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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #62618 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/62618)
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-Project Gutenberg's Selected Essays of Plutarch, Vol. I., by Plutarch
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you'll
-have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using
-this ebook.
-
-
-
-Title: Selected Essays of Plutarch, Vol. I.
-
-Author: Plutarch
-
-Translator: Thomas George Tucker
-
-Release Date: July 11, 2020 [EBook #62618]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SELECTED ESSAYS OF PLUTARCH ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Turgut Dincer, David King, and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net. (This
-file was produced from images generously made available
-by The Internet Archive.)
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Selected Essays of Plutarch
-
-
-
-
- SELECTED ESSAYS OF PLUTARCH
-
- TRANSLATED WITH INTRODUCTION
-
- BY
-
- T. G. TUCKER
-
- LITT.D. (CAMB.), HON. LITT.D. (DUBLIN)
- PROFESSOR OF CLASSICAL PHILOLOGY IN THE UNIVERSITY OF MELBOURNE
-
- Volume I.
-
- OXFORD
- AT THE CLARENDON PRESS
- 1913
-
- HENRY FROWDE, M.A.
- PUBLISHER TO THE UNIVERSITY OF OXFORD
- LONDON, EDINBURGH, NEW YORK, TORONTO
- MELBOURNE AND BOMBAY
-
-
-
-
- PREFACE
-
-
-The essays here rendered into English have not been selected as the very
-best pieces in Plutarch’s _Moralia_, but, first, as typical examples of
-his writing in that kind, and, second, as covering between them a
-tolerably large field of interesting matter. The _Moralia_ offer us
-perhaps the best of all extant material for judging the civilization of
-the middle classes of society just before and after the year 100 of our
-era. From them and from Pliny’s _Letters_ we are able to form a fairly
-complete picture of a large part of that sounder social element which
-lay between the froth and the dregs.
-
-In the Introduction some remarks are offered concerning Plutarch’s
-literary style. Here it will suffice to say that the English version
-does not seek to be either more formal or more vivacious, either more
-imposing or more humorous, than the original. An attempt has been made
-to preserve the tone as faithfully as the substance. In making Plutarch
-write as he does in the following pages the translator hopes that _il ne
-luy a au moins rien presté qui le desmente ou qui le desdie_. It is fair
-to add that no modern version of the _Moralia_ has been consulted for
-the purposes of this rendering. In the Introduction, however, one cannot
-fail to owe much suggestion to Gréard and Volkmann.
-
-In the spelling of Greek proper names every modern scholar must follow
-his own best judgement. It does not follow that, because it is necessary
-to say ‘Plato’ and usual to say ‘Parmenio’, it is equally judicious to
-say ‘Chilo’. Nor can any safe rule be laid down for a choice between
-‘Pisistratus’ and ‘Peisistratus’. Perhaps the most advisable course is
-to safeguard, as far as possible, the pronunciation of those who are
-unfamiliar with Greek, and the spelling ‘Pheidias’ may do something
-towards correcting the common English tendency to pronounce the first
-syllable as it is pronounced in ‘fiddle’. Notes upon the proper names
-will be found after the text by readers who may require them.
-
-The text generally adopted is that of Bernardakis in the Teubner series,
-but recourse has been had throughout to Wyttenbach, and in a number of
-places which are commonly acknowledged to be corrupt the translator has
-ventured on a modest emendation of his own. These places are marked in
-the translation by an asterisk in the margin, and the readings adopted
-will be found at the end of the book in an appendix on the Greek text.
-Critics would have saved themselves much trouble if they had observed
-that, though hiatus is regularly avoided in the genuine writings of
-Plutarch, no hiatus is created by a word ending in iota or upsilon,
-vowels which carry a semi-vowel glide in themselves.
-
-The orthodox order, Greek and Latin titles, and sectional references of
-the pieces here chosen are as follows. The English titles belong to the
-present version.
-
- ON BRINGING UP A BOY (περὶ παίδων ἀγωγῆς: _De liberis educandis_),
- 1-14 C.
-
- ON THE STUDENT AT LECTURES (περὶ τοῦ ἀκούειν: _De recta ratione
- audiendi_), 37 C-48 D
-
- ON FAWNER AND FRIEND (πῶς ἄν τις διακρίνειε τὸν κόλακα τοῦ φίλου:
- _Quomodo adulator ab amico internoscatur_), 48 E-74 E.
-
- ADVICE TO MARRIED COUPLES (γαμικὰ παραγγέλματα: _Coniugalia
- praecepta_), 138 B-146.
-
- DINNER-PARTY OF THE SEVEN SAGES (τῶν ἑπτὰ σοφῶν συμπόσιον: _Septem
- sapientum convivium_), 146 B-164 D.
-
- ON GARRULOUSNESS (περί ἀδολεσχίας: _De garrulitate_), 502 B-515.
-
- CONCERNING BUSYBODIES (περὶ πολυπραγμοσύνης: _De curiositate_), 515
- B-523 B.
-
- ON MORAL IGNORANCE IN HIGH PLACES (πρὸς ἡγεμόνα ἀπαίδευ τον: _Ad
- principem ineruditum_), 779 D-782 F.
-
- ON OLD MEN IN PUBLIC LIFE (εἰ πρεσβυτέρῳ πολιτευτέον: _An seni
- respublica gerenda sit_), 783 B-797 F.
-
-
- INTRODUCTION
-
-
-The age in which Plutarch was educated and in which he wrote his
-_Ethica_ is, from the literary point of view, closely similar to the
-so-called ‘Augustan’ age of English writing. Of all the periods of
-English style and thought, he would probably have found himself most at
-home in that of Pope, Addison, and Steele, or in its continuation with
-Goldsmith and Johnson. He flourished at a time when intellectual
-interests were remarkably keen, if not very profound; when literature,
-if for the most part it ventured on no high imaginative flights, did at
-least aim at some practical bearing upon the conduct of life; when men
-found entertainment, and probably some measure of moral or social help,
-in the readable essay or the friendly epistle; when facts, merely as
-such, were accepted as interesting if interestingly set forth; and when
-Philosophy, if she deigned to keep her feet upon the ground and to speak
-as one of the mortals, met with a due welcome from either sex. An
-eighteenth-century Plutarch might conceivably have written the moral
-papers of Johnson without Johnson’s ponderousness, or have contributed
-to the _Spectator_ papers more full than Addison’s of those ‘ideas’ in
-which Matthew Arnold found that writer so deficient. He might have
-written, though in a prose form, the _Essay on Man_, being meanwhile as
-willing as Pope to owe the bulk of his matter to other minds, but not so
-willing as Pope to play the expositor without first playing the earnest
-and critical student. Plutarch did not, so far as we are aware, try his
-hand at verse. To judge by his comments upon poetic duty and by his
-quotations—which are regularly taken from the best writers of a
-classical age already far remote—his conception of the poetic office was
-too exalted to permit of his dabbling in that domain. Had he done so,
-and had he followed the fashion of his times, he would perhaps have come
-nearer to our ‘Augustans’ even than in his prose. In poetry it was the
-age of description, reflection, satire, and moralizing, in the highest
-degree sensible, studiously informed with ‘wit’—in the broader Queen
-Anne sense of that word—and characterized by extreme deftness of pointed
-and quotable phrase, but in no sense creative, imaginative, or inspired.
-Its ideal contents consisted of ‘what oft was thought, but ne’er so well
-expressed’. The attitudes of both prose-writer and poet belonged to the
-intellectual and aesthetic spirit of the period, and so far as that
-spirit finds an individual embodiment in the Greek half of the Roman
-Empire, it finds him in Plutarch of Chaeronea.
-
-It would be difficult to suggest with any precision the place which
-Plutarch might have filled in Victorian literature. A distinguished and
-popular ‘man of letters’ and an educator of public opinion he assuredly
-would have been. Given a width of reading, a persistent self-culture,
-and a careful but unpedantic style, corresponding to those which he
-practised in his own generation, he might have made—as he did then—an
-admirable biographer and essayist. He might have been a contributor of
-substantial papers to the quarterlies and other higher reviews. He
-might, and probably would, have been an eminent lecturer; possibly, with
-a broad practical Christianity substituted for his broad practical
-Platonism, a preacher not only eminent but also in the best sense
-popular. He would certainly have made a brilliant expositor of whatever
-he undertook to expound. He was no Plato or Aristotle; he would have
-been no Carlyle or Herbert Spencer; but he might have been much that
-Macaulay was outside of politics.
-
-As to the date of Plutarch’s birth there can be no certainty.
-Approximately it may be put down as A. D. 48. It is accepted that his
-death did not occur before the year 120; it may have taken place
-somewhat, though not much, later. Born in the days of Claudius, he lived
-through the reigns of Nero, Galba, Otho, Vitellius, Vespasian, Titus,
-Domitian, Nerva, and Trajan, and saw at least the first three years of
-the rule of Hadrian. He must have been nearly fifty before the last
-tyrant of the early Empire fell, but the remainder of his life was spent
-under the most beneficent régime, and amid the greatest peace and
-prosperity, ever experienced in the ancient world. The _pax Romana_ was
-at its profoundest, the sense of security at its fullest; the fact of
-general well-being was everywhere most palpable. There was at the same
-time, or in consequence, a vigorous revival of intellectual life. At no
-period of antiquity would it have been possible for a man of studious
-habits and of mild and genial disposition to enjoy a leisure so
-undisturbed or a society so free from those forms of preoccupation which
-preclude an engrossing interest in things purely of the mind. For the
-orator who is fired by the natural heat of democratic politics, for the
-patriotic poet from whom thrilling verse must be wrung by the wrongs,
-the decline, or the yet unrealized aspirations of his country, there was
-indeed no stimulation or scope. But for the cultivation of the
-humanities, for the indulgence of a taste for art and _belles-lettres_,
-for the satisfaction of intellectual curiosity, for the search after
-interesting knowledge—physical, mathematical, antiquarian, historical,
-philological—and for the thoughtful observation of men and manners, the
-time was almost ideal. In the absence of anxious and absorbing problems
-of the present there was leisure for a contemplative and critical survey
-of the past, and for making acquaintance with ‘the best that had been
-thought and said’ by it. Since the immediate human environment was no
-longer distracted and distracting with the clamorous urgencies of
-external or internal strife and danger, it was possible to look abroad
-over a wider field, to contemplate the more spacious world of man and
-his work, of Nature and her facts, beauties, and marvels. It was
-therefore the age of the encyclopaedist, the traveller, the commentator,
-the describer, the collector—collector of curiosities, of objects of
-art, of books, of stories from history, of apophthegms, of pointed and
-interesting quotations. The prevailing aim was mental and social
-culture. This was the one object of education, however much its
-professors might dissent from each other according to the degrees of
-philistinism in their respective temperaments.
-
-The aim of contemporary education—generally realized with more
-definiteness than educational aims are wont to be in modern times—was to
-turn the pupil into a gentleman, to equip him for the art of living and
-conducting himself as such. There could, of course, hardly fail to be
-those who regarded this _kalokagathia_ too much from the exterior point
-of view, while others fixed their attention more decidedly, and often
-perhaps too exclusively, upon the inward and spiritual grace. There were
-also considerable differences between the Greek and Roman conceptions of
-a gentleman. But in the main this end was universally avowed—to turn the
-raw material of the boy into a man both capable and clubbable, whether
-from a public or a private standpoint. The things to be sought were the
-right accomplishments, the right morals, and the right manners. The
-accomplishments included, beyond all else, literary information and
-culture, argumentative dexterity, and a capacity for speech. The right
-morals were based mainly upon reasoned self-command. The right manners
-were chiefly those of urbanity, dignity, and that care of the person,
-the voice, the dress, and the deportment upon which all ages have
-insisted according to their several lights or tastes. It might be that
-the teaching ‘philosopher’, whose concern was with the soundness of the
-morals, had his quarrel with the teaching ‘sophist’, whose business was
-with the rhetoric and its excellence for exhibition purposes or for the
-gaining of various forms of influence. The philosopher might think the
-sophist superficial, showy, and often actually pernicious, while the
-sophist might look upon the philosopher as visionary, pedantic, and
-often a positive clog upon practical efficiency. Nevertheless no
-typically cultured person of the day would have questioned that, in
-order to be complete—or, as Coleridge calls it, ‘orbicular’—education
-must include its due measure of both forms of teaching.
-
-After his years of infancy the boy, under the supervision of his
-_paedagogus_—ideally a slave of superior character, but too often a
-person who was merely useless for harder work—passed into a school,
-where he was first taught his letters and then proceeded to the reading,
-learning, and recital of classical poetry, to the study of music, and to
-some acquaintance with elementary arithmetic and geometry. Next, taken
-in hand by the rhetorical teacher in a higher school, he was made to
-write and deliver descriptions and essays, mostly on trite and unreal
-themes of a historical or pseudo-historical nature, to develop his
-powers of invention on either side of a chosen topic, and to cultivate a
-fastidious diction, pointed phrase, and the elocutionary arts and
-graces. From artificial harangues and the ‘speaking of a piece’ he
-advanced to the imaginary pleading of forensic cases, in which the law
-was often as fictitious as the facts. When, upon reaching the age for
-assuming the _toga virilis_, he was emancipated from the custody of the
-_paedagogus_ and the discipline of the school, his formal education
-commonly ceased. If he proceeded further, as many did, to what may be
-considered as the equivalent of a university course, he might elect to
-study philosophy, to study ‘sophistic’, or to dally with both in such
-measure as seemed likely to set off the abilities or consolidate the
-culture of a gentleman. Even in the more mature years of life the
-intellectually-disposed grandee had a habit of maintaining near his
-person a salaried philosopher as a kind of domestic monitor, and
-audiences of wealth and fashion readily gathered in Rome and elsewhere
-to listen to lectures on philosophy by professors who properly
-understood the art of clear and pleasant exposition. For the most part
-the typical Roman, less genuinely impassioned than the Greek for thought
-pure and simple, looked upon any ‘specializing’ in philosophy as likely
-to lead either to too cloistered a virtue or to the acquisition of
-eccentric, if not dangerous, views. A certain modicum of philosophical
-knowledge might be an adornment to life, and a certain modicum of
-philosophical training might impart a steadiness to character, but the
-study must not be pursued to the point at which the student himself
-stood in danger of becoming a ‘philosopher’. With the Greeks
-philosophical specializing was commonly subject to no such reprehension,
-partly because of the inborn Hellenic ardour for study and esteem of
-learning, partly because in this domain, even more than in the
-rhetorical, the Greeks were the accepted teachers throughout the Roman
-sphere.
-
-This, or nearly this, was the attitude of the educational world in the
-first decades of the second century, and it was in this world that
-Plutarch of Chaeronea became a figure of special eminence and
-distinction. For in whatever light the modern reader may regard Plutarch
-as a man of letters, to his own times he was first and foremost an
-educator. It is from this point of view that we must consider both his
-_Parallel Lives_ and his _Moral Essays_, if we are to perceive in them
-that unity of character and purpose which he intended all his work to
-possess.
-
-Plutarch, then, was born about A. D. 48 in the very heart of Greece, at
-the comparatively small town of Chaeronea, famous as the scene of the
-decisive victory of the Macedonians over the southern Greeks, and also
-of that in which the forces of Mithridates were routed by Sulla. His
-family must have been of high local standing, and the fact that his
-father—a man of cultivated tastes and refined manners—was the owner of
-the ‘finest kind of horses’ is enough to show, to those who appreciate
-the significance of the word _hippotrophia_, that he must have been
-possessed of considerable means. The same conclusion may be drawn both
-from what Plutarch himself incidentally reveals concerning his brothers,
-Lamprias and Timon, as well as other members of the family circle, and
-also from what is known of his own life and upbringing. That as a boy he
-passed through the orthodox curriculum, is obvious from his wide
-acquaintance with literature and his intelligent, if not particularly
-profound, references to both music and mathematics. When of an age to
-receive an education in philosophy, he was placed, or placed himself,
-chiefly under the distinguished Ammonius, an Alexandrian philosopher of
-a broad semi-Platonist, semi-Peripatetic school, who had become
-established in a prominent intellectual and public position at Athens.
-It was the accepted rule for the student to attend, but not necessarily
-to confine himself to, the lectures of a selected teacher. Often he
-lived in that teacher’s house, or at least, in intimate connexion
-therewith. If the philosopher was strictly conscientious he felt it his
-duty to watch over the developing character of his pupil, to visit him
-with any deserved reproof,[1] to serve as his father confessor, to
-answer his questions, and to meet his moral and intellectual
-difficulties. The familiar phrase ‘guide, philosopher, and friend’
-perhaps describes the relations with unusual exactness. We find both
-Plutarch and his brother in the company of Ammonius at Delphi when Nero,
-in the year 66, graced that city with his imperial and artistic
-presence.
-
-His formal education completed, we discover little of the younger
-manhood of Plutarch, except that he must have been in high local
-estimation, partly, perhaps, from the position of his family, but
-doubtless no less on account of his own conspicuous gifts. Had this not
-been the case, he would hardly have been appointed as one of a
-delegation of two sent on a mission to the Roman proconsul of the
-province. At what age he was first entrusted with civic functions as
-aedile, or with a Delphic priesthood (then merely a ceremonial office
-open to any layman), or with other public positions, we cannot say. We
-can only be sure that to his learning he added a recognizable capacity
-for public business. However many hours he may have devoted to study and
-to the compilation of those ample commonplace-books which evidently
-served him in such good stead, he prided himself on carrying his
-philosophic attainments into the local Chamber or on to the local
-platform. In his judgement this procedure was not only a vindication of
-philosophy and a method of keeping the faculties energetic; it was also
-a patriotic duty.
-
-As has been already said, this was an age of travel. Facilities of
-transport were plentiful; the seas and main roads were secure from
-pirate or enemy; journeys were at least as expeditious as at any modern
-time until the employment of steam. We know of visits made by Plutarch
-to Alexandria, various parts of Greece, Rome, and the north of Italy.
-Rome he must have visited at least twice, and in this metropolis and
-‘epitome of the world’ he made acquaintance with a large circle of men
-of distinction, transacted public business (presumably on behalf of his
-native town, of which he may have been sent as representative),
-delivered lectures,[2] and apparently acted as a sort of consulting
-physician to morally perturbed members of Roman society. He must have
-spoken always in Greek, for he confesses that—like most other Greek
-writers—he had given almost no attention to Latin; nor is any such
-avowal needed from a person who, even after looking into the language,
-believed _sine patris_ to be the Latin for ‘without a father’. Greek,
-however, was then as much the universal language of the cultured as,
-until recently, French was the universal accomplishment of fashion,
-diplomacy, and the traveller.
-
-The Rome with which Plutarch was immediately acquainted was the Rome of
-Vespasian and of the earlier half of Domitian’s reign. Had his sojourn
-in the capital taken place some fifteen or twenty years later, it is in
-the highest degree probable that he would have been further known to us
-through an acquaintance with Pliny or some other Roman writer of that
-date. That a Greek, and especially one who had a difficulty in reading
-Latin, should make no mention of contemporary Latin authors—that in his
-heart he should rather despise them—is only characteristic of the
-Hellenic attitude of the time. But that the amiable Pliny, who has an
-appreciative word to say of almost every one within his social horizon,
-including comparatively obscure philosophers like Euphrates, should say
-nothing of so eminent a figure as Plutarch, amounts to evidence that the
-two had never met. A man who could make close friends of consulars like
-Sosius Senecio and Mestrius Florus, and who enjoyed an intimacy with
-Paccius and Fundanus, could not have failed to win the notice of the
-Horace Walpole of his day. Quintilian, Silius, Statius, Martial, Pliny,
-Suetonius, and Juvenal were all writing when Plutarch was already the
-coryphaeus of Greek culture, and if not one of them mentions his name,
-it is because he was living in remote Chaeronea and forgathering only
-with his chosen circle of philosophers, men of letters, artists, or
-musicians in that town or in Athens, Corinth, and other Greek centres
-near at hand.
-
-To Chaeronea Plutarch must have retired by middle life. There he married
-Timoxena, a lady of position, but of quiet tastes, had issue four sons
-and a daughter, identified himself with the civic and religious concerns
-of his town, delivered lectures, imparted instruction on the lines of a
-modified or latitudinarian Platonic philosophy, industriously read the
-books in his moderate but useful library, made copious extracts
-therefrom, wrote his _Lives_ and those occasional papers known as his
-_Ethica_ or _Moral Essays_, and enjoyed the discussion of many a knotty
-question—often perhaps of little or no importance beyond the fact of its
-forming a problem—in the agreeable society of his relatives or his
-cultivated friends and guests. At such gatherings he was the leader,
-doubtless dominating the conversation—though in his more courteous
-way—somewhat as Johnson dominated the coterie described by Boswell.
-Often, we gather, he varied this quiet course of life by means of
-excursions to other Greek cities—Athens, Sparta, Aedepsus—where he most
-probably delivered an occasional lecture, and where, as we are certain,
-he thoroughly enjoyed himself in table-talk.[3]
-
-That he gave philosophical education, though apparently not of a
-systematic and pedagogic kind, to persons of both sexes is known from
-his own references to the practice. Whether he did so for money or not,
-we cannot tell. The later Platonists by no means felt bound to adopt the
-attitude of Socrates and Plato towards the taking of fees. The world had
-changed, and the _res angusta_ was often more powerful than a principle
-which had ceased to appear entirely rational. But there is every reason
-to suppose that Plutarch was a man of independent means; we know further
-that a genial frugality was the rule of his household, and that he
-entertained a becoming contempt for the obsequious or the advertiser.
-The day of the endowed professor, whether of philosophy or sophistic,
-was still to dawn for Greece under Marcus Aurelius, and it never dawned
-at all for so small a town as Chaeronea. We may take it therefore that,
-whether with or without fee or present, Plutarch was able to choose his
-own pupils—in all likelihood the sons and daughters of his friends—and
-that, in dealing with them or with a wider audience, he maintained the
-fullest dignity and independence, and practised all the amiable candour
-which he explicitly recommends.
-
-For any lack of originality, of speculative audacity, of profundity (or
-the obscurity which is so often mistaken for that virtue), Plutarch
-fully compensates. To his generation he served as a milch-cow of
-practical philosophy on its ethical side. He browsed on literature and
-thought, secreted the most valuable constituents, and yielded the cream
-to his hearers or readers. So far as he belonged to a philosophic
-school, it was that of the Old Academy. In other words, he would have
-labelled himself a Platonist. It is probable that he was as much
-attracted by the superb literary style of Plato, the nature of the man,
-and the nobility of his conceptions, as by anything capable of
-crystallization into a philosophy. These qualities attracted even the
-dilettante, while in the more specially philosophic world time had done
-much to refract the real Plato, to extract dogma from him, and to create
-a large _Aberglaube_ about his writings. Be that as it may, there is
-much in Plato that Plutarch does not accept, and there is much outside
-of Plato to which he gives a welcome. Towards Stoics and
-Epicureans—whose doctrines, like those of the Christians, would
-logically withhold men from public activity—he is distinctly, though
-never virulently, hostile, and when his pen ranges itself against
-particular schools, it is against these.[4] It is easier, in fact, to
-say to what sect Plutarch did not belong than to associate him
-definitively with any other. Nevertheless it is as a Platonist that he
-would have classed himself, and it is especially by the later
-Neo-Platonists that he was quoted as a divinely gifted writer who lent
-literary charm and potency to wisdom. So broad, however, was his
-teaching, and in many respects so adaptable even to Christianity, that
-early writers of the Church had no scruple in borrowing liberally from
-him.[5]
-
-Into whatever shape he may have systematized his views, and however
-popular his treatment of them, Plutarch ranked with the philosophers. If
-he was opposed to Stoicism and Epicureanism, he was, like other
-philosophers, no less opposed to sophistic. To him the representatives
-of that art were apt to seem shallow and showy.[6]
-
-He held, with the Socratics in general, that the basis of right action
-is knowledge, and he had no belief in empiricism. Not that he rejected
-either established moral views or established religion. He was no
-sceptic, still less an atheist. As Friedländer has well argued, there
-was no ancient cult of atheism. Plutarch, indeed, is remarkably
-receptive in the matter of deities. The Egyptian worship of Isis and
-Osiris, which had made great progress throughout the Roman Empire,
-appeared to him equally tenable with the worship practised by his own
-ancestors. In the polytheism in which he acquiesced, such divinities
-were only other forms of those known in Hellas, and he found no
-difficulty in reconciling and combining the two sets of notions and
-cults. He was deeply tinged with Orientalism, though his culture and his
-natural good taste made him despise corybantic demonstrations and what
-Friedländer has called ‘dirty mortifications’. He held the Eranian
-belief in daemonic agencies, which acted upon mankind from the one side
-as the gods did from the other. If he appears to rise to the conception
-of ‘God’ in the singular, the word is rather to be taken as denoting the
-sum of divine wisdom and beneficent dispensation. Like all the best
-minds of his own and many a previous generation, he found moral
-difficulties in accepting the characters ascribed to the deities in the
-best literature of earlier Greece, and therefore, while approving of the
-established education in poetry, he necessarily felt some qualms as to
-the possible effects. Poetry served in the schools ‘as introduction to
-philosophy, history, geography, and astronomy’, and it had much to do
-with the formation of religious and ethical notions. Homer, Pindar,
-Sophocles, and Menander were ‘learned and wise’, and boys were brought
-to regard them as inspired. Hence Plutarch’s treatise on _Poets as Moral
-Teachers of the Young_. The point of view in that essay is not, indeed,
-entirely rational. It was not so easy for Plutarch as it is for us to
-realize that moral and religious ideas in Greek literature had passed
-through an evolution corresponding to the development of intellect and
-society. Instead of frankly recognizing the limitations of Homer or the
-inconsistencies of the dramatists in this respect, he puts a highly
-ingenious constraint upon the connexion between any dubious sentiment
-and its context. It is only when he fails in such a _tour de force_ that
-he consents to censure the poet. In this procedure he was by no means
-the first. The battle of the ‘takers of objection’ (προβληματικοί) and
-the ‘solvers of difficulties’ (λυτικοί) was centuries old. That Plutarch
-should range himself as far as possible with the solvers is a
-circumstance which would naturally follow both from his love of
-literature and from his constitutionally reverential temperament.
-
-As has been often observed, the purpose running through the _Parallel
-Lives_ and the _Moral Essays_ is one and the same. The philosophy of
-Plutarch was ethical. For logic and dialectic he shows no liking. His
-object was to relate philosophy to life, to bring home a philosophy
-which could be lived. By philosophy he meant the best conduct of life,
-based on an understanding of the nature of virtue—τὸ καλόν, the right,
-the honourable, the becoming. From philosophy we are to learn not only
-what is due to ourselves, but what is due to the gods, to the laws, to
-parents, children, friends, enemies, fellow-citizens, and strangers. The
-_Essays_, like those of Seneca or Bacon, deal with separable components
-or manifestations of right and wrong character, with duties and
-circumstances: the _Lives_ meanwhile afford us concrete examples or
-object lessons from history.[7] Yet life, even that of a philosopher, is
-not made up entirely of preaching and exhortation, least of all when the
-philosopher is at the same time a man of the world and a man of letters.
-Plutarch felt a lively interest in all such posers as were mooted in the
-talk of the table or of the loungers’ club. He therefore includes among
-his occasional papers—whether written by request or under the
-fashionable fiction of a request—a number of treatises on physical,
-antiquarian, literary, and artistic topics which can hardly be said to
-bear with any immediateness upon the ethical perfection of the reader.
-As a change, therefore, from the treatment of _Superstition_ or
-_Inquisitiveness_ or _The Restraint of Anger_, of _Rules for Married
-Couples_ and _Rules of Health_ and rules for _The Student at Lecture_,
-he may in a spare moment discuss such matters as _The Face in the Moon_
-or questions in Roman custom.
-
-The majority of the pieces in the present selection speak for
-themselves. With the one exception to be mentioned immediately, they all
-bear the impress of the man. There is the same moral broadmindedness and
-sobriety, the same shrewd sense of _le bonhomme Plutarque_, the same
-faculty for popularizing[8] without descending to vapidity, the same
-knack of relieving the sermon by means of anecdote, quotation, or
-interesting item of information at the point where the discourse
-threatens to become tedious. It is true that the German critic, in his
-indefatigable search for the _unecht_, has impugned the authorship of
-the _Dinner-Party of the Seven Sages_[9] on grounds unintelligible to
-those who do not expect a dinner-table conversation to be a systematic
-treatise, and who are satisfied to believe that a mixture of serious
-talk, banter, and narrative, and a frequent transition of subject, are
-precisely the things for which one would look on such an occasion. Every
-feature of the style is Plutarchan, and, if Plutarch did not write the
-piece, we can only feel unmixed regret that he did not, and unmixed
-surprise that its real author should sacrifice the credit of his
-performance. With the article on _The Bringing-up of a Boy_ the case is
-different. Wyttenbach has sufficiently pointed out its frequent
-feebleness of argument, its turbid arrangement, the exceeding triteness
-of its ideas, and its unaccountable omissions. To us moderns it is of
-great interest for the light which it throws on the education of the
-period, and for its incidental revelations of the conditions of domestic
-life and the domestic affections. Otherwise it is a puerile performance
-and savours of nothing but the student essay. If it be argued that it is
-one of Plutarch’s juvenile works, the answer is that it is unlike him to
-be disingenuous; and disingenuous he must be, if in his early youth he
-pretends to have ‘often impressed upon parents’ this or that. Antiquity
-produced far too many amateur essays in imitation of great
-authors—imitations actually ascribed to those authors by a recognized
-fiction of the schools—for us to do an injustice to Plutarch when an
-easier solution lies so close to our hands. Perhaps, again, the piece on
-_Fawner and Friend_[10] suffers from an occasional _longueur_, but there
-are few writers who do not at some less felicitous moment perpetrate
-paragraphs less vivacious than their average.
-
-As a stylist Plutarch is apt to be underrated. He is, it is true, no
-laborious atticist, and makes no point of writing like a purist in the
-classic manner of a Plato or a Lysias. But this does not mean that he is
-in the least negligent in either word or sentence. On the contrary, his
-words are selected with extreme care, and his sentences—where the text
-is sound, as for the most part it is—are rounded off and interlinked as
-watchfully as any natural writing need require. It is true that his
-vocabulary is large and his expression full, but, when his words are
-properly weighed and their metaphorical and other differentiations duly
-perceived, no understanding reader will call him verbose.[11] He
-displays an immense command of language, but no word plays an idle part,
-and if (like Cicero, whom in many respects he resembles) he is fond of
-joining what are erroneously called synonyms, it needs but little
-appreciation of verbal values to realize that the added words invariably
-carry some amplification, some more precise definition, or some emphasis
-helpful to a full grasp upon the sense. It is true also that his
-sentences are apt to appear—like the sentences of Ruskin’s earlier
-days—somewhat lengthy; nevertheless they commonly atone by lucidity of
-construction for any demand they may make upon sustained attention.[12]
-In a modern English dress they must necessarily be broken up, but a
-practised reader of Plutarch finds no more difficulty with them in the
-original than he would find with a passage of Demosthenes or Plato. To
-one who becomes familiar with them they are at least as agreeable as the
-staccato brevities of Seneca. What chiefly exacts some effort from the
-reader of Plutarchan Greek is the fact that its words are
-extraordinarily charged with metaphor and allusion.[13] His choice of
-one word rather than another is always nicely calculated. This truth
-once recognized, a reader cannot fail to admire both the consistency
-with which the writer maintains his similitude while he is upon it, and
-also the copious resources of vocabulary upon which he draws for the
-purpose. Meanwhile, despite any length of sentence and fullness of
-praise, Plutarch neither irritates with tricks and mannerisms nor
-wearies with pedantry and ponderousness. A pedant he could not be. He is
-no writer of Johnsonese. To him the best words are those which best suit
-their context, and he has no objection whatever to a dash of the
-colloquial or a touch of the homely or naïve. It is one of his
-characteristic merits that he knows when to take the higher and when the
-lower road of diction. He also knows when he is in danger of stylistic
-monotony. Plutarch was a teacher, but, like all truly intelligent
-members of that profession, he recognized that the most uninspiring
-attitude to adopt is the severely and unremittingly pedagogic. ‘The
-knack of style,’ it has been said, ‘is to write like a human being,’ and
-Plutarch, a professor of humanity without a chair, is always and
-entirely human. That his pen must have moved with extraordinary facility
-is evident from the number of his publications. Apart from his _Lives_
-(of which not all are extant), his _Moralia_ include over eighty pieces,
-long or short, and it is certain that many others had disappeared[14]
-before the present collection became available in its eleventh-century
-MS.
-
-It is not here implied that he is never culpable, never over-loaded.
-There are times, though rare ones, at which we feel that his memory or
-his notebook has been unduly exploited. We feel that he might have
-spared us an illustration which does not illustrate or a similitude
-which is deficient in similarity. To a certain extent he is a Euphuist,
-and though Guevara perhaps owed nothing directly to him (as he did to
-Seneca[15]), it is manifest that Plutarch sometimes strains a point in
-order to achieve an over-ingenious comparison. The contagion of the
-thing, like that of Euphuism in the Elizabethan age, was in the air, and
-Plutarch assuredly does not err more often or more heinously with one
-generation than Shakespeare did with another. Wide reading and natural
-fecundity easily slip into sins which narrow resources and slow
-invention are impotent to commit.
