was doing me good, or one who could not
+ know it, when in each case the will to do me good was wanting? You might
+ as well bid me be grateful to a ship, a carriage, or a lance for saving me
+ from danger, as bid me be grateful to a man who may have done me good by
+ chance, but with no more intention of doing me good than those things
+ could have.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ VIII. Some men may receive benefits without knowing it, but no man can
+ bestow them without knowing it. Many sick persons have been cured by
+ chance circumstances, which do not therefore become specific remedies; as,
+ for instance, one man was restored to health by falling into a river
+ during very cold weather, as another was set free from a quartan fever by
+ means of a flogging, because the sudden terror turned his attention into a
+ new channel, so that the dangerous hours passed unnoticed. Yet none of
+ these are remedies, even though they may have been successful; and in like
+ manner some men do us good, though they are unwilling&mdash;indeed,
+ because they are unwilling to do so&mdash;yet we need not feel grateful to
+ them as though we had received a benefit from them, because fortune has
+ changed the evil which they intended into good. Do you suppose that I am
+ indebted to a man who strikes my enemy with a blow which he aimed at me,
+ who would have injured me had he not missed his mark? It often happens
+ that by openly perjuring himself a man makes even trustworthy witnesses
+ disbelieved, and renders his intended victim an object of compassion, as
+ though he were being ruined by a conspiracy. Some have been saved by the
+ very power which was exerted to crush them, and judges who would have
+ condemned a man by law, have refused to condemn him by favour. Yet they
+ did not confer a benefit upon the accused, although they rendered him a
+ service, because we must consider at what the dart was aimed, not what it
+ hits, and a benefit is distinguished from an injury not by its result, but
+ by the spirit in which it was meant. By contradicting himself, by
+ irritating the judge by his arrogance, or by rashly allowing his whole
+ case to depend upon the testimony of one witness, my opponent may have
+ saved my cause. I do not consider whether his mistakes benefited me or
+ not, for he wished me ill.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ IX. In order that I may be grateful, I must wish to do what my benefactor
+ must have wished in order that he might bestow a benefit. Can anything be
+ more unjust than to bear a grudge against a person who may have trodden
+ upon one's foot in a crowd, or splashed one, or pushed one the way which
+ one did not wish to go? Yet it was by his act that we were injured, and we
+ only refrain from complaining of him, because he did not know what he was
+ doing. The same reason makes it possible for men to do us good without
+ conferring benefits upon us, or to harm us without doing us wrong, because
+ it is intention which distinguishes our friends from our enemies. How many
+ have been saved from service in the army by sickness! Some men have been
+ saved from sharing the fall of their house, by being brought up upon their
+ recognizances to a court of law by their enemies; some have been saved by
+ ship-wreck from falling into the hands of pirates; yet we do not feel
+ grateful to such things, because chance has no feeling of the service it
+ renders, nor are we grateful to our enemy, though his lawsuit, while it
+ harassed and detained us, still saved our lives. Nothing can be a benefit
+ which does not proceed from good will, and which is not meant as such by
+ the giver. If any one does me a service, without knowing it, I am under no
+ obligation to him; should he do so, meaning to injure me, I shall imitate
+ his conduct.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ X. Let us turn our attention to the first of these. Can you desire me to
+ do anything to express my gratitude to a man who did nothing in order to
+ confer a benefit upon me? Passing on to the next, do you wish me to show
+ my gratitude to such a man, and of my own will to return to him what I
+ received from him against his will? What am I to say of the third, he who,
+ meaning to do an injury, blunders into bestowing a benefit? That you
+ should have wished to confer a benefit upon me is not sufficient to render
+ me grateful; but that you should have wished not to do so is enough to set
+ me free from any obligation to you. A mere wish does not constitute a
+ benefit; and just as the best and heartiest wish is not a benefit when
+ fortune prevents its being carried into effect, neither is what fortune
+ bestows upon us a benefit, unless good wishes preceded it. In order to lay
+ me under an obligation, you must not merely do me a service, but you must
+ do so intentionally.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XI. Cleanthes makes use of the following example:&mdash;"I sent," says he,
+ "two slaves to look for Plato and bring him to me from the Academy. One of
+ them searched through the whole of the colonnade, and every other place in
+ which he thought that he was likely to be found, and returned home alike
+ weary and unsuccessful; the other sat down among the audience of a
+ mountebank close by, and, while amusing himself in the society of other
+ slaves like a careless vagabond as he was, found Plato, without seeking
+ for him, as he happened to pass that way. We ought," says he, "to praise
+ that slave who, as far as lay in his power, did what he was ordered, and
+ we ought to punish the other whose laziness turned out so fortunate." It
+ is goodwill alone which does one real service; let us then consider under
+ what conditions it lays us under obligations. It is not enough to wish a
+ man well, without doing him good; nor is it enough to do him good without
+ wishing him well. Suppose that some one wished to give me a present, but
+ did not give it; I have his good will, but I do not have his benefit,
+ which consists of subject matter and goodwill together. I owe nothing to
+ one who wished to lend me money but did not do so, and in like manner I
+ shall be the friend of one who wished but was not able to bestow a benefit
+ upon me, but I shall not be under any obligation to him. I also shall wish
+ to bestow something upon him, even as he did upon me; but if fortune be
+ more favorable to me than to him, and I succeed in bestowing something
+ upon him, my doing so will be a benefit bestowed upon him, not a repayment
+ out of gratitude for what he did for me. It will become his duty to be
+ grateful to me; I shall have begun the interchange of benefits; the series
+ must be counted from my act.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XII. I already understand what you wish to ask; there is no need for you
+ to say anything, your countenance speaks for you. "If any one does us good
+ for his own sake, are we," you ask, "under an obligation to him? I often
+ hear you complain that there are some things which men make use of
+ themselves, but which they put down to the account of others." I will tell
+ you, my Liberalis; but first let me distinguish between the two parts of
+ your question, and separate what is fair from what is unfair. It makes a
+ great difference whether any one bestows a benefit upon us for his own
+ sake, or whether he does so partly for his own sake and partly for ours.
+ He who looks only to his own interests, and who does us good because he
+ cannot otherwise make a profit for himself, seems to me to be like the
+ farmer who provides winter and summer fodder for his flocks, or like the
+ man who feeds up the captives whom he has bought in order that they may
+ fetch a better price in the slave market, or who crams and curry-combs fat
+ oxen for sale; or like the keeper of a school of arms, who takes great
+ pains in exercising and equipping his gladiators. As Cleanthes says, there
+ is a great difference between benefits and trade.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XIII. On the other hand, I am not so unjust as to feel no gratitude to a
+ man, because, while helping me, he helped himself also; for I do not
+ insist upon his consulting my interests to the exclusion of his own&mdash;nay,
+ I should prefer that the benefit which I receive may be of even greater
+ advantage to the giver, provided that he thought of us both when giving
+ it, and meant to divide it between me and himself. Even should he possess
+ the larger portion of it, still, if he admits me to a share, if he meant
+ it for both of us, I am not only unjust but ungrateful, if I do not
+ rejoice in what has benefited me benefiting him also. It is the essence of
+ spitefulness to say that nothing can be a benefit which does not cause
+ some inconvenience to the giver.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As for him who bestows a benefit for his own sake, I should say to him,
+ "You have made use of me, and how can you say that you have bestowed a
+ benefit upon me, rather than I upon you?" "Suppose," answers he, "that I
+ cannot obtain a public office except by ransoming ten citizens out of a
+ great number of captives, will you owe me nothing for setting you free
+ from slavery and bondage? Yet I shall do so for my own sake." To this I
+ should answer, "You do this partly for my sake, partly for your own. It is
+ for your own sake that you ransom captives, but it is for my sake that you
+ ransom me; for to serve your purpose it would be enough for you to ransom
+ any one. I am therefore your debtor, not for ransoming me but for choosing
+ me, since you might have attained the same result by ransoming some one
+ else instead of me. You divide the advantages of the act between yourself
+ and me, and you confer upon me a benefit by which both of us profit. What
+ you do entirely for my sake is, that you choose me in preference to
+ others. If therefore you were to be made praetor for ransoming ten
+ captives, and there were only ten of us captives, none of us would be
+ under any obligation to you, because there is nothing for which you can
+ ask any one of us to give you credit apart from your own advantage. I do
+ not regard a benefit jealously and wish it to be given to myself alone,
+ but I wish to have a share in it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XIV. "Well, then," says he, "suppose that I were to order all your names
+ to be put into a ballot-box, and that your name was drawn among those who
+ were to be ransomed, would you owe me nothing?" Yes, I should owe you
+ something, but very little: how little, I will explain to you. By so doing
+ you do something for my sake, in that you grant me the chance of being
+ ransomed; I owe to fortune that my name was drawn, all I owe to you is
+ that my name could be drawn. You have given me the means of obtaining your
+ benefit. For the greater part of that benefit I am indebted to fortune;
+ that I could be so indebted, I owe to you.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I shall take no notice whatever of those whose benefits are bestowed in a
+ mercenary spirit, who do not consider to whom, but upon what terms they
+ give, whose benefits are entirely selfish. Suppose that some one sells me
+ corn; I cannot live unless I buy it; yet I do not owe my life to him
+ because I have bought it. I do not consider how essential it was to me,
+ and that I could not live without it; but how little thanks are due for
+ it, since I could not have had it without paying for it, and since the
+ merchant who imported it did not consider how much good he would do me,
+ but how much he would gain for himself, I owe nothing for what I have
+ bought and paid for.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XV. "According to this reasoning," says my opponent, "you would say that
+ you owe nothing to a physician beyond his paltry fee, nor to your teacher,
+ because you have paid him some money; yet these persons are all held very
+ dear, and are very much respected." In answer to this I should urge that
+ some things are of greater value than the price which we pay for them. You
+ buy of a physician life and good health, the value of which cannot be
+ estimated in money; from a teacher of the liberal sciences you buy the
+ education of a gentleman and mental culture; therefore you pay these
+ persons the price, not of what they give us, but of their trouble in
+ giving it; you pay them for devoting their attention to us, for
+ disregarding their own affairs to attend to us: they receive the price,
+ not of their services, but of the expenditure of their time. Yet this may
+ be more truly stated in another way, which I will at once lay before you,
+ having first pointed out how the above may be confuted. Our adversary
+ would say, "If some things are of greater value than the price which we
+ pay for them, then, though you may have bought them, you still owe me
+ something more for them." I answer, in the first place, what does their
+ real value matter, since the buyer and seller have settled the price
+ between them? Next, I did not buy it at it's own price, but at yours. "It
+ is," you say, "worth more than its sale price." True, but it cannot be
+ sold for more. The price of everything varies according to circumstances;
+ after you have well praised your wares, they are worth only the highest
+ price at which you can sell them; a man who buys things cheap is not on
+ that account under any obligation to the seller. In the next place, even
+ if they are worth more, there is no generosity in your letting them go for
+ less, since the price is settled by custom and the rate of the market, not
+ by the uses and powers of the merchandise. What would you state to be the
+ proper payment of a man who crosses the seas, holding a true course
+ through the midst of the waves after the land has sunk out of sight, who
+ foresees coming storms, and suddenly, when no one expects danger, orders
+ sails to be furled, yards to be lowered, and the crew to stand at their
+ posts ready to meet the fury of the unexpected gale? and yet the price of
+ such great skill is fully paid for by the passage money. At what sum can
+ you estimate the value of a lodging in a wilderness, of a shelter in the
+ rain, of a bath or fire in cold weather? Yet I know on what terms I shall
+ be supplied with these when I enter an inn. How much the man does for us
+ who props our house when it is about to fall, and who, with a skill beyond
+ belief, suspends in the air a block of building which has begun to crack
+ at the foundation; yet we can contract for underpinning at a fixed and
+ cheap rate. The city wall keeps us safe from our enemies, and from sudden
+ inroads of brigands; yet it is, well known how much a day a smith would
+ earn for erecting towers and scaffoldings [Footnote: See Viollet-le-Duc's
+ "Dictionnaire d'Architecture," articles "Architecture Militaire" and
+ "Hourds," for the probable meaning of "Propugnacula."]to provide for the
+ public safety.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XVI. I might go on for ever collecting instances to prove that valuable
+ things are sold at a low price. What then? why is it that I owe something
+ extra both to my physician and to my teacher, and that I do not acquit
+ myself of all obligation to them by paying them their fee? It is because
+ they pass from physicians and teachers into friends, and lay us under
+ obligations, not by the skill which they sell to us, but by kindly and
+ familiar good will. If my physician does no more than feel my pulse and
+ class me among those whom he sees in his daily rounds, pointing out what I
+ ought to do or to avoid without any personal interest, then I owe him no
+ more than his fee, because he views me with the eye not of a friend, but
+ of a commander. [Footnote: I read "Nbn tamquam amicus videt sed tamquam
+ imperator."] Neither have I any reason for loving my teacher, if he has
+ regarded me merely as one of the mass of his scholars, and has not thought
+ me worthy of taking especial pains with by myself, if he has never fixed
+ his attention upon me, and if when he discharged his knowledge on the
+ public, I might be said rather to have picked it up than to have learnt it
+ from him. What then is our reason for owing them much? It is, not that
+ what they have sold us is worth more than we paid for it, but that they
+ have given something to us personally. Suppose that my physician has spent
+ more consideration upon my case than was professionally necessary; that it
+ was for me, not for his own credit, that he feared: that he was not
+ satisfied with pointing out remedies, but himself applied them, that he
+ sat by my bedside among my anxious friends, and came to see me at the