-
- * * * * *
-
-There are numerous signs that the pendulum of classical interest is
-swinging in the direction of the literature of the early Empire. The
-exclusive _toujours perdrix_ of the Attic and Ciceronian periods has
-apparently begun to jade the palate, and writers like Seneca and
-Plutarch are coming into their own once more. There was a time when
-these authors were perhaps better known than any others. That they were
-worthy of prime consideration is manifest from the immense influence
-which they exercised upon the ardent and inquiring spirits of the
-sixteenth and following centuries, in England no less than on the
-Continent. Authors who could make such an appeal to Montaigne, to the
-Elizabethan dramatists, to Bacon, or to Jeremy Taylor,[16] are surely
-not to be despised because they belong stylistically to a ‘silver’ age,
-or because their strength lies mostly in the fact that they are a mine
-of ideas, wise saws, and pointed moral instances. Seneca, as being a
-writer of Latin, was naturally the earlier and more widely read,[17] but
-from the publication of the _editio princeps_ of Plutarch by Aldus in
-1509 our author sprang into peculiar estimation among the recovered
-spirits of antiquity. It was, however, due to Amyot that both his
-_Lives_ and his _Essays_ became accessible to those who had little or no
-Greek. The _Essays_ were rendered into idiomatic French by that
-admirable translator in the year 1572,[18] and Montaigne was by no means
-the only reader among _nous autres ignorans_ who made the Plutarch of
-Amyot his breviary, and who ‘drew his water incessantly’ from him. It
-was not the literary etiquette of the Elizabethan age to acknowledge all
-the obligations one might owe even to a contemporary, much less to the
-ancients, and the stores of Plutarch might be rifled without much fear
-of detection, and certainly with no fear of reproach. When Lyly, in
-_Euphues and his Ephoebus_,[19] takes it in hand to bring up a child in
-the way he should go, he is in a large measure simply translating,
-expanding, and emphasizing the pseudo-Plutarch on the _Bringing-up of a
-Boy_ and interspersing the discourse with pickings from other essays,
-particularly that on _Garrulousness_.[20] Montaigne, of course, with his
-bland unreserve, credits Plutarch via Amyot with a multitude of
-observations, while Bacon, when following the new vogue of the essay,
-sometimes refers us to ‘Plutarke’, and at least on one occasion informs
-us that ‘Mountaigny saith’ a thing which on reference to the said
-‘Mountaigny’ we find to be Plutarchan.
-
-Though it is no part of the present Introduction to examine in detail
-the influence of the philosopher of Chaeronea upon modern writers, or to
-make an inventory of his contributions to English literature, it is at
-least worth asking whether an author whom genius once delighted to
-exploit, and from whom so many good things have filtered down to us
-through various channels, may not be well worth reading at first hand.
-To Professor Mahaffy[21] Plutarch ‘is a pure and elevating writer, full
-of precious information, and breathing a lofty moral tone’, and to
-Professor Gilbert Murray[22] he is ‘one of the most tactful and charming
-of writers, and one of the most lovable characters in antiquity’. Said
-Emerson[23]: ‘Plutarch will be perpetually rediscovered from time to
-time as long as books last.’
-
-Footnote 1:
-
- The reproof might ostensibly be general, but its particular
- application was readily felt. Musonius, we are told by Epictetus, made
- all his hearers feel ‘as if some one had been talking to him about
- them’.
-
-Footnote 2:
-
- See _Concerning Busybodies_, 522 E.
-
-Footnote 3:
-
- Over and above his resemblances to Macaulay as a writer of essays and
- biographical history, there is a distinct similarity between their
- conversational tastes. We can imagine a Plutarch fully at home with
- Macaulay at one of those astonishing early Victorian breakfast-parties
- where a man might be asked if he ‘knew his Popes’, and where he might
- be endured while he recited them. Plutarch’s _Table-Talk_, like his
- _Dinner-Party of the Seven Sages_, reveals for contemporary Greek
- society the same deliberate cult of intellectual conversation
- sharpened by challenge and debate. In such conversation he must
- himself have played a conspicuous part. Nevertheless, it may fairly be
- gathered that the Greek or Graeco-Roman interlocutors in the reign of
- Trajan were the more ingenuously athirst for reciprocal enlightenment,
- however dubiously we may regard the value of the information or
- misinformation actually gained. Nor is it easy to believe that
- Plutarch would have thought it etiquette to indulge in the protracted
- monologues to which the more modern society submitted with such grace
- as it best could.
-
-Footnote 4:
-
- e.g. in his _De repugnantiis Stoicorum_ and his _Non posse suaviter
- vivi secundum Epicurum_. Yet, as Mahaffy says, ‘it would be hard to
- say whether the number of Stoic dogmas which he rejects exceeds that
- which he quotes with approval’ (_The Greek World under Roman Sway_,
- pp. 300 sqq.).
-
-Footnote 5:
-
- Volkmann names in particular Clement of Alexandria and Basil.
-
-Footnote 6:
-
- This does not mean that he had no friends among the rhetorical
- teachers (the contrary is shown by his reference to ‘our Niger’ in
- _praec. san._, § 16), but only that he distrusted the type. He refused
- to approve of a fluent and polished style as an end in itself. Pliny
- describes how the amazingly voluble Isaeus would offer his audience a
- choice of subject and allow it to dictate the side which he should
- take. He would then rise and demonstrate his extemporizing powers with
- much show of rhetorical ornament.
-
-Footnote 7:
-
- Volkmann says of the _Lives_, ‘Das Werthvolle an ihnen sind nicht die
- historischen Details, die er giebt, sondern die eingestreuten
- Reflexionen, die ethischen Betrachtungen, das Eingehen auf
- individuelle Stimmungen und Leidenschaften der grossen Männer.’
-
-Footnote 8:
-
- _Aulicis tantum scripsit, non doctis_, says Scaliger.
-
-Footnote 9:
-
- Volkmann guesses that it is _ein Produkt der späteren Sophistik_. If
- so, we may congratulate the Sophist on his perfect reproduction of
- Plutarch’s style and of his non-sophistic tone.
-
-Footnote 10:
-
- Bacon’s Essay _Of Followers and Friends_ owes almost nothing to
- Plutarch beyond the title. We do, however, find him borrowing the
- words ‘for there is no such Flatterer as a Man’s selfe’.
-
-Footnote 11:
-
- As Volkmann happily puts it, he writes ‘with comfortable breadth’.
-
-Footnote 12:
-
- The sentences would doubtless have been easier still if Plutarch had
- not felt bound to follow the fashion of the time and elaborately avoid
- hiatus.
-
-Footnote 13:
-
- Perhaps this is why Plutarch, as seen through Amyot, appeared to
- Montaigne ‘close and thorny,’ while his sense was nevertheless
- ‘closely-jointed and pithily-continued’.
-
-Footnote 14:
-
- Stobaeus (sixth century) had access to much of Plutarch that is now
- lost.
-
-Footnote 15:
-
- See an observation of Professor Summers, _Seneca Select Letters_,
- Introduction, p. lxxiv.
-
-Footnote 16:
-
- Plutarch ‘is the theme of more than 230 allusions or direct references
- on the part of Jeremy Taylor’ (Sandys, _A History of Classical
- Scholarship_, i. 300).
-
-Footnote 17:
-
- He was familiar reading of the twelfth and thirteenth centuries, and
- appears in the _Gesta Romanorum_. Later the _Adagia_ of Erasmus draw
- freely upon him.
-
-Footnote 18:
-
- ‘Il a en quelque sorte créé Plutarque,’ says Demogeot.
-
-Footnote 19:
-
- _Euphues_ appeared in 1579. Jusserand (_The English Novel in the Time
- of Shakespeare_, p. 127) remarks that Euphues ‘addresses moral
- epistles to his fellow men to guide them through life’, but he appears
- to be unaware that Lyly borrowed this object, as well as so large a
- quantity of his matter, from Plutarch.
-
-Footnote 20:
-
- We meet, for example, with the story of Zeno, ‘the olde man in Athens
- that amiddest the pottes could hold his peace.’
-
-Footnote 21:
-
- _History of Greek Classical Literature_, ii. 427.
-
-Footnote 22:
-
- _The Literature of Ancient Greece_, p. 396.
-
-Footnote 23:
-
- Quoted by Sandys (_A History of Classical Scholarship_, i. 300).
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS
-
-
- Dinner-Party of the Seven Sages 27
-
- On Old Men in Public Life 65
-
- Advice to Married Couples 96
-
- Concerning Busybodies 113
-
- On Garrulousness 130
-
- On the Student at Lectures 157
-
- On Moral Ignorance in High Places 180
-
- Fawner and Friend 187
-
- On Bringing up a Boy 241
-
- Notes on Persons and Places 267
-
-
- Appendix: Notes on the Greek Text 295
-
-
-
-
-_In the following imaginary ‘Dinner-Party of the Seven Sages’ the
-supposed narrator is a certain Diocles of Corinth, a professional
-diviner and expiator of omens connected with the court of Periander, who
-was despot of Corinth from 625_ B. C. _to 585_ B. C. _The dramatic date
-is towards the close of that period. It must not be assumed that
-Plutarch is pretending to be historical, and anachronisms must be
-disregarded._
-
-_The Seven Sages are here Thales, Bias, Pittacus, Solon, Chilon,
-Cleobulus, Anacharsis (see Notes on Persons and Places). The list varies
-with different writers, but Thales, Bias, Pittacus, and Solon are
-invariably, and Chilon is regularly, included in the canon. Periander is
-himself sometimes made one of the number, and a certain Myson also
-appears._
-
-_The qualities which constituted a ‘sage’ in this connexion were those
-of keen practical sense and insight, and a power of crystallizing the
-results into pithy maxims. He was not a ‘philosopher’ in the later sense
-of that word._
-
-
-
-
- DINNER-PARTY OF THE SEVEN SAGES
-
-
-We [Sidenote: 146 B] may be sure, Nicarchus, that in process of time
-facts will become so obscured as to be altogether beyond ascertainment,
-seeing that in the present instance, where they are so fresh and recent,
-the world accepts accounts of them which are pure concoctions. In the
-first place, the party at dinner did not consist—as you have been
-told—merely of seven, but of [Sidenote: C] more than twice that number.
-I was myself included, both as being professionally intimate with
-Periander and as the host of Thales, who had taken up his quarters with
-me by Periander’s directions. In the second place, whoever related the
-conversation to you, reported it incorrectly. Presumably he was not one
-of the company. Inasmuch, therefore, as I have plenty of spare time and
-my years do not warrant me in putting off the narrative with any
-confidence, I will—since you are all so eager—tell you the whole story
-from the beginning.
-
-Periander [Sidenote: D] had prepared his entertainment, not in the city,
-but in the banquet-hall at Lechaeum, close to the temple of Aphrodite,
-the festival being in her honour. For after having refused to sacrifice
-to Aphrodite since the love-affair which led to his mother’s suicide, he
-was now for the first time, thanks to certain dreams on the part of
-Melissa, induced to pay honour and court to that goddess.
-
-Inasmuch as it was summer-time and the road all the way to the sea was
-crowded with people and vehicles, and therefore full of dust and a
-confusion of traffic, each of the invited guests was supplied with a
-carriage and pair handsomely caparisoned. Thales, however, on seeing the
-carriage at the door, simply [Sidenote: E] smiled and sent it away.
-Accordingly we turned off the road and proceeded to walk quietly through
-the fields, a third member of our party being Niloxenus of Naucratis, a
-man of high character who had formed a close acquaintance with Solon and
-Thales in Egypt. His presence was due to his having been sent on another
-mission to Bias. Of its purpose he was himself unaware, although he
-suspected that the sealed document of which he was the bearer contained
-a second problem for solution. He had been instructed, in case Bias
-could do nothing, to show the missive to the wisest of the Greeks. ‘It
-is a godsend to me,’ [Sidenote: F] said Niloxenus, ‘to find you all
-here, and, as you perceive’—showing us the paper—‘I am bringing the
-letter to the dinner.’ At this Thales remarked with a laugh, ‘In case of
-trouble, once more to Priene![24] For Bias will solve the difficulty, as
-he did the first, without assistance.’ ‘What do you mean,’ said I, ‘by
-“the first”?’ ‘The king,’ replied Thales, ‘sent him an animal for
-sacrifice, and bade him pick out and send back the worst and best
-portion of the meat. Thereupon our friend, with excellent judgement,
-took out and sent the tongue; and he is manifestly held in high repute
-and admiration in consequence.’ [Sidenote: 147] ‘That is not the only
-reason,’ said Niloxenus, ‘Bias does not object—as you do—to be, and to
-be called, a friend of kings. In your own case the king not only admires
-you on general grounds, but he was hugely delighted with your method of
-measuring the pyramid. Without any fuss or the need of any instrument,
-you stood your stick at the end of the shadow thrown by the pyramid, and
-the fall of the sunlight making two triangles, you showed that the
-pyramid stood in the same ratio to the stick as the one shadow to the
-other.[25] But, as I observed, you were charged with being a king-hater,
-and [Sidenote: B] certain outrageous expressions of yours concerning
-despots were reported to him. For example, when asked by the Ionian
-Molpagoras what was the strangest sight you had seen, you answered, “An
-aged despot.” Again, at a drinking-party, when the talk fell upon
-animals, you stated that among wild animals the worst was the despot,
-and among tame animals the sycophant. However much a king may claim to
-differ from a despot, he does not welcome language of that kind.’ ‘Nay,’
-said Thales, ‘the former remark belongs to Pittacus, who once made it in
-a playful attack on Myrsilus. My own observation [Sidenote: C] was that
-I should regard as a strange sight, not an aged despot, but an aged
-navigator. None the less, my feelings at the altered version are those
-of the young fellow who, after throwing at the dog and hitting his
-step-mother, remarked, “Not so bad, after all.” Yes, I regarded Solon as
-very wise in refusing to act the despot. Our Pittacus also, if he had
-kept clear of monarchy, would not have said that “_it is hard to be
-good_”. As for Periander, his despotism may be regarded as an inherited
-disease, from which he is making a creditable recovery, inasmuch as up
-to the present he keeps wholesome company, cultivates the society of
-sensible men, and will have nothing to say to that “cutting down of the
-tall poppies” suggested by my fellow-countryman [Sidenote: D]
-Thrasybulus. A despot who desires to rule over slaves rather than men is
-no better than a farmer who is ready to reap a harvest of darnel and
-cammock in preference to wheat and barley. Among the many undesirable
-features of despotic rule, the one desirable element is the honour and
-glory, in a case where the subjects are good but the ruler is better,
-and where they are great but he is regarded as greater. If he is
-satisfied with safety without honour, his right course would be to rule
-over a herd of sheep, horses, or oxen, not over human beings. However,
-[Sidenote: E] your visitor here has launched us upon an inopportune
-topic. We are walking to a dinner, and he should have remembered to moot
-questions suited to the occasion. For you will doubtless admit that
-there is a certain preparation necessary for the guest as well as for
-the host. The people of Sybaris, I understand, send their invitations to
-the women a year in advance, so that they may have plenty of time to
-prepare their dress and their jewelry before coming to dinner. In my own
-opinion one who is to play the diner in the proper way requires still
-more time for real and true preparation, inasmuch as it is harder to
-arrive at the appropriate adornment of character than at the useless and
-superfluous adornment of the person. When a man of sense comes to
-[Sidenote: F] dinner, he does not bring himself to be filled like a
-vessel, but to contribute something either serious or sportive. He is to
-listen or talk about such matters as the occasion asks of the company,
-if they are to find pleasure in each other’s society. An inferior dish
-may be put aside, and if a wine is poor, one may take refuge with the
-Nymphs.[26] But when your table-companion is an ill-bred bore who gives
-you a headache, he utterly ruins the enjoyment of any wine or dish or
-musical entertainment. [Sidenote: 148] Nor have you the resource of an
-emetic for that kind of annoyance, but in some cases the mutual
-antipathy lasts all your life, an insulting or angry incident at your
-wine having resulted in a kind of nausea. Chilon was therefore quite
-right when, on receiving his invitation yesterday, he only accepted
-after ascertaining the full list of the guests. As he remarked, when
-people cannot help going to sea or on a campaign, and a shipmate or
-tentmate proves disagreeable, they are obliged to put up with him; but
-no sensible man will form one of an indiscriminate wine-party. The mummy
-which the Egyptians regularly bring in and exhibit at their parties,
-bidding you [Sidenote: B] remember that you will very soon be like it,
-may be an unwelcome and unseasonable boon-companion; yet the custom is
-not without its point. Even if it may not incite you to drink and enjoy
-yourself, it does incite to mutual liking and regard. “Life,” it urges,
-“is short in duration; do not make it long by vexations.”’
-
-After talk of this nature on the way we arrived at the house. As we had
-anointed ourselves, Thales decided not to take a bath, but proceeded to
-visit and inspect the race-tracks, the wrestling-grounds, and the
-handsomely decorated park along the shore. Not that he was greatly taken
-with anything of that kind, but he would not appear to despise or slight
-Periander’s display [Sidenote: C] of public spirit. The other guests, as
-soon as each had anointed himself or bathed, were being led by the
-servants through the cloister into the dining-room. Anacharsis, however,
-was seated in the cloister, and in front of him stood a girl, who was
-parting his hair with her hands. Upon her running to meet Thales in the
-frankest possible manner, he kissed her and said with a laugh, ‘That’s
-right: make our foreign visitor beautiful, so that he may not frighten
-us by looking like a savage, when he is really a most civilized person.’
-Upon my asking him who the child was, he replied, ‘Don’t you know the
-wise and far-famed [Sidenote: D] Eumetis? That, by the way, is her
-father’s name for her, though most people call her Cleobuline, after
-him.’ ‘I presume,’ said Niloxenus, ‘your compliment refers to the girl’s
-cleverness in constructing riddles. Some of her puzzles have found their
-way as far as Egypt.’ ‘Not at all,’ rejoined Thales. ‘Those are merely
-the dice with which, on occasion, she plays a match for fun in
-conversation. There is more in her than that: an admirable spirit, a
-practical intellect, and an amiable character, by which she renders her
-father’s rule over his fellow country-men more gentle and popular.’
-‘Yes,’ remarked Niloxenus, ‘one [Sidenote: E] can see it by looking at
-her simplicity and unpretentiousness. But how is it she is attending to
-Anacharsis so affectionately?’ ‘Because,’ was the answer, ‘he is a man
-of virtue and learning, and has given her zealous and ungrudging
-instruction in the Scythian manner of dieting and purging the sick. I
-should say that at the present moment, while looking after the gentleman
-so amiably, she is getting some lesson and talking it over.’
-
-As we were just approaching the dining-room, we were met by Alexidemus
-of Miletus, the natural son of the despot Thrasybulus. [Sidenote: F] He
-was coming out in a state of excitement and angrily muttering something
-which conveyed no meaning to us. When he saw Thales he collected himself
-a little, stopped, and said: ‘Look how we have been insulted by
-Periander! He would not allow me to take ship home when I was anxious to
-do so, but begged me to stay for the dinner; and, when I come to it, he
-assigns me a degrading place at table, and lets Aeolians, islanders, and
-goodness knows whom, take precedence of Thrasybulus. For since I was
-commissioned by Thrasybulus, it is evident that, in my person, he means
-to insult and humiliate [Sidenote: 149] him, by treating him as if he
-were nobody.’ ‘I see,’ said Thales, ‘what you are afraid of. In Egypt
-they say of the stars, according to their increase or decrease of
-altitude in the regions they traverse, that they become ‘better’ or
-‘worse’ than themselves. You are afraid that in your own case your place
-at table may mean a similar loss of brightness and eminence, and you
-propose to show less spirit than the Lacedaemonian, who, upon being put
-by the director in the last place in a chorus, remarked, “A capital way
-of making even this place one of honour.” When we take our places,’
-continued Thales, ‘we should not ask who have seats above us, but how we
-are to make ourselves agreeable to our immediate neighbours. As a means
-of immediately securing a beginning of friendly feeling on their part,
-we should cultivate, [Sidenote: B] or rather bring with us, instead of
-irritation, a tone of satisfaction at being placed in such good company.
-The man who is annoyed with his place at table is more annoyed with his
-next neighbour than with his host, and he earns the dislike of both.’
-‘That,’ retorted Alexidemus, ‘is mere talk. In practice I notice that
-even you sages are greedy for precedence’—and therewith he passed us and
-went off. Upon our expressing surprise at the man’s peculiar behaviour,
-Thales said, ‘A crazy person, constitutionally wrong-headed. When he was
-still a mere lad and a quantity of valuable perfume had been presented
-to Thrasybulus, he emptied it into a big wine-cooler, poured in some
-neat wine, and drank it off, thereby bringing ill-odour upon [Sidenote:
-C] Thrasybulus instead of the contrary.’
-
-At this point an attendant came up and said, ‘Periander requests you to
-take Thales here along with you and examine an object which has just
-been brought to him, to see whether it is a mere matter of accident or
-signifies something portentous. He appears himself to be greatly
-agitated, regarding it as a pollution, and as a smirch upon the
-festival.’ Whereupon he proceeded to lead us to one of the apartments
-off the garden. Here a youth, apparently a herdsman, still beardless and
-with considerable handsomeness of person, opened a leather wrapper and
-displayed a baby thing which he told us was the offspring of a mare. The
-upper parts, as far as the neck and arms, were human, the lower parts
-equine; its voice when it cried was that [Sidenote: D] of a new-born
-child. Niloxenus, exclaiming ‘Heaven help us!’ turned away from the
-sight; but Thales took a prolonged look at the young fellow, and with a
-smile remarked—in accordance with his regular habit of twitting me in
-connexion with my profession—‘I suppose, Diocles, you are thinking of
-setting your purifications to work and giving trouble to the averting
-powers, in the belief that a great and terrible thing has happened?’ ‘Of
-course I am, Thales,’ said I, ‘for the token indicates strife and
-discord, and I am afraid it may affect no less a matter than marriage
-and its issue. As you see, before we have expiated the original offence,
-the goddess is giving warning of a second.’ [Sidenote: E] To this Thales
-made no answer, but began to move off—laughing. Upon Periander coming to
-the door to meet us, and putting questions as to what we had seen,
-Thales turned from me, took him by the hand, and said: ‘Anything Diocles
-bids you do, you will perform at your leisure. My own advice is to be
-more careful as to your herdsmen.’ On hearing this speech Periander
-appeared to be greatly delighted, for he burst out laughing and hugged
-and kissed Thales, who observed: ‘I should say, Diocles, that the sign
-has found its fulfilment already; for you see what a serious misfortune
-has befallen us in the [Sidenote: F] refusal of Alexidemus to be present
-at dinner.’
-
-When we had actually entered the room, Thales, speaking in a louder
-tone, said: ‘And where was the seat to which the gentleman objected?’
-Upon the place being pointed out, he went round and occupied it himself,
-taking me with him, and remarking: ‘Why, I would have paid something for
-the [Sidenote: 150] privilege of sharing the same table with Ardalus.’
-The Ardalus in question was a Troezenian, a flute-player and priest of
-the Ardalian Muses, whose worship was established by the original
-Ardalus of Troezen. Thereupon Aesop—who happened to have arrived
-recently on a simultaneous mission from Croesus to Periander and to the
-god at Delphi, and was present on a low stool close to where Solon was
-reclining above—said, ‘A Lydian mule, having caught sight of his
-reflection in a river and conceived an admiration for the size and
-beauty of his body, gave a toss of his mane and set out to run like a
-horse; but after a while, reflecting that he was the son of an ass, he
-quickly [Sidenote: B] stopped his career and dropped his pride and
-conceit.’ At this Chilon, speaking in broad Laconian, observed: ‘Ye’re
-slow yersel, an’ ye’re running the mule’s gait.’
-
-At this point Melissa came in and reclined beside Periander, whereas
-Eumetis sat at her dinner.
-
-Thales, addressing me—I was on the couch above Bias—said: ‘Diocles, why
-don’t you inform Bias that our visitor from Naucratis has come to him
-again with royal problems to solve, so that he may be sober and capable
-of looking after himself when he receives the communication?’ Bias
-replied: ‘Nay, our friend here has been trying for a long time to
-frighten me with that warning. But I am aware that, besides his other
-capacities, Dionysus is styled _Solver_[27] in right of wisdom. I feel
-[Sidenote: C] no fear, therefore, that my being “filled with the god”
-will cause me to make a less hopeful fight of it.’
-
-While jokes of this kind were passing between these great men over their
-dinner, I was noticing that the meal was unusually frugal, and I was led
-to meditate on the fact that to invite and entertain wise and good men
-means no additional expense, but rather a curtailment of it, since it
-eliminates fancy dishes, out-of-the-way perfumes and sweetmeats, and
-lavish decantings of costly wines. Though Periander, being a despot and
-a person [Sidenote: D] of wealth and power, indulged in such things
-pretty nearly every day, on this occasion he was trying to impress the
-company with a show of simplicity and modest expenditure. He put aside
-and out of sight not only the display usually made in other things, but
-also that used by his wife, whom he made present herself in modest and
-inexpensive attire.
-
-The tables were removed; Melissa caused garlands to be distributed; and
-we poured libations. After the flute-girl had played a short piece to
-accompany them, and had then withdrawn, Ardalus, addressing Anacharsis,
-asked if there were any flute-girls among the Scythians. Instantly he
-replied, ‘No, nor [Sidenote: E] yet vines.’ When Ardalus rejoined:
-‘Well, but the Scythians have gods;’ ‘Quite true,’ said he: ‘gods who
-understand human language. We are not like the Greeks, who imagine they
-speak better than the Scythians, and yet believe that the gods would
-rather listen to pieces of bone and wood.’ ‘Ah,’ said Aesop, ‘what if
-you knew, Sir Visitor, that the present-day flute-makers have given up
-using the bones of fawns and have taken to those of asses? They maintain
-that these sound better—a fact which explains Cleobuline’s riddle upon
-the Phrygian flute: [Sidenote: F]
-
- _With a shin that was horned
- Did an ass that was dead
- Deal a blow on my ear._
-
-It is a wonderful thing that the ass, who is otherwise particularly
-crass and unmusical, should supply us with a bone particularly fine and
-melodious.’ ‘Now that,’ said Niloxenus, ‘is precisely the objection
-which the Busirites bring against us of Naucratis; for asses’ bones for
-flutes are already in use with us. With them, on the contrary, it is
-profanation even to listen to a trumpet, because it sounds like the bray
-of an ass. You know, I presume, that the ass is treated contemptuously
-by the Egyptians because of Typhon?’
-
-A silence here occurred, and, as Periander perceived that Niloxenus,
-though eager to enter upon the subject, was shy [Sidenote: 151] of doing
-so, he said: ‘To my mind, gentlemen, it is a commendable practice,
-whether of community or ruler, to take the business of strangers first
-and of citizens afterwards. On the present occasion, therefore, I
-propose that for a short time we suspend any topics of our own, as being
-local and familiar, and that we treat ourselves as an Assembly and
-‘grant an audience’ to those royal communications from Egypt, of which
-our excellent friend Niloxenus is the bearer to Bias, and which Bias
-desires that you should join him in considering.’ ‘Yes,’ said Bias: ‘for
-where, or with whom, could one more readily face the risk—if it must be
-faced—of answering in a case like this, especially when the king’s
-instructions are that, though [Sidenote: B] the matter is to begin with
-me, it is to go the round of you all?’ Niloxenus thereupon offered him
-the document, but Bias bade him open it himself and read every word to
-the whole company. The contents of the letter were to the following
-effect:
-
- AMASIS, KING OF EGYPT, TO BIAS, WISEST OF THE GREEKS
-
- _The King of Ethiopia is engaged in matching his wits against mine.
- Hitherto he has had the worst of it, but has finally concocted a
- terrible poser in the shape of a command that I should ‘drink up the
- sea’. If I meet it with a solution, I am to have a number of his
- villages and towns. If not, I am to surrender the cities in the
- neighbourhood of Elephantine. Do you, therefore, take the matter
- [Sidenote: C] in hand and send Niloxenus back to me at once. Any
- return which friends or countrymen of yours require from me will be
- made without hesitation on my part._
-
-This part of the letter having been read, Bias was not long in
-answering. After a few moments of meditation and a brief conversation
-with Cleobulus, who was close to him at table, he said: ‘Do you mean to
-say, my friend from Naucratis, that Amasis, though reigning over so many
-subjects and possessed of so large and excellent a country, will be
-ready to drink up the sea in order to win a few miserable insignificant
-villages?’ ‘Take it that he will, Bias,’ replied Niloxenus, ‘and
-consider how it can be done.’ ‘Very well then,’ said he: ‘let him tell
-[Sidenote: D] the Ethiopian _to stop the rivers that run into the ocean,
-while he is himself drinking up the sea at present existing_. The
-command applies to the sea as it is, not as it is to be later on.’ Bias
-no sooner made this speech than Niloxenus was so delighted that he
-rushed to embrace and kiss him. After the rest of the company had
-cheered and applauded, Chilon said with a laugh, ‘Sir Visitor from
-Naucratis, before the sea is all drunk up and lost, set sail and tell
-Amasis not to be asking how to make away with all that brine, but rather
-how to render his kingship sweet and drinkable for his subjects. Bias is
-a past master at teaching [Sidenote: E] such a lesson, and, if Amasis
-learns it, he will have no further occasion for his golden footpan[28]
-in dealing with the Egyptians. They will all be courting and making much
-of him for his goodness, even if he is declared to be of a thousand
-times lower birth than he actually is.’ ‘Yes, and by the way,’ said
-Periander, ‘it would be a good thing if all—“man after man”, as Homer
-has it—were to contribute a similar offering to His Majesty. A bonus of
-the kind thrown in would not only make the returns on his venture more
-valuable to him, but would also be the best thing in the world for us.’
-
-Chilon thereupon asserted that Solon was the right man to [Sidenote: F]
-make a beginning on the subject, not only because he was senior to all
-the rest and was in the place of honour at the table, but because,
-having legislated for the Athenians, he held the greatest and completest
-position as a ruler. At this Niloxenus remarked quietly to me, ‘People
-believe a good deal that is false, Diocles; and they mostly take a
-delight in inventing for themselves, and in accepting with avidity from
-others, mischievous stories about wise men. For instance, it was
-reported [Sidenote: 152] to us in Egypt that Chilon had cancelled his
-friendship and his relations of hospitality with Solon, because Solon
-declared that laws were alterable.’ At this I answered, ‘The story is
-ridiculous; for in that case Chilon ought to begin by disclaiming
-Lycurgus and all his laws, as having altered the whole Lacedaemonian
-constitution.’
-
-After a brief delay Solon said: ‘In my opinion a king or despot would
-win most renown _by furnishing his fellow-citizens with a popular, in
-place of a monarchical, government_.’ The second to speak was Bias, who
-said: ‘_By identifying his behaviour with the laws of his country._’
-Thales came next with the statement that he considered a ruler happy
-‘_if he died naturally of old age_‘. Fourth Anacharsis: ‘_If good sense
-never failed him._’ [Sidenote: *] Fifth Cleobulus: ‘_If he trusted none
-of those about him._’ Sixth Pittacus: ‘_If the ruler could get his
-subjects to fear, not him, but [Sidenote: B] for him._’ Next Chilon said
-that ‘_the ruler’s conceptions should never be mortal, but always
-immortal_‘.
-
-After hearing these dicta, we claimed that Periander himself should
-express an opinion. With anything but cheerfulness, and pulling a
-serious face, he replied: ‘Well, the opinion I have to add is that every
-one of the views stated practically disqualifies a man of sense from
-being a ruler.’ Whereupon Aesop, as if in a spirit of reproof, said,
-‘You ought, of course, to have discussed this subject by yourselves, and
-not to have delivered an attack upon rulers under pretence of being
-their advisers and friends.’ [Sidenote: C] ‘Don’t you think,’ said
-Solon, taking him by the head and smiling, ‘that one can make a ruler
-more moderate and a despot more reasonable by persuading him that it is
-better to decline such a position than to hold it?’ ‘And pray who,’ he
-replied, ‘is likely to follow you in the matter rather than the God,
-whose opinion is given in the oracle delivered to yourself:
-
- _Blessèd the city that hearkens to one commander’s proclaiming._’
-
-‘True,’ said Solon, ‘but, as a matter of fact, the Athenians, though
-with a popular government, do listen to one proclaimer [Sidenote: D] and
-ruler in the shape of the law. You have a wonderful gift at
-understanding ravens and jackdaws, but your hearing of the [Sidenote: *]
-voice of modesty is indistinct. While you think that a state is best off
-when it listens, as the God says, to “one”, you believe that the best
-convivial party is that in which everybody talks on every subject.’
-‘Yes,’ said Aesop, ‘for you have not yet legislated to the effect that
-“_a slave shall not get tipsy_” is to stand on the same footing with
-those Athenian ordinances of yours which say “_a slave shall not indulge
-in love or in dry-rubbing with oil_”.’[29] At this Solon broke into a
-laugh, and Cleodorus the physician remarked: ‘But, in one respect,
-talking when the wine is taking effect does stand on the same footing
-with dry-rubbing—it is very pleasant.’ ‘Consequently,’ [Sidenote: E]
-broke in Chilon, ‘it is the more to be avoided.’ ‘Yes,’ said Aesop
-again,[30] ‘Thales did appear to recommend getting old as quickly as
-possible.’ Periander laughed, and said: ‘Aesop, we have been properly
-punished for dropping into other questions before bringing forward the
-whole of those from Amasis, as we proposed. Pray look at the rest of the
-letter, Niloxenus, and take advantage of the gentlemen being all here
-together.’ ‘As for that,’ replied Niloxenus, ‘whereas the command sent
-by the Ethiopian can only be called a “doleful [Sidenote: F]
-dispatch”—as Archilochus would say—your friend Amasis has shown a fine
-and more civilized taste in setting such problems. He bade him name the
-oldest thing, the most beautiful, the greatest, the wisest, the most
-universal, and—not stopping there—the most beneficent, the most harmful,
-the most powerful, and the easiest.’ ‘Well, and did his answers give the
-solution in each case?’ ‘His replies were these,’ said Niloxenus. ‘It is
-[Sidenote: 153] for you to listen and judge; for the king is very
-anxious neither to be guilty of pettifogging with the answers, nor to
-let any slip on the part of the answerer escape without refutation. I
-will read you the replies as given. _What is the oldest thing?_—_Time._
-_What the greatest?_—_The universe._ _What the wisest?_—_Truth._ _What
-the most beautiful?_—_Light._ _What the most universal?_—_Death._ _What
-the most beneficent?_—_God._ _What the most harmful?_—_Evil genius._
-_What the strongest?_—_Fortune._ _What the easiest?_—_That which is
-pleasant._’
-
-Well, Nicarchus, after the reading of this second passage there was a
-silence. Then Thales asked Niloxenus if Amasis was satisfied with the
-solutions. Upon his replying that he had [Sidenote: B] accepted some,
-but was dissatisfied with others, Thales said, ‘And yet not one of them
-is unassailable. There are great blunders and signs of ignorance all
-through. For instance, how can Time be the oldest thing, seeing that,
-while some of it is past and some present, some of it is future? Time
-which is to come after us must be regarded as younger than the events
-and persons of the present. Again, to call Truth wisdom appears to me as
-bad as making out that the light is the eye. Next, if he considered
-Light beautiful—as indeed it is—how came he to ignore the sun? As for
-the rest, the answer concerning gods and evil spirits is bold and
-dangerous, while in that [Sidenote: C] concerning Fortune the logic is
-exceedingly bad. Fortune would not be so readily upset if it was the
-strongest and most powerful thing in existence. Nor yet again is Death
-the most universal thing, for in the case of the living it has no
-existence. However, to avoid seeming merely to criticize the work of
-others, let us express views of our own and compare them with his. I am
-ready to be the first to be questioned point by point, if Niloxenus so
-desires.’
-
-In relating the questions and answers I will put them exactly as they
-occurred. _What is the oldest thing?_ ‘_God_,’ said Thales: ‘for He is
-without birth.’ _What is greatest?_ ‘_Space_: for [Sidenote: D] while
-the universe contains everything else, it is space that contains the
-universe.’ _What is most beautiful?_ ‘_The cosmos_: for everything duly
-ordered is part of it.’ _What is wisest?_ ‘_Time_: for it is Time that
-has either discovered things or will discover them.’ _What most
-universal?_ ‘_Expectation_: for those who have nothing else have that.’
-_What most beneficent?_ ‘_Virtue_: for it makes other things beneficent
-by using them rightly.’ _What most harmful?_ ‘_Vice_: for most things
-suffer from its presence.’ _What most powerful?_ ‘_Necessity_: for it is
-invincible.’ _What most easy?_ ‘_The natural_; not pleasure, for people
-often fail to cope with that.’
-
-The whole company being satisfied with Thales and his [Sidenote: E]
-acumen, Cleodorus observed: ‘It is questions and answers of this kind,
-Niloxenus, that are proper for kings. On the other hand, the barbarian
-who gave Amasis the sea to drink, required the short answer made by
-Pittacus to Alyattes, when he wrote the Lesbians a letter containing an
-arrogant command. The reply was merely a recommendation to eat onions
-and hot bread.’[31]
-
-Here Periander joined in; ‘I may remind you, Cleodorus, that even in old
-times the Greeks had a habit of posing each [Sidenote: F] other with
-similar difficulties. We are told, for instance, that there was a
-gathering at Chalcis of the most distinguished poets among the wise men
-of the day, in order to celebrate the funeral of Amphidamas—a great
-warrior who had given much trouble to the Eretrians and had fallen in
-the fighting for Lelantum. The verses composed by the poets were so well
-matched, that it became a difficult and troublesome matter to judge
-between them, and the reputation of the competitors—Homer and
-Hesiod—caused the jury much diffidence and [Sidenote: 154]
-embarrassment. Thereupon they had recourse to questions of the present
-kind, and Homer—as Lesches tells us—propounded the following:
-
- _Tell me, Muse, of such things as neither before have befallen,
- Nor shall hereafter befall?_
-
-To which Hesiod instantly replied:
-
- _When in eager pursuit of the prize the chariots, one ’gainst the
- other
- Are dashed by the ringing-hoof’d steeds round the tomb where Zeus
- lieth buried._
-
-This answer, it is said, won particular admiration and secured him the
-tripod.’
-
-‘But pray what is the difference,’ asked Cleodorus, ‘between such
-questions and Eumetis’s riddles? It is no doubt right [Sidenote: B]
-enough for her to set women such puzzles by way of amusement,
-constructing them as other women plait their bits of girdles or
-hair-nets. But for sensible men to treat them with any seriousness is
-absurd.’ Eumetis would apparently have liked to make some retort, but
-she was too shy, and checked herself, her face mantled with blushes.
-‘Nay,’ said Aesop, by way of championing her, ‘it is surely more absurd
-to be unable to solve them. Take for example the one she set us just
-before dinner:
-
- _I saw a man glue bronze on a man; with fire did he glue it._
-
-Can you tell me what that means?’ ‘No, and I don’t want [Sidenote: C] to
-be told either,’ answered Cleodorus. ‘And yet,’ said Aesop, ‘no one is
-so familiar with the thing, or does it so well, as you. If you deny it,
-cupping-glasses[32] will bear me out.’ At this Cleodorus laughed, for he
-made more use of cupping-glasses than any medical man of the day, and
-the estimation in which that remedy is held is especially due to him. ‘I
-beg to ask, Periander,’ said Mnesiphilus the Athenian, a close friend
-and admirer of Solon, ‘that the conversation, like the wine, shall not
-be limited to wealth or rank, but shall be put on a democratic footing
-and made to concern all alike. In what has just been [Sidenote: D] said
-about wealth and kingship there is nothing for us commoners. We think,
-therefore, that you should take a government with equal rights, and each
-of you again contribute some opinion, beginning once more with Solon.’
-It was decided that this should be done. First came Solon. ‘Well,
-Mnesiphilus, you, like every other Athenian, have heard what opinion I
-hold about such a government. But if you desire to hear it again now, it
-seems to me that a community is in the soundest condition, and its
-popular government most securely maintained, _when the wrongdoer is
-accused and punished quite as much by those who [Sidenote: E] have not
-been wronged as by the man that has_.’ The second to speak was Bias, who
-said that the best popular government is ‘_that in which every one fears
-the law as he would a despot_.’ Next came Thales with ‘_that in which
-there are no citizens either too rich or too poor_.’ Anacharsis followed
-with ‘_that in which, while everything else is treated as equal,
-superiority is determined by virtue and inferiority by vice_.’ In the
-fifth place Cleobulus affirmed that a democracy is most soundly
-conducted ‘_when its public men are more afraid of blame than of the
-law_‘. Sixth, Pittacus: ‘_Where the bad are not permitted to hold office
-and the [Sidenote: F] good are not permitted to decline it._’ Last of
-all Chilon expressed the view that the best free government is ‘_that
-which pays least attention to the orators and most to the laws_.’
-Periander once more summed up at the end by saying that they all
-appeared to him to be praising ‘that democratic government which most
-resembled an aristocratic.’
-
-Upon the conclusion of this second discussion I begged that they would
-also tell us the proper way to deal with a household; ‘for while there
-are few who are at the helm of a kingdom or a commonwealth, we all play
-our parts in the hearth and home.’ [Sidenote: 155] At this Aesop said
-with a laugh: ‘No! not if in “all” you include Anacharsis. He has no
-home, but actually prides himself on being homeless, and on using a
-wagon—in the same way as they tell us the sun roams about in a chariot,
-occupying first one and then another region of the sky.’ ‘Yes,’ retorted
-Anacharsis, ‘and that is why, unlike any other—or more than any
-other—god, he is free and independent, ruling all and ruled by none, but
-always playing the king and holding the reins. You, however, fail to
-realize the surpassing beauty and marvellous [Sidenote: B] size of his
-car, otherwise you would not have tried to raise a laugh by jocosely
-comparing it with ours. It seems to me, Aesop, that to you a home means
-those coverings of yours made by clay and wood and tiles. You might as
-well regard a “snail” as meaning the shell instead of the animal. It is
-therefore natural that you should find cause to laugh at Solon, when he
-beheld all the costly splendour in the house of Croesus and yet refused
-to declare off-hand that its possessor was happy and blessed in his
-home; “for”—he argued—“I am more desirous of looking at the fine things
-in the man than at those in his house.” It appears, moreover, that you
-have forgotten your own fox. That animal, when she and the leopard were
-engaged in a dispute as to which was the more “cunningly marked”, begged
-the judge to examine her on the inside, inasmuch as she would be found
-to possess more “marks of cunning” from that point of view. But you go
-inspecting the productions of carpenters [Sidenote: C] and stone-masons,
-and regarding those as the “home”, instead of the inward and domestic
-constituents in the case—the children, wife, friends, and servants. If
-these have good sense and good morals, a man who shares his best means
-with them possesses a good and happy home, even if it be but an ant-hill
-or a bird’s-nest.’ ‘That,’ he continued, ‘is my answer to Aesop and my
-contribution to Diocles. But it is only fair that each of the others
-should express his own views.’
-
-Thereupon Solon said that in his opinion the best household was ‘_that
-in which the resources are acquired without dishonesty, [Sidenote: D]
-watched over without distrust, and expended without repentance_‘.
-According to Bias it was ‘_that inside which the master behaves for his
-own sake as well as he does outside for the law’s sake_‘. According to
-Thales, ‘_that in which the master can find most time to himself_‘.
-According to Cleobulus, ‘_where the master has more who love than fear
-him_.’ Pittacus would have it that the best house is ‘_that which wants
-no luxury and lacks no necessity_‘. Chilon’s view was that the house
-should be ‘_as like as possible to a state ruled by a king_‘, and he
-went on to observe that when some one urged Lycurgus to establish a
-republic at Sparta, he [Sidenote: E] answered: ‘You begin by creating a
-republic at home.’
-
-This topic also having been dealt with, Eumetis left the room in company
-with Melissa. Periander then pledged Chilon in a capacious goblet, and
-Chilon in turn pledged Bias. At this Ardalus got up, and, addressing
-Aesop, said: ‘Perhaps you will be good enough to pass yonder cup on to
-us, seeing that these gentlemen are passing theirs to each other, as if
-it were a Bathycles’s goblet,[33] and are giving no one else a turn.’
-‘Nay,’ [Sidenote: F] replied Aesop, ‘there is to be nothing democratic
-about this cup either, for Solon has been keeping it all to himself for
-quite an age.’ Thereupon Pittacus, addressing Mnesiphilus, asked why
-Solon, by not drinking, was testifying against the verses in which he
-had written
-
- _Now do I welcome the tasks of the Cyprus-born goddess and Bacchus,
- And tasks of the Muses that bring cheer to the heart of mankind._
-
-‘Because,’ said Anacharsis, before Mnesiphilus could speak, ‘he is
-frightened at that cruel law of your own, Pittacus, where the words run,
-_If any one commit any offence when drunk, the penalty to be double that
-paid by a man who was sober._’ ‘And you,’ retorted Pittacus, ‘showed
-such wanton contempt of the law that last year, when you had got
-intoxicated at that [Sidenote: 156] party at Delphi, you asked for a
-prize and a victor’s wreath.’ ‘And why not?’ asked Anacharsis. ‘A prize
-was offered to him who drank most, and, since I was the first to get
-tipsy, I, of course, claimed the reward of victory. Otherwise will you
-gentlemen tell me what is the end and aim of drinking a large quantity
-of unmixed wine, if it is not to get intoxicated?’ Pittacus laughed,
-while Aesop told the following story. ‘A wolf, having seen some
-shepherds eating a sheep in a tent, came close up to them, and said:
-“What a to-do you would have made if _I_ had been doing that!”’ At this
-Chilon remarked, ‘Aesop has properly taken his revenge. A moment ago we
-put the muzzle on him, and now he sees that others have taken the words
-out of Mnesiphilus’ mouth. It was Mnesiphilus who was requested to
-answer on behalf of Solon.’ ‘Well, in doing so,’ said Mnesiphilus, ‘I
-speak with knowledge. In Solon’s opinion [Sidenote: B] the concern of
-every art and faculty of man or God is with results rather than with
-agencies, the end rather than the means. A weaver, I take it, would
-consider his object to be a cloak or mantle rather than the arrangement
-of his shuttle-rods or the picking-up of his straightening-stones. To a
-blacksmith it is rather the welding of iron and putting an edge on an
-axe than any of the processes necessary thereto, such as the kindling of
-his charcoal or the preparation of lime. Still more would a
-master-builder object if, instead of a ship or a house, we declared his
-object to be the boring of wood or the mixing of mortar. The Muses would
-utterly scout the notion that their [Sidenote: C] concern is with a harp
-or flute, instead of with the cultivation of character and the soothing
-of the emotions of their votaries by means of melodies properly attuned.
-So—to come to the point—the object of Aphrodite is not sexual
-intercourse, nor that of Dionysus wine and tipsiness, but the friendly
-feeling, the longing, the companionship, and the close mutual
-understanding which they produce in us by those agencies. These are what
-Solon calls divine “tasks”, and he means that these are the objects
-which he appreciates and cultivates in his old age. Of reciprocal
-affection between men and women Aphrodite is the creator, using pleasure
-as the means of melting and commingling their souls at the same time
-with their bodies; while in ordinary cases, where persons are not very
-intimate or particularly acquainted, Dionysus uses wine as a kind of
-fire to soften and supple their dispositions, and so provides a
-starting-point towards a blending in mutual friendship.
-
-‘But when such men meet together as Periander has invited in your
-persons, there is no need, I take it, of the goblet and the wine-ladle.
-The Muses set before you all, in the form of conversation, a mixing-bowl
-containing no intoxicant and yet abundance of pleasure, grave or gay. In
-this they stir friendly feeling, blend it, and pour it forth, while for
-the most part the [Sidenote: E] ladle is allowed to lie undisturbed
-“above the bowl”—a thing which Hesiod forbids where the company is
-better qualified for drinking than for conversation.’
-
-‘As for pledging one another,’ he continued, ‘I gather that with the
-ancients the ceremony consisted of one large goblet going the round,
-each man drinking a measured “allowance” (as Homer tells us), and then
-letting his neighbour take his share, as he would do with a sacrificial
-portion.’
-
-When Mnesiphilus had finished, the poet Chersias—who had ceased to be
-under censure and had lately been reconciled to [Sidenote: F] Periander
-through Chilon’s intercession—remarked, ‘Are we also to understand that,
-when the gods were the guests of Zeus and were pledging each other, he
-poured in their drink by measure, as Agamemnon did for his chieftains?’
-‘And pray, Chersias,’ said Cleodorus, ‘if Zeus has his ambrosia
-brought—as you poets say he does—by doves which find the greatest
-difficulty in flying over the Clashing Rocks, don’t you think [Sidenote:
-157] that his nectar is also scarce and hard to get, and that
-consequently he is sparing of it and doles it out economically?’
-‘Perhaps so,’ replied Chersias. ‘Since, however, the question of
-household economy has again been mooted, perhaps some one will deal with
-the remainder of the question. And that, I take it, is to discover what
-amount of property will be sufficient to meet all needs.’ ‘To the wise
-man,’ said Cleobulus, ‘the law has supplied the standard; but in
-reference to weak characters I will repeat a story which my daughter
-told her brother. The Moon, she said, asked her mother to weave a tunic
-to fit her; whereat the mother answered, “How can I possibly [Sidenote:
-B] weave one to fit? At one time I see you as a full moon, at another as
-a crescent, and at another gibbous.” Similarly, my dear Chersias, there
-is no way of determining the amount of means requisite for a weak and
-foolish person. His wants vary with his appetites and experiences, his
-case being that of Aesop’s dog, of whom our friend says that in winter
-he huddled and curled himself up with the cold, and contemplated making
-a house; but in summer it was different; he stretched himself out when
-he slept, thought himself a big fellow, and decided that it was both a
-laborious and an unnecessary task to build so large a house to cover
-him. Don’t you observe, Chersias’—he went on—‘that even insignificant
-people, though they will at one moment draw themselves into a very
-modest compass, with the idea of living a close and simple Spartan life,
-at another [Sidenote: C] time will fancy they are going to die of want
-unless they have all the money in the world—all the king’s and all the
-private people’s?’
-
-Chersias having nothing to say, Cleodorus joined in. ‘Well, but,’ he
-said, ‘I perceive that there is no equal distribution in the properties
-which even you sages respectively possess.’ ‘Yes, my dear sir,’ said
-Cleobulus, ‘because the law, like a weaver, allots us the amount which
-properly and reasonably fits each case. In your own profession,
-substituting reason for law, you feed [Sidenote: D] and diet and physic
-the sick by prescribing, not the same quantity for everybody, but the
-proper quantity for each case.’ Here Ardalus interposed. ‘I suppose,
-then,’ he asked, ‘it is at the bidding of some law that Epimenides—the
-friend of you gentlemen and the guest of Solon—abstains from other kinds
-of food and passes the day without breakfast or dinner by merely putting
-in his mouth a little of that “anti-hunger essence” which he makes up
-for himself?’ This remark having arrested the attention of the party,
-Thales mockingly observed that Epimenides was a sensible man for
-refusing to be troubled—as [Sidenote: E] Pittacus was—with grinding and
-cooking his own food. ‘You must know,’ he said, ‘that when I was at
-Eresus, I heard my hostess singing to the mill:
-
- _Grind, mill, grind;
- For Pittacus is grinding,
- As he kings it over great Mytilene._’
-
-Then Solon expressed his surprise that Ardalus had not read the law
-ordaining the diet in question, seeing that it was written in the verses
-of Hesiod. ‘For it is he who first supplied Epimenides with hints for
-that form of nourishment, by teaching him to make trial [Sidenote: F]
-
- _How great and sustaining the food that in mallow and asphodel
- lieth._
-
-‘Nay,’ said Periander, ‘do you imagine Hesiod conceived of anything of
-the kind? Don’t you suppose that, with his habitual praise of economy,
-he is merely urging us to try the most frugal dishes as being the most
-agreeable? The mallow makes good eating, and asphodel-stalk is sweet;
-but I am told that anti-hunger and anti-thirst drugs—for they are drugs
-rather than foods—include among their ingredients some sort of foreign
-honey and cheese, and a large number of seeds which are difficult to
-procure. Most certainly, therefore, Hesiod would find that the
-“_rudder_” hung “_above the smoke_” and
-
- _The works of the drudging mules and the oxen’s labour would
- perish_,
-
-[Sidenote: 158] if all that provision is to be made. I am surprised,
-Solon, if your guest, on recently making his great purification of
-Delos, failed to note how they present to the temple—as commemorative
-samples of the earliest form of food—mallow and asphodel-stalk along
-with other cheap and self-grown produce. The natural reason for which
-Hesiod also recommends them to us is that they are simple and frugal.’
-‘Not only so,’ remarked Anacharsis, ‘but both vegetables bear the
-highest possible character for wholesomeness.’ ‘You are quite right,’
-said Cleodorus. ‘That Hesiod possessed medical knowledge is manifest
-from the careful and well-informed manner in which he speaks about diet,
-the mixing of wine, good quality in water, [Sidenote: B] bathing, women,
-and the way to seat infants. But it seems to me that there is more
-reason for Aesop to declare himself a pupil of Hesiod than there is for
-Epimenides. It is to the speech of the hawk to the nightingale that our
-friend owes the first promptings to his admirably subtle wisdom in many
-tongues. But for my part I should be glad to hear what Solon has to say.
-We may assume that, in his long association with Epimenides at Athens,
-he asked him what motive or subtle purpose he had in adopting such a
-diet.’
-
-‘What need was there to ask him that question?’ replied Solon. ‘It was
-self-evident that the next best thing to the [Sidenote: C] supreme and
-greatest good is to require the least possible food. You allow, I
-suppose, that the greatest good is to require no food at all?’ ‘Not I,
-by any means,’ answered Cleodorus, ‘if I am to say what I think,
-especially with a table in front of us. Take away food, and you take
-away the table—that is to say, the altar of the Gods of Friendship and
-Hospitality. As Thales tells us that, if you do away with the earth, the
-whole cosmos will fall into confusion, so the abolition of food means
-the dissolution of house and home. For with it you do away with the
-hearth-fire, the hearth, the wine-bowl, all entertainment and
-hospitality—the most humanizing and essential elements in our mutual
-relations. Or rather you do away with the whole of life, if life is “_a
-passing of the time on the part [Sidenote: D] of a human being involving
-a series of actions_”, most of those actions being evoked by the need,
-and in the acquirement, of food. Of immense importance, my good friend,
-is the question [Sidenote: *] of mere agriculture. Let agriculture
-perish, and the earth that it leaves us becomes unsightly and foul, a
-corrupt wilderness of barren forest and vagabond streams. The ruin of
-agriculture means the ruin of all arts and crafts as well; for she takes
-the lead of them, and provides them with their basis and their
-[Sidenote: E] material. Do away with her, and they count for nothing.
-There is an end also to our honouring the gods. Men will thank the Sun
-but little, and the Moon still less, for mere light and warmth. Where
-will you find altar or sacrifice to Zeus of the Rain, Demeter of the
-Plough, or Poseidon the Fosterer of Plants? How can Dionysus be
-Boon-Giver, if we need nothing that he gives? What sacrifice or libation
-shall we make? What offering of firstfruits? All this means the
-overthrow and confounding of our most important interests. Though to
-cling to every pleasure in every case is to be a madman, to avoid every
-pleasure in every case is to be a block. By all means let the soul have
-[Sidenote: F] other pleasures of a superior kind to enjoy; the body can
-find no pleasure more right and proper than that derived from taking
-food. All the world recognizes the fact, for this pleasure people take
-openly, sharing with each other in the table and the banquet, whereas
-their amorous pleasure is screened by night and all the darkness
-possible. To share that pleasure with others is considered as shameless
-and brutelike as it is not to share in the case of the table.’
-
-Here, as Cleodorus paused for a moment, I joined in: ‘And is there not
-another point—that in discarding food we also [Sidenote: 159] discard
-sleep? If there is no sleep, there is no dreaming either, and we lose
-our most important means of divination. Moreover, life will be all
-alike, and there will be practically no purpose in wearing a body round
-our soul. Most of its parts, and the most important, are provided as
-instruments to feeding—the tongue, teeth, stomach, and liver. None of
-them is without its work, and none has other business to attend to.
-Consequently any one who has no need of food has no need of a body
-either. Which means that a person has no need of himself; for it is
-thanks to the body that each of us is a “self”.’ ‘Such,’ I added, ‘are
-our contributions on behalf of the belly. If Solon or any one else has
-objections to bring, we will listen.’
-
-‘Of course I have objections,’ replied Solon. ‘I have no [Sidenote: B]
-wish to be thought a poorer judge than the Egyptians. After cutting open
-a dead body, they take out the entrails and expose them to the sunlight.
-They then throw those parts into the river and proceed to attend to the
-rest of the body, which is now regarded as purified. Yes, therein in
-truth lies the pollution of our flesh. It is its Tartarus—like that in
-Hades—full of “dreadful streams”, a confused medley of wind and fire and
-of dead things. For while itself lives, nothing that feeds it can be
-alive. We commit the wrong of murdering animate things and of destroying
-plants, which can claim to have life through the fact that they feed and
-grow. I say destroying, because [Sidenote: C] anything that changes from
-what nature has made it into something else, is destroyed; it must
-perish utterly in order to become the other’s sustenance. To abstain
-from eating flesh, as we are told Orpheus did in ancient times, is more
-a quibble than an avoidance of crime in the matter of food. The only way
-of avoiding it, and the only way of attaining to justice by a complete
-purification, is to become self-sufficing and free of external needs. If
-God has made it impossible for a thing to secure its own preservation
-without injury to another, He has also endowed it with the principle of
-injustice in the shape of its own nature. Would it not, therefore, be a
-good thing, my dear friend, if, when cutting out injustice, we could cut
-out the belly, the gullet, and the liver, which impart to us no
-perception [Sidenote: D] of anything noble and no appetite for it, but
-partly resemble the utensils for cooking butcher’s meat—such as choppers
-and stew-pans—and partly the apparatus for a bakery—ovens, water-tanks,
-and kneading-troughs? Indeed, in the case of most [Sidenote: *] people
-you can see their soul shut up in their body as if in a baker’s mill,
-and perpetually going round and round at the business of getting food.
-Take ourselves, for example. Just now we were neither looking at nor
-listening to one another, but we all had our heads down, slaving at the
-business of feeding. But now that the tables have been removed, we
-have—as you perceive—become free, and with garlands on our heads we are
-[Sidenote: E] engaged in sociable and leisurely conversation together,
-because we have arrived at the state of not requiring food. Well then,
-if the state in which we now find ourselves remains as a permanence all
-our lives, shall we not be at perpetual leisure to enjoy each other’s
-society? We shall have no fear of poverty. Nor shall we know the meaning
-of wealth, since the quest for luxuries is but the immediate consequence
-and concomitant of the use of necessaries.
-
-‘But, thinks Cleodorus, there must be food so that there may be tables
-and wine-bowls and sacrifices to Demeter and the Maid. Then let some one
-else demand that there shall be war and fighting, so that we may have
-fortifications and arsenals and [Sidenote: F] armouries, and also
-sacrifices in honour of slaying our hundreds, such as they say are the
-law in Messenia. Another, I suppose, is aggrieved at the prospect of the
-healthfulness which would follow. A terrible thing if, because there is
-no illness, there is no more use in soft bedclothes, and no more
-sacrificing to Asclepius or the Averting Powers, and if medical skill,
-with all its drugs and implements, must be put away into inglorious
-hiding! What is the difference between these arguments and the other?
-Food is, in fact, “taken” as a “remedy” for hunger, and all who use food
-are said to be “taking care” of [Sidenote: 160] themselves and using
-some “diet”; and this implies that the act is not a pleasant and
-agreeable performance, but one which Nature renders compulsory.
-Certainly one can enumerate more pains than pleasures arising from
-feeding. Further still; whereas the pleasure affects but a small region
-of the body, and lasts but a short time, it needs no telling how full we
-become of ugly and painful experiences through the worry and difficulty
-of digesting.
-
-Homer had these in view, I suppose, when he used as a proof that the
-gods do not die the fact that they do not feed:
-
- _For they eat not the bread of corn, nor drink they the wine that is
- ruddy,
- And therefore blood have they none in their veins, and are called
- the Immortals._
-
-Food, he gives us to understand, is the necessary means not only
-[Sidenote: B] for living, but for dying. From it come our diseases,
-feeding themselves with the feeding of our bodies, which suffer quite as
-much from repletion as from want. Very often it is an easier business to
-get together our supply of victuals than to make away with them and get
-quit of them again when once they are in the body. Just suppose it were
-a question with the Danaids what sort of life they would live and what
-they would do if they could get rid of their menial labour at filling
-the cask. When we raise the question, “Supposing it possible to cease
-from heaping into this unconscionable flesh all these things from
-[Sidenote: C] land and sea, what are we going to do?” it is because in
-our ignorance of noble things we are content with the life which our
-necessities impose. Well, as those who have been in slavery, when they
-are emancipated, do for themselves and on their own account what they
-used formerly to do in the service of their masters, so is it with the
-soul. As things are, it feeds the body with continual toil and trouble;
-but let it get quit of its menial service, and it will presumably feed
-itself in the enjoyment of freedom, and will live with an eye to itself
-and the truth, with nothing to distract and deter it.’
-
-This, Nicarchus, concluded the discussion as to food.
-
-While Solon was still speaking, Gorgos, Periander’s brother, entered the
-room. It happened that, in consequence of certain [Sidenote: D] oracles,
-he had been sent on a mission to Taenarum in charge of a sacrificial
-embassy. After we had welcomed him, and Periander had taken him to his
-arms and kissed him, he sat down by his brother on the couch and gave
-him a private account of some occurrence which appeared to cause
-Periander various emotions as he listened to it. At one part he was
-manifestly vexed, at another indignant; often he showed incredulity, and
-this was followed by amazement. Finally he laughed and said to us, ‘I
-should like to tell the company the news; but I have [Sidenote: E]
-scruples about it, because I heard Thales once say that when a thing is
-probable we should speak of it, but when it is impossible we should say
-nothing about it.’ At this Bias interposed, ‘Yes, but here is another
-wise saying of Thales, that “while we should disbelieve our enemies even
-in matters believable, we should believe our friends even when the thing
-is unbelievable”. By enemies I presume he meant the wicked and foolish,
-and by friends the good and wise.’ ‘Very well then,’ said Periander,
-‘you must let every one hear it; or rather you must pit the story you
-have brought us against those new-fangled dithyrambs and overcrow them.’
-
-Gorgos then told us his story.
-
-His sacrificial ceremony had occupied three days, and on the [Sidenote:
-F] last there was an all-night festival with dancing and frolic by the
-sea-shore. The sea was covered with the light of the moon, and, though
-there was no wind, but a dead calm, there appeared in the distance a
-ripple coming in past the promontory, accompanied by foam and a very
-appreciable noise of surge. At this they all ran in astonishment down to
-the place where it was [Sidenote: *] coming to land. This happened so
-quickly that, before they could guess what was approaching, dolphins
-were seen, some of them massed together and moving in a ring, some
-leading the way to the levellest part of the shore, and others as it
-were [Sidenote: 161] bringing up the rear. In the middle there stood out
-above the sea, dim and indistinct, the shape of a body being carried. So
-they came on, until, gathering together and coming to land at the same
-moment, they put ashore a human being, alive and moving; after which
-they themselves retired in the direction of the promontory, leaping out
-of the water more than ever and for some reason, apparently, frolicking
-and bounding for joy. ‘Many of our number,’ continued Gorgos, ‘fled from
-the sea in a panic, but a few found the courage to approach along with
-myself, and discovered that it was Arion, the harp-player. Not only did
-he utter his own name, but his dress spoke for itself, [Sidenote: B] for
-he was actually wearing the festal robes which he adopted when
-performing at the competitions. Well, we brought him to a tent, and,
-inasmuch as there was nothing the matter with him except that he was
-evidently tired and overstrained from the rushing motion, we heard him
-tell a story which no one would believe except us who actually saw the
-end of it.
-
-‘What Arion told us was this. He had for some time made up his mind to
-leave Italy, and had been made the more eager to do so by a letter from
-Periander. Accordingly, when a Corinthian merchant-vessel appeared on
-the scene, he at once went on board and put to sea. They had a moderate
-wind for three days, when he perceived that the sailors were forming a
-plot to make away with him, and was afterwards secretly informed
-[Sidenote: C] by the pilot that they had resolved to do the deed that
-night. At this, being helpless and at a loss what to do, he acted upon a
-kind of heaven-sent impulse. He decided that he would adorn his person
-and—while still alive—put on his own shroud in the shape of his festal
-attire. Then, in meeting his death, he would sing a _finale_ to life,
-and in that respect show no less spirit than the swan does. Accordingly,
-having dressed himself and given notice that he felt moved to perform
-the Pythian hymn on behalf of the safety of himself and the ship and
-crew, [Sidenote: D] he took his stand on the poop by the bulwarks. After
-some prelude invoking the gods of the sea, he began to sing the piece.
-Just before he was half-way through, the sun began to set into the sea
-and the Peloponnese to come into sight. Thereupon the sailors no longer
-waited for night, but advanced to their murderous deed. Arion, seeing
-their knives unsheathed and the pilot beginning to cover his face from
-the sight, ran back and hurled himself as far as possible from the
-vessel. Before, however, his body had all sunk into the water, a number
-of dolphins ran under him and bore him up. At first he was filled with
-bewilderment, distress, and alarm; but when he found himself riding
-easily, and saw many of them gathering about [Sidenote: E] him in a
-friendly way, and taking turns at the work as if it were a necessary
-duty belonging to them all; and when the long distance at which the
-vessel was left behind showed how great was their speed; he said that
-what he felt was not so much fear of death or desire of life, as
-eagerness to be rescued, so that he might become recognized as the
-object of divine favour, and might have his reputation as a religious
-man assured.
-
-At the same time, observing that the sky was full of stars, and that the
-moon was rising bright and clear, while the sea [Sidenote: F] on all
-sides was waveless and a kind of path was being cut for his course, he
-was led to reflect that Justice has more eyes than one, and that God
-looks abroad with all those orbs upon whatever deeds are done by land or
-sea. By these reflections (he told us) he found relief from the
-weariness which was by this time beginning to weigh upon his body, and
-when at last, dexterously avoiding and rounding the lofty and
-precipitous headland which ran out to meet them, they swam close in by
-the shore and [Sidenote: 162] brought him safely to land like a ship
-into harbour, he realized beyond doubt that he had been steered on his
-voyage by the hand of God. ‘When Arion had told us this story,’
-continued Gorgos, ‘I asked him where he thought the ship would put in.
-He answered that it would certainly be at Corinth, but that it was left
-far behind; for, after throwing himself off it in the evening, he
-believed he had been carried over sixty miles and a calm had fallen
-immediately.’ Gorgos added, however, that after ascertaining the names
-of the captain and pilot, and also the ship’s flag, he had sent out
-vessels and soldiers to the various landing-places to keep a watch.
-Moreover, he had Arion with [Sidenote: B] him in hiding, so that they
-might not hear of his rescue beforehand and make their escape. ‘The
-event,’ he said, ‘has proved truly miraculous; for no sooner did we
-arrive here than we learned that the ship had been seized by the
-soldiers, and the traders and sailors arrested.’
-
-Thereupon Periander ordered Gorgos to get up and go out at once and
-place the men in custody where no one would approach them or tell them
-of Arion’s escape.
-
-‘Well now,’ said Aesop, ‘you gentlemen make fun of my jackdaws and crows
-for talking. Do dolphins behave in this outrageous way?’ To which I
-replied, ‘A different matter, [Sidenote: C] Aesop! A story to the same
-effect as this has been believed and written among us for more than a
-thousand years, ever since the times of Ino and Athamas.’
-
-Solon here interposed: ‘Well, Diodes; let us grant that these events are
-in the sphere of the divine and beyond us. But what happened to Hesiod
-is on our own human plane. You have probably heard the story.’ ‘For my
-part, no,’ I answered. ‘Well, it is worth hearing. Hesiod and a
-Milesian—I think it was—shared the same room as guests in a house at
-[Sidenote: D] Locri. The Milesian having been found out in a secret
-intrigue with the host’s daughter, Hesiod fell under suspicion of having
-all along known of the offence and helped in concealing it. Though in no
-way guilty, he fell a victim to cruel circumstance at a critical time of
-anger and misrepresentation. For the girl’s brothers lay in wait for him
-at the Nemeum in Locris and killed him, together with his servant, whose
-name was Troilus. Their bodies having been pushed into the sea, that of
-Troilus, which was carried out into the current of the river Daphnus,
-was caught by a low wave-washed rock projecting a little above the
-water. The rock still bears his name. Meanwhile the [Sidenote: E] dead
-body of Hesiod was picked up immediately off the shore by a shoal of
-dolphins, who proceeded to carry it to Rhium, close to Molycrea. It
-happened that the Locrians were engaged in the Rhian festival and fair,
-which is still a notable celebration in those parts. At sight of the
-body being borne towards them they were naturally amazed, and when, on
-running down to the shore, they recognized the corpse—for it was still
-fresh—they could think of nothing but tracking out the murder, so high
-was the renown of Hesiod. Their object was soon achieved. They
-discovered the murderers, threw them into the sea, and razed their house
-to the ground. Meanwhile Hesiod was buried near the Nemeum. Most
-strangers, however, are ignorant of his tomb, which has been concealed
-because the people of [Sidenote: F] Orchomenus are in quest of it, from
-a desire, it is said, to recover the remains and bury them in their own
-country in accordance with an oracle.