+ crises of my disorder; that no service was too troublesome or too
+ disgusting for him to perform; that he did not hear my groans unmoved;
+ that among the numbers who called for him I was his favourite case; and
+ that he gave the others only so much time as his care of my health
+ permitted him: I should feel obliged to such a man not as to a physician,
+ but as to a friend. Suppose again that my teacher endured labour and
+ weariness in instructing me; that he taught me something more than is
+ taught by all masters alike; that he roused my better feelings by his
+ encouragement, and that at one time he would raise my spirits by praise,
+ and at another warn me to shake off slothfulness: that he laid his hand,
+ as it were, upon my latent and torpid powers of intellect and drew them
+ out into the light of day; that he did not stingily dole out to me what he
+ knew, in order that he might be wanted for a longer time, but was eager,
+ if possible, to pour all his learning into me; then I am ungrateful, if I
+ do not love him as much as I love my nearest relatives and my dearest
+ friends.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XVII. We give something additional even to those who teach the meanest
+ trades, if their efforts appear to be extraordinary; we bestow a gratuity
+ upon pilots, upon workmen who deal with the commonest materials and hire
+ themselves out by the day. In the noblest arts, however, those which
+ either preserve or beautify our lives, a man would be ungrateful who
+ thinks he owes the artist no more than he bargained for. Besides this, the
+ teaching of such learning as we have spoken of blends mind with mind; now
+ when this takes place, both in the case of the physician and of the
+ teacher the price of his work is paid, but that of his mind remains owing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XVIII. Plato once crossed a river, and as the ferryman did not ask him for
+ anything, he supposed that he had let him pass free out of respect, and
+ said that the ferryman had laid Plato under an obligation. Shortly
+ afterwards, seeing the ferryman take one person after another across the
+ river with the same pains, and without charging anything, Plato declared
+ that the ferryman had not laid him under an obligation. If you wish me to
+ be grateful for what you give, you must not merely give it to me, but show
+ that you mean it specially for me; you cannot make any claim upon one for
+ having given him what you fling away broad-cast among the crowd. What
+ then? shall I owe you nothing for it? Nothing, as an individual; I will
+ pay, when the rest of mankind do, what I owe no more than they.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XIX. "Do you say," inquires my opponent, "that he who carries me gratis in
+ a boat across the river Po, does not bestow any benefit upon me?" I do. He
+ does me some good, but he does not bestow a benefit upon me; for he does
+ it for his own sake, or at any rate not for mine; in short, he himself
+ does not imagine that he is bestowing a benefit upon me, but does it for
+ the credit of the State, or of the neighbourhood, or of himself, and
+ expects some return for doing so, different from what he would receive
+ from individual passengers. "Well," asks my opponent, "if the emperor were
+ to grant the franchise to all the Gauls, or exemption, from taxes to all
+ the Spaniards, would each individual of them owe him nothing on that
+ account?" Of course he would: but he would be indebted to him, not as
+ having personally received a benefit intended for himself alone, but as a
+ partaker in one conferred upon his nation. He would argue, "The emperor
+ had no thought of me at the time when he benefited us all; he did not care
+ to give me the franchise separately, he did not fix his attention upon me;
+ why then should I be grateful to one who did not have me in his mind when
+ he was thinking of doing what he did? In answer to this, I say that when
+ he thought of doing good to all the Gauls, he thought of doing good to me
+ also, for I was a Gaul, and he included me under my national, if not under
+ my personal appellation. In like manner, I should feel grateful to him,
+ not as for a personal, but for a general benefit; being only one of the
+ people, I should regard the debt of gratitude as incurred, not by myself,
+ but by my country, and should not pay it myself, but only contribute my
+ share towards doing so. I do not call a man my creditor because he has
+ lent money to my country, nor should I include that money in a schedule of
+ my debts were I either a candidate for a public office, or a defendant in
+ the courts; yet I would pay my share towards extinguishing such a debt.
+ Similarly, I deny that I am laid under an obligation by a gift bestowed
+ upon my entire nation, because although the giver gave it to me, yet he
+ did not do so for my sake, but gave it without knowing whether he was
+ giving it to me or not: nevertheless I should feel that I owed something
+ for the gift, because it did reach me, though not directly. To lay me
+ under an obligation, a thing must be done for my sake alone."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XX. "According to this," argues our opponent, "you are under no obligation
+ to the sun or the moon; for they do not move for your sake alone." No, but
+ since they move with the object of preserving the balance of the universe,
+ they move for my sake also, seeing that I am a fraction of the universe.
+ Besides, our position and theirs is not the same, for he who does me good
+ in order that he may by my means do good to himself, does not bestow a
+ benefit upon me, because he merely makes use of me as an instrument for
+ his own advantage; whereas the sun and the moon, even if they do us good
+ for their own sakes, still cannot do good to us in order that by our means
+ they may do good to themselves, for what is there which we can bestow upon
+ them?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXI. "I should be sure," replies he, "that the sun and the moon wished to
+ do us good, if they were able to refuse to do so; but they cannot help
+ moving as they do. In short, let them stop and discontinue their work."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ See now, in how many ways this argument may be refuted. One who cannot
+ refuse to do a thing may nevertheless wish to do it; indeed there is no
+ greater proof of a fixed desire to do anything, than not to be able to
+ alter one's determination. A good man cannot leave undone what he does:
+ for unless he does it he will not be a good man. Is a good man, then, not
+ able to bestow a benefit, because he does what he ought to do, and is not
+ able not to do what he ought to do? Besides this, it makes a great
+ difference whether you say, "He is not able not to do this, because he is
+ forced to do it," or "He is not able to wish not to do it;" for, if he
+ could not help doing it, then I am not indebted for it to him, but to the
+ person who forced him to do it; if he could not help wishing for it
+ because he had nothing better to wish for, then it is he who forces
+ himself to do it, and in this case the debt which as acting under
+ compulsion he could not claim, is due to him as compelling himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Let the sun and moon cease to wish to benefit us," says our adversary. I
+ answer, "Remember what has been said. Who can be so crazy as to refuse the
+ name of free-will to that which has no danger of ceasing to act, and of
+ adopting the opposite course, since, on the contrary, he whose will is
+ fixed for ever, must be thought to wish more earnestly than any one else.
+ Surely if he, who may at any moment change his mind, can be said to wish,
+ we must not deny the existence of will in a being whose nature does not
+ admit of change of mind."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXII. "Well," says he "let them stop, if it be possible." What you say is
+ this:&mdash;"Let all those heavenly bodies, placed as they are at vast
+ distances from each other, and arranged to preserve the balance of the
+ universe, leave their appointed posts: let sudden confusion arise, so that
+ constellations may collide with constellations, that the established
+ harmony of all things may be destroyed and the works of God be shaken into
+ ruin; let the whole frame of the rapidly moving heavenly bodies abandon in
+ mid career those movements which we were assured would endure for ages,
+ and let those which now by their regular advance and retreat keep the
+ world at a moderate temperature, be instantly consumed by fire, so that
+ instead of the infinite variety of the seasons all may be reduced to one
+ uniform condition; let fire rage everywhere, followed by dull night, and
+ let the bottomless abyss swallow up all the gods." Is it worth while to
+ destroy all this merely in order to refute you? Even though you do not
+ wish it, they do you good, and they wheel in their courses for your sake,
+ though their motion may be due to some earlier and more important cause.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXIII. Besides this, the gods act under no external constraint, but their
+ own will is a law to them for all time. They have established an order
+ which is not to be changed, and consequently it is impossible that they
+ should appear to be likely to do anything against their will, since they
+ wish to continue doing whatever they cannot cease from doing, and they
+ never regret their original decision, No doubt it is impossible for them
+ to stop short, or to desert to the other side, but it is so for no other
+ reason than that their own force holds them to their purpose. It is from
+ no weakness that they persevere; no, they have no mind to leave the best
+ course, and by this it is fated that they should proceed. When, at the
+ time of the original creation, they arranged the entire universe, they
+ paid attention to us as well as to the rest, and took thought about the
+ human race; and for this reason we cannot suppose that it is merely for
+ their own pleasure that they move in their orbits and display their work
+ since we also are a part of that work. We are, therefore; under an
+ obligation to the sun and moon and the rest of the heavenly host, because,
+ although they may rise in order to bestow more important benefits than
+ those which we receive from them, yet they do bestow these upon us as they
+ pass on their way to greater things. Besides this, they assist us of set
+ purpose, and, therefore, lay us under an obligation, because we do not in
+ their case stumble by chance upon a benefit bestowed by one who knew not
+ what he was doing, but they knew that we should receive from them the
+ advantages which we do; so that, though they may have some higher aim,
+ though the result of their movements may be something of greater
+ importance than the preservation of the human race, yet from the beginning
+ thought has been directed to our comforts, and the scheme of the world has
+ been arranged in a fashion which proves that our interests were neither
+ their least nor last concern. It is our duty to show filial love for our
+ parents, although many of them had no thought of children when they
+ married. Not so with the gods: they cannot but have known what they were
+ doing when they furnished mankind with food and comforts. Those for whose
+ advantage so much was created, could not have been created without design.
+ Nature conceived the idea of us before she formed us, and, indeed, we are
+ no such trifling piece of work as could have fallen from her hands
+ unheeded. See how great privileges she has bestowed upon us, how far
+ beyond the human race the empire of mankind extends; consider how widely
+ she allows us to roam, not having restricted us to the land alone, but
+ permitted us to traverse every part of herself; consider, too, the
+ audacity of our intellect, the only one which knows of the gods or seeks
+ for them, and how we can raise our mind high above the earth, and commune
+ with those divine influences: you will perceive that man is not a
+ hurriedly put together, or an unstudied piece of work. Among her noblest
+ products nature has none of which she can boast more than man, and
+ assuredly no other which can comprehend her boast. What madness is this,
+ to call the gods in question for their bounty? If a man declares that he
+ has received nothing when he is receiving all the while, and from those
+ who will always be giving without ever receiving anything in return, how
+ will he be grateful to those whose kindness cannot be returned without
+ expense? and how great a mistake is it not to be thankful to a giver,
+ because he is good even to him who disowns him, or to use the fact of his
+ bounty being poured upon us in an uninterrupted stream, as an argument to
+ prove that he cannot help bestowing it. Suppose that such men as these
+ say, "I do not want it," "Let him keep it to himself," "Who asks him for
+ it?" and so forth, with all the other speeches of insolent minds: still,
+ he whose bounty reaches you, although you say that it does not, lays you
+ under an obligation nevertheless; indeed, perhaps the greatest part of the
+ benefit which he bestows is that he is ready to give even when you are
+ complaining against him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXIV. Do you not see how parents force children during their infancy to
+ undergo what is useful for their health? Though the children cry and
+ struggle, they swathe them and bind their limbs straight lest premature
+ liberty should make them grow crooked, afterwards instill into them a
+ liberal education, threatening those who are unwilling to learn, and
+ finally, if spirited young men do not conduct themselves frugally,
+ modestly, and respectably, they compel them to do so. Force and harsh
+ measures are used even to youths who have grown up and are their own
+ masters, if they, either from fear or from insolence, refuse to take what
+ is good for them. Thus the greatest benefits that we receive, we receive
+ either without knowing it, or against our will, from our parents.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXV. Those persons who are ungrateful and repudiate benefits, not because
+ they do not wish to receive them, but in order that they may not be laid
+ under an obligation for them, are like those who fall into the opposite
+ extreme, and are over grateful, who pray that some trouble or misfortune
+ may befall their benefactors to give them an opportunity of proving how
+ gratefully they remember the benefit which they have received. It is a
+ question whether they are right, and show a truly dutiful feeling; their
+ state of mind is morbid, like that of frantic lovers who long for their
+ mistress to be exiled, that they may accompany her when she leaves her
+ country forsaken by all her friends, or that she may be poor in order that
+ she may the more need what they give her, or who long that she may be ill
+ in order that they may sit by her bedside, and who, in short, out of sheer
+ love form the same wishes as her enemies would wish for her. Thus the
+ results of hatred and of frantic love are very nearly the same; and these
+ lovers are very like those who hope that their friends may meet with
+ difficulties which they may remove, and who thus do a wrong that they may
+ bestow a benefit, whereas it would have been much better for them to do
+ nothing, than by a crime to gain an opportunity of doing good service.
+ What should we say of a pilot who prayed to the gods for dreadful storms
+ and tempests, in order that danger might make his skill more highly
+ esteemed? what of a general who should pray that a vast number of the
+ enemy surround his camp, fill the ditches by a sudden charge, tear down
+ the rampart round his panic-stricken army, and plant its hostile standards
+ at the very gates, in order that he might gain more glory by restoring his
+ broken ranks and shattered fortunes? All such men confer their benefits
+ upon us by odious means, for they beg the gods to harm those whom they
+ mean to help, and wish them to be struck down before they raise them up;
+ it is a cruel feeling, brought about by a distorted sense of gratitude, to
+ wish evil to befall one whom one is bound in honour to succour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXVI. "My wish," argues our opponent, "does him no harm, because when I
+ wish for the danger I wish for the rescue at the same time." What you mean
+ by this is not that you do no wrong, but that you do less than if you
+ wished that the danger might befall him, without wishing for the rescue.