-
-‘If, then, dolphins show such affectionate interest in the dead, it is
-still more natural for them to render help to the living, especially if
-they have been charmed by the flute or the singing of tunes. For, of
-course, we are all aware that music is a thing which these animals enjoy
-and court, swimming and gambolling beside a ship as its oarsmen row to
-the tune of song and flute in calm weather. They take a delight also in
-children when [Sidenote: 163] swimming, and they have diving matches
-with them. Hence there is an unwritten law that they shall not be
-harmed. No one hunts them or injures them; the only exception being
-that, when they get into the nets and do mischief to the catch, they are
-punished with a beating, like naughty children. I further remember
-hearing some Lesbians tell of a girl having been rescued from the sea by
-a dolphin. I am not, however, sure as to the exact details, and, since
-Pittacus knows them, he is the right person to tell us about them.’
-
-Pittacus thereupon assured us that the story had good warrant and was
-mentioned by many authorities. ‘An oracle was given to the colonizers of
-Lesbos that, when on the voyage they came across the reef known as
-Mesogeum, they should then and [Sidenote: B] there throw a bull into the
-water as an offering to Poseidon, and a live virgin to Amphitrite and
-the Nereids. There were seven chiefs, all of whom were kings,
-Echelaus—whom the Pythian oracle had assigned as leader of the
-colony—making an eighth. Echelaus was still a bachelor. When as many of
-the seven as had unmarried girls cast lots, the lot fell upon the
-daughter of Smintheus. Upon getting near the place, they decked her in
-fine clothes and gold ornaments, and, after offering prayer, were on the
-point of lowering her into the water. Now it happened that one of the
-party on the ship—assuredly a gallant young man—was in love with her.
-His name has been preserved to us as Enalus. This youth, in the passion
-of the [Sidenote: C] moment, seized by an eager but utterly hopeless
-desire to succour the girl, darted forward at the right instant and,
-throwing his arms about her, cast himself along with her into the sea.
-Now from the first there was spread among the contingent a rumour,
-lacking certainty, but nevertheless widely believed, that they were safe
-and had been rescued; and at a later date, it is said, Enalus appeared
-in Lesbos and told how they had been carried by dolphins through the sea
-and cast ashore without harm upon the mainland. He had other still more
-miraculous experiences to tell, which held the crowd spellbound with
-amazement, but for all of which he gave actual evidence. For when an
-enormous wave was rushing sheer round [Sidenote: D] the island and
-people were terrified, he alone ventured to face it. [Sidenote: *] On
-its retiring, a number of polypi followed him to the temple of Poseidon.
-From the largest of these he took a stone which it was carrying, and
-offered it as a dedication. That stone we call Enalus.
-
-‘Speaking generally, the man who knows the difference between impossible
-and unfamiliar, between unreasonable and unexpected, will be most a man
-after your own heart, Chilon; he will neither believe nor disbelieve
-without discrimination, but will carefully observe your own rule of
-“_nothing in excess_”.’
-
-Anacharsis next made the remark that, as Thales believed [Sidenote: E]
-all the greatest and most important components of the universe to
-contain soul, there was no reason to wonder if the most splendid actions
-were brought to pass by the will of God. ‘For the body is the instrument
-of the soul, and soul is the instrument of God. And as, though many of
-the motions of the body proceed from itself, the most and the finest are
-produced by the soul, so again is it with the soul. While it performs
-many actions on its own motion, in other cases it is but lending itself,
-as the aptest of all instruments, to the use of God, for Him to direct
-and apply it as He chooses. It would,’ said he, ‘be [Sidenote: F] a very
-strange thing if, while fire, wind, water, clouds, and rain are God’s
-instruments, by which He often preserves and nourishes and often kills
-and destroys, He has never on any occasion at all used animals as His
-agents. On the contrary, it is natural that, in their dependence upon
-the divine power, they should lend themselves more responsively to
-motions from God than does the bow to the Scythian or the lyre and flute
-to the Greek.’
-
-After this the poet Chersias mentioned, among other cases of persons
-rescued in hopeless situations, that of Cypselus, Periander’s father.
-When he was a newborn babe, the men who had been sent to make away with
-him were turned from their purpose because he smiled at them. When they
-changed their minds and came back to look for him, he was not to be
-found, his mother having hidden him in a chest. ‘It is for this reason
-[Sidenote: 164] that Cypselus built the house at Delphi, believing that
-the god had then stopped him from crying so that he might elude the
-search.’
-
-At this Pittacus, addressing Periander, observed, ‘I have to thank
-Chersias, Periander, for mentioning that house; for I have often wanted
-to ask you the meaning of those frogs which are carved in such large
-size at the base of the palm-tree. What reference have they to the god
-or to the dedication?’ Periander having bidden him ask Chersias, who
-knew the reason and was present when Cypselus consecrated the house,
-Chersias said with [Sidenote: B] a smile, ‘No: I will give no
-information until these gentlemen have told me the meaning of their
-_Nothing in excess_ and _Know thyself_, and of those words which have
-kept many people from marrying, made many distrustful, and reduced some
-to positive dumbness—the words _Give a pledge, and Mischief is nigh._’
-‘Why do you need us to tell you that,’ said Pittacus, ‘seeing that you
-have so long admired the stories in which Aesop practically deals with
-each of those maxims?’ ‘Nay,’ replied Aesop, ‘he does need it, when he
-is joking at me. But when he is in earnest, he proves that Homer was
-their inventor. He says that Hector “knew himself”, inasmuch as, though
-[Sidenote: C] he attacked the rest,
-
- _Ajax, Telamon’s son, he would not fight, but he shunned him_,
-
-and that Odysseus recommends “nothing in excess” since he urges Diomede
-
- _Nay, prithee, Tydeus’ son; nor praise me much nor reprove me_.
-
-As for a pledge, not only is it the general opinion that he is
-reprobating it as a misguided and futile thing when he says
-
- _Sorry, I trow, to take are the pledges that sorry folk offer_,
-
-but our friend Chersias here tells us how “Mischief” was hurled from
-heaven by Zeus because she was present when he was tripped [Sidenote: D]
-up through pledging his word in connexion with the birth of Heracles.’
-
-Here Solon interposed. ‘Well, Homer was a very wise man, and we should
-do well to take his advice:
-
- _Already the night is here; night bids, and ’tis good to obey her._
-
-Let us therefore pour an offering to the Muses and to Poseidon and
-Amphitrite, and then—with your permission—break up the party.’
-
-This, Nicarchus, terminated the party on that occasion.
-
-Footnote 24:
-
- The home of Bias.
-
-Footnote 25:
-
- According to another account he waited till the shadow was equal in
- length to the stick. The pyramid was then also equal in height to the
- length of its shadow.
-
-Footnote 26:
-
- The divinities of spring-water.
-
-Footnote 27:
-
- The title _Lusios_ or _Luaios_ was popularly interpreted Deliverer
- (from care or difficulty).
-
-Footnote 28:
-
- See note on _Amasis_.
-
-Footnote 29:
-
- i.e. anointing himself, not in connexion with bathing, but with
- exercise in the wrestling-schools.
-
-Footnote 30:
-
- The precise remark is uncertain, the text here being corrupt.
-
-Footnote 31:
-
- Equivalent to a command to ‘go weep’.
-
-Footnote 32:
-
- In antiquity these vessels were of bronze.
-
-Footnote 33:
-
- Which was bequeathed ‘to the wisest’. It was given to Thales, who
- passed it on to another, and the process was repeated till it came
- back to Thales, whereupon he dedicated it to Apollo.
-
-
-
-
- ON OLD MEN IN PUBLIC LIFE
-
-
-It is well known, Euphanes, that as an admirer of Pindar you [Sidenote:
-783 B] are fond of quoting his ‘fine and forcible words’:
-
- _When struggle is afoot, excuses
- Cast a deep cloud on valour._
-
-In connexion with the struggles of public life timidity and weakness can
-find plenty of excuses, but as a last and most desperate plea they urge
-‘advancing years’. This is their pretext _par excellence_ for blunting
-ambition and putting it out of countenance. They argue that there is a
-fitting close to a public, as much as to an athletic, career. For these
-reasons [Sidenote: C] I think it well to take my own ordinary
-reflections upon ‘old men in public life’ and lay them before yourself.
-They may prevent either of us from deserting that long companionship
-which has hitherto followed a common path, and from abandoning that
-public life which may be regarded as a familiar friend from youth up, in
-order to adopt another which is unfamiliar, and with which there is no
-time for us to become thoroughly intimate. I would have us abide by our
-original principle, and determine that life and the worthy life shall
-end together. It is not for us to convert the brief remainder into a
-confession that the bulk of our time has been wastefully applied to no
-good purpose. [Sidenote: D]
-
-It is not, indeed, true—as some one told Dionysius—that ‘despotism is a
-fine shroud’. In his case the combination of absolutism with injustice
-was only made all the more complete a calamity by the fact that it never
-ceased. It was therefore a shrewd remark of Diogenes, when at a later
-date he saw Dionysius’ son in a humble private station at Corinth.
-‘Dionysius,’ said he, ‘you are far from receiving your deserts. Instead
-of living a free and fearless life here with us, you ought to have been
-there, housed in the despot’s palace and made to live in it, like your
-father, till old age.’ It is different with constitutional and
-democratic statesmanship. When a man has learned to show himself a
-profitable subject as well as a profitable ruler, he [Sidenote: E] does
-indeed obtain at death a ‘fine shroud’, in the shape of the good name
-earned by his life. For this—to quote Simonides—
-
- _Is the last thing to sink beneath the ground_,
-
-except in cases where high human interests and noble zeal are earlier to
-fail and die than natural desires.
-
-Are the active and divine elements of our being more evanescent than the
-passionate and corporeal? That were an unworthy view to hold; as
-unworthy as to accept the doctrine that the [Sidenote: F] only thing of
-which we never weary is making gain. On the contrary, we should improve
-upon Thucydides, and regard as ‘_the only thing that never ages_’ not
-‘_the love of honour_‘, but that public spirit and activity which even
-ants and bees maintain till the end. No one has ever seen old age
-convert a bee into a drone. Yet there are some who claim that public men
-who have passed their prime should sit and be fed in seclusion at home,
-allowing their practical abilities to rust away in idleness. [Sidenote:
-784] Cato used to say that, to the many plagues of its own from which
-old age suffers, there is no justification for deliberately adding the
-disgrace of vice. There are many vices, but none can do more than weak
-and cowardly inactivity to disgrace a man in years—a man who skulks away
-from the public offices to look after a houseful of women, or to
-supervise gleaners and reapers in the country.
-
- _Where now
- Is Oedipus? Where the famed riddles now?_
-
-It is one thing to wait till old age before commencing public life, and
-to be like Epimenides, who—so they say—fell asleep a youth and fifty
-years afterwards awoke an old man. If, in [Sidenote: B] such a case, one
-were to divest himself of that quiet habit which has lasted all his
-life, and were to plunge into struggles and worries with which he was
-unfamiliar, and for which he was not trained by intercourse with public
-affairs or with mankind, there would be room for remonstrance. We might
-say, as the Pythian priestess said, ‘_You come too late_’ in your quest
-of office and leadership. You are past the time for knocking at the door
-of the Presidency. You are like some blundering reveller whose surprise
-visit is not made till night; or like some stranger who is in quest, not
-of a new district or country, but of a new life, about which you know
-nothing. If Simonides says
-
- _The State is a man’s teacher_,
-
-it is true only of those who have the time to change their teacher and
-learn a new lesson—a lesson slowly and laboriously acquired by means of
-many a struggle and experience, and only when it [Sidenote: C] can take
-its hold sufficiently early on a natural genius for bearing toils and
-troubles with equanimity.
-
-To resume. We find that, on the contrary, it is striplings and youths
-whom sensible men do their best to keep out of public business. Witness
-our laws, under which the crier in the Assembly, when inviting speech
-and advice, calls upon the platform in the first instance not an
-Alcibiades or a Pytheas, but persons over fifty. Foolish audacity and
-lack of experience [Sidenote: D] are nowhere so out of place as in a
-deliberator or a judge.[34] Cato, when past eighty and on his defence,
-said it was hard to have to defend himself before one set of people
-after having lived with another. It is agreed on all hands that the
-measures of Caesar—the conqueror of Antony—became considerably more
-regal and good for the public towards the end of his life. Once, when by
-stern application of custom and law he was correcting the rising
-generation, and they made an outcry, his own words were: ‘Young men,
-listen to an old man to whom old men listened [Sidenote: E] when he was
-young.’ It was in old age, too, that the statesmanship of Pericles
-reached its greatest influence. This was the time when he induced the
-Athenians to enter upon the war, and when he successfully opposed their
-ill-timed eagerness to fight a battle against sixty thousand
-men-at-arms, by all but sealing up the public armouries and the locks of
-the gates. As for what Xenophon writes of Agesilaus, it is best to quote
-verbatim. _‘Is there any youth with whom this old man did not compare to
-advantage? Who in the prime of life was so formidable to an enemy as
-Agesilaus was at the most advanced age? Of whom was the foe so glad to
-be rid as of Agesilaus, though he was old [Sidenote: F] when his end
-came? Who inspired such courage in his own side as Agesilaus, although
-close upon the end of life? What young man was more regretted by his
-friends than Agesilaus, though he died when full of years?_’
-
-Well, if time was no hindrance to the great actions of men like these,
-what of us, who nowadays enjoy the luxury of a public life which admits
-of no despots, no fighting, no sieges, but only of warless contests and
-of ambitions which are for the most part settled by just means according
-to law and reason? Are we [Sidenote: 785] to play the coward? Must we
-confess that we are the inferiors, not merely of the commanders and
-popular leaders of those days, but of the poets, leaders of thought, and
-actors? Take Simonides. He won choric victories in old age, as is
-evident from the last lines of the epigram:
-
- _And withal to Simonides fell the glory and prize of the poet;
- Fell to Leoprepes’ son, come to his eightieth year._
-
-Take Sophocles. It is said that, when his sons charged him with being in
-his dotage, he read in his defence the entrance ode of the _Oedipus at
-Colonus_, beginning:
-
- _To this land of the steed, O stranger,
- To the goodliest homes on earth,
- Thou hast come—to the white Colonus,
- Fond haunt of the nightingale,
- Where her clear voice trills its sorrow
- In the green of the leafy dell...._
-
-a lyric which won such admiration that he left the court, as it
-[Sidenote: B] might have been the theatre, amid the applause and cheers
-of the audience. A little epigram, admitted to be by Sophocles, contains
-the words:
-
- _Five years and fifty Sophocles had seen,
- Ere for Herodotus he wrought a song._
-
-Take Philemon, the comic poet, and Alexis. They were still putting plays
-upon the stage, still winning crowns, when death overtook them. Take
-Polus, the tragedian. Eratosthenes and Philochorus inform us that,
-shortly before his end, and when [Sidenote: C] he was seventy, he acted
-eight tragedies in four days.
-
-Is it, I say, creditable that old men of the platform should show a
-poorer spirit than old men of the stage? That they should retire from
-the sacred contests—for ‘sacred’ these veritably are—and give up the
-rôle of the public man in exchange for goodness knows what other part?
-From king, say, to farmer is a descent indeed. Demosthenes calls it
-cruel treatment of the _Paralus_, to make that sacred warship carry
-cargoes of timber, vine-stakes, and cattle for Meidias. But suppose a
-public man abandons the Presidentship of Games, his seat on the Federal
-Board, his high place in the Sacred League, and is found [Sidenote: D]
-measuring out barley-meal and olive-cake, or shearing sheep. It cannot
-but look as if he were needlessly courting the status of ‘old worn-out
-horse’. As for leaving a public career to engage in vulgar and petty
-trade, one might as well take some self-respecting lady, strip off her
-gown, give her an apron, and keep her in a tavern. Turn public ability
-to mere business and money-making, and its rank and character [Sidenote:
-E] are lost.
-
-Or if, as a last alternative, people choose to talk of ‘ease and
-enjoyment’, when they mean luxurious self-indulgence; if they recommend
-the public man to adopt that process of idle senile decay, I hardly know
-which of two ugly comparisons will best hit off such a life. Shall I say
-it is a case of sailors taking ‘Aphrodite-holiday’ and keeping it up for
-ever, without waiting till their ship is berthed, but deserting it while
-still on the voyage? Or is it a case of ‘Heracles-chez-Omphale’—as some
-sorry humourists depict him—wearing a saffron gown and quietly allowing
-Lydian handmaids to fan him and braid his hair? Are we to treat our
-public man in that way? To strip off his [Sidenote: F] lion’s-skin, lay
-him on a couch, and feast him, with lute and flute lulling him all the
-while? Or should we not take warning by the retort of Pompey the Great
-to Lucullus? The latter, after his campaigns and public services, had
-given himself up to baths, dinners, social entertainments in the
-daytime, profound indolence, and new-fangled notions in the way of
-house-building. Meanwhile he accused Pompey of a fondness for place and
-power unsuited to his years. Pompey replied that for an old man
-effeminacy was more unseasonable than office. When he was [Sidenote:
-786] ill and the doctor ordered him fieldfares—the bird being then out
-of season and difficult to procure—and when some one told him that
-Lucullus had a large number in his preserves, he refused to send for or
-receive one, exclaiming, ‘What? Pompey could not live but for the luxury
-of Lucullus?’
-
-It may be true that nature ordinarily seeks pleasure and delight. But,
-with an old man, the body has become incapable of all pleasures except a
-few which are essential. Not only is it the case that
-
- _The Queen of Love turns weary from the old_,
-
-[Sidenote: B] as Euripides has it. Though they may retain the appetite
-for eating and drinking—generally in a dulled or toothless form—they
-find a difficulty in whetting the edge or sharpening the teeth even of
-that. It is in the mind that one must lay up a stock of pleasures,
-though not of the mean and ignoble kind indicated by Simonides, when he
-told those who reproached him with avarice that, though age had robbed
-him of other joys, he had still one left to support his declining
-years—the joy of money-making. In public activity there are pleasures of
-the greatest and noblest sort, such as we may believe to be the only, or
-the chief, enjoyment of the gods themselves—I mean those which result
-from a beneficent deed or a fine achievement.
-
-Nicias the painter was so taken up with his artistic work that he was
-often obliged to ask his servants whether he had had his [Sidenote: C]
-bath or his breakfast. Archimedes stuck so closely to his drawing-board
-that, in order to anoint him, his attendants had to drag him away and
-strip him by force. He then went on drawing his diagrams in the ointment
-on his body. Carus the flutist (an acquaintance of your own) used to say
-that people did not know how much more pleasure he himself got from
-playing than he gave to others; otherwise an audience would be paid to
-listen instead of paying. Can we fail to perceive how great are the
-pleasures derived from fine actions and public-spirited achievements by
-those who put high qualities to use? Nor is it by means of those
-effeminate titillations which soft and agreeable movements exert upon
-the flesh. The ticklings of the flesh [Sidenote: D] are spasmodic,
-fickle, intermittent, whereas the pleasures of noble deeds—the creations
-of the true statesman’s art—will bear the soul aloft in grandeur and
-pride and joy, as if, I will not say upon the ‘_golden wings_’ of
-Euripides, but upon those ‘_celestial pinions_’ described by Plato.
-
-Remember the instances of which you have so often heard. Epaminondas,
-when asked what had been his most pleasurable experience, replied,
-‘Having been victorious at Leuctra while [Sidenote: E] my father and
-mother were still alive.’ When Sulla first reached Rome after purging
-Italy of its civil wars, he could not sleep a wink that night. As he has
-written in his own _Notes and Recollections_, so elated was his mind
-with the greatness of his joy and happiness, that it seemed to walk on
-air. If we admit, with Xenophon, that ‘_no hearing is so agreeable as
-praise_‘, no sight, recollection, or reflection is so fraught with
-gratification as the contemplation of exploits of our own in the
-conspicuous public arena of office and statesmanship. Not but what, when
-[Sidenote: F] a grateful goodwill testifies to our achievements, and
-when there is a rivalry of commendation productive of well-earned
-popularity, our merit acquires a gloss and brilliance which adds to our
-sense of pleasure.
-
-Therefore, instead of permitting our reputation to wither in our old age
-like an athlete’s crown, we must be constantly adopting new devices and
-making fresh efforts to enliven the sense of past obligation, to enhance
-it, and to make it permanent. We must act like the craftsmen who were
-required to provide for the security of the Delian ship. They used to
-replace unsound timbers by others, and, by means of insertions and
-repairs, were regarded as keeping the vessel immortal and indestructible
-from [Sidenote: 787] the oldest times. Reputation is like flame. There
-is no difficulty in keeping it alive; it merely requires a little
-feeding with fuel. But let either of them become extinct and cold, and
-it will take some trouble to rekindle.
-
-Lampis, the shipowner, was once asked how he made his fortune. ‘Making
-the big one,’ he answered, ‘was easy enough; but it was a long and hard
-business to make the little one.’ So with political power and
-reputation. Though not easy to get in the first instance, anything will
-suffice to maintain and increase them when once they are great. It is as
-with a friend, when once he becomes such. He does not look for a large
-number of important services in order to retain his friendship;
-[Sidenote: B] small tokens, consistently shown, will keep his constant
-affection. Nor are the confidence and friendship of the people
-perpetually calling for you to open your purse, to play the champion, or
-to hold an office. They are retained by mere public spirit—by being in
-no haste to desert or shirk the burden of care and watchfulness.
-
-Campaigns are not matters of everlastingly facing the enemy, fighting,
-and besieging. They have also their times of sacrifice, their occasional
-social gatherings, their periods of ample leisure, when jest and
-nonsense are toward. And why should one look upon public life with
-dread, as being laborious, wearisome, and devoid of consolations, seeing
-that the theatre, processions, awards, ‘_dances of the Muses and
-Gladsomeness_,’ and honour [Sidenote: C] after honour to the gods relax
-the stern brow of the Bureau or the Chamber, and yield a manifold return
-of inviting entertainment?
-
-In the next place jealousy, the greatest bane of public life, is less
-severe upon old age. For, to quote Heracleitus, ‘_dogs bark at the man
-they do not know_.’ Though jealousy may fight with the beginner at the
-doors of the platform and refuse him access, no savageness or fierceness
-is shown to a man of familiar and established reputation, but he finds
-friendly admittance. For this reason some have compared jealousy to
-smoke. In the case of beginners, during the process of kindling, it
-pours forth in clouds; when they are in full blaze, it disappears. And
-while [Sidenote: D] people resist and dispute other forms of
-superiority—in merit, birth, or public spirit—through a belief that any
-acknowledgement to others means so much derogation to themselves, the
-primacy which is due to time—‘seniority’ in the proper sense—is conceded
-without a grudge. Respect paid to the aged has the unique quality of
-doing more honour to the giver than to the recipient.
-
-Moreover it is not every one who expects to attain to the power derived
-from wealth, eloquence, or wisdom; whereas no public man despairs of
-winning the esteem and distinction to which age gradually leads.
-
-Imagine a navigator, who has managed his ship safely in the face of
-contrary winds and waves, and then, when the weather [Sidenote: E]
-becomes fair and calm, wishes to lay her to. It is just as strange when
-a man has fought his ship in a long battle with jealousies, and then,
-after they are quietly laid, backs out of public life, and, in
-abandoning his activities, abandons his partners and associates. The
-more time there has been, the more friends and fellow-workers he has
-made; but he is neither in a position to lead them with him off the
-stage, as a poet does his chorus, [Sidenote: F] nor has he the right to
-leave them in the lurch. A long public life is like an old tree. To pull
-it up is no easy task, because of its many roots and its entanglement
-with many interests, which involve worse wrenching and disturbance when
-you leave them than when you stay.
-
-And if political conflict does leave you some remnant of jealousy or
-antagonism to face when you are old, it is better to quell it by means
-of your position than to turn your back and retire without armour or
-weapons of defence. People are not so ready to attack you out of
-jealousy when you are still in action as they are out of contempt when
-you give it up.
-
-[Sidenote: 788] We may also appeal to the great Epaminondas and his
-remark to the Thebans. It was winter at the time, and the Arcadians were
-inviting them to enter the city and live in the houses. This he refused
-to allow, observing: ‘At the present time they come to look at you and
-admire your wrestling and military exercises; but if they see you
-sitting by the fire and chewing your beans, they will regard you as no
-better than themselves.’ So with an aged man. When making a speech,
-transacting business, or receiving honours, he is a dignified spectacle;
-but when he lies all day on a couch or sits in the corner of a public
-[Sidenote: B] resort talking drivel and wiping his nose, he is an object
-of contempt. This is precisely what Homer teaches, if you read him
-rightly. Nestor, who was campaigning at Troy, received high respect and
-honour; whereas Peleus and Laertes, the stay-at-homes, were despised,
-and counted for nothing.
-
-Nay, even intellectual power begins to fail those who have let
-themselves relax. Idleness gradually renders it feeble and flaccid, in
-the absence of some necessary exercise of thought to keep the logical
-and practical faculty perpetually alive and in trim.
-
- _Like glossy bronze, ’tis use that makes it shine._
-
-Bodily weakness may be a drawback to public activity in the [Sidenote:
-C] case of those who, in spite of their years, make the platform or the
-Cabinet their goal. But it is more than compensated by the advantage of
-their caution and prudence. They do not dash into public affairs with
-the expression of opinions prompted by error or vanity as the case may
-be, and carrying the mob with them in as excited a condition as a stormy
-sea; but they deal in a mild and reasonable fashion with such matters as
-arise. It is for this reason that, in times of disaster or alarm,
-communities feel the need of a Board of Government consisting of senior
-men. Often they have fetched back from the country [Sidenote: D] an old
-man who neither asked nor wished it, and have compelled him to put his
-hand to the helm and steer the ship of State into safety, while they
-thrust aside generals and popular leaders, despite all their ability to
-shout, to talk without taking breath, and also, no doubt, to make
-‘_sturdy stand and doughty fight_’ against the enemy. When Chares, the
-son of Theochares—a man in the prime of bodily strength and
-condition—was brought into the ring in opposition to Timotheus and
-Iphicrates by the public speakers of Athens, with the claim that ‘this
-is the kind of general the Athenians should have’, Timotheus [Sidenote:
-E] replied: ‘By no manner of means. No doubt that is the sort needed to
-carry the general’s baggage; but the general should be one who “_sees
-before and after_”, and whose calculations as to policy no distractions
-can disturb.’ Sophocles said ‘he was glad that old age had enabled him
-to escape from sexual passion—a fierce and mad master.’ But in public
-life we have to escape, not from one master—the love of women—but from
-many madder still; from contentiousness, vanity, and the desire to be
-first and greatest—a malady most fertile in envy, jealousy, and
-[Sidenote: F] feud. Some of these feelings are abated or dulled, some
-are altogether chilled and quenched, by old age. And though old age may
-do something to diminish our zest for action, it does more to guard us
-from the intemperate heat of passion, so that we can bring a sober and
-steady reason to bear upon our thoughts.
-
-By all means, in dealing with one who begins to play the youth when his
-hair is grey, let it be—as it is considered—sound warning to say:
-
- _Misguided man, stay quiet in thy bed._
-
-[Sidenote: 789] Let us remonstrate with an old man when he rises from a
-long privacy, as from a bed of sickness, and bestirs himself to obtain a
-command or an official post. But suppose a man has lived a life of
-public action and thoroughly played the part. To prevent him from going
-on till ‘finis and the torch’, to call him back and bid him change the
-road he has long followed, is utterly unfeeling, and bears no
-resemblance to the case just given. If an old man has his wreath on and
-is scenting himself in readiness to marry, there is nothing unreasonable
-in trying to dissuade him by quoting the lines addressed to Philoctetes:
-
- _But, pray, where is the bride, where the young maid,
- Would welcome thee? Rare bridegroom thou, poor soul!_
-
-Nay, they are fond of making jests of the kind at their own [Sidenote:
-B] expense:
-
- _I’m marrying old, and for the neighbours’ good:
- I know it._
-
-But when a man has been long married, and has lived with his wife for
-years without a fault to find, to tell him that he should divorce her
-because he is old, and that he should live by himself or get a wretched
-concubine in place of his lawful spouse, is the very extreme of
-absurdity. In the same way when an aged man seeks to enter
-politics—Chlidon the farmer, Lampon the ship’s captain, or some
-philosopher from the Garden[35]—there is some reason in admonishing him,
-and keeping him to the state of inactivity to which he has been used.
-But it is urging a public man to act [Sidenote: C] with injustice and
-ingratitude, when we take hold of a Phocion, a Cato, or a Pericles, and
-say, ‘Sir Athenian—or Sir Roman—
-
- _Thine age is wither’d and thy head o’erfrosted_;
-
-therefore sue for a divorce from statesmanship, have done with the
-worrying business of the platform and the Board of War, and make haste
-into the country, to live with farming “for a waiting-maid” or to occupy
-the rest of your days with thrift and the keeping of accounts.’
-
-Well, but (it may be asked) what of the soldier in the comedy with his
-
- _Discharged! No pay! because of my white hair?_
-
-Quite true, my friend. The War-God’s servants must be in the prime of
-manly vigour. Their business is with
-
- _War and war’s baleful work_,
-
-in which, though an old man’s grey hair may be hidden by his [Sidenote:
-D] helmet,
-
- _Yet in secret his thews are aweary_,
-
-and, though the spirit be willing, the strength can no longer respond.
-
-But the ministers of Zeus—the God of Council, of Assembly, of the
-State—are not asked for deeds of hand and foot, but for counsel and
-foresight. We ask them for advice, not such as to evoke roars of mere
-noise in the Assembly, but full of sense and shrewdness, and safe to
-follow. In their case the despised white hair and wrinkles become the
-visible tokens of experience. They suggest moral force, and are
-therefore a help to persuasion. [Sidenote: E] It is the part of youth to
-obey; of old age to guide; and that state is safest where
-
- _Best are the old men’s counsels,
- And best the young man’s spear._
-
-Homer’s
-
- _And first he summon’d to council the old men mighty-hearted
- By the side of the ship of Nestor_,
-
-is a touch greatly admired. For the same reason the Select Board
-associated with the kings at Sparta was called by the Pythian oracle
-‘elder-born’, but by Lycurgus ‘old men’ _sans phrase_, while the Roman
-Council is called _Senatus_ down to the present time. The law crowns a
-man with the circlet and the wreath, Nature crowns him with grey hair,
-and both are the venerable emblems of sovereign rank. Moreover, the
-words [Sidenote: F] _geras_, ‘prerogative,’ and _gerairein_, ‘honour
-with prerogative’—derived from _geron_, ‘old man’—retain a dignified
-sense, not because the old man’s bath is warmed and his bed a softer
-one, but because he amounts to a king in the state by virtue of his
-wisdom; and wisdom is like a late-fruiting plant, it is only in old age
-that nature brings out its special excellence and perfect quality.
-
-When the king of kings prayed to the gods
-
- _Would that among the Achaeans were ten such as he to advise me!_
-
-[Sidenote: 790] —meaning Nestor—not one of the ‘_valorous_’ and
-‘_prowess-breathing_’ Achaeans complained. They all admitted that not
-only in statesmanship, but in war also, age was of great moment, since
-
- _More worth is one sage thought than many a hand_,
-
-and one rational and cogent judgement achieves the finest and most
-important results in public affairs.
-
-Now kingship, the most complete and comprehensive form of public
-activity, is full of cares, labours, and preoccupations. Seleucus, it
-was said, used to declare that if ordinary people knew what a business
-it was merely to write and read so many letters, they would not pick up
-the crown if they found it [Sidenote: B] lying in the street. And the
-story goes that, when Philip was proposing to encamp in an excellent
-position, but was told that there was no fodder for the pack-animals, he
-exclaimed: ‘Good Heavens! what is our life worth, when we are obliged to
-suit it to the convenience of our asses?’ Ought we then to give the same
-advice to a king when he has grown old? Bid him lay aside the crown and
-the purple, take to a cloak and a crutched stick, and live in the
-country, for fear people should think it officious and unseasonable of
-him to be reigning when he is grey?
-
-But we have no right to talk in this way about an Agesilaus, or a Numa,
-or a Darius. Neither then should we compel a Solon [Sidenote: C] to
-leave the Council of the Areopagus, nor a Cato the Senate, nor yet urge
-a Pericles to leave popular government to look after itself. It is
-contrary to reason that in our youth we should bounce upon the platform,
-spend upon the public all the passionate licence of our ambition, and
-then, when age arrives and brings the wisdom of experience, desert and
-betray our public standing like a woman whom we have used at our
-pleasure.
-
-In Aesop, when the hedgehog wanted to pick off his ticks, the fox would
-not let him. ‘These are glutted,’ said he, ‘and [Sidenote: D] if you get
-rid of them, hungry ones will be at you in their place.’ So with public
-life. If it is perpetually shedding the old men, it will necessarily be
-plagued with young ones, who are thirsting for notoriety and power but
-devoid of political sense. How can they be otherwise, if they are to
-have no elderly statesman to watch and learn from? A ship’s captain is
-not made by treatises on navigation. He must often have stood upon the
-quarter-deck and watched the struggle with wave and wind and stormy
-nights, when
-
- _The sailor on the brine longs sore
- For Tyndareus’ twin sons._
-
-And can the handling of a State and the persuading of Assembly
-[Sidenote: E] or Council be rightly left to a young man because he has
-read a book or taken down a lecture on statesmanship in the Lyceum?
-Though he has not taken his stand many a time beside rudder-rope and
-tiller, leaned first to this side and then to that, while generals and
-public leaders were pitting their knowledge and experience against each
-other, and so learned his lesson in the midst of dangers and
-difficulties? Beyond question, No! For the education and training of the
-young, if for no other reason, old men should play a public part. A
-teacher of letters or of music himself reads or plays a passage over
-first by way of example [Sidenote: F] to his pupils. So the authority on
-statesmanship must guide a young man, not simply by talking or
-suggesting from outside, but by the practical administration of public
-business. It is by deeds as well as by words that he will mould him to
-the true shape, filled with the breath of life. It is training of this
-kind—not in the schools where you practise safe forms of wrestling under
-mannerly professors, but in contests truly Olympian and Pythian—that
-makes one, as Simonides puts it,
-
- _Keep pace, as with the steed the wearied colt_;
-
-[Sidenote: 791] —Aristeides with Cleisthenes, Cimon with Aristeides,
-Phocion with Chabrias, Cato with Fabius Maximus, Pompeius with Sulla,
-Polybius with Philopoemen. It was by attaching themselves when young to
-older men, by using them as supports to their own growth, by being
-raised to their standard of statesmanlike achievement, that they
-acquired the political experience which brought them fame and power.
-
-When certain professors declared that the claim of Aeschines, the
-Academic philosopher, to have been a pupil of Carneades was contrary to
-fact, he replied, ‘O yes: I was a disciple of Carneades at the time when
-age had taken all the fuss and noise [Sidenote: B] out of his teaching
-and reduced it to practical and serviceable shape.’ With the
-statesmanship of an old man, however, it is not merely the talking, but
-the deeds, that lose all ostentation and itch for notoriety. They tell
-us that, when the iris has grown old and exhausted all crude exuberance
-of perfume, its fragrance gains in sweetness. So with the views and
-suggestions of the old. There is no crudeness in them, but always a
-quality of quiet solidity. For this reason, as I have said, we must have
-elderly men in public life. Plato speaks of mixing water with neat wine
-as the bringing of a ‘frenzied god’ to sanity by the [Sidenote: C]
-‘chastening of another who is sober’. So when young spirits in the
-Assembly are a-boil with the intoxication of glory and ambition, we need
-the old men’s caution to qualify them and to eliminate their mad excess
-of fire.
-
-There is another consideration. It is an error to suppose that
-statesmanship is like a voyage or a campaign—carried on for an ulterior
-object and discontinued when that is attained. Statesmanship is not a
-public burden, to be borne only so long as needs must. It is the career
-of a civilized being with a gift for citizenship and society, and with a
-natural disposition to live a life of public influence, worthy aims, and
-social helpfulness for as long as occasion calls.
-
-The right course therefore is to _be_ a public man, not to _have_ been
-one; just as it is right to speak the truth, not to [Sidenote: D] _have_
-spoken it; to act honestly, not to _have_ so acted; to love one’s
-country and fellow-citizens, not to _have_ loved them. Those are
-Nature’s objects, and where men are not utterly demoralized by idleness
-and effeminacy, her promptings are such as these:
-
- _Thy sire begat thee for rich use to men_,
-
-and
-
- _Ne’er let us cease from service to mankind._
-
-To urge the plea of ill-health or disablement is to blame disease and
-injury, not old age. Young men are often sickly, old men often vigorous.
-It is therefore not the old whom we should discourage, but the
-incapable. It is the capable whom [Sidenote: E] we should encourage, not
-the young. Aridaeus was young, and Antigonus old; but while Antigonus
-annexed nearly the whole of Asia, Aridaeus was like the ‘super’ upon the
-stage—a king with nothing to say, and a butt for whoever happened to be
-in power. To demand of the sophist Prodicus or the poet Philetas—who,
-young though they might be, were thin, sickly, and constantly taking to
-their beds through ill-health—that they should take up public life, were
-folly. But it were folly also to hinder old men like Phocion, or
-Masinissa the African, or the Roman Cato, from holding office or
-military command. The [Sidenote: F] Athenians being set upon an
-ill-timed war, Phocion ordered that every man under sixty should take up
-arms and serve. When this made them angry, he said, ‘There is no
-hardship. I, who am to be with you in command, am over eighty.’ And of
-Masinissa Polybius relates that he died when he was ninety, leaving a
-child of four, of whom he was the father. Shortly before his death he
-beat the Carthaginians in a great battle, [Sidenote: 792] and the next
-day was seen in front of his tent eating a loaf of cheap coarse bread.
-To expressions of surprise he answered that he did so to keep himself in
-training.
-
- _For like to goodly bronze, it shines in use,
- While a house crumbles, if left idle long_,
-
-says Sophocles. We may say the same of that glossy brightness of the
-mind, to which we owe calculation, memory, and sound judgement.
-
-For the same reason it is said that wars and campaigns make better kings
-than inactivity. Attalus, the brother of Eumenes, was so thoroughly
-enervated by long peace and [Sidenote: B] idleness that Philopoemen, one
-of his intimates, had simply to shepherd him and keep him fat. In fact,
-the Romans used to inquire of arrivals from Asia, whether ‘the king had
-any influence with Philopoemen’. It would be hard to find a Roman
-general more able than Lucullus, so long as he kept his intellect braced
-with action. But he surrendered himself to a life of inactivity, stayed
-at home, thought of nothing, and became as lifeless and shrunken as a
-sponge in a calm. Afterwards, in his old age, he so tamely accepted a
-certain freedman, Callisthenes, for his keeper, that the man [Sidenote:
-C] was thought to be bewitching him with spells and drugs, till at last
-his brother Marcus drove the fellow away and himself took to managing
-and tutoring him for the short remainder of his life. On the other hand,
-Darius, the father of Xerxes, used to say that he became his wisest in
-times of danger; and Ateas the Scythian declared that, when he had
-nothing to do, he could see nothing to distinguish him from his grooms.
-When some one asked the elder Dionysius if he had time to spare, he
-replied: ‘Heaven forbid I ever should!’ Whereas a bow, they tell us, is
-broken by stringing it tight, a mind is broken by leaving it loose. If a
-musician gives up listening [Sidenote: D] for pitch, a geometrician the
-solving of problems, an arithmetician the constant habit of calculation,
-old age will enfeeble the ability along with the loss of its exercise,
-although the art in these cases is not a ‘practic’ one, but a
-‘theoretic’. In the case of the special ability of the statesman—his
-caution, wisdom, and justice, together with an experienced knack of
-hitting the right language at the right time; that is to say, a faculty
-for creating persuasion—it is kept in good condition by constant speech,
-action, calculation, and judicial decision. It would be a dire mistake
-for it to abandon such activities [Sidenote: E] and permit all those
-important virtues to leak away from the mind. For it naturally means a
-decline of kindly interest in man and society—a thing which should be
-without limit or end.
-
-Suppose your father had been Tithonus. Suppose, though he was immortal,
-old age had made him require close and constant care. You would not, I
-imagine, have run away and repudiated the task of tending him, talking
-to him, and helping him, just because you had ‘borne the burden for a
-long time’. Well, your fatherland—or ‘motherland’ as it is called in
-Crete—has claims prior to those of parents, and greater. Your country’s
-life has been a long one, but she is not without old age. She is
-[Sidenote: F] not sufficient to herself, but is in perpetual need of
-watchful and considerate help. She therefore grasps at the statesman and
-holds him back:
-
- _Clutching his garment she stays him, though eager he be for
- departure._
-
-You are aware that I have performed my public duty at many a Pythian
-festival. But you would not say ‘Plutarch, you have done enough in the
-way of sacrifices, processions, and choruses. You are now in years; it
-is time to put off your wreath; age entitles you to leave the shrine
-alone’. Well, look at your own duty in the same way. In the sacred
-service of the State you are coryphaeus and prophet, and it is not for
-you to abandon that worship of Zeus, God of State and Assembly, in which
-you have been so long initiated and are so thoroughly versed.
-
-[Sidenote: 793] Permit me now to leave the arguments for quitting public
-life, and to examine another point. We must beware of inflicting upon
-our old age an unbecoming or exacting task, when so many portions of
-public work are so well suited to that time of life. If it had been
-proper for us to go on singing all our days, there are at our disposal
-many keys and modes, or, as the musicians call them, ‘systems.’ Our
-right course in our old age would have been to cultivate, not a mode
-both high and sharp, but one combining ease with appropriate character.
-And since Nature prompts mankind to act and speak—even more [Sidenote:
-B] than it prompts the swan to sing—until the end, our duty is not to
-lay action aside, like a lyre of too high a pitch, but to lower the key
-and adapt it to such forms of public effort as are light, unexacting,
-and within an old man’s compass. We do not leave our bodies entirely
-without muscular exercise because we cannot use the spade and the
-jumping-weights, or hurl the discus, or practise fencing, as we used to
-do. We swing or walk, and in some cases the breathing is exercised and
-warmth stimulated by playing a gentle game of ball, or by conversation.
-
-On the one hand, then, do not let us allow ourselves to become
-[Sidenote: C] stiff and torpid from inactivity. On the other, let us not
-undertake any and every official position, clutch at any and every kind
-of public work, and bring such an exposure upon old age that it is
-driven to exclaim in despair:
-
- _Right hand, how fain art thou to grasp the spear!
- How vain thy longing, in thy strengthlessness!_
-
-Even in the prime of strength a man wins no credit if he tries to take
-on his shoulders the whole pack of public business, and [Sidenote: D]
-refuses—like Zeus, according to the Stoics—to leave anything to others;
-if he insinuates himself everywhere and has his finger in everything,
-through an insatiable greed for notoriety or through jealousy of any one
-who contrives to get a share of honour and power in the community. But
-when a man is quite old, then, apart from the discredit, wretchedly hard
-work is entailed by that itch for office which is always courting every
-ballot-box, that meddlesomeness which lies in wait for every opportunity
-of acting on a jury or a committee, that ambition which snaps up every
-appointment as delegate or proctor. [Sidenote: E] Such work is a heavy
-tax on an old man, even when people are well-disposed. But the opposite
-may very well be the case. For young men hate him because he leaves them
-no opportunities and prevents them from coming to the front; while the
-rest of the community looks upon his itch for office and precedence with
-the same disapproval as upon the itch of other old men for money and
-pleasure.
-
-When Bucephalus was growing old, Alexander, being unwilling to overwork
-him, used to ride some other horse while reviewing the phalanx and
-getting it into position before the [Sidenote: F] battle. Then, after
-giving the word for the day, he changed his mount to Bucephalus, and at
-once led the charge and tried the fortunes of war. In the same way a
-sensible public man—in this case handling his own reins—will, when in
-years, hold aloof from unnecessary effort, leaving more vigorous persons
-to deal with the minor matters of state, but himself playing a zealous
-part in great ones.
-
-Athletes keep their bodies from all contact with necessary labours and
-in perfect trim for useless ones. We, on the contrary, will leave petty
-little details alone, and will keep ourselves in reserve for matters of
-moment. No doubt, as Homer says,
-
- _To the young all labours are seemly_,
-
-and the world gives consent and approval, calling them ‘public-spirited’
-and ‘energetic’ when they do a large number of little things, and
-‘noble’ and ‘lofty-minded’ when they do brilliant and distinguished
-things. At that time of life there are [Sidenote: 794] occasions when a
-venturesome aggressiveness is more or less in season and wears a grace
-of its own. But what when an elderly man consents to perform routine
-services to the public, such as letting out taxes, or superintending
-harbours and markets? What when he seizes opportunities of being sent on
-a mission to some governor or other powerful personage—a position for
-which there is no necessity, which contains no dignity, and which
-necessitates time-serving and complaisance? To my mind, my friend, his
-case is one for regret and commiseration; some may even think it
-distressingly vulgar.
-
-Not even positions of authority are any longer a suitable [Sidenote: B]
-sphere for him, unless they are of high rank and importance; such a
-position, for example, as you now hold in the Presidentship of the
-Areopagite Council, not to mention the distinguished rank of
-Amphictyon,[36] which your country has imposed upon you all your life,
-with its
-
- _Welcome toil and labour sweet to bear._
-
-Even these honours we should not seek, but should make from holding
-them. We should ask, not for them, but to be excused from them. It
-should seem, not that we are taking office to ourselves, but that we are
-surrendering ourselves to office. The Emperor Tiberius used to say that
-a man over sixty should be ashamed of holding out his wrist to a
-physician. But he should [Sidenote: C] be more ashamed of holding out
-his hand to the public in solicitation of its ‘vote and influence’. That
-situation is as humiliating and ignoble as the contrary is honourable
-and dignified—I mean when your country chooses you, calls you, and waits
-for you, and when you come down amidst respect and welcome, a ‘reverend
-signior’ indeed, to meet your distinction with gracious acceptance.
-
-Similarly with speaking in the Assembly. A man of advanced age should
-not be perpetually springing upon the platform and crowing back to every
-cock that crows. Young men are like horses, and he should not, by
-constantly grappling with [Sidenote: D] them and irritating them, lose
-control of their respect, or encourage the practice and habit of
-resistance to the reins. He should sometimes leave them to make a
-restive plunge for distinction, keeping out of the way and not
-interfering, unless the matter at stake is vital to the public safety or
-to decency and honour. In that case he should not wait to be called, but
-should let some one take him by the hand, or carry him in his chair, and
-push his way at more than full speed, like Appius Claudius in Roman
-history. The Romans had been defeated by Pyrrhus in a great battle, and
-Appius heard that the Senate [Sidenote: E] was listening to proposals
-for a truce and a peace. This was more than he could bear, and, though
-blind of both eyes, along he came in his chair through the Forum to the
-Senate House. He went in, planted himself before them, and said:
-‘Hitherto I have been distressed at the loss of my sight; now I could
-pray to be also unable to hear—that you are meditating so ignoble and
-disgraceful a transaction.’ Thereupon, partly by reproaches, partly by
-advice and encouragement, he persuaded them to have [Sidenote: F]
-immediate recourse to arms and to fight Pyrrhus to a finish for the
-prize of Italy.
-
-Again, when it became manifest that, in acting the demagogue,
-Peisistratus was aiming at absolutism, and yet no one ventured to resist
-or prevent it, Solon brought out his weapons with his own hands, piled
-them in front of his house, and called upon the citizens to help. And
-when Peisistratus sent and asked him what gave him the confidence to do
-so, he replied, ‘My age.’
-
-Things so vital as these, it is true, are rousing enough to fire even
-the most worn-out of old men, so long as he possesses the breath of life
-at all. Otherwise he will sometimes, as I have said, be showing good
-taste if he declines to perform paltry and menial tasks which bring more
-worry to the doer than good [Sidenote: 793] to the persons for whom they
-are done. There are also occasions when he will wait for the citizens to
-call for him, feel the need of him, and come to his house to fetch him.
-He is wanted, and therefore his appearance on the scene will carry more
-weight. But for the most part, though present, he will be silent and
-will leave the younger generation to do the speaking, while he acts as
-umpire to the match of political ambition. And if it goes beyond bounds,
-he will offer a mild reproof and courteously put an end to outbreaks of
-self-assertion, recrimination, or ill-temper. When a motion is wrong, he
-will reason with and correct the mover, but without blaming him. When it
-is right, he will commend it without reserve and will cheerfully
-acquiesce, often surrendering an argumentative victory in order that
-[Sidenote: B] a young man may get on in the world and be in good heart.
-In some cases he will supply a deficiency while paying a compliment,
-like Nestor with his
-
- _No man, I trow, will find fault with thy words among all the
- Achaeans:
- None say thee nay. Yet not to an end hast thou brought all the
- matter.
- True ’tis, thou art yet but young, and myself might be thine own
- father._
-
-There is a practice still more statesmanlike. One may not merely teach a
-lesson openly in public by means of a reproval unaccompanied by any
-sting of humiliation or injury to prestige. Still more may be done in
-private for persons with good political abilities. We may offer them
-kindly suggestions and assistance [Sidenote: C] towards the bringing
-forward of useful arguments and public measures, encourage them to high
-aims, help them to acquire a distinguished tone of mind, and—as
-riding-masters do with their horses—see that at first the people shall
-be gentle and docile for them to mount. And if so be a young man should
-make a failure, instead of leaving him to despond, we may rouse and
-comfort him. It was in this way that the spirits and courage of Cimon
-were revived by Aristeides, and those of Themistocles by Mnesiphilus,
-when they began by incurring ill-odour and a bad name for forwardness
-and recklessness. It is also said of Demosthenes that, when he was in
-great distress at his failure [Sidenote: D] in the Assembly, he was
-taken to task by a very old man who had heard Pericles, and who told him
-that he had no right to despair of himself, seeing that he possessed
-gifts so much like those of that eminent person. So when Timotheus was
-hissed for his innovations and treated as guilty of an outrage on music,
-Euripides bade him keep up his courage, since he would soon be dictating
-to his audience.
-
-At Rome the term of the Vestal Virgins is divided into three stages—one
-for learning, one for the performance of the ceremonies, and the third
-for teaching. So with the votaries of [Sidenote: E] Artemis at Ephesus;
-each is called first a novice, next a priestess, and then a
-past-priestess. In the same way the complete statesman is during the
-first part of his public career still engaged in learning the mysteries;
-during the last part he is engaged in teaching and initiating.
-
-Whereas to superintend the athletics of others is to take no part in
-them oneself, it is otherwise with those who train a youth in public
-business and the political arena, and who make sure that for the good of
-his country he shall
-
- _Be speaker of words and eke doer of deeds._
-
-They perform good service, not in some petty inconsiderable [Sidenote:
-F] part of public life, but in one to which Lycurgus devoted his first
-and foremost attention—training the young to give to every old man the
-same unfailing obedience as to a lawgiver. What had Lysander in his
-mind, when he declared that the finest form of old age is to be found at
-Lacedaemon? Did he mean that at Lacedaemon elderly people had the best
-opportunities of doing nothing, of lending money, of sitting together
-and playing dice, or of meeting together at an early hour to drink?
-Surely not. He meant that all persons at that time of life hold, as it
-were, a magisterial position; that they are, in a sense, public fathers
-or guardians, who not only look after matters of state, but take active
-cognisance of everything a young [Sidenote: 796] man may do in connexion
-with his training-school, his pastimes, or his style of living. Such a
-position makes them an object of fear to wrong-doers, and of respect and
-affection to the well-behaved. For young men make a point of cultivating
-their society, because of the way in which they encourage steadiness and
-nobility of character by sympathy and approbation and without jealousy.
-
-The last-named feeling is not a becoming one at any time of life. But
-whereas in the case of a young man it finds plenty of respectable
-names—‘rivalry’, ‘emulation’, ‘ambition’—in an old man it is a coarse
-and vulgar sentiment altogether out of place. The aged statesman should
-therefore be entirely free from jealousy. He should be no malignant old
-tree, [Sidenote: B] unequivocally snubbing the shoots and checking the
-growth of plants which spring up beside or beneath it, but should give
-them a kindly welcome and every opportunity to cling to him and twine
-about him. He should hold young people upright, lead them by the hand,
-and foster them, not only by wise suggestion and advice, but by
-surrendering to them political tasks which bring honour and distinction,
-or which afford scope for services of an innocent nature and yet welcome
-and gratifying to the public.
-
-When a task is a stubborn and arduous one, or when it is like a medicine
-which stings and gives pain at the moment, while its beneficial effects
-are not produced till afterwards, he [Sidenote: C] should not prescribe
-it for young people. Instead of subjecting them in their inexperienced
-state to the uproars of an unreasonable mob, he should himself accept
-the unpopularity attaching to salutary measures. By this means he will
-render a youth both more well-disposed and also more zealous in other
-duties.
-
-Meanwhile it must be remembered that statesmanship does not consist
-solely in holding office, acting as envoy, shouting loudly in the
-Assembly, and indulging in a fine frenzy of speeches and motions on the
-platform. The generality of people may think that these make a
-statesman, just as they think that talking [Sidenote: D] from a chair
-and delivering lectures based on books make a philosopher. But they fail
-to discern the sustained statesmanship or philosophy which is revealed
-consistently day after day in actions and conduct. As Dicaearchus used
-to say, the word _peripatein_, ‘walk’, has now come to be used of
-persons taking a turn in the colonnades rather than of those who are
-walking into the country or to see a friend. It is the same with acting
-the statesman as it is with acting the philosopher. For Socrates to play
-the philosopher there was no arranging of forms, seating himself in a
-chair, or observing a fixed time—arranged with his associates—for a
-discussion or discourse. He played the philosopher while joking with
-you, perhaps, or drinking with you, [Sidenote: E] or possibly
-campaigning with you, or at market with you, and finally when he was in
-prison and drinking the poison. He was thus the first to show that life
-affords scope for philosophy at every moment, in every detail, in every
-feeling and circumstance whatsoever. Statesmanship should be regarded in
-the same light. Foolish persons, even if they are Ministers of War, or
-Secretaries, or platform-speakers, should not be considered as acting
-the statesman, but as courting the mob, or making a display, or creating
-dissension, or doing public service because they must. But when a man
-possesses public spirit and broad interests, and is a keen patriot and a
-‘state’s man’ in the literal sense, even if he has never worn official
-garb, he is playing the statesman all the time. He does so by
-stimulating men of [Sidenote: F] ability, giving advice to those who
-need it, lending his help to deliberation, discouraging bunglers, and
-fortifying persons of sense. And this does not mean that he goes to the
-Assembly Theatre or Senate House out of pride of place when canvassed or
-pressed, and, when he gets there, merely puts in an appearance—if he
-does so—by way of pastime, as he might at a show or entertainment. It
-means that, even if not present in body, he [Sidenote: 797] is present
-in spirit; that he asks how the business goes, and is pleased or vexed
-as the case may be.
-
-Aristeides at Athens and Cato at Rome held few public offices; but they
-made their whole life a perpetual service to their country. Though
-Epaminondas won many a distinguished success as commander-in-chief, he
-is no less famous for what he did in Thessaly at a time when he held no
-command or office. The generals had plunged the phalanx into a difficult
-situation. The enemy was attacking them with his missiles, [Sidenote: B]
-and they were in confusion. Epaminondas was therefore summoned from the
-ranks, and, after allaying the panic of the army by words of
-encouragement, he proceeded to make an orderly disposition of the
-phalanx—which was in a state of turmoil—extricated it with ease, posted
-it so as to confront the enemy, and compelled him to change his tactics
-and retire.
-
-Once when King Agis was in Arcadia, and was in the act of leading his
-army into action in full order of battle, one of the elder Spartans
-shouted out that he was proposing to ‘mend one error by another’,
-meaning (as Thucydides says) that ‘his [Sidenote: C] present
-unseasonable ardour was intended to repair the discredit of his retreat’
-from Argos. Agis listened, took the advice, and retired. Menecrates
-actually had a seat placed for him every day at the doors of the
-Government Office, and the Ephors frequently rose and consulted him upon
-questions of the first importance; so great was his reputation for
-wisdom and shrewdness. The story goes that, when he had completely lost
-all physical strength and was for the most part confined all day to his
-bed, upon the Ephors sending for him to the Agora, he got up and set out
-to walk. As he was toiling slowly along, he met [Sidenote: D] some
-children on the way, and asked them: ‘Do you know anything more binding
-than to obey a master?’ Upon their replying, ‘Lack of the power,’ his
-reason told him that this brought his service to an end, and he turned
-back home. For though zeal should not fail so long as ability lasts, we
-must not put pressure upon it when left helpless.
-
-Once more, Scipio, whether in the field or in politics, constantly
-sought the advice of Gaius Laelius to such an extent as to make some
-people say of his achievements that Scipio was the actor, but the author
-was Gaius. And Cicero himself acknowledges that the greatest and finest
-of the successful measures of his consulship were devised with the help
-of the philosopher Publius Nigidius.
-
-[Sidenote: E] There is, then, nothing to prevent an aged man from
-advancing the public good in many a department of statesmanship. He has
-the best of means thereto: reason, judgement, plain-speaking, and
-‘_thought discreet_‘, as the poets say. It is not merely our hands and
-feet or the strength of our bodies that are part and parcel of the
-possessions of the State. Most important are the mind and the beauties
-of the mind—temperance, justice, and wisdom. It is monstrous that, as
-these come late and [Sidenote: F] slowly to their own, our house and
-farm and other goods and chattels should get the benefit of them, while,
-in a public way, to our country and our fellow-citizens, we make
-ourselves of no further use because of ‘time’. For what time takes away
-from our powers of active effort is less than what it adds to those of
-guidance and statesmanship. It is for this reason that, when Hermes is
-represented in an elderly form, though he has no hands or feet, his
-virile parts are tense—an indirect way of saying that there is little
-need for old men’s bodies to be hard at work, so long as their power of
-reasoned speech is—as it ought to be—vigorous and generative.
-
-Footnote 34:
-
- The text here is corrupt.
-
-Footnote 35:
-
- i.e. Epicurean.
-
-Footnote 36:
-
- Member of a religious council which met at Delphi and represented the
- chief states of all Greece.
-
-
-
-
- ADVICE TO MARRIED COUPLES
-
-
-[Sidenote: 138 B] TO POLLIANUS AND EURYDICE WITH PLUTARCH’S BEST WISHES.
-
-When they were shutting you in your bridal chamber, the ancestral ritual
-was duly applied to you by the priestess of Demeter. I believe that now,
-if reason also were to take you in hand and join in the nuptial song, it
-would prove of some service, and would support the tune as prescribed.
-
-In the musical world they used to call one of the modes for the flute
-‘the Horse-and-Mare’, because, apparently, the strains in that key were
-provocative of union between those animals. Well, philosophy has many
-excellent sermons to give, but none [Sidenote: C] more worthy of serious
-attention than that upon marriage. By it she exerts a spell upon those
-who come together as partners in life, and renders them gentle and
-tractable to each other. I have, therefore, taken the main points of the
-lessons which you have repeatedly heard, brought up as you have been in
-the company of Philosophy. I have arranged them in a series of brief
-comparisons to make them easier to remember, and am sending them as a
-present to you both. In doing so I pray that the Muses may graciously
-lend aid to Aphrodite, since, if it is their province to see that a lyre
-or a harp shall be in tune, it is no less so to provide that the music
-of the married home shall be harmonized by reason and philosophy. When
-people in olden times assigned a seat with Aphrodite to Hermes, it was
-because [Sidenote: D] the pleasure of marriage stands in special need of
-reason; when to Persuasion and the Graces, it was in order that the
-married pair might obtain their wishes from each other by means of
-persuasion, and not by contention and strife.
-
-
- THE RULES:
-
-
-1. Solon bade the bride eat a piece of quince before coming to the
-bridegroom’s arms—apparently an enigmatical suggestion that, as a first
-requirement, a pleasant and inviting impression should be gathered from
-an agreeable mouth and speech.
-
-2. In Boeotia, after veiling the bride, they crown her with a wreath of
-thorny asparagus. As that plant yields the sweetest eating from among
-the roughest prickles, so a bride, if the groom does not run away in
-disgust because he finds her difficult and vexatious at first, will
-afford him a sweet and gentle companionship. One who shows no patience
-with the girl’s first [Sidenote: E] bickerings is as bad as those who
-let the ripe grapes go because once they were sour. Many a young bride
-is affected in the same way. First experiences disgust her with the
-bridegroom, and she makes as great a mistake as if, after enduring the
-sting of the bee, she were to abandon the honeycomb.
-
-3. It is especially at the beginning that married people should beware
-of quarrel and friction. Let them note how vessels which have been
-mended will at first easily pull to pieces on the slightest occasion,
-but as time goes on and they become solid at the seams, it is as much as
-fire and iron can do to separate [Sidenote: F] the parts.
-
-4. Fire is readily kindled in chaff, dry rushes, or hare’s fur, but
-quickly goes out unless it gets a further hold upon something capable
-both of keeping it in and feeding it. So with that fierce blaze of
-passion which is produced in the newly-married by physical enjoyment.
-You must not rely upon it nor expect it to last, unless it is built
-round the moral character, gets a hold upon your rational part, and so
-obtains a permanent vitality.
-
-5. Doctoring the water is no doubt a quick and easy way of [Sidenote:
-139] catching fish, but it renders them bad and uneatable. So when women
-work artificially upon their husbands with philtres and spells, and
-control them by the agency of pleasure, they have but crazy simpletons
-and dotards for their partners. While Circe derived no good from the men
-she had bewitched, and made no use of them when turned into swine and
-asses, she found the greatest pleasure in the rational companionship of
-the wise Odysseus.
-
-6. A woman who is more desirous of ruling a foolish husband than of
-obeying a wise one, is like a traveller who would rather lead a blind
-man than follow one who possesses sight and knowledge.
-
-[Sidenote: B] 7. Why should people disbelieve that Pasiphae, though
-consort to a king, fell in love with an ox, when they see that some
-women find a strict and continent husband wearisome, and prefer to live
-with one who is as much a mass of ungoverned sensuality as a dog or a
-goat?
-
-8. When a rider is too weak or effeminate to vault upon a horse, he
-teaches the animal itself to bend its legs and crouch. In the same way
-some men who marry high-born or wealthy women, instead of improving
-themselves, put indignities upon their wives, in the belief that they
-will be more easily ruled when humbled. The proper course is, while
-using the rein, to maintain the dignity of the wife, as one would the
-full height of the horse.
-
-[Sidenote: C] 9. When the moon is at a distance from the sun, we see it
-bright and luminous. When it comes near him, it fades and is lost to
-view. With a properly conducted woman it is the contrary. She should be
-most visible when with her husband; in his absence she should keep at
-home and out of sight.
-
-10. Herodotus was wrong in saying that when a woman lays aside her tunic
-she lays aside her modesty. On the contrary, a chaste wife puts on
-modesty in its place. Between married persons the token of greatest
-regard is greatest modesty.
-
-11. If two notes are taken in accord, the lower of the two is [Sidenote:
-D] the dominant. So, though every action in a well-conducted house is
-performed by both parties in tune, it will reveal the husband’s
-leadership and priority of choice.
-
-12. The Sun vanquished the North Wind. When the wind endeavoured to take
-off the man’s cloak by violence and blowing a gale, he only tightened
-his mantle the more and held it the closer. But when, after the wind,
-the sun became hot, the man began to grow warm. When at last he
-sweltered, he took off not only his cloak but his tunic. The parable
-applies to the generality of women. When their husbands take violent
-measures to do away with extravagant indulgence, they show [Sidenote: E]
-fight and temper; but if you reason with them, they give it up peaceably
-and practise moderation.
-
-13. Cato expelled from the Senate a man who had kissed his own wife in
-the presence of his daughter. This, perhaps, was too severe a step. But
-if—as is the case—it is unseemly to be fondling and kissing and
-embracing each other in company, it is surely more unseemly to be
-scolding and quarrelling in company, and, while treating your
-love-passages as a sacred secret between you and your wife, to make an
-open display of fault-finding [Sidenote: F] and reproach.
-
-14. A mirror,[37] though decorated with gold and precious stones, is of
-no use unless it shows you your form true to life. Similarly there is no
-advantage in a rich wife, if her conduct does not represent that of her
-husband and harmonize with it in character. If the reflection which it
-offers is glum when you are joyful, but wears a merry grin when you are
-gloomy and distressed, the mirror is faulty and bad. A wife is a poor
-thing and out of place if she is in the dumps when her husband is
-disposed for frolic or love-making, but is all fun and laughter when he
-is serious. In the former case she is disagreeable; in [Sidenote: 140]
-the latter, she slights you. Geometers tell us that lines and surfaces
-make no movement by themselves, but only in conjunction with the bodies
-to which they belong. In the same way a woman should be free from
-peculiar states of mind of her own, but should act as the husband’s
-partner in his earnestness and his jest, in his preoccupation and his
-laughter.
-
-15. A man who dislikes to see his wife eating with him, teaches her to
-satisfy her appetite when she gets by herself. Similarly one who is
-never a merry companion to her, nor shares in her sport and laughter,
-teaches her to look for private pleasures apart from him.
-
-[Sidenote: B] 16. When the Persian kings are dining or feasting, their
-legitimate wives sit at their side. But when they wish to amuse
-themselves or get tipsy, they send those wives away and summon their
-minstrel-women and concubines. The practice is a right one, at least to
-the extent that they do not permit their wives to take part in wanton
-and licentious scenes. So, if a private man, who lacks self-control or
-good-breeding in his pleasures, is guilty of a lapse with a common woman
-or a menial, the wife should not be indignant and resentful, but should
-reflect that, out of respect for her, he finds some other woman to share
-his riot and lasciviousness.
-
-[Sidenote: C] 17. When kings are fond of music, they make many
-musicians; when of learning, learned men; when of athletics, gymnasts.
-So when the love of a husband is for the person, his wife will be all
-for dress; when for pleasure, she becomes lewd and wanton; when for
-goodness and virtue, she shows herself discreet and chaste.
-
-18. When a Lacedaemonian girl was once asked whether she had already
-embraced a man, she answered, ‘No, indeed; but _he_ has embraced _me_.’
-Such, I believe, is the right attitude for a lady—not to shun or dislike
-caresses, when the husband begins them, nor yet to begin them of her own
-accord. The one course is bold and immodest, the other disdainful and
-[Sidenote: D] unaffectionate.
-
-19. The woman ought not to possess private friends, but to share those
-of the man. But first and greatest are the gods, and it is therefore
-right for the wife to reverence or acknowledge only those gods who are
-recognized by the husband. Her street-door should be kept shut to
-out-of-the-way forms of worship and alien superstitions. No deity finds
-gratification in ceremonies which a woman performs in secret and by
-stealth.
-
-20. Plato holds that a community is in a state of blissful well-being
-when the expressions ‘_mine_’ and ‘_not mine_’ are scarcely ever heard,
-inasmuch as the citizens enjoy, as far as [Sidenote: E] possible, the
-common use of everything worth considering. Much more ought such
-language to be abolished from the married state. In the same way,
-however, in which medical men tell us that a blow on the left side
-produces an answering sensation in the right, it is proper for a wife to
-sympathize with her husband’s concerns and the husband with the wife’s.
-In this way, just as ropes, when interwoven, lend each other strength,
-so, through each party reciprocating the other’s goodwill, the
-partnership will be maintained by both combined. Nature blends us
-through the body in such a way as to take [Sidenote: F] a portion from
-each, and by commingling produce an offspring common to both, so that
-neither can define or distinguish an ‘own’ part from ‘another’s’. The
-same sort of partnership between married persons should assuredly exist
-in respect of money also. They should pour it all into a single fund,
-and blend it in such a way that they never think of one part as ‘own’
-and one as ‘another’s’, but treat it all as ‘own’ and none of it as
-‘another’s’. And as we call a mixture ‘wine’, though it may contain a
-greater proportion of water, so the property of the house should be said
-to belong to the man, even though the wife may contribute the larger
-share.