+ It is wicked to throw a man into the water in order that you may pull him
+ out, to throw him down that you may raise him up, or to shut him up that
+ you may release him. You do not bestow a benefit upon a man by ceasing to
+ wrong him, nor can it ever be a piece of good service to anyone to remove
+ from him a burden which you yourself imposed on him. True, you may cure
+ the hurt which you inflict, but I had rather that you did not hurt me at
+ all. You may gain my gratitude by curing me because I am wounded, but not
+ by wounding me in order that you may cure me: no man likes scars except as
+ compared with wounds, which he is glad to see thus healed, though he had
+ rather not have received them. It would be cruel to wish such things to
+ befall one from whom you had never received a kindness; how much more
+ cruel is it to wish that they may befall one in whose debt you are.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXVII. "I pray," replies he, "at the same time, that I may be able to help
+ him." In the first place, if I stop you short in the middle of your
+ prayer, it shows at once that you are ungrateful: I have not yet heard
+ what you wish to do for him; I have heard what you wish him to suffer. You
+ pray that anxiety and fear and even worse evil than this may come upon
+ him. You desire that he may need aid: this is to his disadvantage; you
+ desire that he may need your aid: this is to your advantage. You do not
+ wish to help him, but to be set free from your obligation to him: for when
+ you are eager to repay your debt in such a way as this, you merely wish to
+ be set free from the debt, not to repay it. So the only part of your wish
+ that could be thought honourable proves to be the base and ungrateful
+ feeling of unwillingness to lie under an obligation: for what you wish for
+ is, not that you may have an opportunity of repaying his kindness, but
+ that he may be forced to beg you to do him a kindness. You make yourself
+ the superior, and you wickedly degrade beneath your feet the man who has
+ done you good service. How much better would it be to remain in his debt
+ in an honourable and friendly manner, than to seek to discharge the debt
+ by these evil means! You would be less to blame if you denied that you had
+ received it, for your benefactor would then lose nothing more than what he
+ gave you, whereas now you wish him to be rendered inferior to you, and
+ brought by the loss of his property and social position into a condition
+ below his own benefits. Do you think yourself grateful? Just utter your
+ wishes in the hearing of him to whom you wish to do good. Do you call that
+ a prayer for his welfare, which can be divided between his friend and his
+ enemy, which, if the last part were omitted, you would not doubt was
+ pronounced, by one who opposed and hated him? Enemies in war have
+ sometimes wished to capture certain towns in order to spare them, or to
+ conquer certain persons in order to pardon, them, yet these were the
+ wishes of enemies, and what was the kindest part of them began by cruelty.
+ Finally, what sort of prayers do you think those can be which he, on whose
+ behalf they are made, hopes more earnestly than any one else may not be
+ granted? In hoping that the gods may injure a man, and that you may help
+ him, you deal most dishonourably with him, and you do not treat the gods
+ themselves fairly, for you give them the odious part to play, and reserve
+ the generous one for yourself: the gods must do him wrong in order that
+ you may do him a service. If you were to suborn an informer to accuse a
+ man, and afterwards withdrew him, if you engaged a man in a law suit and
+ afterwards gave it up, no one would hesitate to call you a villain: what
+ difference does it make, whether you attempt to do this by chicanery or by
+ prayer, unless it be that by prayer you raise up more powerful enemies to
+ him than by the other means? You cannot say "Why, what harm do I do him?"
+ your prayer is either futile or harmful, indeed it is harmful even though
+ nothing comes of it. You do your friend wrong by wishing him harm: you
+ must thank the gods that you do him no harm. The fact of your wishing it
+ is enough: we ought to be just as angry with you as if you had effected
+ it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXVIII. "If," argues our adversary, "my prayers had any efficacy, they
+ would also have been efficacious to save him from danger." In the first
+ place, I reply, the danger into which you wish me to fall is certain, the
+ help which I should receive is uncertain. Or call them both certain; it is
+ that which injures me that comes first. Besides, YOU understand the terms
+ of your wish; <i>I</i> shall be tossed by the storm without being sure
+ that I have a haven of rest at hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Think what torture it must have been to me, even if I receive your help,
+ to have stood in need of it: if I escape safely, to have trembled for
+ myself; if I be acquitted, to have had to plead my cause. To escape from
+ fear, however great it may be, can never be so pleasant as to live in
+ sound unassailable safety. Pray that you may return my kindnesses when I
+ need their return, but do not pray that I may need them. You would have
+ done what you prayed for, had it been in your power.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXIX. How far more honourable would a prayer of this sort be: "I pray that
+ he may remain in such a position as that he may always bestow benefits and
+ never need them: may he be attended by the means of giving and helping, of
+ which he makes such a bountiful use; may he never want benefits to bestow,
+ or be sorry for any which he has bestowed; may his nature, fitted as it is
+ for acts of pity, goodness, and clemency, be stimulated and brought out by
+ numbers of grateful persons, whom I trust he will find without needing to
+ make trial of their gratitude; may he refuse to be reconciled to no one,
+ and may no one require to be reconciled to him: may fortune so uniformly
+ continue to favour him that no one may be able to return his kindness in
+ any way except by feeling grateful to him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How far more proper are such prayers as these, which do not put you off to
+ some distant opportunity, but express your gratitude at once? What is
+ there to prevent your returning your benefactor's kindness, even while he
+ is in prosperity? How many ways are there by which we can repay what we
+ owe even to the affluent&mdash;for instance, by honest advice, by constant
+ intercourse, by courteous conversation, pleasing him without flattering
+ him, by listening attentively to any subject which he may wish to discuss,
+ by keeping safe any secret that he may impart to us, and by social
+ intercourse. There is no one so highly placed by fortune as not to want a
+ friend all the more because he wants nothing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXX. The other is a melancholy opportunity, and one which we ought always
+ to pray may be kept far from us: must the gods be angry with a man in
+ order that you may prove your gratitude to him? Do you not perceive that
+ you are doing wrong, from the very fact that those to whom you are
+ ungrateful fare better? Call up before your mind dungeons, chains,
+ wretchedness, slavery, war, poverty: these are the opportunities for which
+ you pray; if any one has any dealings with you, it is by means of these
+ that you square your account. Why not rather wish that he to whom you owe
+ most may be powerful and happy? for, as I have just said, what is there to
+ prevent your returning the kindness even of those who enjoy the greatest
+ prosperity? to do which, ample and various opportunities will present
+ themselves to you, What! do you not know that a debt can be paid even to a
+ rich man? Nor will I trouble you with many instances of what you may do.
+ Though a man's riches and prosperity may prevent your making him any other
+ repayment, I will show you what the highest in the land stand in need of,
+ what is wanting to those who possess everything. They want a man to speak
+ the truth, to save them from the organized mass of falsehood by which they
+ are beset, which so bewilders them with lies that the habit of hearing
+ only what is pleasant instead of what is true, prevents their knowing what
+ truth really is. Do you not see how such persons are driven to ruin by the
+ want of candour among their friends, whose loyalty has degenerated into
+ slavish obsequiousness? No one, when giving them his advice, tells them
+ what he really thinks, but each vies with the other in flattery; and while
+ the man's friends make it their only object to see who can most pleasantly
+ deceive him, he himself is ignorant of his real powers, and, believing
+ himself to be as great a man as he is told that he is, plunges the State
+ in useless wars, which bring disasters upon it, breaks off a useful and
+ necessary peace, and, through a passion of anger which no one checks,
+ spills the blood of numbers of people, and at last sheds his own. Such
+ persons assert what has never been investigated as certain facts, consider
+ that to modify their opinion is as dishonourable as to be conquered,
+ believe that institutions which are just flickering out of existence will
+ last for ever, and, thus overturn great States, to the destruction of
+ themselves and all who are connected with them. Living as they do in a
+ fool's paradise, resplendent with unreal and short-lived advantages, they
+ forget that, as soon as they put it out of their power to hear the truth,
+ there is no limit to the misfortunes which they may expect.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXXI. When Xerxes declared war against Greece, all his courtiers
+ encouraged his boastful temper, which forgot how unsubstantial his grounds
+ for confidence were. One declared that the Greeks would not endure to hear
+ the news of the declaration of war, and would take to flight at the first
+ rumour of his approach; another, that with such a vast army Greece could
+ not only be conquered, but utterly overwhelmed, and that it was rather to
+ be feared that they would find the Greek cities empty and abandoned, and
+ that the panic flight of the enemy would leave them only vast deserts,
+ where no use could be made of their enormous forces. Another told him that
+ the world was hardly large enough to contain him, that the seas were too
+ narrow for his fleets, the camps would not take in his armies, the plains
+ were not wide enough to deploy his cavalry in, and that the sky itself was
+ scarcely large enough to enable all his troops to hurl their darts at
+ once. While much boasting of this sort was going on around him, raising
+ his already overweening self-confidence to a frantic pitch, Demaratus, the
+ Lacedaemonian, alone told him that the disorganized and unwieldy multitude
+ in which he trusted, was in itself a danger to its chief, because it
+ possessed only weight without strength; for an army which is too large
+ cannot be governed, and one which cannot be governed, cannot long exist.
+ "The Lacedaemonians," said he, "will meet you upon the first mountain in
+ Greece, and will give you a taste of their quality. All these thousands of
+ nations of yours will be held in check by three hundred men: they will
+ stand firm at their posts, they will defend the passes entrusted to them
+ with their weapons, and block them up with their bodies: all Asia will not
+ force them to give way; few as they are, they will stop all this terrible
+ invasion, attempted though it be by nearly the whole human race. Though
+ the laws of nature may give way to you, and enable you to pass from Europe
+ to Asia, yet you will stop short in a bypath; consider what your losses
+ will be afterwards, when you have reckoned up the price which you have to
+ pay for the pass of Thermopylae; when you learn that your march can be
+ stayed, you will discover that you may be put to flight. The Greeks will
+ yield up many parts of their country to you, as if they were swept out of
+ them by the first terrible rush of a mountain torrent; afterwards they
+ will rise against you from all quarters and will crush you by means of
+ your own strength. What people say, that your warlike preparations are too
+ great to be contained in the countries which you intend to attack, is
+ quite true; but this is to our disadvantage. Greece will conquer you for
+ this very reason, that she cannot contain you; you cannot make use of the
+ whole of your force. Besides this, you will not be able to do what is
+ essential to victory&mdash;that is, to meet the manoeuvres of the enemy at
+ once, to support your own men if they give way, or to confirm and
+ strengthen them when their ranks are wavering; long before you know it,
+ you will be defeated. Moreover, you should not think that because your
+ army is so large that its own chief does not know its numbers, it is
+ therefore irresistible; there is nothing so great that it cannot perish;
+ nay, without any other cause, its own excessive size may prove its ruin."
+ What Demaratus predicted came to pass. He whose power gods and men obeyed,
+ and who swept away all that opposed him, was bidden to halt by three
+ hundred men, and the Persians, defeated in every part of Greece, learned
+ how great a difference there is between a mob and an army. Thus it came to
+ pass that Xerxes, who suffered more from the shame of his failure than
+ from the losses which he sustained, thanked Demaratus for having been the
+ only man who told him the truth, and permitted him to ask what boon he
+ pleased. He asked to be allowed to drive a chariot into Sardis, the
+ largest city in Asia, wearing a tiara erect upon his head, a privilege
+ which was enjoyed by kings alone. He deserved his reward before he asked
+ for it, but how wretched must the nation have been, in which there was no
+ one who would speak the truth to the king except one man who did not speak
+ it to himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXXII. The late Emperor Augustus banished his daughter, whose conduct went
+ beyond the shame of ordinary immodesty, and made public the scandals of
+ the imperial house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Led away by his passion, he divulged all these crimes which, as emperor,
+ he ought to have kept secret with as much care as he punished them,
+ because the shame of some deeds asperses even him who avenges them.
+ Afterwards, when by lapse of time shame took the place of anger in his
+ mind, he lamented that he had not kept silence about matters which he had
+ not learned until it was disgraceful to speak of them, and often used to
+ exclaim, "None of these things would have happened to me, if either
+ Agrippa or Maecenas had lived!" So hard was it for the master of so many
+ thousands of men to repair the loss of two. When his legions were
+ slaughtered, new ones were at once enrolled; when his fleet was wrecked,
+ within a few days another was afloat; when the public buildings were
+ consumed by fire, finer ones arose in their stead; but the places of
+ Agrippa and Maecenas remained unfilled throughout his life. What am I to
+ imagine? that there were not any men like these, who could take their
+ place, or that it was the fault of Augustus himself, who preferred
+ mourning for them to seeking for their likes? We have no reason for
+ supposing that it was the habit of Agrippa or Maecenas to speak the truth
+ to him; indeed, if they had lived they would have been as great
+ dissemblers as the rest. It is one of the habits of kings to insult their
+ present servants by praising those whom they have lost, and to attribute
+ the virtue of truthful speaking to those from whom there is no further
+ risk of hearing it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXXIII. However, to return to my subject, you see how easy it is to return
+ the kindness of the prosperous, and even of those who occupy the highest
+ places of all mankind. Tell them, not what they wish to hear, but what
+ they will wish that they always had heard; though their ears be stopped by
+ flatteries, yet sometimes truth may penetrate them; give them useful
+ advice. Do you ask what service you can render to a prosperous man? Teach
+ him not to rely upon his prosperity, and to understand that it ought to be
+ supported by the hands of many trusty friends. Will you not have done much
+ for him, if you take away his foolish belief that his influence will
+ endure for ever, and teach him that what we gain by chance passes away
+ soon, and at a quicker rate than it came; that we cannot fall by the same
+ stages by which we rose to the height of good fortune, but that frequently
+ between it and ruin there is but one step? You do not know how great is
+ the value of friendship, if you do not understand how much you give to him
+ to whom you give a friend, a commodity which is scarce not only in men's
+ houses, but in whole centuries, and which is nowhere scarcer than in the
+ places where it is thought to be most plentiful. Pray, do you suppose that
+ those books of names, which your nomenclator [Footnote: The nomenclator
+ was a slave who attended his master in canvassing and on similar
+ occasions, for the purpose of telling him the names of whom he met in the
+ street.] can hardly carry or remember, are those of friends? It is not
+ your friends who crowd to knock at your door, and who are admitted to your
+ greater or lesser levees.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXXIV. To divide one's friends into classes is an old trick of kings and
+ their imitators; it shows great arrogance to think that to touch or to
+ pass one's threshold can be a valuable privilege, or to grant as an honour
+ that you should sit nearer one's front door than others, or enter house
+ before them, although within the house there are many more doors, which
+ shut out even those who have been admitted so far. With us Gaius Gracchus,
+ and shortly after him Livius Drusus, were the first to keep themselves
+ apart from the mass of their adherents, and to admit some to their
+ privacy, some to their more select, and others to their general
+ receptions. These men consequently had friends of the first and second
+ rank, and so on, but in none had they true friends. Can you apply the name
+ of friend to one who is admitted in his regular order to pay his respects
+ to you? or can you expect perfect loyalty from one who is forced to slip
+ into your presence through a grudgingly-opened door? How can a man arrive
+ at using bold freedom of speech with you, if he is only allowed in his
+ proper turn to make use of the common phrase, "Hail to you," which is used
+ by perfect strangers? Whenever you go to any of these great men, whose
+ levees interest the whole city, though you find all the streets beset with
+ throngs of people, and the passers-by hardly able to make their way
+ through the crowd, you may be sure that you have come to a place where
+ there are many men, but no friends of their patron. We must not seek our
+ friends in our entrance hall, but in our own breast; it is there that he
+ ought to be received, there retained, and hoarded up in our minds. Teach
+ this, and you will have repaid your debt of gratitude.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXXV. If you are useful to your friend only when he is in distress, and
+ are superfluous when all goes well with him, you form a mean estimate of
+ your own value. As you can bear yourself wisely both in doubtful, in
+ prosperous, and in adverse circumstances, by showing prudence in doubtful
+ cases, courage in misfortune, and self-restraint in good fortune, so in
+ all circumstances you can make yourself useful to your friend. Do not
+ desert him in adversity, but do not wish that it may befall him: the
+ various incidents of human life will afford you many opportunities of
+ proving your loyalty to him without wishing him evil. He who prays that
+ another may become rich, in order that he may share his riches, really has
+ a view to his own advantage, although his prayers are ostensibly offered
+ in behalf of his friend; and similarly he who wishes that his friend may
+ get into some trouble from which his own friendly assistance may extricate
+ him&mdash;a most ungrateful wish&mdash;prefers himself to his friend, and
+ thinks it worthwhile that his friend should be unhappy, in order that he
+ may prove his gratitude. This very wish makes him ungrateful, for he
+ wishes to rid himself of his gratitude as though it were a heavy burden.
+ In returning a kindness it makes a great difference whether you are eager
+ to bestow a benefit, or merely to free yourself from a debt. He who wishes
+ to return a benefit will study his friend's interests, and will hope that
+ a suitable occasion will arise; he who only wishes to free himself from an
+ obligation will be eager to do so by any means whatever, which shows very
+ bad feeling. "Do you say," we may be asked, "that eagerness to repay
+ kindness belongs to a morbid feeling of gratitude?" I cannot explain my
+ meaning more clearly than by repeating what I have already said. You do
+ not want to repay, but to escape from the benefit which you have received.
+ You seem to say, "When shall I get free from this obligation? I must
+ strive by any means in my power to extinguish my debt to him." You would
+ be thought to be far from grateful, if you wished to pay a debt to him
+ with his own money; yet this wish of yours is even more unjust; for you
+ invoke curses upon him, and call down terrible imprecations upon the head
+ of one who ought to be held sacred by you. No one, I suppose, would have
+ any doubt of your wickedness if you were openly to pray that he might
+ suffer poverty, captivity, hunger, or fear; yet what is the difference
+ between openly praying for some of these things, and silently wishing for
+ them? for you do wish for some of these. Go, and enjoy your belief that
+ this is gratitude, to do what not even an ungrateful man would do,
+ supposing he confined himself to repudiating the benefit, and did not go
+ so far as to hate his benefactor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXXVI. Who would call Aeneas pious, if he wished that his native city
+ might be captured, in order that he might save his father from captivity?
+ Who would point to the Sicilian youths as good examples for his children,
+ if they had prayed that Aetna might flame with unusual heat and pour forth
+ a vast mass of fire in order to afford them an opportunity of displaying
+ their filial affection by rescuing their parents from the midst of the
+ conflagration? Rome owes Scipio nothing if he kept the Punic War alive in
+ order that he might have the glory of finishing it; she owes nothing to
+ the Decii if they prayed for public disasters, to give themselves an
+ opportunity of displaying their brave self-devotion. It is the greatest
+ scandal for a physician to make work for himself; and many who have
+ aggravated the diseases of their patients that they may have the greater
+ credit for curing them, have either failed to cure them, at all or have
+ done so at the cost of the most terrible suffering to their victims.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXXVII. It is said (at any rate Hecaton tells us) that when Callistratus
+ with many others was driven into exile by his factious and licentiously
+ free country, some one prayed that such trouble might befall the Athenians
+ that they would be forced to recall the exiles, on hearing which, he
+ prayed that God might forbid his return upon such terms. When some one
+ tried to console our own countryman, Rutilius, for his exile, pointing out
+ that civil war was at hand, and that all exiles would soon be restored to
+ Rome, he answered with even greater spirit, "What harm have I done you,
+ that you should wish that I may return to my country more unhappily than I
+ quit it? My wish is, that my country should blush at my being banished,
+ rather than that she should mourn at my having returned." An exile, of
+ which every one is more ashamed than the sufferer, is not exile at all.
+ These two persons, who did not wish to be restored to their homes at the
+ cost of a public disaster, but preferred that two should suffer unjustly
+ than that all should suffer alike, are thought to have acted like good
+ citizens; and in like manner it does not accord with the character of a
+ grateful man, to wish that his benefactor may fall into troubles which he
+ may dispel; because, even though he may mean well to him, yet he wishes
+ him evil. To put out a fire which you yourself have lighted, will not even
+ gain acquittal for you, let alone credit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXXVIII. In some states an evil wish was regarded as a crime. It is
+ certain that at Athens Demades obtained a verdict against one who sold
+ furniture for funerals, by proving that he had prayed for great gains,
+ which he could not obtain without the death of many persons. Yet it is a
+ stock question whether he was rightly found guilty. Perhaps he prayed, not
+ that he might sell his wares to many persons, but that he might sell them
+ dear, or that he might procure what he was going to sell, cheaply. Since
+ his business consisted of buying and selling, why should you consider his
+ prayer to apply to one branch of it only, although he made profit from
+ both? Besides this, you might find every one of his trade guilty, for they
+ all wish, that is, secretly pray, as he did. You might, moreover, find a
+ great part of the human race guilty, for who is there who does not profit
+ by his neighbour's wants? A soldier, if he wishes for glory, must wish for
+ war; the farmer profits by corn being dear; a large number of litigants
+ raises the price of forensic eloquence; physicians make money by a sickly
+ season; dealers in luxuries are made rich by the effeminacy of youth;
+ suppose that no storms and no conflagrations injured our dwellings, the
+ builder's trade would be at a standstill. The prayer of one man was
+ detected, but it was just like the prayers of all other men. Do you
+ imagine that Arruntius and Haterius, and all other professional
+ legacy-hunters do not put up the same prayers as undertakers and
+ grave-diggers? though the latter know not whose death it is that they wish
+ for, while the former wish for the death of their dearest friends, from
+ whom, on account of their intimacy, they have most hopes of inheriting a
+ fortune. No one's life does the undertaker any harm, whereas these men
+ starve if their friends are long about dying; they do not, therefore,
+ merely wish for their deaths in order that they may receive what they have
+ earned by a disgraceful servitude, but in order that they may be set free
+ from a heavy tax. There can, therefore, be no doubt that such persons
+ repeat with even greater earnestness the prayer for which the undertaker
+ was condemned, for whoever is likely to profit such men by dying, does
+ them an injury by living. Yet the wishes of all these are alike well known
+ and unpunished. Lastly, let every man examine his own self, let him look
+ into the secret thoughts of his heart and consider what it is that he
+ silently hopes for; how many of his prayers he would blush to acknowledge,
+ even to himself; how few there are which we could repeat in the presence
+ of witnesses!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXXIX. Yet we must not condemn every thing which we find worthy of blame,
+ as, for instance, this wish about our friends which we have been
+ discussing, arises from a misdirected feeling of affection, and falls into
+ the very error which it strives to avoid, for the man is ungrateful at the
+ very time when he hurries to prove his gratitude. He prays aloud, "May he
+ fall into my power, may he need my influence, may not be able to be safe
+ and respectable without my aid, may he be so unfortunate that whatever
+ return I make to him may be regarded as a benefit." To the gods alone he
+ adds, "May domestic treasons encompass him, which can be quelled by me
+ alone; may some powerful and virulent enemy, some excited and armed mob,
+ assail him; may he be set upon by a creditor or an informer."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XL. See, how just you are; you would never have wished any of these
+ misfortunes to befall him, if he had not bestowed a benefit upon you. Not
+ to speak of the graver guilt which you incur by returning evil for good,
+ you distinctly do wrong in not waiting for the fitting time for each
+ action, for it is as wrong to anticipate this as it is not to take it when
+ it comes. A benefit ought not always to be accepted, and ought not in all
+ cases to be returned. If you were to return it to me against my will, you
+ would be ungrateful, how much more ungrateful are you, if you force me to
+ wish for it? Wait patiently; why are you unwilling to let my bounty abide
+ with you? Why do you chafe at being laid under an obligation? why, as
+ though you were dealing with a harsh usurer, are you in such a hurry to
+ sign and seal an equivalent bond? Why do you wish me to get into trouble?
+ Why do you call upon the gods to ruin me? If this is your way of returning
+ a kindness, what would you do if you were exacting repayment of a debt?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XLI. Above all, therefore, my Liberalis, let us learn to live calmly under
+ an obligation to others, and watch for opportunities of repaying our debt
+ without manufacturing them. Let us remember that this anxiety to seize the
+ first opportunity of setting ourselves free shows ingratitude; for no one
+ repays with good will that which he is unwilling to owe, and his eagerness
+ to get it out of his hands shows that he regards it as a burden rather
+ than as a favour. How much better and more righteous is it to bear in mind
+ what we owe to our friends, and to offer repayment, not to obtrude it, nor
+ to think ourselves too much indebted; because a benefit is a common bond
+ which connects two persons. Say "I do not delay to repay your kindness to
+ me; I hope that you will accept my gratitude cheerfully. If irresistible
+ fate hangs over either of us, and destiny rules either that you must
+ receive your benefit back again, or that I must receive a second benefit,
+ why then, of us two, let him give that was wont to give. I am ready to
+ receive it.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "'Tis not the part of Turnus to delay."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ That is the spirit which I shall show whenever the time comes; in the
+ meanwhile the gods shall be my witnesses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XLII. I have noted in you, my Liberalis, and as it were touched with my
+ hand a feeling of fussy anxiety not to be behindhand in doing what is your
+ duty. This anxiety is not suitable to a grateful mind, which, on the
+ contrary, produces the utmost confidence in oneself, and which drives away
+ all trouble by the consciousness of real affection towards one's
+ benefactor. To say "Take back what you gave me," is no less a reproach
+ than to say "You are in my debt." Let this be the first privilege of a
+ benefit, that he who bestowed it may choose the time when he will have it
+ returned. "But I fear that men may speak ill of me." You do wrong if you
+ are grateful only for the sake of your reputation, and not to satisfy your
+ conscience. You have in this matter two judges, your benefactor, whom you
+ ought not, and yourself, whom you cannot deceive. "But," say you, "if no
+ occasion of repayment offers, am I always to remain in his debt?" Yes; but
+ you should do so openly, and willingly, and should view with great
+ pleasure what he has entrusted to you. If you are vexed at not having yet
+ returned a benefit, you must be sorry that you ever received it; but if he
+ deserved that you should receive a benefit from him, why should he not
+ deserve that you should long remain in his debt?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XLIII. Those persons are much mistaken who regard it as a proof of a great
+ mind to make offers to give, and to fill many men's pockets and houses
+ with their presents, for sometimes these are due not to a great mind, but
+ to a great fortune; they do not know how far more great and more difficult
+ it sometimes is to receive than to lavish gifts. I must disparage neither
+ act; it is as proper to a noble heart to owe as to receive, for both are
+ of equal value when done virtuously; indeed, to owe is the more difficult,
+ because it requires more pains to keep a thing safe than to give it away.