-
-21. Helen loved wealth, and Paris loved pleasure: Odysseus was wise, and
-Penelope discreet. Hence the union of the latter [Sidenote: 141] pair
-was happy and enviable, while that of the former brought upon Greeks and
-Asiatics an ‘Iliad of Woes’.
-
-22. When the Roman was admonished by his friends for having divorced a
-wife who was chaste, rich, and beautiful, he stretched out his shoe and
-remarked: ‘Yes, and this looks fine and new, but no one knows where it
-chafes me.’ The wife must not rely upon her dowry, her birth, or her
-beauty. The matters in which she touches her husband most closely are
-conversation, character, and companionship. Instead of making these
-harsh and vexatious day after day, she must render them [Sidenote: B]
-compatible, soothing, and grateful. Physicians are more afraid of fevers
-which spring from vague causes gradually accumulating, than of those for
-which there is a great and manifest reason. So it is these little,
-continual, daily frictions between man and wife, which the world knows
-nothing of, that do most to create the rifts which ruin married life.
-
-23. King Philip was once enamoured of a Thessalian woman who was charged
-with bewitching him. Olympias thereupon became eager to get this person
-into her power. When, upon presenting herself, she not only turned out
-to be a handsome woman, but spoke with considerable nobility and good
-sense, [Sidenote: C] Olympias said: ‘Those calumnies are all nonsense!
-Your witchcraft lies in yourself.’ How irresistible a thing is a married
-and lawful wife, if, by treating everything—dowry, birth, philtres, the
-very girdle[38] of Aphrodite—as lying in herself, she conquers affection
-by means of character and virtue!
-
-24. On another occasion, when a youthful courtier had married a handsome
-woman of bad repute, Olympias remarked, ‘The fellow has no judgement;
-otherwise he would not have married with his eyes.’ Marriage should not
-be made with the eyes; neither should it with the fingers, as it is in
-the case of some, who reckon up the amount of the dower, instead of
-calculating the companionable quality, of the wife they are [Sidenote:
-D] marrying.
-
-25. To young men who are fond of looking at themselves in the mirror
-Socrates recommended that the ugly should correct their defects by
-virtue, while the handsome should avoid spoiling their beauty by vice.
-It is a good thing for the married woman also, while she is holding the
-mirror, to talk to herself, and, if she is plain, to ask, ‘And what if I
-show myself indiscreet?’ if beautiful, ‘And what if I show myself
-discreet as well?’ The plain woman may pride herself on being loved for
-her character, and the handsome woman on being loved more for her
-character than her beauty.
-
-26. When the Sicilian despot sent Lysander’s daughters a set of costly
-mantles and chains, he refused to accept them. ‘These bits of
-ornaments,’ said he, ‘will rather take from my [Sidenote: E] daughters’
-beauty than set it off.’ Lysander, however, was anticipated by Sophocles
-in the lines:
-
- _Nay, ’twould not seem, poor fool, to beautify,
- But to unbeautify, and prove thee wanton._
-
-As Crates used to say, ‘Adornment is that which adorns,’ and that which
-adorns is that which adds to a woman’s seemliness. This is not done by
-gold or jewels or scarlet, but by whatever invests her with the badges
-of dignity, decorum, and modesty.
-
-27. In sacrificing to Hera as goddess of marriage, the gall is not
-burned with the other portions of the sacrifice, but is [Sidenote: F]
-taken out and thrown down at the side of the altar—an indirect
-injunction of the legislator that gall and anger should have no place in
-the married state. The austerity of the lady of the house, like the
-dryness of wine, should be wholesome and palatable, not bitter like
-aloes or unpleasant like a drug.
-
-28. Xenocrates being somewhat harsh in character, though otherwise a
-high type of man, Plato recommended him to _sacrifice to the Graces_.
-Now I take it that a woman of strict morals stands in special need of
-the graces in dealing with her [Sidenote: 142] husband, so that—as
-Metrodorus used to say—she may live with him on pleasant terms and not
-‘in a temper because she is chaste’. A woman should no more forget to be
-amiable because she is faithful, than to be neat because she is thrifty.
-Decorum in a woman is rendered as disagreeable by harshness as frugality
-is by sluttishness.
-
-29. A wife who is afraid to laugh and joke with her husband for fear of
-seeming bold and wanton, is as bad as the woman who, from fear of being
-thought to use ointments on her head, does not even oil it,[39] and, to
-avoid seeming to rouge her face, does not even wash it. We find that
-when poets and orators avoid appealing to the vulgar by bad taste and
-affectation in [Sidenote: B] respect of their diction, they practise
-every art to attract and stir the hearer with their matter, their
-treatment, and their moral quality. So the lady of the house, because
-she avoids and deprecates—as she is quite right to do—extravagant or
-meretricious demonstration, ought all the more to bring the graces of
-character and conduct into play in dealing with her husband, thus
-habituating him to proper ways, but in a pleasurable manner. If,
-however, a wife shows herself strait-laced and rigidly austere, her
-husband must put the best face upon it. When Antipater required Phocion
-to perform an improper and [Sidenote: C] degrading action, he answered,
-‘I cannot serve you both as your friend and your toady.’ In the same
-way, when a woman is staid and strait-laced, our reflection should be,
-‘The same woman cannot behave to me as both a wife and a mistress.’
-
-30. By a national custom the Egyptian women wore no shoes, so that they
-might keep at home all day. In the case of most women, to deprive them
-of gold-worked shoes, bangles, anklets, purple, and pearls, is to make
-them stay indoors.
-
-31. Theano, in putting on her mantle, once showed a glimpse of her arm.
-Upon some one saying, ‘A beautiful forearm!’ she retorted, ‘But not for
-the public!’ A well-conducted woman will keep, not only her forearm, but
-her speech, from [Sidenote: D] publicity. She will be as shy and
-cautious about her utterances to the outside world as if they were an
-exposure of her person, inasmuch as, when she talks, they are a
-revelation of feelings, character, and disposition.
-
-32. Pheidias, in representing the Elean Aphrodite with her foot upon a
-tortoise, meant women to take it as a symbol of home-keeping and
-silence. A woman should talk either to, or through the medium of, her
-husband; nor should she resent it if, like a player on the clarinet, she
-finds a more impressive utterance through another tongue than through
-her own.
-
-33. When rich or royal persons pay respect to a philosopher, they do
-honour both to themselves and to him. But when a philosopher pays court
-to rich people, he is not conferring [Sidenote: E] distinction upon
-them, but lowering his own. The same is the case with women. By
-submission to their husbands they win regard; by seeking to govern them
-they demean themselves worse than the men so governed. Meanwhile it is
-only right that the husband, in controlling the wife, should not be like
-an owner dealing with a chattel, but like the mind dealing with the
-body—sympathetic with the sympathy of organic union. It is possible to
-care for the body without being a slave to its pleasures and desires,
-and it is possible to rule a wife and yet do things to please and
-gratify her.
-
-34. Compound objects are classified by philosophers as follows. In some
-the parts are distinct, as in a fleet or army. [Sidenote: F] In some
-they are conjoined, as in a house or ship. In others they form an
-organic unity, as in all living creatures. We may say much the same of
-marriage. The marriage of love is the ‘organic unity’; the marriage for
-a dowry or for children is that of persons ‘conjoined’; marriage without
-sharing the same couch is that of persons ‘distinct’, who may be said to
-[Sidenote: 143] dwell together, but not to live together. With persons
-marrying, there should be a mutual blending of bodies, means, friends,
-and relations, in the same way as, according to the scientists, when
-liquids are mixed, the mixture runs through the whole. When the Roman
-legislator forbade married couples to exchange presents, he did not mean
-that they should not impart to each other, but that they should look
-upon everything as joint property.
-
-35. At Leptis in Africa it is a traditional custom for the bride, on the
-day after marriage, to send to the bridegroom’s mother to borrow a pot.
-The latter refuses, saying she has none. The intention is that the bride
-may realize from the first the ‘step-mother’ attitude of her
-mother-in-law, so that, if anything more disagreeable happens
-afterwards, she may not be vexed or irritated. The wife should
-understand this fact and apply [Sidenote: B] treatment to its cause,
-which is, that the mother is jealous of her son’s affections. There is
-but one treatment for this state of mind. While winning the special
-affection of her husband for herself, she must avoid detaching or
-lessening his affection for his mother.
-
-36. Mothers appear to be more fond of their sons, because those sons are
-able to help them, and fathers of their daughters, because daughters
-need their help. Maybe also it is out of compliment to each other that
-both parties desire to be seen making much of that which is more akin to
-the other. This, perhaps, is a trait of no importance, but there is
-another which is charming. I mean, when the wife’s respect is seen to
-incline rather to the husband’s parents than to her own, and when,
-[Sidenote: C] in case of anything troubling her, she refers it to them
-and conceals it from her own people. If you are thought to trust, you
-are trusted; if you are thought to love, you are loved.
-
-37. The Greeks who accompanied Cyrus received the following order from
-their commanders: ‘If the enemy come shouting to the attack, await them
-in silence; if they come in silence, charge to meet them with a shout.’
-When a husband has his fits of anger, if he raises his voice, a sensible
-wife keeps quiet; if he is silent, she soothes him by talking to him in
-a coaxing way.
-
-38. Euripides is right in blaming those who have the lyre [Sidenote: D]
-played to them at their wine. Music is more properly called in to cure
-anger and grief than to encourage further abandonment on the part of
-those who are taking their pleasure. So I would have you believe that it
-is a wrong principle to share the same bed for the sake of pleasure, and
-yet, when you are angry or fall out, to sleep apart. That is exactly the
-time to call in the Goddess of Love, who is the best physician for such
-cases. This is practically the teaching of the poet, when he makes Hera
-say:
-
- _And their tangled strife will I loosen,
- When to their couch I bring them, to meet in love and in union._
-
-[Sidenote: E] 39. At all times and everywhere a wife should avoid
-offending the husband, and a husband the wife; but especially should
-they beware of doing so when together at night. In the story, the wife,
-in the vexation of her throes, used to say to those who were putting her
-to bed: ‘How can this couch cure a trouble which befell me upon it?’ So
-quarrels, recriminations, and tempers which are begotten in the chamber
-are not easily got over in another place or at another time.
-
-40. There appears to be a truth in Hermione’s plea: [Sidenote: F]
-
- ‘_Tis wicked women’s visits have undone me._
-
-This occurs in more than one way, but especially when connubial quarrels
-and jealousies offer to such women not only an open door, but an open
-ear. At such a time, therefore, should a sensible woman shut her ears,
-keep out of the way of slanderous whispers which add fuel to the fire,
-and be ready to apply the well-known saying of Philip. We are told that
-when his friends were trying to exasperate that monarch against the
-Greeks—on the ground that, though he treated them well, they abused
-him—he remarked, ‘Well, and what, pray, if we treat them badly?’ So,
-when the scandalizers say, ‘Your husband grieves you, in spite of all
-your affection and chastity,’ you [Sidenote: 144] should retort, ‘And
-what, pray, if I begin to hate and wrong him?’
-
-41. A man caught sight of a slave who had run away some time before, and
-gave chase. When the slave was too quick, and took refuge in a mill, he
-observed, ‘And in what better place could I have wished to find you than
-where you are?‘[40] So let a woman who is declaring for a divorce
-through jealousy say to herself, ‘And where would my rival be more glad
-to see me? And what would she be more pleased to see me doing, than
-harbouring a grievance, at feud with my husband, and actually abandoning
-the house and the marriage-chamber?’
-
-[Sidenote: B] 42. The Athenians observe three sacred ploughings; the
-first at Sciron, in memory of the oldest sowing of crops; the second in
-the Rharian district; and the third—known as the Buzygian festival—close
-to the Acropolis. More sacred than all of these is the connubial
-ploughing and sowing for the procreation of children. It is a happy
-expression of Sophocles, when he calls Aphrodite ‘_fair-fruited
-Cytherea_‘. Man and wife should therefore be especially scrupulous in
-this connexion, keeping pure from unholy and unlawful intercourse with
-others, and forbearing to sow where they desire no crop to grow, or, if
-it does, are ashamed of it and seek to conceal it.
-
-43. When Gorgias the rhetorician once read to the Greeks at Olympia a
-discourse upon peace and harmony, Melanthius exclaimed, ‘Here is a man
-giving us advice about peace and [Sidenote: C] harmony, when in private
-life he has failed to harmonize three people—himself, his wife, and his
-maidservant.’ For Gorgias, it appears, was enamoured, and his wife
-jealous, of the domestic. A man’s house ought to be in tune before he
-offers to set in tune a state, a public meeting, or friends. The public
-is more likely to hear of offences against a wife than of offences
-committed by her.
-
-44. They say that the cat is driven frantic by the smell of unguents. If
-it had been the case that women were provoked [Sidenote: D] out of their
-senses by the same means, it would have been a monstrous thing for men
-not to abstain from unguents, and to let their wives suffer so cruelly
-for the sake of a trifling gratification of their own. Now since, though
-the husband’s use of unguents does not so afflict them, his dealings
-with other women do, it is unjust to cause such vexation and distress to
-a wife for the sake of a little pleasure. On the contrary, husbands
-should come to their wives pure and untainted by other intercourse, just
-as they would approach bees, who are said to show disgust and hostility
-towards any one who has been so engaged.
-
-45. People never dress in bright clothes when approaching [Sidenote: E]
-an elephant, nor in red when approaching a bull, since the animals in
-question are particularly infuriated by those colours. Of tigers it is
-said that, if you beat drums all round them, they go mad and tear
-themselves to pieces. Surely, then, inasmuch as some men cannot bear to
-see scarlet or purple clothes, and some are irritated at cymbals and
-tambourines, it is not asking too much for women to leave such things
-alone, and not harass or exasperate their husbands, but practise
-quietude and consideration in their society.
-
-[Sidenote: F] 46. When Philip was once seizing upon a woman against her
-will, she said, ‘Let me go. All women are the same when you take away
-the light.’ While this applies well enough to adulterers and
-sensualists, it is particularly when the light is taken away that a wife
-should _not_ be the same as any ordinary female. Her person may not be
-visible, but her modesty, chastity, decorum, and natural affection
-should make themselves palpable.
-
-47. Plato used to recommend that respect should rather be paid by
-elderly men to the young, so that the latter might behave modestly to
-them in return. For, said he, ‘where old men are shameless,’ the young
-acquire no modesty or scruple. A husband should bear this in mind, and
-show more respect [Sidenote: 145] to his wife than to any one else,
-since the nuptial chamber will prove to be her school of propriety or
-its opposite. The husband who indulges himself in certain pleasures,
-while warning her against the same, is as bad as the man who bids his
-wife fight on against an enemy to whom he has himself surrendered.
-
-48. As to love of display, do you, Eurydice, read and endeavour to
-remember what Timoxena wrote to Aristylla. And you, Pollianus, must not
-expect your wife to refrain from showy extravagance, if she sees that
-you do not despise it in other [Sidenote: B] matters, but that you take
-a pleasure in cups with gilding, rooms with painted walls, mules with
-decorated harness, and horses with neck-trappings. You cannot banish
-extravagance from the women’s quarters when it has the free run of the
-men’s. You are at the right age to cultivate philosophy. Adorn your
-character, therefore, by listening to careful reasoning and
-demonstration in improving company and conversation. Be like the bees.
-Gather valuable matter from every source. Carry it home in yourself, and
-share it with your wife by discussing it and making all the best
-principles agreeable and familiar to her. While [Sidenote: C]
-
- _Thou unto her art father, and honoured mother, and brother_,
-
-it is no less a matter of pride to hear a wife say, ‘Husband, thou unto
-me art guide, philosopher, and teacher of the noblest and divinest
-lessons.’ It is studies of this kind that tend to keep a woman from
-foolish practices. She will be ashamed to be dancing, when she is
-learning geometry. She will lend no ear to the incantations of sorcery,
-when she is listening to those of Plato and Xenophon. When any one
-promises to fetch down the moon,[41] she will laugh at the ignorance and
-silliness of women who believe such things; for she will possess a
-knowledge of astronomy, and will have heard how Aglaonice, the daughter
-of Hegetor of Thessaly, thoroughly understood [Sidenote: D] eclipses of
-the full moon, how she knew beforehand the date at which it must be
-caught in the shadow, and how she thereby cheated the women into
-believing that she was fetching it down herself.
-
-We are told that no woman produces a child without the participation of
-the man, though there are shapeless and fleshlike growths—called
-‘millstones’—which form themselves spontaneously from corrupted matter.
-We must beware of this occurring in women’s minds. If they are not
-impregnated with sound doctrines by sharing in the culture of their
-husbands, [Sidenote: E] they will of their own accord conceive many an
-ill-advised intention or irrational state of feeling.
-
-As for you, Eurydice, above all things do your best to keep touch with
-the sayings of wise and good men, and to have continually in your mouth
-those utterances which you learned by heart in my school when a girl. By
-so doing, you will not only be a joy to your husband, but the admiration
-of other women, when they see how, at no expense, you can adorn yourself
-with so much distinction and dignity.
-
-This rich woman’s pearls, that foreign lady’s silks, are not to be worn
-without paying a large price for them. But the ornaments [Sidenote: F]
-of Theano, of Cleobuline, of Gorgo the wife of Leonidas, of Timoclea the
-sister of Theagenes, of the Claudia of ancient history, and of Cornelia
-the daughter of Scipio, you may wear for nothing; and with this
-adornment your life may be as happy as it is distinguished.
-
-[Sidenote: 146] Sappho thought so much of her skill as a lyrist that she
-wrote—addressing a wealthy woman—
-
- _When thou art dead, thou shalt lie with none to remember thy name:
- For no portion hast thou in the roses Pierian...._
-
-You will assuredly have more occasion to think highly and proudly of
-yourself, if you have a portion, not only in the roses, but also in the
-fruits, which the Muses bring as free gifts to those who prize culture
-and philosophy.
-
-Footnote 37:
-
- Made of polished bronze.
-
-Footnote 38:
-
- Which contained ‘every charm: love, desire, and sweet converse’
- (Homer, _Il._ xiv. 214).
-
-Footnote 39:
-
- The use of oil to soften the hair was practically universal.
-
-Footnote 40:
-
- A common punishment for a slave was to put him to hard labour in
- turning the mill, in place of a horse or ass.
-
-Footnote 41:
-
- A frequent pretence of ancient witches.
-
-
-
-
- CONCERNING BUSYBODIES
-
-
-If a house is stuffy, dark, chilly, or unhealthy, it is perhaps
-[Sidenote: 515 B] best to get out of it. But if long association makes
-you fond of the place, you may alter the lights, shift the stairs, open
-a door here and close one there, and so make it brighter, fresher, and
-more wholesome. Even cities have sometimes been improved [Sidenote: C]
-by such rearrangement. For instance, it is said that my own native town,
-which used to face the west and receive the full force of the afternoon
-sun from Parnassus, was turned by Chairon so as to front the east.
-Empedocles, the natural philosopher, once blocked up a mountain gorge,
-which sent a destructive and pestilential south wind blowing down upon
-the plains. By this means, it was thought, he shut the plague out of the
-district.
-
-Well, since there are certain injurious and unhealthy states of mind
-which chill and darken the soul, it would be best to get rid of them—to
-make a clean sweep to the foundations, and give ourselves the benefit of
-a clear sky, light, and pure air [Sidenote: D] to breathe. If not, we
-should reform and readjust them by turning them some other way about.
-
-We may take the vice of the busybody as an instance in point. It is a
-love of prying into other people’s troubles, a disease tainted—we may
-believe—with both envy and malice.
-
- _Why so sharp-eyed, my most malignant Sir,
- For others’ faults, yet overlook your own?_
-
-Pray turn your pryingness the other way about, and make it face inwards.
-If you are so fond of the business of inquiring into defects, you will
-find plenty to occupy you at home.
-
-[Sidenote: *] _Abundant as leaves on the oak or the water that rolls
-from Alizon_ will you find the errors in your conduct, the disorders in
-your heart and mind, and the lapses in your duty.
-
-[Sidenote: E] According to Xenophon, a good householder has a special
-place for the utensils of sacrifice, and a special place for those of
-the table; agricultural implements are stored in one room, weapons of
-war in another. In your own case you have one stock of faults arising
-from envy, another from jealousy, another from cowardice, another from
-meanness. These are the faults for you to inspect and examine. Block up
-the windows [Sidenote: F] and alleys of your inquisitiveness on the side
-towards your neighbours, and open others which look into your own
-house—the male quarters, the female quarters, the living-rooms of the
-servants. Our busy curiosity will find occupation of a profitable and
-salutary, instead of a useless and malicious, kind, if each one will say
-to himself:
-
- _How have I err’d? What deed have I done? What duty neglected?_
-
-As it is, we are all of us like the Lamia in the fable, of whom
-[Sidenote: 516] we are told that at home she is asleep and blind, with
-her eyes stowed away in a jar, but that when she comes abroad she puts
-them in and can see. Outside, and in dealing with others, we furnish our
-malice with an eye in the shape of our meddlesomeness, but we are
-continually being tripped up by our own misdeeds and vices, of which we
-are unaware, because we provide ourselves with no light or vision to
-perceive them. It follows that the busybody is a better friend to his
-enemies than to himself. While censoriously reproving their shortcomings
-and showing them what they ought to avoid or amend, he is so taken up
-with faults outside that he overlooks most of those at home.
-
-[Sidenote: B] Odysseus refused even to talk to his mother, until he had
-got his answer from the seer concerning the business which had brought
-him to Hades. When he had received the information, he turned to her,
-and also began to put questions to the other women, asking who Tyro was,
-and the beautiful Chloris, and why Epicaste met her death by
-
- _Tying a sheer-hung noose from the height of the lofty roof-tree_.
-
-Not so we. While treating our own concerns with the greatest
-indifference, ignorance, and neglect, we begin discussing other people’s
-pedigrees—how our neighbour’s grandfather was a Syrian and his
-grandmother a Thracian. ‘So-and-So owes more than seven hundred pounds,
-and cannot pay the interest.’ We also make it our business to inquire
-about such matters as where So-and-So got his wife from, and what
-private talk was that between A and B in the corner. Socrates, on the
-other [Sidenote: C] hand, went about inquiring, ‘By what arguments did
-Pythagoras carry conviction?’ So Aristippus, when he met Ischomachus at
-Olympia, proceeded to ask by what kind of conversation Socrates affected
-the Athenians as he did. When he had gleaned a few seeds or samples of
-his talk, he was so moved that he suffered a physical collapse, and
-became quite pale and thin. In the end he set sail for Athens, and
-slaked his thirst with draughts from the fountain-head, studying the
-man, his discourses and his philosophy, of which the aim was to
-recognize one’s own vices and get rid of them.
-
-But there are some to whom their own life is a most distressing
-[Sidenote: D] spectacle, and who therefore cannot bear to look at it nor
-to reflect the light of reason upon themselves. Their soul is so fraught
-with all manner of vices, that, shuddering with horror at what lies
-within, it darts away from home, and goes prowling round other men’s
-concerns, where it lets its malice batten and grow fat.
-
-It often happens that a domestic fowl, though there is plenty of food
-lying at its disposal, will slink into a corner and scratch
-
- _Where so appeareth, mayhap, one barley-grain in a dunghill._
-
-It is much the same with the busybody. Ignoring the topics and questions
-which are open to all, and which no one prevents him from asking about
-or is annoyed with him if he does ask, [Sidenote: E] he goes picking out
-of every house the troubles which it is endeavouring to bury out of
-sight. But surely it was a neat answer which the Egyptian made to the
-man who asked him what he was carrying in that wrapper. ‘That,’ said he,
-‘is why it _is_ in a wrapper.’ And why, pray, are you so inquisitive
-about a thing which is being concealed? If it had not been something
-undesirable, there would have been no concealment. It is not usual to
-walk into another man’s house without knocking at the door. Nowadays
-there are doorkeepers—formerly knockers were beaten upon the doors in
-order to give warning—the intention being that the stranger shall not
-surprise the lady of the [Sidenote: F] house or her daughter in the
-open, or come upon a slave receiving punishment, or the handmaids
-screaming. But these are exactly the things which the busybody steals in
-to see. At a staid and quiet household he would have no pleasure in
-looking, even if he were invited. His object is to uncover and make
-public those things to which keys, bolts, and the street-door owe their
-existence. ‘The winds which vex us most,’ says Ariston, ‘are those which
-pull up our cloaks.’ But the busybody strips off not only our mantles
-and tunics, but our walls; he spreads our doors wide open, and makes his
-way like a piercing wind through the ‘_maiden of tender skin_‘, prying
-and sneaking into [Sidenote: 517] her bacchic revels, her dances, and
-her all-night festivals.
-
-As Cleon in the comedy had
-
- _His hands in Askthorpe and his thoughts in Thefton_,
-
-so the busybody’s thoughts are at one and the same time in the houses of
-the rich and the hovels of the poor, in the courts of kings and the
-chambers of the newly-wed. He searches into everybody’s
-business—business of strangers, and business of potentates. Nor is his
-search without danger. If one were to take a taste of aconite because he
-was inquisitive as to its properties, he would find that he had killed
-the learner before he got his lesson. So those who pry into the troubles
-of the [Sidenote: B] great destroy themselves before discovering what
-they seek. If any one is not satisfied with the beams which the sun
-lavishes so abundantly upon all, but audaciously insists upon gazing
-unabashed at the orb itself and probing the light to its heart, the
-result is blindness. It was therefore wise of Philippides, the comic
-poet, when King Lysimachus once asked him, ‘What can I give you of
-mine?’ to reply, ‘Anything, Sire, but your secrets.’ The finest and most
-pleasant aspects of royalty are those displayed outwardly—its banquets,
-wealth, pomps and shows, graces and favours. But if a king has any
-secret, keep away from it and leave it alone. A king does not conceal
-his [Sidenote: C] joy when prosperous, nor his laughter when jocose, nor
-his intention to do a kindness or confer a boon. When he hides a thing,
-when he is glum, unsmiling, unapproachable, it is time for alarm. It
-means that he has been storing up anger, and that it is festering; or
-that he is sullenly meditating a severe punishment; or that he is
-jealous of his wife, or suspicious of his son, or distrustful of a
-friend. Run, run from that cloud which is gathering so black! You cannot
-possibly miss the thunder and lightning, when the matter which is now a
-secret bursts out in storm.
-
-How, then, are we to escape this vice? By turning our inquisitiveness—as
-we have said—the other way round, and, as far as possible, directing our
-minds to better and more interesting objects. If you are to pry, pry
-into questions [Sidenote: D] connected with sky, earth, air, or sea. You
-are by nature fond of looking either at little things or at big things.
-If at big things, apply your curiosity to the sun; ask where he sets and
-whence he rises. Inquire into the changes of the moon, as if she were a
-human being. Ask where she loses so much of her light, and whence she
-gets it back; how
-
- _Once dim, she first comes forth and makes
- Her young face beauteous, gathering to the full,
- And, when her greatest splendours she hath shown,
- Fades out, and passes into naught again._
-
-These, too, are secrets—the secrets of Nature; but Nature has [Sidenote:
-E] no grievance against those who find them out. Are the big things
-beyond you? Then pry into the smaller ones. Ask how it is that some
-plants are always flourishing and green, proudly displaying their wealth
-at every season, while others are at one moment as good as these, but at
-another have squandered their abundance all at once, like some human
-spendthrift, and are left bare and beggared. Why, again, do some plants
-produce elongated fruits, some angular, some round and globelike?
-
-But perhaps you will have no curiosity for such concerns, [Sidenote: F]
-because there is nothing wrong about them. Well, if inquisitiveness
-absolutely must be always browsing and passing its time among things
-sordid, like a maggot among dead matter, let us introduce it to history
-and story, and supply it with bad things in abundance and without stint.
-For there it will find
-
- _Fallings of men and spurnings-off of life_,
-
-seductions of women, assaults by slaves, slanderings of friends,
-concoctions of poisons, envies, jealousies, shipwrecks of homes,
-overthrows of rulers. Take your fill, enjoy yourself, and cause no
-annoyance or pain to any of those with whom you come in contact.
-
-Apparently, however, inquisitiveness finds no pleasure in scandals which
-are stale; it wants them hot and fresh. And [Sidenote: 518] while it
-enjoys the spectacle of a novel tragedy, it takes no sort of interest in
-the comedy or more cheerful side of life. Consequently the busybody
-lends but a careless and indifferent ear to the account of a wedding, a
-sacrifice, or a complimentary ‘farewell’. He says he has already heard
-most of the details, and urges the narrator to cut them short or omit
-them. But if any one will sit by him and tell him the news about the
-corruption of a girl or the unfaithfulness of a wife or an impending
-action at law or a quarrel between brothers, there is no sleepiness or
-hurry about him, but
-
- _More words still doth he ask, and proffers his ears to receive
- them._
-
-As applied to the busybody, the words
-
- _How much more apt to reach the ear of man
- An ill thing than a happy!_
-
-are a true saying. As a cupping-glass sucks from the flesh what
-[Sidenote: B] is worst in it, so the inquisitive ear draws to itself the
-most undesirable topics. To vary the figure: cities have certain
-‘Accursed’ or ‘Dismal’ gates, through which they take out criminals on
-their way to death and throw the refuse and offscourings of
-purification, while nothing sacred or undefiled goes in or out through
-them. So with the ears of the busybody. They give passage to nothing
-fine or useful, but serve only as the pathway of gruesome
-communications, with their load of foul and polluted gossip.
-
- _No chance brings other minstrel to my roof,
- But always Lamentation._
-
-[Sidenote: C] That is the one Muse and Siren of the busybody, the most
-pleasant of all music to his ear. For his vice is a love of finding out
-whatever is secret and concealed, and no one conceals a good thing when
-he has one; on the contrary, he will pretend to one which has no
-existence. Since therefore it is troubles that the busybody is eager to
-discover, the disease from which he suffers is malignant gloating—own
-brother to envy and spite. For envy is pain at another’s good; malignity
-is pleasure at another’s harm; and the parent of both is ill-nature—the
-[Sidenote: D] feeling of a savage or a brute beast.
-
-So painful do we all find it to have our troubles revealed, that there
-are many who would rather die than tell a physician of a secret disease.
-Imagine Herophilus or Erasistratus, or Asclepius himself—when he was a
-mortal man—calling from house to house with his drugs and his
-instruments, and asking whether a man had a fistula or a woman a cancer
-in the womb! Inquisitiveness in their profession may, it is true, save a
-life. None the less, I presume, every one would have scouted such a
-person, [Sidenote: E] for coming to investigate other people’s ailments
-without waiting till he was required and sent for. Yet our busybody
-searches out precisely these, or even worse, ailments; and, since he
-does so not by way of curing them, but merely of disclosing them, he
-deserves the hatred he gets.
-
-We are annoyed and indignant with the collector of customs,[42] not when
-he picks out and levies on those articles which we import openly, but
-when, in the search for hidden goods, he ransacks among baggage and
-merchandise which are not in [Sidenote: F] question. Yet the law permits
-him to do so, and he is the loser if he does not. On the other hand, the
-busybody lets his own concerns go to ruin, while he is occupying himself
-with those of other people. He rarely takes a walk to the farm; it is
-too lonely, and he cannot bear the quiet and silence. And if, after a
-time, he does chance along, he has a keener eye for his neighbour’s
-vines than for his own. He proceeds to ask how many of his neighbour’s
-cattle have died, or how much of his wine turned sour. After a good meal
-of such news he is quickly off and away.
-
-Your true and genuine type of farmer has no desire to hear even the news
-which finds its own way from the city. Says he:
-
- _Then, while he digs, he’ll tell
- The terms o’the treaty. He must now, confound him,
- Go round and poke his nose in things like that!_
-
-[Sidenote: 519] But to your busybody country life is a stale and
-uninteresting thing with nothing to fuss about. He therefore flees from
-it, and pushes into the Exchange, the Market, or the Harbour. ‘Is there
-any news?’ ‘Why, weren’t you at market early this morning? Do you
-imagine there has been a revolution in three hours?’ If, however, any
-one has a piece of news to tell, down he gets from his horse, grasps the
-man’s hand, kisses him, and stands there listening. But if some one
-meets him and says there is nothing fresh, he exclaims, as if he were
-annoyed: ‘What? Haven’t you been at market? Haven’t you been near the
-Board-Room? And haven’t you met the new arrivals from [Sidenote: B]
-Italy?’
-
-The Locrian magistrates therefore did right in fining any one who, after
-being out of town, came up and asked, ‘Is there any news?’ As the
-butchers pray for a good supply of animals, and fishermen for a good
-supply of fish, so busybodies pray for a good supply of calamities, for
-plenty of troubles, for novelties and changes. They must always have
-their fish to catch or carcass to cut up.
-
-Another good rule was that of the legislator of Thurii, who forbade the
-lampooning of citizens on the stage, with the exception of adulterers
-and busybodies. The one class bears a resemblance to the other, adultery
-being a sort of inquisitiveness into [Sidenote: C] another’s pleasure,
-and a prying search into matters protected from the general eye, while
-inquisitiveness is the illicit denuding and corrupting of a secret.
-While a natural consequence of much learning is having much to say, and
-therefore Pythagoras enjoined upon the young a five years’ silence,
-which he called ‘Truce to Speech’, the necessary concomitant of
-curiosity is speaking evil. What the curious delight to hear, they
-delight to talk about; what they take pains to gather from others, they
-joy in giving out to new hearers. It follows that, besides its
-[Sidenote: D] other drawbacks, their disease actually stands in the way
-of its own desires. For every one is on his guard to hide things from
-them, and is reluctant to do anything when the busybody is looking, or
-to say anything when he is listening. People put off a consultation and
-postpone the consideration of business until such persons are out of the
-way. If, when a secret matter is towards, or an important action is in
-the doing, a busybody appears upon the scene, they take it away and hide
-it, as they [Sidenote: E] would a piece of victuals when the cat comes
-past. Often, therefore, he is the only person not permitted to hear or
-see what others may see and hear.