+ We ought not therefore to be in a hurry to repay, nor need we seek to do
+ so out of due season, for to hasten to make repayment at the wrong time is
+ as bad as to be slow to do so at the right time. My benefactor has
+ entrusted his bounty to me: I ought not to have any fears either on his
+ behalf or on my own. He has a sufficient security; he cannot lose it
+ except he loses me&mdash;nay, not even if he loses me. I have returned
+ thanks to him for it&mdash;that is, I have requited him. He who thinks too
+ much about repaying a benefit must suppose that his friend thinks too much
+ about receiving repayment. Make no difficulty about either course. If he
+ wishes to receive his benefit back again, let us return it cheerfully; if
+ he prefers to leave it in our hands, why should we dig up his treasure?
+ why should we decline to be its guardians? he deserves to be allowed to do
+ whichever he pleases. As for fame and reputation, let us regard them as
+ matters which ought to accompany, but which ought not to direct our
+ actions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0009" id="link2H_4_0009">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ BOOK VII.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ I.
+ </h3>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Be of good cheer, my Liberalis:
+
+ "Our port is close, and I will not delay,
+ Nor by digressions wander from the way."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ This book collects together all that has been omitted, and in it, having
+ exhausted my subject, I shall consider not what I am to say, but what
+ there is which I have not yet said. If there be anything superfluous in
+ it, I pray you take it in good part, since it is for you that it is
+ superfluous. Had I wished to set off my work to the best advantage, I
+ ought to have added to it by degrees, and to have kept for the last that
+ part which would be eagerly perused even by a sated reader. However,
+ instead of this, I have collected together all that was essential in the
+ beginning; I am now collecting together whatever then escaped me; nor, by
+ Hercules, if you ask me, do I think that, after the rules which govern our
+ conduct have been stated, it is very much to the purpose to discuss the
+ other questions which have been raised more for the exercise of our
+ intellects than for the health of our minds. The cynic Demetrius, who in
+ my opinion was a great man even if compared with the greatest
+ philosophers, had an admirable saying about this, that one gained more by
+ having a few wise precepts ready and in common use than by learning many
+ without having them at hand. "The best wrestler," he would say, "is not he
+ who has learned thoroughly all the tricks and twists of the art, which are
+ seldom met with in actual wrestling, but he who has well and carefully
+ trained himself in one or two of them, and watches keenly for an
+ opportunity of practising them. It does not matter how many of them he
+ knows, if he knows enough to give him the victory; and so in this subject
+ of ours there are many points of interest, but few of importance. You need
+ not know what is the system of the ocean tides, why each seventh year
+ leaves its mark upon the human body, why the more distant parts of a long
+ portico do not keep their true proportion, but seem to approach one
+ another until at last the spaces between the columns disappear, how it can
+ be that twins are conceived separately, though they are born together,
+ whether both result from one, or each from a separate act, why those whose
+ birth was the same should have such different fates in life, and dwell at
+ the greatest possible distance from one another, although they were born
+ touching one another; it will not do you much harm to pass over matters
+ which we are not permitted to know, and which we should not profit by
+ knowing. Truths so obscure may be neglected with impunity. [Footnote: The
+ old saying, 'Truth lurks deep in a well (or abyss).'] Nor can we complain
+ that nature deals hardly with us, for there is nothing which is hard to
+ discover except those things by which we gain nothing beyond the credit of
+ having discovered them; whatever things tend to make us better or happier
+ are either obvious or easily discovered. Your mind can rise superior to
+ the accidents of life, if it can raise itself above fears and not greedily
+ covet boundless wealth, but has learned to seek for riches within itself;
+ if it has cast out the fear of men and gods, and has learned that it has
+ not much to fear from man, and nothing to fear from God; if by scorning
+ all those things which make life miserable while they adorn it, the mind
+ can soar to such a height as to see clearly that death cannot be the
+ beginning of any trouble, though it is the end of many; if it can dedicate
+ itself to righteousness and think any path easy which leads to it; if,
+ being a gregarious creature, and born for the common good, it regards the
+ world as the universal home, if it keeps its conscience clear towards God
+ and lives always as though in public, fearing itself more than other men,
+ then it avoids all storms, it stands on firm ground in fair daylight, and
+ has brought to perfection its knowledge of all that is useful and
+ essential. All that remains serves merely to amuse our leisure; yet, when
+ once anchored in safety, the mind may consider these matters also, though
+ it can derive no strength, but only culture from their discussion."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ II. The above are the rules which my friend Demetrius bids him who would
+ make progress in philosophy to clutch with both hands, never to let go,
+ but to cling to them, and make them a part of himself, and by daily
+ meditation upon them to bring himself into such a state of mind, that
+ these wholesome maxims occur to him of their own accord, that wherever he
+ may be, they may straightway be ready for use when required, and that the
+ criterion of right and wrong may present itself to him without delay. Let
+ him know that nothing is evil except what is base, and nothing good except
+ what is honourable: let him guide his life by this rule: let him both act
+ and expect others to act in accordance with this law, and let him regard
+ those whose minds are steeped in indolence, and who are given up to lust
+ and gluttony, as the most pitiable of mankind, no matter how splendid
+ their fortunes may be. Let him say to himself, "Pleasure is uncertain,
+ short, apt to pall upon us, and the more eagerly we indulge in it, the
+ sooner we bring on a reaction of feeling against it; we must necessarily
+ afterwards blush for it, or be sorry for it, there is nothing grand about
+ it, nothing worthy of man's nature, little lower as it is than that of the
+ gods; pleasure is a low act, brought about by the agency of our inferior
+ and baser members, and shameful in its result. True pleasure, worthy of a
+ human being and of a man, is, not to stuff or swell his body with food and
+ drink, nor to excite lusts which are least hurtful when they are most
+ quiet, but to be free from all forms of mental disturbance, both those
+ which arise from men's ambitious struggles with one another, and those
+ which come from on high and are more difficult to deal with, which flow
+ from our taking the traditional view of the gods, and estimating them by
+ the analogy of our own vices." This equable, secure, uncloying pleasure is
+ enjoyed by the man now described; a man skilled, so to say, in the laws of
+ gods and men alike. Such a man enjoys the present without anxiety for the
+ future: for he who depends upon what is uncertain can rely confidently
+ upon nothing. Thus he is free from all those great troubles which unhinge
+ the mind, he neither hopes for, nor covets anything, and engages in no
+ uncertain adventures, being satisfied with what he has. Do not suppose
+ that he is satisfied with a little; for everything is his, and that not in
+ the sense in which all was Alexander's, who, though he reached the shore
+ of the Red Sea, yet wanted more territory than that through which he had
+ come. He did not even own those countries which he held or had conquered,
+ while Onesicritus, whom he had sent on before him to discover new
+ countries, was wandering about the ocean and engaging in war in unknown
+ seas. Is it clear that he who pushed his armies beyond the bounds of the
+ universe, who with reckless greed dashed headlong into a boundless and
+ unexplored sea, must in reality have been full of wants? It matters not
+ how many kingdoms he may have seized or given away, or how great a part of
+ the world may pay him tribute; such a man must be in need of as much as he
+ desires.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ III. This was not the vice of Alexander alone, who followed with a
+ fortunate audacity in the footsteps of Bacchus and Hercules, but it is
+ common to all those whose covetousness is whetted rather than appeased by
+ good fortune. Look at Cyrus and Cambyses and all the royal house of
+ Persia: can you find one among them who thought his empire large enough,
+ or was not at the last gasp still aspiring after further conquests? We
+ need not wonder at this, for whatever is obtained by covetousness is
+ simply swallowed up and lost, nor does it matter how much is poured into
+ its insatiable maw. Only the wise man possesses everything without having
+ to struggle to retain it; he alone does not need to send ambassadors
+ across the seas, measure out camps upon hostile shores, place garrisons in
+ commanding forts, or manoeuvre legions and squadrons of cavalry. Like the
+ immortal gods, who govern their realm without recourse to arms, and from
+ their serene and lofty heights protect their own, so the wise man fulfils
+ his duties, however far-reaching they may be, without disorder, and looks
+ down upon the whole human race, because he himself is the greatest and
+ most powerful member thereof. You may laugh at him, but if you in your
+ mind survey the east and the west, reaching even to the regions separated
+ from us by vast wildernesses, if you think of all the creatures of the
+ earth, all the riches which the bounty of nature lavishes, it shows a
+ great spirit to be able to say, as though you were a god, "All these are
+ mine." Thus it is that he covets nothing, for there is nothing which is
+ not contained in everything, and everything is his.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ IV. "This," say you, "is the very thing that I wanted! I have caught you!
+ I shall be glad to see how you will extricate yourself from the toils into
+ which you have fallen of your own accord. Tell me, if the wise man
+ possesses everything, how can one give anything to a wise man? for even
+ what you give him is his already. It is impossible, therefore, to bestow a
+ benefit upon a wise man, if whatever is given him comes from his own
+ store; yet you Stoics declare that it is possible to give to a wise man. I
+ make the same inquiry about friends as well: for you say that friends own
+ everything in common, and if so, no one can give anything to his friend,
+ for he gives what his friend owned already in common with himself."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is nothing to prevent a thing belonging to a wise man, and yet being
+ the property of its legal owner. According to law everything in a state
+ belongs to the king, yet all that property over which the king has rights
+ of possession is parcelled out among individual owners, and each separate
+ thing belongs to somebody: and so one can give the king a house, a slave,
+ or a sum of money without being said to give him what was his already; for
+ the king has rights over all these things, while each citizen has the
+ ownership of them. We speak of the country of the Athenians, or of the
+ Campanians, though the inhabitants divide them amongst themselves into
+ separate estates; the whole region belongs to one state or another, but
+ each part of it belongs to its own individual proprietor; so that we are
+ able to give our lands to the state, although they are reckoned as
+ belonging to the state, because we and the state own them in different
+ ways. Can there be any doubt that all the private savings of a slave
+ belong to his master as well as he himself? yet he makes his master
+ presents. The slave does not therefore possess nothing, because if his
+ master chose he might possess nothing; nor does what he gives of his own
+ free will cease to be a present, because it might have been wrung from him
+ against his will. As for how we are to prove that the wise man possesses
+ all things, we shall see afterwards; for the present we are both agreed to
+ regard this as true; we must gather together something to answer the
+ question before us, which is, how any means remain of acting generously
+ towards one who already possesses all things? All things that a son has
+ belong to his father, yet who does not know that in spite of this a son
+ can make presents to his father? All things belong to the gods; yet we
+ make presents and bestow alms even upon the gods. What I have is not
+ necessarily not mine because it belongs to you; for the same thing may
+ belong both to me and to you.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He to whom courtezans belong," argues our adversary, "must be a procurer:
+ now courtezans are included in all things, therefore courtezans belong to
+ the wise man. But he to whom courtezans belong is a procurer; therefore
+ the wise man is a procurer." Yes! by the same reasoning, our opponents
+ would forbid him to buy anything, arguing, "No man buys his own property.
+ Now all things are the property of the wise man; therefore the wise man
+ buys nothing." By the same reasoning they object to his borrowing, because
+ no one pays interest for the use of his own money. They raise endless
+ quibbles, although they perfectly well understand what we say.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ V. For, when I say that the wise man possesses everything, I mean that he
+ does so without thereby impairing each man's individual rights in his own
+ property, in the same way as in a country ruled by a good king, everything
+ belongs to the king, by the right of his authority, and to the people by
+ their several rights of ownership. This I shall prove in its proper place;
+ in the mean time it is a sufficient answer to the question to declare that
+ I am able to give to the wise man that which is in one way mine, and in
+ another way his. Nor is it strange that I should be able to give anything
+ to one who possesses everything. Suppose I have hired a house from you:
+ some part of that house is mine, some is yours; the house itself is yours,
+ the use of your house belongs to me. Crops may ripen upon your land, but
+ you cannot touch them against the will of your tenant; and if corn be
+ dear, or at famine price, you will
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "In vain another's mighty store behold,"
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ grown upon your land, lying upon your land, and to be deposited in your
+ own barns. Though you be the landlord, you must not enter my hired house,
+ nor may you take away your own slave from me if I have contracted for his
+ services; nay, if I hire a carriage from you, I bestow a benefit by
+ allowing you to take your seat in it, although it is your own. You see,
+ therefore, that it is possible for a man to receive a present by accepting
+ what is his own.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ VI. In all the cases which I have mentioned, each party is the owner of
+ the same thing. How is this? It is because the one owns the thing, the
+ other owns the use of the thing. We speak of the books of Cicero. Dorus,
+ the bookseller, calls these same books his own; the one claims them
+ because he wrote them, the other because he bought them; so that they may
+ quite correctly be spoken of as belonging to either of the two, for they
+ do belong to each, though in a different manner. Thus Titus Livius may
+ receive as a present, or may buy his own books from Dorus. Although the
+ wise man possesses everything, yet I can give him what I individually
+ possess; for though, king-like, he in his mind possesses everything, yet
+ the ownership of all things is divided among various individuals, so that
+ he can both receive a present and owe one; can buy, or hire things.
+ Everything belongs to Caesar; yet he has no private property beyond his
+ own privy purse; as Emperor all things are his, but nothing is his own
+ except what he inherits. It is possible, without treason, to discuss what
+ is and what is not his; for even what the court may decide not to be his,
+ from another point of view is his. In the same way the wise man in his
+ mind possesses everything, in actual right and ownership he possesses only
+ his own property.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ VII. Bion is able to prove by argument at one time that everyone is
+ sacrilegious, at another that no one is. When he is in a mood for casting
+ all men down the Tarpeian rock, he says, "Whosoever touches that which
+ belongs to the gods, and consumes it or converts it to his own uses, is
+ sacrilegious; but all things belong to the gods, so that whatever thing
+ any one touches belongs to them to whom all belongs; whoever, therefore,
+ touches anything is sacrilegious." Again, when he bids men break open
+ temples and pillage the Capitol without fear of the wrath of heaven, he
+ declares that no one can be sacrilegious; because, whatever a man takes
+ away, he takes from one place which belongs to the gods into another place
+ which belongs to the gods. The answer to this is that all places do indeed
+ belong to the gods, but all are not consecrated to them, and that
+ sacrilege can only be done in places solemnly dedicated to heaven. Thus,
+ also, the whole world is a temple of the immortal gods, and, indeed, the
+ only one worthy of their greatness and splendour, and yet there is a
+ distinction between things sacred and profane; all things which it is
+ lawful to do under the sky and the stars are not lawful to do within
+ consecrated walls. The sacrilegious man cannot do God any harm, for He is
+ placed beyond his reach by His divine nature; yet he is punished because
+ he seems to have done Him harm: his punishment is demanded by our feeling
+ on the matter, and even by his own. In the same way, therefore, as he who
+ carries off any sacred things is regarded as sacrilegious, although that
+ which he stole is nevertheless within the limits of the world, so it is
+ possible to steal from a wise man: for in that case it will be some, not
+ of that universe which he possesses, but some of those things of which he
+ is the acknowledged owner, and which are severally his own property, which
+ will be stolen from him. The former of these possessions he will recognize
+ as his own, the latter he will be unwilling, even if he be able to
+ possess; he will say, as that Roman commander said, when, to reward his
+ courage and good service to the state, he was assigned as much land as he
+ could inclose in one day's ploughing. "You do not," said he, "want a
+ citizen who wants more than is enough for one citizen." Do you not think
+ that it required a much greater man to refuse this reward than to earn it?
+ for many have taken away the landmarks of other men's property, but no one
+ sets up limits to his own.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ VIII. When, then, we consider that the mind of the truly wise man has
+ power over all things and pervades all things, we cannot help declaring
+ that everything is his, although, in the estimation of our common law, it
+ may chance that he may be rated as possessing no property whatever. It
+ makes a great difference whether we estimate what he owns by the greatness
+ of his mind, or by the public register. He would pray to be delivered from
+ that possession of everything of which you speak. I will not remind you of
+ Socrates, Chrysippus, Zeno, and other great men, all the greater, however,
+ because envy prevents no one from praising the ancients. But a short time
+ ago I mentioned Demetrius, who seems to have been placed by nature in our
+ times that he might prove that we could neither corrupt him nor be
+ corrected by him; a man of consummate wisdom, though he himself disclaimed
+ it, constant to the principles which he professed, of an eloquence worthy
+ to deal with the mightiest subjects, scorning mere prettinesses and verbal
+ niceties, but expressing with infinite spirit, the ideas which inspired
+ it. I doubt not that he was endowed by divine providence with so pure a
+ life and such power of speech in order that our age might neither be
+ without a model nor a reproach. Had some god wished to give all our wealth
+ to Demetrius on the fixed condition that he should not be permitted to
+ give it away, I am sure that he would have refused to accept it, and would
+ have said,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ IX. "I do not intend to fasten upon my back a burden like this, of which I
+ never can rid myself, nor do I, nimble and lightly equipped as I am, mean
+ to hinder my progress by plunging into the deep morass of business
+ transactions. Why do you offer to me what is the bane of all nations? I
+ would not accept it even if I meant to give it away, for I see many things
+ which it would not become me to give. I should like to place before my
+ eyes the things which fascinate both kings and peoples, I wish to behold
+ the price of your blood and your lives. First bring before me the trophies
+ of Luxury, exhibiting them as you please, either in succession, or, which
+ is better, in one mass. I see the shell of the tortoise, a foul and
+ slothful brute, bought for immense sums and ornamented with the most
+ elaborate care, the contrast of colours which is admired in it being
+ obtained by the use of dyes resembling the natural tints. I see tables and
+ pieces of wood valued at the price of a senator's estate, which are all
+ the more precious, the more knots the tree has been twisted into by
+ disease. I see crystal vessels, whose price is enhanced by their
+ fragility, for among the ignorant the risk of losing things increases
+ their value instead of lowering it, as it ought. I see murrhine cups, for
+ luxury would be too cheap if men did not drink to one another out of
+ hollow gems the wine to be afterwards thrown up again. I see more than one
+ large pearl placed in each ear; for now our ears are trained to carry
+ burdens, pearls are hung from them in pairs, and each pair has other
+ single ones fastened above it. This womanish folly is not exaggerated
+ enough for the men of our time, unless they hang two or three estates upon
+ each ear. I see ladies' silk dresses, if those deserve to be called
+ dresses which can neither cover their body or their shame; when wearing
+ which, they can scarcely with a good conscience, swear that they are not
+ naked. These are imported at a vast expense from nations unknown even to
+ trade, in order that our matrons may show as much of their persons in
+ public as they do to their lovers in private."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ X. What are you doing, Avarice? see how many things there are whose price
+ exceeds that of your beloved gold: all those which I have mentioned are
+ more highly esteemed and valued. I now wish to review your wealth, those
+ plates of gold and silver which dazzle our covetousness. By Hercules, the
+ very earth, while she brings forth upon the surface every thing that is of
+ use to us, has buried these, sunk them deep, and rests upon them with her
+ whole weight, regarding them as pernicious substances, and likely to prove
+ the ruin of mankind if brought into the light of day. I see that iron is
+ brought out of the same dark pits as gold and silver, in order that we may
+ lack neither the means nor the reward of murder. Thus far we have dealt
+ with actual substances; but some forms of wealth deceive our eyes and
+ minds alike. I see there letters of credit, promissory notes, and bonds,
+ empty phantoms of property, ghosts of sick Avarice, with which she
+ deceives our minds, which delight in unreal fancies; for what are these
+ things, and what are interest, and account books, and usury, except the
+ names of unnatural developments of human covetousness? I might complain of
+ nature for not having hidden gold and silver deeper, for not having laid
+ over it a weight too heavy to be removed: but what are your documents,
+ your sale of time, your blood-sucking twelve per cent. interest? these are
+ evils which we owe to our own will, which flow merely from our perverted
+ habit, having nothing about them which can be seen or handled, mere dreams
+ of empty avarice. Wretched is he who can take pleasure in the size of the
+ audit book of his estate, in great tracts of land cultivated by slaves in
+ chains, in huge flocks and herds which require provinces and kingdoms for
+ their pasture ground, in a household of servants, more in number than some
+ of the most warlike nations, or in a private house whose extent surpasses
+ that of a large city! After he has carefully reviewed all his wealth, in
+ what it is invested, and on what it is spent, and has rendered himself
+ proud by the thoughts of it, let him compare what he has with what he
+ wants: he becomes a poor man at once. "Let me go: restore me to those
+ riches of mine. I know the kingdom of wisdom, which is great and stable: I
+ possess every thing, and in such a manner that it belongs to all men
+ nevertheless."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XI. When, therefore, Gaius Caesar offered him two hundred thousand
+ sesterces, he laughingly refused it, thinking it unworthy of himself to
+ boast of having refused so small a sum. Ye gods and goddesses, what a mean
+ mind must the emperor have had, if he hoped either to honour or to corrupt
+ him. I must here repeat a proof of his magnanimity. I have heard that when
+ he was expressing his wonder at the folly of Gaius at supposing that he
+ could be influenced by such a bribe, he said, "If he meant to tempt me, he
+ ought to have tried to do so by offering his entire kingdom."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XII. It is possible, then, to give something to the wise man, although all
+ things belong to the wise man. Similarly, though we declare that friends
+ have all things in common, it is nevertheless possible to give something
+ to a friend: for I have not everything in common with a friend in the same
+ manner as with a partner, where one part belongs to him, and another to
+ me, but rather as a father and a mother possess their children in common
+ when they have two, not each parent possessing one child, but each
+ possessing both. First of all I will prove that any chance would-be
+ partner of mine has nothing in common with me: and why? Because this
+ community of goods can only exist between wise men, who are alone capable
+ of friendship: other men can neither be friends nor partners one to
+ another. In the next place, things may be owned in common in various ways.
+ The knights' seats in the theatre belong to all the Roman knights; yet of
+ these the seat which I occupy becomes my own, and if I yield it up to any
+ one, although I only yield him a thing which we own in common, still I
+ appear to have given him something. Some things belong to certain persons
+ under particular conditions. I have a place among the knights, not to
+ sell, or to let, or to dwell in, but simply to see the spectacle from,
+ wherefore I do not tell an untruth when I say that I have a place among
+ the knights' seats. Yet if, when I come into the theatre, the knights'
+ seats are full, I both have a seat there by right, because I have the
+ privilege of sitting there, and I have not a seat there, because my seat
+ is occupied by those who share my right to those places. Suppose that the
+ same thing takes place between friends; whatever our friend possesses, is
+ common to us, but is the property of him who owns it; I cannot make use of
+ it against his will. "You are laughing at me," say you; "if what belongs
+ to my friend is mine, I am able to sell it." You are not able; for you are
+ not able to sell your place among the knights' seats, and yet they are in
+ common between you and the other knights. Consequently, the fact that you
+ cannot sell a thing, or consume it, or exchange it for the better or the
+ worse does not prove that it is not yours; for that which is yours under
+ certain conditions is yours nevertheless.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XIII. I have received, but certainly not less. Not to detain you longer
+ than is necessary, a benefit can be no more than a benefit; but the means
+ employed to convey benefits may be both greater and more numerous. I mean
+ those things by which kindness expresses and gives vent to itself, like
+ lovers, whose many kisses and close embraces do not increase their love
+ but give it play.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XIV. The next question which arises has been thoroughly threshed out in
+ the former books, so here it shall only be touched on shortly; for the
+ arguments which have been used for other cases can be transferred to it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The question is, whether one who has done everything in his power to
+ return a benefit, has returned it. "You may know," says our adversary,
+ "that he has not returned it, because he did everything in his power to
+ return it; it is evident, therefore, that he did not not do that which he
+ did not have an opportunity of doing. A man who searches everywhere for
+ his creditor without finding him does not thereby pay him what he owes."