-
-For the same reason the busybody can find no one to trust him. We would
-rather trust our letters, papers, or seals to a slave or a stranger than
-to an inquisitive relation or friend. Bellerophon, though the writing
-which he carried was about himself, would not broach it, but showed the
-same continence in keeping his hands off the king’s letter as in keeping
-them off his wife.
-
-Yes, inquisitiveness is as incontinent as adultery, and not only
-incontinent, but terribly silly and foolish. To pass by so many women
-who are public property, and to struggle to get at one [Sidenote: F] who
-is kept under lock and key, who is expensive, and perhaps ugly to boot,
-is the very height of insanity. The busybody is just as bad. He passes
-by much that is admirable to see and hear, many an excellent discourse
-or discussion, to dig into another man’s poor little letter or clap his
-ear to his neighbour’s wall, listening to slaves and womenfolk
-whispering together, and incurring danger often, and discredit always.
-
-[Sidenote: 520] Well, if he wishes to get rid of his vice, the busybody
-will find nothing so helpful as to think over the discoveries he has
-hitherto made. Simonides used to say that, in opening his boxes after a
-lapse of time, he found the fee-box always full and the thanks-box
-always empty. So, if one were to open the store-room of inquisitiveness
-after an interval, and to contemplate all the useless, futile, and
-uninviting things with which it is filled, he would probably become sick
-of the business, so nauseating and senseless would it appear.
-
-Suppose a person to run over the works of our old writers and pick out
-their faultiest passages, compiling and keeping a book full of such
-things as ‘headless’ lines of Homer, solecisms [Sidenote: B] in the
-tragedians, the indecent and licentious language to women by which
-Archilochus makes a sorry show of himself. Does he not deserve the
-execration in the tragedy:
-
- _Perish, thou picker-up of miseries!_
-
-Execration apart, his treasury, filled with other men’s faults,
-possesses neither beauty nor use. It is like the town which Philip
-founded with the rudest riff-raff, and which he called Knaveborough.
-
-With the busybody, however, it is not from lines of poetry, but from
-lives, that he goes gleaning and gathering blunders and slips and
-solecisms, till the memory which he carries about is the dullest and
-dreariest record-box, crammed with ugly things. [Sidenote: C]
-
-At Rome there are those who set no store by the paintings, the statues,
-or—failing these—the handsome children or women on sale, but who haunt
-the monster-market, examining specimens with no calves to their legs, or
-with weasel-elbows, three eyes, or ostrich-heads, and looking out for
-the appearance of any
-
- _Commingled shape and misformed prodigy._
-
-Yet if you keep on showing them such sights, they will soon become
-surfeited and sick of it all. In the same way those who make it their
-business to pry into other people’s failures in their affairs, blots on
-their pedigree, disturbances and delinquencies in their homes, will do
-well to remind themselves how thankless [Sidenote: D] and unprofitable
-their previous discoveries have proved.
-
-The most effective way, however, of preventing this weakness is to form
-a habit—to begin at an early stage and train ourselves systematically to
-acquire the necessary self-control. It is by habit that the vice
-increases, the advance of the disease being gradual. How this is, we
-shall see, in discussing the proper method of practice.
-
-Let us make a beginning with comparatively trifling and insignificant
-matters.
-
-On the roads it can be no difficult matter to abstain from reading
-[Sidenote: E] the inscriptions on the tombs. Nor in the promenades can
-there be any hardship in refusing to let the eye linger upon the
-writings on the walls. You have only to tell yourself that they contain
-nothing useful or entertaining. There is A expressing his ‘kind
-sentiments’ towards B; So-and-So described as ‘the best of friends’; and
-much mere twaddle of the same kind. No doubt it seems as if the reading
-of them does you no harm; but harm you it does, without your knowing it,
-by inducing a habit of inquiring into things which do not concern you.
-Hunters do not permit young hounds to turn aside and [Sidenote: F]
-follow up every scent, but pull them sharply back with the leash, so as
-to keep their power of smell in perfectly clean condition for their
-proper work, and make it stick more keenly to the tracks:
-
- _With nostril a-search for the trail that the beast gives forth from
- its body_.
-
-The same watchfulness must be shown in suppressing, or in diverting to
-useful ends, the tendency of an inquisitive person to run off the track
-and wander after everything that he can see or hear. An eagle or a lion
-gathers its talons in when it [Sidenote: 521] walks, so as not to wear
-the sharp edge from their tips. Similarly let us treat the inquiring
-spirit as the keen edge to our love of learning, and refrain from
-wasting or blunting it upon objects of no value.
-
-In the next place let us train ourselves, when passing another’s door,
-to refrain from looking in, or from letting our inquisitive gaze clutch
-at what is passing inside. Xenocrates said—and we shall do well to keep
-the remark in mind—that whether we set foot or set eyes in another man’s
-house makes no difference. Not only is such prying unfair and improper;
-we get no pleasure from the spectacle.
-
- _Unsightly, stranger, are the sights within_,
-
-is a saying which is generally true of what we see inside—a litter of
-pots and pans, or servant-girls sitting about, but nothing of [Sidenote:
-B] any importance or interest. This furtive throwing of sidelong
-glances, which at the same time gives a kind of squint to the mind, is
-ugly, and the habit is demoralizing. When the Olympian victor Dioxippus
-was making a triumphal entry in a chariot, and could not drag his eyes
-from a beautiful woman among the spectators, but kept turning half round
-and throwing side glances in her direction, Diogenes—who saw it
-all—remarked, ‘See how a bit of a girl gets the neck-grip on our great
-athlete!’ Inquisitive people, however, are to be seen gripped by the
-neck and twisted about by any kind of sight, when they once develop a
-habit of squandering their glances in all directions.
-
-This is assuredly no right use of the faculty of vision. It should
-[Sidenote: C] not go gadding about like some ill-trained maidservant;
-but when the mind sends it upon an errand, it should make haste to reach
-its destination, deliver its message, and then come quietly home again
-to wait upon the commands of the reason. Instead of this, the case is as
-in Sophocles:
-
- _Thereon the Aenean driver’s hard-mouthed colts
- Break from control._
-
-When the faculty of vision has not been tutored and trained in the
-proper manner as above described, it runs away, drags [Sidenote: D] the
-mind with it, and often brings it into disastrous collisions.
-
-There is a story that Democritus deliberately destroyed his sight by
-fixing his eyes upon a red-hot mirror and allowing its heat to be
-focussed upon them. His object, it is said, was to block up the windows
-toward the street, and thus prevent the disturbance of his intellect by
-repeated calls from outside, enabling it to stay at home and devote
-itself to pure thinking. Though the story is a fiction, nothing is more
-true than that those who make most use of their mind make few calls upon
-the senses. Note how our halls of learning are built far out from the
-towns, and how night has been styled the ‘_well-minded_‘, from a belief
-[Sidenote: E] that quiet and the absence of distraction are a powerful
-aid to intellectual discovery and research.
-
-Suppose, again, that people are quarrelling and abusing each other in
-the market-place. It requires no great effort of self-denial to keep at
-a distance. When a crowd is running towards a certain spot, it is easy
-for you to remain seated, or else, if you lack the necessary strength of
-mind, to get up and go away. There is no advantage to be got from mixing
-yourself with busybodies, whereas you will derive great benefit from
-putting a forcible check upon your curiosity and training it to obey the
-commands of the reason.
-
-[Sidenote: F] We may now go a step further, and tax ourselves more
-severely. It is good practice, when a successful entertainment is going
-on in a public hall, to pass it by; when our friends invite us to a
-performance by a dancer or comedian, to decline; when there is a roar in
-the race-ground or the circus, to take no notice. Socrates used to urge
-the avoidance of all foods and drinks which tempt one to eat when he is
-not hungry or to drink when he is not thirsty. In the same way we shall
-do well to shun carefully all appeals to eye or ear, when, though they
-are no business of ours, their attractions prove too much for us.
-
-Cyrus refused to see Panthea, and when Araspes talked of her [Sidenote:
-522] remarkable beauty, his answer was: ‘All the more reason for keeping
-away from her. If I took your advice and went to see her, she might
-perhaps tempt me to be visiting her again when I could not spare the
-time, and to be sitting and looking at her to the neglect of much
-important business.’ In the same way Alexander refused to set eyes on
-Darius’ wife, who was said to be strikingly handsome. Though he visited
-the mother—an elderly woman—he would not bring himself to see her young
-and beautiful daughter. But what we do is to peep into women’s litters
-and hang about their windows, finding nothing improper in encouraging
-our curiosity and allowing it such dangerous [Sidenote: B] and unchecked
-play.
-
-Note how you may train yourself for other virtues. To learn justice you
-should sometimes forgo an honest gain, and so accustom yourself to keep
-aloof from dishonest ones. Similarly, to learn continence, you should
-sometimes hold aloof from your own wife, and so secure yourself against
-temptation from another’s. Apply this habit to inquisitiveness.
-Endeavour occasionally to miss hearing or seeing things which concern
-yourself. When something happens at home, and a person wishes to tell
-you of it, put the matter off; and when things have been said which
-appear to affect yourself, refuse to hear them. Remember how Oedipus was
-brought into the direst disasters by over-curiosity. Finding he was no
-Corinthian, but an alien, he set to work [Sidenote: C] to discover who
-he was, and so he met with Laius. He killed him, married his own mother,
-with the throne for dowry, and then, while apparently blessed by
-fortune, began his search once more. The endeavours of his wife to
-prevent him only made him question still more closely, and in the most
-peremptory way, the old man who was in the secret. And at last, when
-circumstances are already bringing him to suspect, and the old man
-cries:
-
- _Alas! I stand on the dread brink of speech!_
-
-he is nevertheless in such a blaze or spasm of passion that he replies:
-
- _And I of hearing; and yet hear I must._
-
-[Sidenote: D] So bitter-sweet, so uncontrollable, is the excitement of
-curiosity—like the tickling of a wound, at which one tears till he makes
-it bleed. Meanwhile if we are free from that malady, and mild by nature,
-we shall ignore a disagreeable thing and say:
-
- _Sovran Oblivion, how wise art thou!_
-
-We must therefore train ourselves to this end. If a letter is brought to
-us, we must not show all that hurry and eagerness to open it which most
-people display, when they bite the fastenings through with their teeth,
-if their hands are too slow. When a messenger arrives from somewhere or
-other, we must not run to meet him, nor get up from our seats. If a
-friend [Sidenote: E] says, ‘I have something new to tell you,’ let us
-reply: ‘Better, if you have something useful or profitable.’ When I was
-once lecturing at Rome, the famous Rusticus—who was afterwards put to
-death by Domitian out of jealousy at his reputation—was among my
-hearers. A soldier came through the audience and handed him a note from
-the emperor. There was a hush, and I made a pause, to allow of his
-reading the letter. This, however, he refused to do, nor would he open
-it, until I had finished my discourse and the audience broke up. The
-incident caused universal admiration at his dignified behaviour.
-
-But when one feeds his inquisitiveness upon permissible material until
-he makes it robust and headstrong, he no longer [Sidenote: F] finds it
-easy to master, when force of habit urges it towards forbidden ground.
-Such persons will stealthily open their friends’ missives, will push
-their way into a confidential meeting, will get a view of rites which it
-is an impiety to see, will tread in hallowed places, and will pry into
-the doings and sayings of a king.
-
-Now with a despot—who is compelled to know everything—there is nothing
-that makes him so detested as the crew known as his ‘ears’ and
-‘jackals’. ‘Listeners’ were first instituted by Darius the Younger, who
-had no confidence in himself and looked upon every one with fear and
-suspicion. ‘Jackals’ were [Sidenote: 523] the creation of the Dionysii,
-who distributed them among the people of Syracuse. Naturally, when the
-revolution came, these were the first to be seized and cudgelled to
-death by the Syracusans.
-
-Blackmailers and informers are a breed belonging to the Busybody clan;
-they are members of the family. But, whereas the informer looks to see
-if his neighbours have done or plotted any mischief, the busybody brings
-to book and drags into public even the misfortunes for which they are
-not responsible. It is said that the outcast derived his name of
-_aliterios_ in the first instance from being a busybody. It appears that
-when a severe famine once occurred at Athens, and when those who were in
-possession of wheat, instead of bringing it in to the public [Sidenote:
-B] stock, used to grind it (_alein_) secretly by night in their houses,
-certain persons, who went round watching for the noise of the mills,
-were in consequence called _aliterioi_. It was in the same way, we are
-told, that the informer won his name of _sukophantes_. The export of
-figs (_suka_) being prohibited, those who gave information (_phainein_)
-and impeached the offenders were called _sukophantai_. Busybodies would
-do well to reflect upon this fact. It may make them ashamed of the
-family likeness between their own practices and those of a class which
-is a special object of loathing and anger.
-
-Footnote 42:
-
- These were farmed.
-
-
-
-
- ON GARRULOUSNESS
-
-
-[Sidenote: 502 B] When philosophy undertakes to cure garrulity it has a
-difficult and intractable case in hand. The remedy is reason, which
-requires that the patient should listen. But the garrulous person
-[Sidenote: C] does not listen, for he is always talking. Herein lies the
-first trouble with an inability to keep silent; it means an inability to
-listen. It is the deliberate deafness of a person who appears to find
-fault with nature for giving him two ears and only one tongue. Euripides
-is, of course, right when he says of the unintelligent hearer:
-
- _I cannot fill a man who cannot hold
- My wise words, poured and poured in unwise ears._
-
-But there is more reason to say of the babbler:
-
- _I cannot fill a man who takes not in
- My wise words, poured and poured in unwise ears_,
-
-—or rather poured over them, since he talks though you do [Sidenote: D]
-not listen, and refuses to listen when you talk. For even if, thanks to
-some ebb in his loquacity, he does listen for a moment, he immediately
-makes up for it several times over.
-
-There is a colonnade at Olympia which reverberates a single utterance
-time after time, and is therefore known as the ‘Seven-Voiced’. Say but
-the least thing to set garrulity sounding, and it immediately dins you
-with its echoes:
-
- _Stirring the strings o’ the mind that none should stir._
-
-The passage through the babbler’s ears leads, apparently, not to his
-mind, but to his tongue. Consequently, while others [Sidenote: E] retain
-what is said, the loquacious person lets it all leak away, and goes
-about like a vessel full of noise but void of sense. Nevertheless, if we
-are resolved to leave no stone unturned, let us say to the babbler:
-
- _Hush, boy: in silence many a virtue lies_,
-
-and, first and foremost, the two virtues of hearing and being heard. The
-garrulous person can get the benefit of neither, and makes a miserable
-failure of the very thing he is aiming at.
-
-In other mental maladies—love of money, love of glory, love of
-pleasure—there is at least a chance of gaining the object pursued. But
-with the babbler that result can hardly happen. [Sidenote: F] What he
-desires is listeners, and listeners he cannot get, for they all run
-headlong away. If, when they are sitting in a lounge or taking a walk
-together, they catch sight of him approaching, they promptly pass each
-other the word to shift camp.
-
-When a silence occurs at some meeting, it is said that _Hermes has
-appeared upon the scene_. Similarly, when a chatterer comes in to a
-wine-party or a social circle, everybody grows mum, for [Sidenote: 503]
-fear of giving him an opportunity. And if he begins of his own accord to
-open his lips, then
-
- _As ere the storm, when the North wind blows
- By the headland that juts to the deep_,
-
-the prospect of being tossed and seasick is so distressing that up they
-get and out they go.
-
-For the same reason he finds no welcome from neighbours at a dinner or
-from messmates on a journey or a voyage. They merely tolerate him
-because they must. For he sticks to you anywhere and everywhere, seizing
-you by the clothes or the beard, and slapping you in the ribs.
-
- _Then are your feet most precious_,
-
-as Archilochus would say—and not only Archilochus, but that wise man
-Aristotle. When the latter was himself once worried [Sidenote: B] by a
-chatterer, who bored him with a number of silly stories and kept
-repeating, ‘Isn’t it wonderful, Aristotle?’ he retorted, ‘The wonder is
-not at that, but at any one tolerating you, when he owns a pair of
-legs.’ To another person of the kind, who, after a great deal of talk,
-remarked, ‘Master, I have wearied you with my chatter,’ he replied, ‘Not
-at all; I was not listening.’ Precisely so. If a chatterer insists on
-talking, the mind surrenders the ears to him and lets the stream pour
-over them on the outside, while inwardly it goes its own way, opening
-[Sidenote: C] and reading to itself a book of quite different thoughts.
-It follows that he can get no hearer either to attend to him or to
-believe him. A babbler’s talk is as barren of effect as the seed of a
-person over-prone to sexualities is said to be.
-
-And yet there is no part of us which Nature has fenced with so excellent
-a barricade as the tongue. In front of that organ it has planted a guard
-in the shape of the teeth, so that, if it will not obey orders and pull
-itself together inside when reason tightens the ‘_silence-working
-reins_‘,[43] we may check its rashness by biting it till it bleeds. The
-phrase of Euripides is that ‘_disaster is the end_’ not of an
-‘unchained’ treasury or storeroom, but of an ‘_unchained mouth_‘. To
-recognize that a storeroom without a door, or a purse without a
-fastening, is of no use to the owner, and yet to possess a mouth without
-lock or door, but with as perpetual an outflow as the mouth of the
-[Sidenote: D] Black Sea, is to set the lowest possible value on speech.
-
-The result is that such a person meets with no belief, though all speech
-has that object, its final cause being to create precisely such credence
-in the hearer. A chatterer is disbelieved even when he tells the truth.
-For as wheat, when shut in a bin, is found to increase in bulk but to
-deteriorate in quality, so, when a story finds its way into a chatterer,
-it generates a large addition of falsehood and its credibility is
-thereby corrupted.
-
-Again, any self-respecting and well-behaved person will beware of
-drunkenness. For while—as some put it—anger lives next door to madness,
-drunkenness lives in the same house. [Sidenote: E] Or rather it _is_
-madness, of shorter duration, it is true, but more culpable, as being in
-a measure voluntary. But the charge most seriously urged against
-drunkenness is its intemperate and irresponsible language:
-
- _For though right shrewd be a man, wine eggs him on till he singeth;
- It loosens him that he laughs with a feeble laughter, and danceth._
-
-Yet if this were the worst—singing, laughing, and dancing—there would
-be, so far, nothing very terrible.
-
- _And he letteth slip some speech, the which were better unspoken_:—
-
-[Sidenote: F] that is where the mischief and danger begin.
-
-We may, indeed, believe that these lines of the poet give the solution
-of the question discussed in the philosophic schools as to the
-distinction between mellowness and intoxication: mellowness produces
-unbending, but drunkenness foolish twaddling. As the proverb-makers put
-it, ‘_What is in the sober man’s heart is on the drunken man’s tongue._’
-Hence when Bias once kept silent at a carousal, and a chatterer taunted
-him with stupidity, he retorted: ‘And, pray, who could keep silent over
-his wine, if he were a fool?’ A certain person at Athens was [Sidenote:
-504] once entertaining envoys from a king, and, as they were eager for
-him to get together the philosophic teachers, he made every effort to
-gratify them. While the rest took part in general discussion, to which
-each contributed his quota, Zeno said nothing. At this the visitors,
-pledging him in friendly and courteous terms, asked him, ‘And what are
-we to say to the king about you, Zeno?’ ‘Merely,’ replied he, ‘that
-there is one old man at Athens who is capable of holding his tongue
-[Sidenote: *] when drinking.’
-
-Silence, then, goes with depth, the capacity to keep a secret,
-[Sidenote: B] and sobriety. Drunkenness, on the other hand, will be
-talking, for it means folly and witlessness, and therefore loquacity. In
-fact, the philosophic definition of intoxication calls it ‘_silly talk
-in one’s cups_‘. The blame, therefore, is not for drinking, if one can
-drink and yet at the same time hold his tongue. It is the foolish talk
-that converts mellowness into drunkenness.
-
-Well, while the drunken man talks nonsense at his wine, the babbler
-talks it everywhere—in the market-place, in the theatre, when walking,
-when tipsy, by day and by night. As your doctor, he is a greater
-infliction than the disease; as your shipmate, more disagreeable than
-the sea-sickness; his praises are more annoying than another person’s
-blame. A tactful rogue is more pleasant company than an honest
-chatterer. In Sophocles, when [Sidenote: C] Ajax is beginning to use
-rough language, Nestor, in endeavouring to soothe him, says politely:
-
- _I blame thee not; for though thy words are wrong,
- Thine acts are right._
-
-But those are not our feelings towards the twaddler. On the contrary,
-the tactlessness of his talk spoils and nullifies anything acceptable in
-what he may do.
-
-Lysias once gave a litigant a speech which he had composed for him.
-After reading it several times the man came back. In a despondent tone
-he told Lysias that, when he first went through the speech, it appeared
-wonderfully good, but on taking it up a second and third time, he found
-it extremely weak and ineffective. ‘Well,’ said Lysias laughing, ‘isn’t
-it only once [Sidenote: D] that you have to speak it before the jury?’
-And consider how persuasive and charming Lysias is! For he is another
-who
-
- _Hath goodly portion, I trow,
- Of the Muses violet-tress’d._
-
-Of all things that are said about the great bard the truest is this—that
-Homer alone manages never to cloy the appetite, since he is always new,
-and his charm always at its height. Nevertheless, exclaiming on his own
-account in the words of Odysseus: [Sidenote: *]
-
- _But to me it is hateful
- To tell o’er a story again, when once right plainly ’tis told you_,
-
-he is continually avoiding that tendency to surfeit which threatens talk
-of every kind, carrying his hearers from one story to another, and
-relieving their satiety by his constant freshness.
-
-Our babblers, on the contrary, bore us to death with their repetitions,
-as if our ears were palimpsests for them to scrawl rubbish upon.
-
-Let this, then, be the first thing of which we remind them. [Sidenote:
-E] It is with talking as it is with wine. The purpose of wine is to
-create pleasure and friendly feeling; but to insist upon our drinking it
-in great quantities and without qualifying it, is to lead us into
-offensive and wanton behaviour. So, while talk plays the most pleasant
-and human part in our intercourse, those who make a wrong and rash use
-of it render it inhuman and insufferable. The means by which they
-imagine they are ingratiating themselves and gaining admiration and
-friendship, only makes them a nuisance and wins them ridicule and
-dislike.
-
-How destitute of charm would be a person who alienated his company and
-drove them away with the very ‘girdle of charm’! And how destitute of
-culture and tact is the man [Sidenote: F] who arouses annoyance and
-hostility by means of speech!
-
-Other infirmities and disorders may be dangerous or detestable or
-ridiculous. Garrulity is all three at once. It is derided for relating
-what everybody knows; it is hated for bearing bad news; it is endangered
-through blabbing secrets. This is the [Sidenote: 505] reason why, when
-Anacharsis went to sleep after being entertained at dinner at Solon’s
-house, he was seen to be holding his right hand over his mouth. He
-believed—quite rightly—that the tongue requires a firmer control than
-any other member. It would be difficult, for instance, to count up as
-many persons who have been ruined by sensuality, as cities and dominions
-which have been brought to destruction by the divulgence of a secret.
-When Sulla was besieging Athens, he could not afford to spend much time
-upon it,
-
- _Since other labour was urging_,
-
-Mithridates having seized upon Asia, and the Marian party [Sidenote: B]
-being again masters of Rome. It happened, however, that a number of old
-men were talking at a barber’s, to the effect that no watch was kept
-upon the Heptachalcon and that the town was in danger of capture at that
-point. They were overheard by spies, who gave information to Sulla; and
-he promptly brought up his forces at midnight, led in his army, and
-almost razed the city to the ground, filling it with carnage till the
-Cerameicus flowed with blood. His anger with the Athenians was, however,
-due more to their words than to their deeds. They would leap on to the
-walls, and abuse him and Metella, and by jeering at him with [Sidenote:
-C]
-
- _A mulberry is Sulla, sprinkled o’er with barley-meal_,
-
-and a number of similar scurrilities, they brought upon themselves—to
-use a phrase of Plato—‘_a very heavy penalty_’ for that ‘_very light_’
-thing, their words.
-
-It was, again, the talkativeness of one man that prevented Rome from
-obtaining its freedom by the removal of Nero. All preparations had been
-made, and only a single night was left before the despot was to perish.
-It happened, however, that the man who was to perform the assassination,
-when on his way to the theatre, saw a prisoner at the palace doors on
-the point of being brought before Nero. As he was bewailing his fate,
-our friend came up close and whispered to him, ‘My good [Sidenote: D]
-man, only pray that to-day may pass, and to-morrow you will be offering
-me thanks.’ The prisoner grasped the meaning of the hint, and
-reflecting, I suppose, that
-
- _’Tis a fool who forgoes what he holds, to pursue what is out of his
- keeping_,
-
-chose the surer rather than the more righteous way of saving himself.
-That is to say, he informed Nero of the expression used. The man was
-thereupon promptly seized, and underwent rack, fire, and lash while
-denying, in the face of constraint, what he had betrayed without any
-constraint.
-
-The philosopher Zeno, for fear that bodily suffering might force him to
-reveal some secret in spite of himself, bit through his tongue and spat
-it out at the despot. Leaena, again, has been gloriously rewarded for
-her self-command. She was the [Sidenote: E] mistress of Harmodius and
-Aristogeiton, and she shared in their plot against the despots—to the
-best of her hopes, which was all a woman could do. For she also was
-inspired with the bacchic frenzy of that glorious ‘_bowl of love_‘, and
-the God had caused her also to be initiated into the secret. Well, after
-they had failed and met their death, she was put to the question and
-ordered to inform against those who still escaped detection. She
-refused, and the firmness with which she bore her sufferings [Sidenote:
-F] proved that, in the love of those heroes for such a woman, there was
-nothing unworthy of themselves. The Athenians therefore had a bronze
-lioness made without a tongue, and set it up in the gates of the
-Acropolis, that courageous animal representing her indomitable firmness,
-and the absence of a tongue her power of silence in keeping a solemn
-secret.
-
-No uttered word has ever done such service as many which have been
-unuttered. You may some day utter what you have kept silent, but you
-cannot unsay what has been said; it has been poured out, and has run
-abroad. Hence, I take it, we have mankind to teach us how to speak, but
-gods to teach us how to keep silent, our lesson in that art being
-received at initiatory [Sidenote: 506] rites and mysteries. Odysseus,
-who possessed most eloquence, the poet has made most reticent; he has
-done the same with his son, his wife, and his nurse. You hear how she
-says:
-
- _Like stubborn oak or like iron will I hold your secret and keep
- it._
-
-In the case of Odysseus himself, as he sat beside Penelope,
-
- _Though in his heart he pitied his wife, and was sore at her
- weeping,
- Steady within their lids stood his eyes as horn or as iron._
-
-[Sidenote: B] So full of self-command was his body in every part, under
-such perfect discipline and control did reason hold it, that it forbade
-the eyes to shed a tear, the tongue to utter a sound, the heart to
-tremble or cry out with rage;
-
- _And his heart once more did obey, and endure with a patient
- enduring_,
-
-inasmuch as reason had extended even to his irrational movements and
-made his very breath and blood amenable to its authority. Most of his
-comrades also were of the same character. Self-command and loyalty could
-no further go than in their case. Though harried and dashed upon the
-ground by the Cyclops, they would not denounce Odysseus to him. They
-would not betray the plot against his eye and the implement which had
-[Sidenote: C] been sharpened in the fire for that purpose; but they
-chose to be eaten raw rather than tell a word of the secret.
-
-Pittacus, therefore, was not far out, when, upon the King of Egypt
-sending him a sacrificial victim and bidding him pick out the ‘fairest
-and foulest’ part of the meat, he took out and sent him the tongue, as
-being the instrument of both the greatest good and the greatest evil.
-
-Euripides’ Ino, making bold to speak for herself, says that she knows
-how to be
-
- _Silent in season, speak where speech is safe._
-
-Those, indeed, who are blessed with a noble and a truly royal education,
-know first how to be silent and then how to talk. The famous king
-Antigonus, when his son asked him at what [Sidenote: D] hour they were
-to break camp, replied, ‘What are you afraid of? That you may be the
-only one to miss hearing the trumpet?’ Was it that he did not trust with
-a secret the man to whom he intended to bequeath his throne? Rather he
-meant to teach him self-mastery and caution in dealing with such
-matters. The aged Metellus, on being asked a similar question during a
-campaign, answered, ‘If I thought my shirt knew that secret, I would
-take it off and put it on the fire.’ When Eumenes heard that Craterus
-was advancing, he told the fact to none of his friends, but pretended
-that it was Neoptolemus, whom his [Sidenote: E] soldiers despised,
-whereas they entertained a great respect for the reputation of Craterus
-and a high esteem of his ability. As, however, no one else found out the
-truth, they joined battle, won the victory, killed Craterus without
-knowing him, and only discovered who he was from his corpse. So good a
-general was the silence of Eumenes in the battle, and so formidable the
-opponent whose presence it disguised, that his friends admired instead
-of blaming him for not forewarning them. Even if some one does find
-fault, it is better to be accused when mistrust has saved you than to be
-the accuser when trust proves your undoing.
-
-What excuse can one possibly find for himself when blaming another for
-not holding his tongue? If the matter ought not to [Sidenote: F] have
-been known, it was wrong to tell it to any one else. If you let the
-secret slip from yourself, and yet ask another person to keep it, you
-take refuge in the loyalty of some one else while abandoning loyalty to
-yourself. And if he turns out as bad as you, you are deservedly undone;
-if better, you are saved by a miracle, through finding another person
-more faithful to you than yourself. ‘But So-and-So is my friend.’ So is
-a second person _his_ friend, whom _he_ again will trust as _I_ trust
-_him_. So with that person and a third, and thus the talk will go on
-[Sidenote: 507] increasing and extending in link after link of weak
-betrayal. The Unit never goes beyond its own limit, but is, once and for
-all, ‘oneness’—whence its name. But the number ‘two’ is the indefinite
-beginning of difference, for by the duplication it at once shifts in the
-direction of multitude. In the same way, so long as a piece of
-information is confined to the first possessor, it is really and truly a
-‘secret’. But if it passes by him to a second, it must be classed as a
-‘report’. ‘_Winged words_,’ says the poet. If you let go from your hand
-a thing with wings, it is not easy to get it back into your grasp; and
-if you let an observation slip from your lips, it is impossible to seize
-and secure it, but away it flies
-
- _on nimbly-whirling wing_,
-
-and circulates in all directions from one set of people to another.
-
-When a ship is caught by a wind, they put a check upon it [Sidenote: B]
-and deaden its speed with cables and anchors; but let a speech run—so to
-speak—out of port, and it finds no place to cast and ride at anchor. It
-is carried away with a roar, till he who has uttered it is dashed and
-sunk upon some great and terrible danger.
-
- _From but a little torch-light Ida’s heights
- May all be set ablaze; so, tell but one,
- And all the town will know it._
-
-The Roman Senate had been engaged for a number of days [Sidenote: C] in
-debating a secret matter of policy. As it gave rise to much
-mystification and conjecture, a woman—otherwise irreproachable, but
-still a woman—kept pestering her husband and imploring him to tell her
-the secret. On her oath, she would be silent: if not, might a curse fall
-upon her. She wept and wailed because she was ‘not trusted’. From a
-desire to bring home her folly by a proof, the Roman said, ‘Have your
-way, wife. But the news is terribly ominous. We have been informed by
-the priests that a lark has been seen flying about with a gold helmet
-and a spear. We are therefore discussing the portent, and are inquiring,
-with the help of the augurs, whether it is good or bad. But mind you
-tell nobody.’ With these words he went off to the Forum. The wife at
-once seized hold of [Sidenote: D] the first maid-servant to enter the
-room, and, beating her own breast and tearing her hair, exclaimed, ‘O my
-poor husband and country! What will become of us?‘, her wish being to
-give the maid the opportunity of asking ‘Why, what has happened?’ At any
-rate she took the question as put, and told the tale, adding the
-invariable refrain of every babbler, ‘Tell no one about it, but hold
-your tongue.’ The girl no sooner left her than she looked for the
-fellow-servant who had least to do, and [Sidenote: E] imparted it to
-her. She in turn told it to her lover, who was paying her a visit. The
-story went rolling on so rapidly that it reached the Forum before the
-man who had invented it, and he was met by an acquaintance, who said,
-‘Have you just come down from home?’ ‘This minute,’ he replied. ‘Then
-you haven’t heard anything?’ ‘No. Why? Is there any news?’ ‘A lark has
-been seen flying about with a gold helmet and a spear, and the
-magistrates are about to hold a Senate meeting on the matter.’ At this
-the man exclaimed with a laugh, ‘O wife, wife! What a speed! To think
-the story has got to the Forum ahead of me!’ First he interviewed the
-magistrates and relieved their anxiety; then, on going home, [Sidenote:
-F] he proceeded to punish his wife by saying, ‘Wife, you have been the
-ruin of me. The secret is public property, and the fault has been traced
-to my house. And so I am to be exiled, all because of your loose
-tongue.’ Upon her attempting to deny it by arguing ‘But there were three
-hundred who heard it as well as you’, he retorted ‘Pooh for your three
-hundred! I invented it to try you, all because of your persistence’.
-
-In this case the man took safe precautions in putting his wife
-[Sidenote: 508] to the test, by pouring into the leaky vessel not wine
-or oil, but water. It was otherwise with Fulvius, the close friend of
-Augustus. The emperor in his old age was lamenting to him over his
-desolate home and grieving because, two of his daughter’s children being
-dead, and Postumius, the only one left, being in exile on some
-calumnious charge, he was being driven to adopt his wife’s son as his
-successor, although he felt compassion [Sidenote: B] for his grandson
-and was considering the question of recalling him from abroad. Fulvius
-divulged what he had heard to his wife, and she to Livia; whereupon
-Livia took Caesar bitterly to task, asking why, if he had been so long
-of this mind, he did not send for his grandson, instead of putting her
-in a position of enmity and strife with the successor to the throne.
-Accordingly, when Fulvius came to him—as he regularly did—in the morning
-and said ‘Good morning, Caesar’, he replied ‘Good-bye, Fulvius’. Fulvius
-took the hint, went away home at once, sent for his wife, and said,
-‘Caesar knows that I have betrayed his secret, and I propose therefore
-to put myself to death.’ ‘Rightly too,’ answered his wife, ‘seeing that,
-after living with [Sidenote: C] me so long, you failed to discover the
-looseness of my tongue and to guard against it. But after me, if you
-please’—and seizing the sword she despatched herself first.