+ Some are in such a position that it is their duty to effect something
+ material; in the case of others to have done all in their power to effect
+ it is as good as effecting it. If a physician has done all in his power to
+ heal his patient he has performed his duty; an advocate who employs his
+ whole powers of eloquence on his client's behalf, performs his duty even
+ though his client be convicted; the generalship even of a beaten commander
+ is praised if he has prudently, laboriously, and courageously exercised
+ his functions. Your friend has done all in his power to return your
+ kindness, but your good fortune stood in his way; no adversity befell you
+ in which he could prove the truth of his friendship; he could not give you
+ money when you were rich, or nurse you when you were in health, or help
+ you when you were succeeding; yet he repaid your kindness, even though you
+ did not receive a benefit from him. Moreover, this man, being always
+ eager, and on the watch for an opportunity of doing this, as he has
+ expended much anxiety and much trouble upon it, has really done more than
+ he who quickly had an opportunity of repaying your kindness. The case of a
+ debtor is not the same, for it is not enough for him to have tried to find
+ the money unless he pays it; in his case a harsh creditor stands over him
+ who will not let a single day pass without charging him interest; in yours
+ there is a most kind friend, who seeing you busy, troubled, and anxious
+ would say.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "'Dismiss this trouble from thy breast;'
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ leave off disturbing yourself; I have received from you all that I wish;
+ you wrong me, if you suppose that I want anything further; you have fully
+ repaid me in intention."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Tell me," says our adversary, "if he had repaid the benefit you would say
+ that he had returned your kindness: is, then, he who repays it in the same
+ position as he who does not repay it?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the other hand, consider this: if he had forgotten the benefit which he
+ had received, if he had not even attempted to be grateful, you would say
+ that he had not returned the kindness; but this man has laboured day and
+ night to the neglect of all his other duties in his devoted care to let no
+ opportunity of proving his gratitude escape him; is then he who took no
+ pains to return a kindness to be classed with this man who never ceased to
+ take pains? you are unjust, if you require a material payment from me when
+ you see that I am not wanting in intention.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XV. In short, suppose that when you are taken captive, I have borrowed
+ money, made over my property as security to my creditor, that I have
+ sailed in a stormy winter season along coasts swarming with pirates, that
+ I have braved all the perils which necessarily attend a voyage even on a
+ peaceful sea, that I have wandered through all wildernesses seeking for
+ those men whom all others flee from, and that when I have at length
+ reached the pirates, someone else has already ransomed you: will you say
+ that I have not returned your kindness? Even if during this voyage I have
+ lost by shipwreck the money that I had raised to save you, even if I
+ myself have fallen into the prison from which I sought to release you,
+ will you say that I have not returned your kindness? No, by Hercules! the
+ Athenians call Harmodius and Aristogiton, tyrannicides; the hand of Mucius
+ which he left on the enemy's altar was equivalent to the death of Porsena,
+ and valour struggling against fortune is always illustrious, even if it
+ falls short of accomplishing its design. He who watches each opportunity
+ as it passes, and tries to avail himself of one after another, does more
+ to show his gratitude than he whom the first opportunity enabled to be
+ grateful without any trouble whatever. "But," says our adversary, "he gave
+ you two things, material help and kindly feeling; you, therefore, owe him
+ two." You might justly say this to one who returns your kindly feeling
+ without troubling himself further; this man is really in your debt; but
+ you cannot say so of one who wishes to repay you, who struggles and leaves
+ no stone unturned to do so; for, as far as in him lies, he repays you in
+ both kinds; in the next place, counting is not always a true test,
+ sometimes one thing is equivalent to two; consequently so intense and
+ ardent a wish to repay takes the place of a material repayment. Indeed, if
+ a feeling of gratitude has no value in repaying a kindness without giving
+ something material, then no one can be grateful to the gods, whom we can
+ repay by gratitude alone. "We cannot," says our adversary, "give the gods
+ anything else." Well, but if I am not able to give this man, whose
+ kindness I am bound to return, anything beside my gratitude, why should
+ that which is all that I can bestow on a god be insufficient to prove my
+ gratitude towards a man?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XVI. If, however, you ask me what I really think, and wish me to give a
+ definite answer, I should say that the one party ought to consider his
+ benefit to have been returned, while the other ought to feel that he has
+ not returned it; the one should release his friend from the debt, the
+ other should hold himself bound to pay it; the one should say, "I have
+ received;" the other should answer, "I owe." In our whole investigation,
+ we ought to look entirely to the public good; we ought to prevent the
+ ungrateful having any excuses in which they can take refuge, and under
+ cover of which they can disown their debts. "I have done all in my power,"
+ say you. Well, keep on doing so still. Do you suppose that our ancestors
+ were so foolish, as not to understand that it is most unjust that the man
+ who has wasted the money which he received from his creditor on
+ debauchery, or gambling, should be classed with one who has lost his own
+ property as well as that of others in a fire, by robbery, or some sadder
+ mischance? They would take no excuse, that men might understand that they
+ were always bound to keep their word; it was thought better that even a
+ good excuse should not be accepted from a few persons, than that all men
+ should be led to try to make excuses. You say that you have done all in
+ your power to repay your debt; this ought to be enough for your friend,
+ but not enough for you. He to whom you owe a kindness, is unworthy of
+ gratitude if he lets all your anxious care and trouble to repay it go for
+ nothing; and so, too, if your friend takes your good will as a repayment,
+ you are ungrateful if you are not all the more eager to feel the
+ obligation of the debt which he has forgiven you. Do not snap up his
+ receipt, or call witnesses to prove it; rather seek opportunities for
+ repaying not less than before; repay the one man because he asks for
+ repayment, the other because he forgives you your debt; the one because he
+ is good, the other because he is bad. You, need not, therefore, think that
+ you have anything to do with the question whether a man be bound to repay
+ the benefit which he has received from a wise man, if that man has ceased
+ to be wise and has turned into a bad man. You would return a deposit which
+ you had received from a wise man; you would return a loan even to a bad
+ man; what grounds have you for not returning a benefit also? Because he
+ has changed, ought he to change you? What? if you had received anything
+ from a man when healthy, would you not return it to him when he was sick,
+ though we always are more bound to treat our friends with more kindness
+ when they are ailing? So, too, this man is sick in his mind; we ought to
+ help him, and bear with him; folly is a disease of the mind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XVII. I think here we ought to make a distinction, in order to render this
+ point more intelligible. Benefits are of two kinds: one, the perfect and
+ true benefit, which can only be bestowed by one wise man upon another; the
+ other, the common vulgar form which ignorant men like ourselves
+ interchange. With regard to the latter, there is no doubt that it is my
+ duty to repay it whether my friend turns out to be a murderer, a thief, or
+ an adulterer. Crimes have laws to punish them; criminals are better
+ reformed by judges than by ingratitude; a man ought not to make you bad by
+ being so himself. I will fling a benefit back to a bad man, I will return
+ it to a good man; I do so to the latter, because I owe it to him; to the
+ former, that I may not be in his debt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XVIII. With regard to the other class of benefit, the question arises
+ whether if I was not able to take it without being a wise man, I am able
+ to return it, except to a wise man. For suppose I do return it to him, he
+ cannot receive it, he is not any longer able to receive such a thing, he
+ has lost the knowledge of how to use it. You would not bid me throw back
+ [Footnote: i.e. in the game of ball.] a ball to a man who has lost his
+ hand; it is folly to give any one what he cannot receive. If I am to begin
+ to reply to the last argument, I say that I should not give him what he is
+ unable to take; but I would return it, even though he is not able to
+ receive it. I cannot lay him under an obligation unless he takes my
+ bounty; but by returning it I can free myself from my obligations to him.
+ You say, "he will not be able to use it." Let him see to that; the fault
+ will lie with him, not with me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XIX. "To return a thing," says our adversary, "is to hand it over to one
+ who can receive it. Why, if you owed some wine to any man, and he bade you
+ pour it into a net or a sieve, would you say that you had returned it? or
+ would you be willing to return it in such a way that in the act of
+ returning it was lost between you?" To return is to give that which you
+ owe back to its owner when he wishes for it. It is not my duty to perform
+ more than this; that he should possess what he has received from me is a
+ matter for further consideration; I do not owe him the safe-keeping of his
+ property, but the honourable payment of my debt, and it is much better
+ that he should not have it, than that I should not return it to him. I
+ would repay my creditor, even though he would at once take what I paid him
+ to the market; even if he deputed an adulteress to receive the money from
+ me, I would pay it to her; even if he were to pour the coins which he
+ receives into a loose fold of his cloak, I would pay it. It is my business
+ to return it to him, not to keep it and save it for him after I have
+ returned it; I am bound to take care of his bounty when I have received
+ it, but not when I have returned it to him. While it remains with me, it
+ must be kept safe; but when he asks for it again I must give it to him,
+ even though it slips out of his hands as he takes it. I will repay a good
+ man when it is convenient; I will repay a bad man when he asks me to do
+ so.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You cannot," argues our adversary, "return him a benefit of the same kind
+ as that which you received; for you received it from a wise man, and you
+ are returning it to a fool." Do I not return to him such a benefit, as he
+ is now able to receive? It is not my fault if I return it to him worse
+ than I received it, the fault lies with him, and so, unless he regains his
+ former wisdom, I shall return it in such a form as he in his fallen
+ condition is able to receive. "But what," asks he, "if he become not only
+ bad, but savage and ferocious, like Apollodorus or Phalaris, would you
+ return even to such a man as this a benefit which you had received from
+ him?" I answer, Nature does not admit of so great a change in a wise man.
+ Men do not change from the best to the worst; even in becoming bad, he
+ would necessarily retain some traces of goodness; virtue is never so
+ utterly quenched as not to imprint on the mind marks which no degradation
+ can efface. If wild animals bred in captivity escape into the woods, they
+ still retain something of their original tameness, and are as remote from
+ the gentlest in the one extreme as they are in the other from those which
+ have always been wild, and have never endured to be touched by man's hand.
+ No one who has ever applied himself to philosophy ever becomes completely
+ wicked; his mind becomes so deeply coloured with it, that its tints can
+ never be entirely spoiled and blackened. In the next place, I ask whether
+ this man of yours be ferocious merely in intent, or whether he breaks out
+ into actual outrages upon mankind? You have instanced the tyrants
+ Apollodorus and Phalaris; if the bad man restrains their evil likeness
+ within himself, why should I not return his benefit to him, in order to
+ set myself free from any further dealings with him? If, however, he not
+ only delights in human blood, but feeds upon it; if he exercises his
+ insatiable cruelty in the torture of persons of all ages, and his fury is
+ not prompted by anger, but by a sort of delight in cruelty, if he cuts the
+ throats of children before the eyes of their parents; if, not satisfied
+ with merely killing his victims, he tortures them, and not only burns but
+ actually roasts them; if his castle is always wet with freshly shed blood;
+ then it is not enough not to return his benefits. All connexion between me
+ and such a man has been broken off by his destruction of the bonds of
+ human society. If he had bestowed something upon me, but were to invade my
+ native country, he would have lost all claim to my gratitude, and it would
+ be counted a crime to make him any return; if he does not attack my
+ country, but is the scourge of his own; if he has nothing to do with my
+ nation, but torments and cuts to pieces his own, then in the same manner
+ such depravity, though it does not render him my personal enemy, yet
+ renders him hateful to me, and the duty which I owe to the human race is
+ anterior to and more important than that which I owe to him as an
+ individual.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XX. However, although this be so, and although I am freed from all
+ obligation towards him, from the moment when, by outraging all laws, he
+ rendered it impossible for any man to do him a wrong, nevertheless, I
+ think I ought to make the following distinction in dealing with him. If my
+ repayment of his benefit will neither increase nor maintain his powers of
+ doing mischief to mankind, and is of such a character that I can return it
+ to him without disadvantage to the public, I would return it: for
+ instance, I would save the life of his infant child; for what harm can
+ this benefit do to any of those who suffer from his cruelty? But I would
+ not furnish him with money to pay his bodyguard. If he wishes for marbles,
+ or fine clothes, the trappings of his luxury will harm no one; but with
+ soldiers and arms I would not furnish him. If he demands, as a great boon,
+ actors and courtesans and such things as will soften his savage nature, I
+ would willingly bestow them upon him. I would not furnish him with
+ triremes and brass-beaked ships of war, but I would send him fast sailing
+ and luxuriously-fitted vessels, and all the toys of kings who take their
+ pleasure on the sea. If his health was altogether despaired of, I would by
+ the same act bestow a benefit on all men and return one to him; seeing
+ that for such characters death is the only remedy, and that he who never
+ will return to himself, had best leave himself. However, such wickedness
+ as this is uncommon, and is always regarded as a portent, as when the
+ earth opens, or when fires break forth from caves under the sea; so let us
+ leave it, and speak of those vices which we can hate without shuddering at
+ them. As for the ordinary bad man, whom I can find in the marketplace of
+ any town, who is feared only by individuals, I would return to him a
+ benefit which I had received from him. It is not right that I should
+ profit by his wickedness; let me return what is not mine to its owner.
+ Whether he be good or bad makes no difference; but I would consider the
+ matter most carefully, if I were not returning but bestowing it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXI. This point requires to be illustrated by a story. A certain
+ Pythagoraean bought a fine pair of shoes from a shoemaker; and as they
+ were an expensive piece of work, he did not pay ready money for them. Some
+ time afterwards he came to the shop to pay for them, and after he had long
+ been knocking at the closed door, some one said to him, "Why do you waste
+ your time? The shoemaker whom you seek has been carried out of his house
+ and buried; this is a grief to us who lose our friends for ever, but by no
+ means so to you, who know that he will be born again," jeering at the
+ Pythagoraean. Upon this our philosopher not unwillingly carried his three
+ or four denarii home again, shaking them every now and then; afterwards,
+ blaming himself for the pleasure which he had secretly felt at not paying
+ his debt, and perceiving that he enjoyed having made this trifling gain,
+ he returned to the shop, and saying, "the man lives for you, pay him what
+ you owe," he passed four denarii into the shop through the crack of the
+ closed door, and let them fall inside, punishing himself for his
+ unconscionable greediness that he might not form the habit of
+ appropriating that which is not his own.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXII. If you owe anything, seek for some one to whom you may repay it, and
+ if no one demands it, dun your own self; whether the man be good or bad is
+ no concern of yours; repay him, and then blame him. You have forgotten,
+ how your several duties are divided: it is right for him to forget it, but
+ we have bidden you bear it in mind. When, however, we say that he who
+ bestows a benefit ought to forget it, it is a mistake to suppose that we
+ rob him of all recollection of the business, though it is most creditable
+ to him; some of our precepts are stated over strictly in order to reduce
+ them to their true proportions. When we say that he ought not to remember
+ it, we mean he ought not to speak publicly, or boast of it offensively.
+ There are some, who, when they have bestowed a benefit, tell it in all
+ societies, talk of it when sober, cannot be silent about it when drunk,
+ force it upon strangers, and communicate it to friends; it is to quell
+ this excessive and reproachful consciousness that we bid him who gave it
+ forget it, and by commanding him to do this, which is more than he is
+ able, encourage him to keep silence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXIII. When you distrust those whom you order to do anything, you ought to
+ command them to do more than enough in order that they may do what is
+ enough. The purpose of all exaggeration is to arrive at the truth by
+ falsehood. Consequently, he who spoke of horses as being:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "Whiter than snows and swifter than the winds,"
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ said what could not possibly be in order that they might be thought to be
+ as much so as possible. And he who said:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "More firm than crags, more headlong than the stream,"
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ did not suppose that he should make any one believe that a man could ever
+ be as firm as a crag. Exaggeration never hopes all its daring flights to
+ be believed, but affirms what is incredible, that thereby it may convey
+ what is credible. When we say, "let the man who has bestowed a benefit,
+ forget it," what we mean is, "let him be as though he had forgotten it;
+ let not his remembrance of it appear or be seen." When we say that
+ repayment of a benefit ought not to be demanded, we do not utterly forbid
+ its being demanded; for repayment must often be extorted from bad men, and
+ even good men require to be reminded of it. Am I not to point out a means
+ of repayment to one who does not perceive it? Am I not to explain my wants
+ to one does not know them? Why should he (if a bad man) have the excuse,
+ or (if a good man) have the sorrow of not knowing them? Men ought
+ sometimes to be reminded of their debts, though with modesty, not in the
+ tone of one demanding a legal right.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXIV. Socrates once said in the hearing of his friends: "I would have
+ bought a cloak, if I had had the money for it." He asked no one for money,
+ but he reminded them all to give it. There was a rivalry between them, as
+ to who should give it; and how should there not be? Was it not a small
+ thing which Socrates received? Yes, but it was a great thing to be the man
+ from whom Socrates received it. Could he blame them more gently? "I
+ would," said he, "have bought a cloak if I had had the money for it."
+ After this, however eager any one was to give, he gave too late; for he
+ had already been wanting in his duty to Socrates. Because some men harshly
+ demand repayment of debts, we forbid it, not in order that it may never be
+ done, but that it may be done sparingly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXV. Aristippus once, when enjoying a perfume, said: "Bad luck to those
+ effeminate persons who have brought so nice a thing into disrepute." We
+ also may say, "Bad luck to those base extortioners who pester us for a
+ fourfold return of their benefits, and have brought into disrepute so nice
+ a thing as reminding our friends of their duty." I shall nevertheless make
+ use of this right of friendship, and I shall demand the return of a
+ benefit from any man from whom I would not have scrupled to ask for one,
+ such a man as would regard the power of returning a benefit as equivalent
+ to receiving a second one. Never, not even when complaining of him, would
+ I say,
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "A wretch forlorn upon the shore he lay,
+ His ship, his comrades, all were swept away;
+ Fool that I was, I pitied his despair,
+ And even gave him of my realm a share."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ This is not to remind, but to reproach; this is to make one's benefits
+ odious to enable him, or even to make him wish to be ungrateful. It is
+ enough, and more than enough, to remind him of it gently and familiarly:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "If aught of mine hath e'er deserved thy thanks."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ To this his answer would be, "Of course you have deserved my thanks; you
+ took me up, 'a wretch forlorn upon the shore.'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXVI. "But," says our adversary, "suppose that we gain nothing by this;
+ suppose that he pretends that he has forgotten it, what ought I to do?"
+ You now ask a very necessary question, and one which fitly concludes this
+ branch of the subject, how, namely, one ought to bear with the ungrateful.
+ I answer, calmly, gently, magnanimously. Never let any one's discourtesy,
+ forgetfulness, or ingratitude, enrage you so much that you do not feel any
+ pleasure at having bestowed a benefit upon him; never let your wrongs
+ drive you into saying, "I wish I had not done it." You ought to take
+ pleasure even in the ill-success of your benefit; he will always be sorry
+ for it, even though you are not even now sorry for it. You ought not to be
+ indignant, as if something strange had happened; you ought rather to be
+ surprised if it had not happened. Some are prevented by difficulties, some
+ by expense, and some by danger from returning your bounty; some are
+ hindered by a false shame, because by returning it, they would confess
+ that they had received it; with others ignorance of their duty, indolence,
+ or excess of business, stands in the way. Reflect upon the insatiability
+ of men's desires. You need not be surprised if no one repays you in a
+ world in which no one ever gains enough. What man is there of so firm and
+ trustworthy a mind that you can safely invest your benefits in him? One
+ man is crazed with lust, another is the slave of his belly, another gives
+ his whole soul to gain, caring nothing for the means by which he amasses
+ it; some men's minds are disturbed by envy, some blinded by ambition till
+ they are ready to fling themselves on the sword's point. In addition to
+ this, one must reckon sluggishness of mind and old age; and also the
+ opposites of these, restlessness and disturbance of mind, also excessive
+ self-esteem and pride in the very things for which a man ought to be
+ despised. I need not mention obstinate persistence in wrong-doing, or
+ frivolity which cannot remain constant to one point; besides all this,
+ there is headlong rashness, there is timidity which never gives us
+ trustworthy counsel, and the numberless errors with which we struggle, the
+ rashness of the most cowardly, the quarrels of our best friends, and that
+ most common evil of trusting in what is most uncertain, and of
+ undervaluing, when we have obtained it, that which we once never hoped to
+ possess. Amidst all these restless passions, how can you hope to find a
+ thing so full of rest as good faith?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXVII. If a true picture of our life were to rise before your mental
+ vision, you would, I think, behold a scene like that of a town just taken
+ by storm, where decency and righteousness were no longer regarded, and no
+ advice is heard but that of force, as if universal confusion were the word
+ of command. Neither fire nor sword are spared; crime is unpunished by the
+ laws; even religion, which saves the lives of suppliants in the very midst
+ of armed enemies, does not check those who are rushing to secure plunder.
+ Some men rob private houses, some public buildings; all places, sacred or
+ profane, are alike stripped; some burst their way in, others climb over;
+ some open a wider path for themselves by overthrowing the walls that keep
+ them out, and make their way to their booty over ruins; some ravage
+ without murdering, others brandish spoils dripping with their owner's
+ blood; everyone carries off his neighbours' goods. In this greedy struggle
+ of the human race surely you forget the common lot of all mankind, if you
+ seek among these robbers for one who will return what he has got. If you
+ are indignant at men being ungrateful, you ought also to be indignant at
+ their being luxurious, avaricious and lustful; you might as well be
+ indignant with sick men for being ugly, or with old men for being pale. It
+ is, indeed, a serious vice, it is not to be borne, and sets men at
+ variance with one another; nay, it rends and destroys that union by which
+ alone our human weakness can be supported; yet it is so absolutely
+ universal, that even those who complain of it most are not themselves free
+ from it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXVIII. Consider within yourself, whether you have always shown gratitude
+ to those to whom you owe it, whether no one's kindness has ever been
+ wasted upon you, whether you constantly bear in mind all the benefits
+ which you have received. You will find that those which you received as a
+ boy were forgotten before you became a man; that those bestowed upon you
+ as a young man slipped from your memory when you became an old one. Some
+ we have lost, some we have thrown away, some have by degrees passed out of
+ our sight, to some we have wilfully shut our eyes. If I am to make excuses
+ for your weakness, I must say in the first place that human memory is a
+ frail vessel, and is not large enough to contain the mass of things placed
+ in it; the more it receives, the more it must necessarily lose; the oldest
+ things in it give way to the newest. Thus it comes to pass that your nurse
+ has hardly any influence with you, because the lapse of time has set the
+ kindness which you received from her at so great a distance; thus it is
+ that you no longer look upon your teacher with respect; and that now when
+ you are busy about your candidature for the consulate or the priesthood,
+ you forget those who supported you in your election to the quaestorship.
+ If you carefully examine yourself, perhaps you will find the vice of which
+ you complain in your own bosom; you are wrong in being angry with a
+ universal failing, and foolish also, for it is your own as well; you must
+ pardon others, that you may yourself be acquitted. You will make your
+ friend a better man by bearing with him, you will in all cases make him a
+ worse one by reproaching him. You can have no reason for rendering him
+ shameless; let him preserve any remnants of modesty which he may have. Too
+ loud reproaches have often dispelled a modesty which might have borne good
+ fruit. No man fears to be that which all men see that he is; when his
+ fault is made public, he loses his sense of shame.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXIX. You say, "I have lost the benefit which I bestowed." Yet do we say
+ that we have lost what we consecrate to heaven, and a benefit well
+ bestowed, even though we get an ill return for it, is to be reckoned among
+ things consecrated. Our friend is not such a man as we hoped he was;
+ still, let us, unlike him, remain the same as we were. The loss did not
+ take place when he proved himself so; his ingratitude cannot be made
+ public without reflecting some shame upon us, since to complain of the
+ loss of a benefit is a sign that it was not well bestowed. As far as we
+ are able we ought to plead with ourselves on his behalf: "Perhaps he was
+ not able to return it, perhaps he did not know of it, perhaps he will
+ still do so." A wise and forbearing creditor prevents the loss of some
+ debts by encouraging his debtor and giving him time. We ought to do the
+ same, we ought to deal tenderly with a weakly sense of honour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXX. "I have lost," say you, "the benefit which I bestowed." You are a
+ fool, and do not understand when your loss took place; you have indeed
+ lost it, but you did so when you gave it, the fact has only now come to
+ light. Even in the case of those benefits which appear to be lost,
+ gentleness will do much good; the wounds of the mind ought to be handled
+ as tenderly as those of the body. The string, which might be disentangled
+ by patience, is often broken by a rough pull. What is the use of abuse, or
+ of complaints? why do you overwhelm him with reproaches? why do you set
+ him free from his obligation? even if he be ungrateful he owes you nothing
+ after this. What sense is there in exasperating a man on whom you have
+ conferred great favours, so as out of a doubtful friend to make a certain
+ enemy, and one, too, who will seek to support his own cause by defaming
+ you, or to make men say, "I do not know what the reason is that he cannot
+ endure a man to whom he owes so much; there must be something in the
+ background?" Any man can asperse, even if he does not permanently stain
+ the reputation of his betters by complaining of them; nor will any one be
+ satisfied with imputing small crimes to them, when it is only by the
+ enormity of his falsehood that he can hope to be believed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXXI. What a much better way is that by which the semblance of friendship,
+ and, indeed, if the other regains to his right mind, friendship itself is
+ preserved! Bad men are overcome by unwearying goodness, nor does any one
+ receive kindness in so harsh and hostile a spirit as not to love good men
+ even while he does them wrong, when they lay him under the additional
+ obligation of requiring no return for their kindness. Reflect, then, upon
+ this: you say, "My kindness has met with no return, what am I to do? I
+ ought to imitate the gods, those noblest disposers of all events, who
+ begin to bestow their benefits on those who know them not, and persist in
+ bestowing them on those who are ungrateful for them. Some reproach them
+ with neglect of us, some with injustice towards us; others place them
+ outside of their own world, in sloth and indifference, without light, and
+ without any functions; others declare that the sun itself, to whom we owe
+ the division of our times of labour and of rest, by whose means we are
+ saved from being plunged in the darkness of eternal night; who, by his
+ circuit, orders the seasons of the year, gives strength to our bodies,
+ brings forth our crops and ripens our fruits, is merely a mass of stone,
+ or a fortuitous collection of fiery particles, or anything rather than a
+ god. Yet, nevertheless, like the kindest of parents, who only smile at the
+ spiteful words of their children, the gods do not cease to heap benefits
+ upon those who doubt from what source their benefits are derived, but
+ continue impartially distributing their bounty among all the peoples and
+ nations of the earth. Possessing only the power of doing good, they
+ moisten the land with seasonable showers, they put the seas in movement by
+ the winds, they mark time by the course of the constellations, they temper
+ the extremes of heat and cold, of summer and winter, by breathing a milder
+ air upon us; and they graciously and serenely bear with the faults of our
+ erring spirits. Let us follow their example; let us give, even if much be
+ given to no purpose, let us, in spite of this, give to others; nay, even
+ to those upon whom our bounty has been wasted. No one is prevented by the
+ fall of a house from building another; when one home has been destroyed by
+ fire, we lay the foundations of another before the site has had time to
+ cool; we rebuild ruined cities more than once upon the same spots, so
+ untiring are our hopes of success. Men would undertake no works either on
+ land or sea if they were not willing to try again what they have failed in
+ once."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXXII. Suppose a man is ungrateful, he does not injure me, but himself; I
+ had the enjoyment of my benefit when I bestowed it upon him. Because he is
+ ungrateful, I shall not be slower to give but more careful; what I have
+ lost with him, I shall receive back from others. But I will bestow a
+ second benefit upon this man himself, and will overcome him even as a good
+ husbandman overcomes the sterility of the soil by care and culture; if I
+ do not do so my benefit is lost to me, and he is lost to mankind. It is no
+ proof of a great mind to give and to throw away one's bounty; the true
+ test of a great mind is to throw away one's bounty and still to give.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+
+
+
+
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+</pre>
+ </body>
+</html>