-
-The comic poet Philippides therefore acted rightly when, in answer to
-the friendly civilities of King Lysimachus and his question ‘What is
-there of mine that I can share with you?‘, he replied ‘What you choose,
-Sire, except your secrets.’
-
-On the other hand garrulity goes with the equally objectionable vice of
-inquisitiveness. The babbler must find much to hear, so that he may have
-much to tell. Especially must he go round tracking and hunting out
-hidden secrets, so as to provide himself with a miscellaneous
-stock-in-trade for his foolish [Sidenote: D] talk. Then, like a child
-with a piece of ice, he neither likes to keep hold nor wants to let go.
-Or rather, the secrets are reptiles, which he grasps and puts in his
-bosom, but which he cannot hold tight, and so is devoured by them.
-Garfish and vipers—so we are told—burst in giving birth to their young.
-So the escape of a secret is ruin and destruction to him who lets it
-out.
-
-Seleucus the Victorious, having lost all his army and resources in his
-fight with the Gauls, tore off his royal circlet with his own hands, and
-fled away on horseback with three or four attendants. After a long and
-circuitous ride away from the highroads, he was at last so overcome by
-want that he approached a homestead, and being fortunate enough to find
-the owner in [Sidenote: E] person, asked him for bread and water. The
-man not only gave him these, but supplied him liberally and in the most
-friendly way with whatever else he had upon his farm. In doing so he
-recognized the king’s face. So overjoyed was he at his fortunate
-opportunity of rendering him service, that, instead of restraining
-himself and playing up to the king’s desire to be unknown, he
-accompanied him as far as the road, and, on taking his leave, said,
-‘Good-bye, King Seleucus.’ At this the king, holding out his right hand
-and drawing the man towards him as if to kiss him, gave a sign to one of
-the attendants to cut off his head with a sword;
-
- _And so, with the word on his lips, his head in the dust lay
- mingled_,—
-
-whereas, if he had then had the patience to hold his tongue [Sidenote:
-F] for a little while, he would in all probability, when the king
-subsequently won success and power, have earned a larger return for his
-silence than for his hospitality.
-
-In this case, it is true, the man’s hopes and kindly feeling formed some
-excuse for his lack of self-command. Most babblers, however, have no
-excuse at all for their own undoing. For example, people were once
-talking in a barber’s shop about the despotism of Dionysius, and saying
-how firmly established it was against all assault. At this the barber
-remarked laughingly, ‘How can you say that, when every few days I have
-my [Sidenote: 509] razor at his throat?’ No sooner did Dionysius hear of
-this speech than he impaled the barber.
-
-Barbers, by the way, are generally a garrulous crew. Their chairs being
-the resort of the greatest chatterers, they catch the bad habit
-themselves. It was a neat quip that Archelaus once gave to a loquacious
-barber. After putting the towel round him, the man asked, ‘How shall I
-cut your hair, Sire?’ ‘In silence,’ he replied. It was a barber also who
-reported the great disaster of the Athenians in Sicily, he having been
-the first to hear it at the Peiraeus from a slave, who had run away
-[Sidenote: B] from the spot. Abandoning his shop, he hurried at full
-speed to town,
-
- _Lest another the glory might win_
-
-by imparting the news to the capital,
-
- _while he might come but the second_.
-
-A panic naturally ensued, and the people were gathered to an assembly,
-where they set to work to trace the rumour to its source. When, however,
-the barber was brought forward and questioned, he did not even know the
-name of his informant, but could only give as his authority a person
-unnamed and unknown. Thereupon the audience shouted in anger: ‘To the
-rack and the wheel with the wretch! The thing is a pure concoction! Who
-else has heard it? Who believes it?’ The wheel [Sidenote: C] had been
-brought, and the man had been stretched upon it, when there appeared
-upon the scene the bearers of the disastrous news, who had escaped from
-the very midst of the action. At this they all dispersed, to occupy
-themselves with their private griefs, leaving the poor wretch bound upon
-the wheel. When at a late hour towards evening he was set free, he
-proceeded to ask the executioner ‘whether they had also heard in what
-manner Nicias, the commander, had met his death’. Such a hopeless and
-incorrigible failing does garrulity become through force of habit.
-
-After drinking a bitter and evil-smelling medicine, we are disgusted
-with the cup as well. In the same way, if you are the bearer of bad
-news, you are regarded with disgust and hatred by those who hear it.
-Hence a pretty discussion in Sophocles: [Sidenote: D]
-
- A. _Is it in ear or heart that thou art stung?_
-
- B. _Why seek thus to define where lies my pain?_
-
- A. _’Tis the doer grieves thine heart, I but thine ears._
-
-Be that as it may, a speaker causes pain as well as a doer. Nevertheless
-there is no stopping or chastening a loose, glib tongue.
-
-On one occasion it was discovered that the temple of Athena ‘Of the
-Bronze House’ at Sparta had been pillaged, and an empty flask was found
-lying inside. The crowd which had run together could make nothing of it,
-when one of their number said, ‘If you like, I will tell you my notion
-as to the flask. I fancy the robbers, realizing all the danger they were
-to run, first drank hemlock, and then brought wine with them. If they
-managed to escape detection, they were to neutralize [Sidenote: E] the
-effects of the poison by drinking the unmixed wine, and so get away in
-safety. If they were caught, they were to die an easy and painless death
-from the poison, before they could be put to torture.’ The theory was so
-ingenious and acute that it appeared to come of knowledge rather than
-conjecture. He was therefore surrounded and questioned on every
-side—‘Who are [Sidenote: F] you? Who knows you? How do you get to know
-all that?‘—till finally, under this searching examination, he confessed
-that he was one of the thieves.
-
-Were not the murderers of Ibycus found out in the same way? As they were
-sitting in the theatre, a number of cranes happened to come in sight,
-and they whispered laughingly to one another, ‘Here are the avengers of
-Ibycus!’ They were overheard by persons sitting near them, and as a
-search was being made for Ibycus, who had been missing for a
-considerable time, the words were seized upon and reported to the
-magistrates. By this means the matter was brought home, and the
-assassins carried off to prison, where their punishment was due, not to
-the cranes, but to their own garrulity, which played the part [Sidenote:
-510] of an Erinys or Spirit of Vengeance in compelling them to divulge
-the murder. For as in the body, when a part is diseased or in pain, the
-neighbouring matter gathers towards it by attraction; so is it with the
-babbler’s tongue. Perpetually throbbing and inflamed, it must keep
-drawing towards itself some secret or other which ought to be concealed.
-
-We must therefore make ourselves secure. Let Reason lie like a barrier
-in the way of the tongue, to restrain its flow or prevent its slipping.
-And let us show that we possess no less [Sidenote: B] sense than certain
-geese of which we are told. It is said that, when they cross from
-Cilicia over the Taurus Range—which is full of eagles—they clap a bolt
-or bit upon their utterance. That is to say, they take in their mouths a
-good-sized stone, and so fly over at night without being discovered.
-
-Now if it were asked
-
- _Who it is that is the vilest, who most unredeemed of men_,
-
-it is the traitor who would always be named before any one else. Well,
-Euthycrates (as Demosthenes puts it) ‘_roofed his house with the timber
-got from Macedon_‘. Philocrates received a large sum of gold and
-proceeded to buy ‘_strumpets and fish_‘. Euphorbus and Philagrus, who
-betrayed Eretria, received lands [Sidenote: C] from the Persian king.
-But the babbler is a traitor who volunteers his services without pay,
-not in the way of betraying horses or fortresses, but of divulging
-secrets connected with lawsuits, party feuds, or political manœuvres.
-Instead of any one thanking him, he actually has to thank people for
-listening to him. The line addressed to a man who was recklessly
-squandering his money by giving indiscriminate presents—
-
- _Not generous, you: ’tis your disease; you love to be a-giving_—
-
-fits the prater also. ‘You do not give this information out of
-friendliness and goodwill. ’Tis your disease; you love to be a-talking
-and a-babbling.’
-
-These remarks are not to be regarded as simply an indictment of
-garrulity. They are an attempt to cure it. An ailment is [Sidenote: D]
-overcome by diagnosis and treatment, but diagnosis comes first. No one
-can be trained to avoid or to rid his mental constitution of a thing
-which causes him no distress. That distress we learn to feel at our
-disorders, when reason leads us to perceive the injury and shame which
-result from them. Thus in the present instance we perceive that the
-babbler is hated where he desires to be liked, annoys where he wishes to
-ingratiate himself, is derided where he thinks he is admired, and spends
-without gaining anything by it. He wrongs his friends, assists his
-[Sidenote: E] enemies, and ruins himself. The first step, therefore, in
-physicing this disorder, is to reflect upon the disgrace and pain which
-it causes. The second is to consider the advantages of the contrary
-behaviour, constantly hearing, remembering, and keeping at our call the
-praises of reticence, the solemn and sacramental associations of
-silence, and the fact that it is not by your unbridled talker at large
-that admiration, regard, and reputation for wisdom are won, but by the
-man of short and pithy speech, who can pack much sense into few words.
-
-We find Plato commending such persons, and saying that, in [Sidenote: F]
-their deliverance of crisp, terse, and compact utterances, they resemble
-a skilful javelineer. Lycurgus, again, forced his fellow-citizens to
-acquire this gift of compression and solidity by applying the pressure
-of silence from their earliest childhood.
-
-The Celtiberians produce steel from iron by first burying it in the
-ground and then clearing away the earthy surplusage. So is it with
-Lacedaemonian speech. It has no surplusage, but is steadily hardened
-down to absolute effectiveness by the removal of everything unessential.
-And this knack of theirs of saying a pithy thing, or making a keen and
-nimble retort, is the result of a great habit of silence.
-
-[Sidenote: 511] We must not omit to give our chatterer examples of such
-brevities, in order to show how pretty and effective they are. For
-instance:
-
- _The Lacedaemonians to Philip_: _Dionysius at Corinth_;
-
-and, again, when Philip wrote to them ‘_If I enter Laconia, I will turn
-you out_‘, they wrote back, ‘_If._’ When King Demetrius shouted in his
-indignation, ‘Have the Lacedaemonians sent only one envoy to _me_?‘, the
-envoy replied undismayed, ‘One to one.’ Among our ancient worthies also
-we admire [Sidenote: B] the men of few words. It was not the _Iliad_ or
-the _Odyssey_ or the paeans of Pindar that the Amphictyons inscribed
-upon the temple of the Pythian Apollo, but the maxims _Know Thyself_:
-_Nothing in Excess_: _Give pledge, and Mischief is nigh_, which they
-admired for their simple and compact expression, with its
-closely-hammered thought in small compass. And does not the god himself
-show a love of conciseness and brevity in his oracles, deriving his name
-of ‘Loxias’ from the fact that he would rather be obscure than
-garrulous?
-
-Do we not also particularly praise and admire those who can say, by
-means of a symbol and without speaking a word, all that [Sidenote: C] is
-necessary? For instance, when his fellow-citizens insisted upon
-Heracleitus proposing some measure for the promotion of concord, he
-mounted the platform, took a cup of cold water, sprinkled it with
-barley-meal, stirred it with a slip of pennyroyal, drank it off, and
-went home. This was his way of intimating that to be satisfied with the
-commonest things, and to have no expensive wants, is the way to maintain
-a community in peace and concord. Another case is that of Scilurus, the
-Scythian king, who left behind him eighty sons. When he was dying, he
-called for a bundle of small spears, and bade them take and break it in
-pieces, tied together as it was, and in the mass. When they gave up the
-task, he himself drew the spears out one by one and snapped them all
-with ease, thereby demonstrating [Sidenote: D] how invincible was their
-strength if harmoniously united, how weak and short-lived if they did
-not hold together.
-
-Any one, I believe, who constantly recalls these and the like examples,
-will cease to take a pleasure in chattering. But—speaking for
-myself—there is a story of a certain slave which greatly discourages me,
-when I reflect how hard it is to be so careful of our words as to make
-sure of our purpose. The orator Pupius Piso, not wishing to be troubled,
-ordered his slaves to talk only in answer to questions, and not a word
-more. Subsequently, being anxious to welcome Clodius in his official
-position, he gave orders for him to be invited to dinner, and prepared
-what was, of course, a splendid banquet. When the hour arrived, the
-other guests were all present and waiting for [Sidenote: E] Clodius. The
-slave who regularly carried the invitations was repeatedly sent out to
-see whether he was on his way. When evening came and he was given up in
-despair, Piso said to the slave, ‘Of course you took him the
-invitation?’ ‘I did,’ he answered. ‘Then why has he not appeared?’
-‘Because he refused.’ ‘Then why did you not tell me so at once?’
-‘Because you did not ask me that question.’
-
-So much for the slave at Rome, whereas at Athens he will tell his master
-while digging
-
- _What terms are named i’ the treaty_,
-
-so great in all things is the force of habituation. To habituation let
-us now turn.
-
-[Sidenote: F] We cannot check the babbler by taking, as it were, a grip
-on the reins. The malady can only be overcome by habit.
-
-In the first place, therefore, when questions are asked of your
-neighbours, train yourself to keep silent until they have all failed to
-answer.
-
- _Counsel hath other ends than running hath_,
-
-says Sophocles, and so has speech or answer. In running, the victor is
-the man who comes in first, but here the case is different. If another
-makes a satisfactory reply, the proper course is to lend approval and a
-word of support, and so win credit for good [Sidenote: 512] feeling. If
-he fails, there is nothing invidious or inopportune in giving the
-information which he does not possess, or in supplementing his
-deficiencies. But above all things let us be on our guard, when a
-question is put to another person, that we do not anticipate him and
-take the answer out of his mouth. In any case in which a request is made
-of another it is, of course, improper for us to push him aside and offer
-our own services. By doing so we shall appear to be casting a slur on
-both parties; as if the one were incapable of performing what is asked,
-and as if the other did not know the right quarter from which to get
-what he asks for. But it is especially in connexion with answers to
-questions that such impudent forwardness is an outrage on [Sidenote: B]
-manners. To give the answer before the person questioned has time,
-implies the remark, ‘What do you want _him_ for?‘, or ‘What does _he_
-know?‘, or, ‘When _I_ am present, nobody else should be asked that
-question.’
-
-Yet we often put a question to a person, not because we need the
-information, but by way of eliciting from him a few words of a friendly
-nature, or from a wish to lead him on to converse, as Socrates did with
-Theaetetus and Charmides. To take the answer out of another’s mouth, to
-divert attention to yourself and wrest it from another, is as bad as if,
-when a person desired to be kissed by some one else, you ran forward and
-kissed him yourself, or as if, when he was looking at another, you
-twisted him round in your own direction. The right and proper [Sidenote:
-C] course, even if the person who is asked for information cannot give
-it, is to wait, to take your cue to answer from the wish of the
-questioner—his invitation not having been addressed to you—and then to
-meet the situation in a modest and mannerly way. If a person of whom a
-question is asked makes a mistake in answering it, he meets with a due
-measure of indulgence; but one who pushes himself forward and insists on
-answering first, receives no welcome if he is right, while, if he is
-wrong, he becomes an object of positive exultation and derision.
-
-The second item of our regimen concerns the answering of questions put
-to ourselves. Our garrulous friend must be particularly careful with
-these. In the first place he must not be deceived into giving serious
-replies to those who merely provoke him into a discussion in order to
-make a laughing-stock of him. [Sidenote: D] Sometimes persons who
-require no information simply concoct a question for the amusement and
-fun of the thing, and submit it to a character of this kind in order to
-set his foolish tongue wagging. Against this trick he must be on his
-guard. Instead of promptly jumping at the subject as if he were
-grateful, he should consider both the character of the questioner and
-the necessity for the question. And when it is clear that information is
-really desired, he must make a habit of waiting and leaving some
-interval between question and answer. There will then be time for the
-inquirer to add anything he wishes, and for himself to reflect upon his
-reply, instead of overrunning and muddling the question, hurriedly
-giving [Sidenote: E] first one answer and then another while the
-question is still going on.
-
-The Pythian priestess, of course, is accustomed to deliver oracles on
-the instant, even before the question is asked, inasmuch as the God whom
-she serves
-
- _Understandeth the dumb, and heareth a man though he speak not._
-
-But if you wish your answer to be to the purpose, you must wait for the
-questioner’s thought to be expressed, and discover [Sidenote: F]
-precisely what he is aiming at. Otherwise it will be a case of the old
-saying:
-
- _Asked for a bucket, they refused a tub._
-
-In any case that ravenous greed to be talking must be checked. Otherwise
-it will seem as if a stream, which has long been banked up at the
-tongue, is taking joyful advantage of the question to disgorge itself.
-Socrates used to control his thirst on the same principle. He would not
-permit himself to drink after exercise without pouring away the first
-jugful drawn from the well, thereby training his irrational part to wait
-until reason named the time.
-
-[Sidenote: 513] There are three possible kinds of answer to a
-question—the barely necessary, the polite, and the superfluous. For
-instance, to the inquiry, ‘Is Socrates at home?‘, one person may reply,
-in an offhand and apparently grudging way, ‘Not at home;’ or, if he is
-disposed to adopt the Laconian style, he will omit the ‘at home’ and
-merely utter the negative. Thus the Lacedaemonians, when Philip had
-written to ask, ‘Do you [Sidenote: *] receive me into your city?‘, wrote
-a large _No_ on a piece of paper and sent it back. Another, with more
-politeness, answers, ‘No, but you will find him at the bankers’
-tables’—going so far, perhaps, as to add, ‘waiting for some strangers.’
-But, [Sidenote: B] third, our inordinate chatterbox—at any rate, if he
-happens also to have read Antimachus of Colophon—will say, ‘No; but you
-will find him at the bankers’ tables, waiting for some strangers from
-Ionia, concerning whom he has had a letter from Alcibiades, who is near
-Miletus, staying with Tissaphernes, the Great King’s Satrap, the same
-who used formerly to help the Lacedaemonians, but who is now attaching
-himself to the Athenians, thanks to Alcibiades; for Alcibiades is
-anxious to be recalled from exile, and is therefore working upon
-Tissaphernes to change sides.’ In fact he will talk the whole eighth
-book of Thucydides and will deluge the questioner with it, until, before
-he has done, there is war with Miletus and Alcibiades has been exiled
-for [Sidenote: C] the second time.
-
-Here especially should loquacity be repressed. It should be forced to
-follow in the footsteps of the question, and to confine the answer
-within the circle of which the questioner’s requirement gives the centre
-and radius. When Carneades, before he became famous, was once
-discoursing in the gymnasium, the superintendent sent and requested him
-to lower his voice, which was a very loud one. Upon his replying ‘Give
-me my limit for reach of voice’, the officer aptly rejoined ‘The person
-who is speaking with you’. So, in making an answer, let the limit
-[Sidenote: D] be the wishes of the questioner.
-
-In the next place remember how Socrates used to urge the avoidance of
-those foods and drinks which induce you to eat when you are not hungry
-and to drink when you are not thirsty. So those subjects in which he
-most delights, and in which he indulges most immoderately, are the
-subjects which the babbler should shun, and whose advances he should
-resist. For example, military men are given to prosing about wars. Homer
-introduces Nestor in that character, making him relate his own deeds of
-prowess time after time. Take, again, those who have scored a victory in
-the law-courts, or who have met with surprising success at the courts of
-governors or kings. Generally [Sidenote: E] speaking, they are chronic
-sufferers from an itch to talk about it, and to describe over and over
-again how they came in, how they were introduced, how they played their
-parts, how they talked, how they confuted some opponent or accuser, and
-what eulogies they won. Their delight is more loquacious than that
-‘sleepless night’ in the comedy, and is perpetually fanning itself into
-new flame and keeping itself fresh by telling over the tale. They are
-therefore prone to slip into such subjects at every pretext. For not
-only
-
- _Where the pain is, there also goes the hand_;
-
-[Sidenote: F] no less does the part which feels pleasure draw the voice
-and twist the tongue in its own direction, from a desire to dwell
-perpetually on the theme. It is the same also with amorous persons, who
-chiefly occupy themselves with such conversation as brings up some
-mention of the object of their passion. If they cannot talk to human
-beings about it, they do so to inanimate things:
-
- _O bed most dear!_
-
-or
-
- _Bacchis thought thee a god, thou blessed lamp;
- And greatest god thou art, methinks, through her._
-
-No doubt it makes not a pin’s difference to the chatterer [Sidenote:
-514] what subject of conversation may arise. Nevertheless, if he has a
-greater predilection for one class of subjects than for another, he
-ought to be on his guard against that class and force himself to hold
-aloof from it, since those are the subjects which can always tempt him
-furthest into prolixity for the pleasure of the thing. It is the same
-with those matters in which the talker thinks that his experience or
-ability gives him a superiority over other people. Through egotism and
-vanity such a person
-
- _Giveth the most part of the day to that
- Wherein he showeth to the most advantage._
-
-With the much-read man it is general information; with the [Sidenote: B]
-expert in letters, the rules of literary art; with the much-travelled
-man, accounts of foreign parts. These subjects also must therefore be
-shunned. They are an enticement to loquacity, which is led on to them
-like an animal towards its wonted fodder. One admirable feature in the
-conduct of Cyrus was that, in his matches with his mates, he challenged
-them to compete at something in which he was not more, but less, expert
-than they. Thus, while he caused no pain by eclipsing them, he also
-derived advantage from a lesson. With the chatterer it is the other way
-about. If any subject is mooted which gives him the opportunity of
-asking and learning something he does not know, he cannot even pay so
-small a fee [Sidenote: C] for it as merely holding his tongue, but he
-blocks the topic and elbows it aside, working steadily round till he
-drives the conversation into the well-worn track of stale old twaddle.
-
-We have had an example of this among ourselves, where a person who
-happened to have read two or three books of Ephorus used to weary every
-one to death, and put any convivial party to rout, by everlastingly
-describing the battle of Leuctra and its sequel, until he earned the
-nickname of ‘Epaminondas’. If, however, we are to choose between evils,
-this is the least, and we must divert loquacity into this channel.
-Talkativeness will be [Sidenote: D] less disagreeable when its excess is
-in an expert connexion.
-
-In the next place such persons should habituate themselves to putting
-things in a written or conversational form when alone. The case is not
-as with Antipater the Stoic. He gained his sobriquet of ‘Pen-Valiant’
-because, being—as it would appear—unable and unwilling to come out and
-meet the vehement attacks made by Carneades upon the Porch, he kept
-filling his books with written disputations against him. But if the
-babbler turns to writing and valiantly fights shadows with his pen, the
-occupation will keep him from attacking people at large and will render
-him daily more bearable to his company. It will be as with dogs. Let
-them vent their anger on sticks and stones, and they are less ferocious
-to human beings. [Sidenote: E]
-
-Another extremely beneficial course for talkers to adopt is to associate
-continually with their superiors and elders, out of respect for whose
-standing they will develop a habit of holding their tongues.
-
-As part and parcel of this training we should always vigilantly apply
-the following reflection, when we are on the point of talking and the
-words begin running to our mouths: ‘What _is_ this remark that is so
-pressing and importunate? With what object is my tongue so impatient?
-What honour do I get by speaking, or what harm by keeping quiet?’ If the
-thought were an oppressive weight to be got rid of, the matter would be
-[Sidenote: F] different; but it remains with you just as much, even if
-it is spoken. When men talk, it is either for their own sake, because
-they want something, or it is to help the hearer; or else they seek to
-ingratiate themselves with each other by seasoning with the salt of
-rational conversation the pastime or business in which they happen to be
-engaged. But if a remark is neither of advantage to the speaker nor of
-importance to the hearer, if it contains nothing pleasant or
-interesting, why is it made? The [Sidenote: *] meaningless and futile is
-as much to be avoided in words as it is in deeds.
-
-Over and above all this, we should keep in lively recollection
-[Sidenote: 515] the saying of Simonides that he ‘had often repented of
-talking, but never of holding his tongue’. We should remember also that
-practice is a potent thing and overcomes all difficulties. People get
-rid even of the hiccoughs or a cough by resolutely resisting them. Yet
-this involves trouble and pain, whereas silence not only, as Hippocrates
-says, ‘prevents thirst;’ it also prevents pain and suffering.
-
-Footnote 43:
-
- The Homeric σιγαλόεντα (‘glossy’) is brought, either in error or by a
- deliberate pun, into relation with σιγή (‘silence’).
-
-
-
-
- ON THE STUDENT AT LECTURES
-
-
-MY DEAR NICANDER, [Sidenote: 37 C]
-
-This is an article upon ‘The Attitude of the Student’, which I have
-written and am sending to you. Its purpose is to teach you the right
-attitude towards your philosophic teacher, now that you are a grown-up
-man and are no longer obliged merely to obey orders.
-
-Some young men are so ill-informed as to suppose that absence of
-restraint is the same thing as freedom, whereas, by unchaining
-[Sidenote: D] the passions, it makes them slaves to a set of masters
-more tyrannical than all the teachers and mentors of childhood.
-Herodotus says that when women take off the tunic they also take off
-shame. It is the same with some young men. In laying aside the garb of
-childhood they also lay aside shame and fear. No sooner do they unloose
-the cloak which controlled their conduct than they indulge in the utmost
-misbehaviour. With you it should be otherwise. You have been told over
-and over again that to ‘follow God’ and to ‘obey reason’ are the same
-thing. Understand, therefore, that with right-minded persons a coming of
-age does not mean rejection of rule, but change of ruler. For the hired
-or purchased[44] director of conduct they [Sidenote: E] substitute one
-that is divine—namely, reason. Only those who follow reason deserve to
-be considered free; for they alone live as they choose, because they
-alone have learned to make the right choice, whereas ignorant and
-irrational desires and actions give small and paltry scope to the will,
-but great scope to repentance.
-
-Note what happens in the case of naturalized citizens. Entire [Sidenote:
-F] foreigners from another country will often grumble irritably at their
-experiences, whereas those who have previously been denizens of the
-state, and have therefore lived in intimate touch with the laws, will
-accept their obligations with cheerful readiness. So with yourself. For
-a long time you have been growing up in the company of philosophy. From
-the first you have been accustomed to a taste of philosophic reason in
-everything that you have been taught or told as a child. It should
-therefore be in a well-disposed and congenial spirit that you come to
-Philosophy, who alone can adorn a youth with that finish of manhood
-which genuinely and rationally deserves the name.
-
-You will not, I believe, object to a prefatory remark upon [Sidenote:
-38] the sense of hearing. Theophrastus asserts that it is the most
-susceptible of all the senses, inasmuch as nothing that can be seen,
-tasted, or touched, is the cause of such strong emotional disturbance
-and excitement as takes hold upon the mind when certain sounds of
-beating, clashing, or ringing fall upon the ear. It is, however, more
-rational, rather than more emotional, than the other senses. Vice can
-find many places and parts of the body open for it to enter and seize
-upon the soul. But the only hold that virtue can take is upon pure young
-ears [Sidenote: B] which have at all times been protected from the
-corruptions of flattery or the touch of low communications. Hence the
-advice of Xenocrates, that ear-guards should be worn by boys more than
-by athletes, inasmuch as the latter merely have their ears disfigured by
-blows, while the former have their characters disfigured by words. Not
-that he would wed us to inattention or deafness. It is but a warning to
-beware of wrong communications, and to see that others of the right
-nature have first been fostered in our character by philosophy and have
-mounted guard in that quarter which is most open to influence and
-persuasion.
-
-Bias, the ancient sage, was once bidden by Amasis to send him that piece
-of meat from a sacrificial victim which was at the same time the best
-and the worst. He replied by taking out and sending the tongue, on the
-ground that speech can do both the greatest harm and the greatest good.
-It is a general practice in fondling little children to take them by the
-ears, and to bid [Sidenote: C] them do the same to us—an indirect and
-playful way of suggesting that we should be especially fond of those who
-make our ears the instruments to our advantage.
-
-It is, of course, obvious that a youth cannot be debarred from any or
-every kind of hearing, or from tasting any discourse at all. Otherwise
-not only will he remain entirely without fruit or growth in the way of
-virtue; he will actually be perverted in the direction of vice, his mind
-being an idle and uncultivated patch producing a plentiful crop of
-weeds. Propensity to pleasure and dislike of labour—the springs of
-innumerable forms of trouble and disease—are not of external origin, nor
-imported [Sidenote: D] from teaching, but they well up naturally from
-the soil. If therefore they are left free to take their natural course;
-if they are not done away with, or turned aside, by sound instruction;
-if nature is not thus brought under control, man will prove more
-unreclaimed than any brute beast.
-
-The hearing of lectures, then, may be of great profit, but at the same
-time of great danger, to a young man. This being so, I believe it a good
-thing to make the matter one of constant discussion, both with oneself
-and with others. In most cases [Sidenote: E] we may notice a false
-procedure—that of cultivating the art of speaking before being trained
-to the art of listening. It is thought that, while speaking requires
-instruction and practice, any kind of listening is attended with profit.
-But not so. Whereas in ball-play one learns simultaneously how to throw
-and how to catch, in the business of speech the right taking in is prior
-to the giving out, just as conception is prior to parturition. We are
-told that in the case of a hen laying a wind-egg her labour and travail
-end in nothing but an abortive and lifeless piece of refuse. So when a
-young man lacks the ability to listen, [Sidenote: F] or the training to
-gather profit through the ear, the speech which he lets fall is
-wind-begotten indeed:
-
- _Sans all regard and sans note it is lost in the clouds and
- dispersèd._
-
-He will take a vessel and tilt it in the right direction for receiving
-anything to be poured into it, and so ensure a real ‘in-pouring’ instead
-of a pouring to waste. But he does not learn to lend his own attention
-to a speaker and meet the lecture half-way, so as to miss no valuable
-point. On the contrary, his behaviour is in the last degree ridiculous.
-If he happens upon a person [Sidenote: 39] describing a dinner, a
-procession, a dream, or a brawling-match in which he has been engaged,
-he listens in silence and is eager for more. But if a teacher to whom he
-has attached himself tries to impart something useful, or to urge him to
-some duty, to admonish him when wrong, or to soothe him when angry, he
-is out of all patience. If possible, he shows fight, and is ambitious to
-get the best of the argument. Otherwise he is off and away to discourses
-of a different and a rubbishy kind, filling his ears—the poor leaky
-vessels—with anything rather than the thing they need.
-
-[Sidenote: B] From the right kind of breeder a horse obtains a good
-mouth for the bit, and a lad a good ear for reason. He is taught to do
-much listening, but to avoid much speaking. We may quote the remark of
-Spintharus in praise of Epaminondas, that he had scarcely ever met with
-any man either of greater judgement or of fewer words. Moreover, we are
-told, the reason why nature gave each of us two ears, but only one
-tongue, was that we should do less speaking than hearing.
-
-A youth is at all times sure to find silence a credit to him; but in one
-case it is especially so—when he can listen to another without becoming
-excited and continually yelping; when, even [Sidenote: C] if what is
-being said is little to his liking, he waits patiently for the speaker
-to finish; when, at the close, he does not immediately come to the
-attack with his contradiction, but (to quote Aeschines) waits a while,
-in case the speaker might wish to supplement his remarks, or perhaps to
-adjust or qualify his position. To take instant objection, neither party
-listening to the other but both talking at once, is an unseemly
-performance. On the other hand, those who have been trained to listen
-with modest self-control will accept a valuable argument and make it
-their own, while they will be in a better position to see through a
-worthless or false one and to expose it, thereby [Sidenote: D] showing
-that they are lovers of truth, and not merely contentious, headstrong,
-or quarrelsome persons. It is therefore not a bad remark of some, that
-there is more need to expel the wind of vanity and self-conceit from the
-young, than to expel the air from a skin, when you wish to pour in
-anything of value: otherwise they are too swollen and flatulent to
-receive it.
-
-The presence of envious and malicious jealousy is, of course, never to
-good purpose, but always an impediment to proper action. In the case of
-a student at lectures it is the most perverse of prompters. Words which
-ought to do him good are rendered vexing, distasteful, and unwelcome by
-the fact that there is nothing which an envious man likes so little as
-an [Sidenote: E] excellent piece of reasoning. And note that, when a man
-is piqued by fame or beauty belonging to others, he is envious and
-nothing more; what annoys him is another’s good fortune. But when he is
-irritated by admirable argument, his vexation is at his own good, since
-reason—if he has a mind to accept it—is as much to the good of one who
-hears as light is to the good of one who sees.
-
-Envy in other matters is the result of various coarse or low attitudes
-of mind; envy of a speaker is born of inordinate love of glory and
-unfair ambition. A person so disposed is prevented [Sidenote: F] from
-listening to reason. His mind is perturbed and distracted. At one and
-the same time it is looking at its own endowments, to see if they are
-inferior to those of the speaker, and at the rest of the company, to see
-if they are wondering and admiring. It is disgusted at their applause,
-and exasperated at their approval. The previous portions of the speech
-it forgets and ignores, because the recollection is irksome. The parts
-yet to come it awaits with trembling anxiety, for fear they may prove
-better still. When the speaker is at his best, it is most [Sidenote: 40]
-eager for him to stop. When the lecture is over, it thinks of nothing
-that was said, but takes count of the expressions and attitudes of the
-audience. From those who give praise it dances away in a frenzy; and to
-those who carp and distort it runs to form one of the herd. If there is
-nothing to distort, it makes comparisons with others who have spoken
-‘better and more eloquently to the same purpose’. In the end our friend
-has so cruelly mishandled the lecture that he has made it of no use or
-profit to himself.
-
-[Sidenote: B] Let the love of glory, then, be brought to terms with the
-love of learning. Let us listen to a speaker with friendly courtesy,
-regarding ourselves as guests at a sacred banquet or sacrificial
-offering. Let us praise his ability when he makes a hit, or be satisfied
-with the mere goodwill of a man who is making the public a present of
-his views and endeavouring to convince others by means of the arguments
-which have convinced himself. When he goes right, let us consider that
-his rightness is due not to chance or accident, but to painstaking
-effort and learning. Let us take a pattern by it, and not only admire
-it, but emulate it. When he is at fault, let us stop and think for what
-reasons he is so, and at what point he began to go astray. [Sidenote: C]
-Xenophon observes that good managers derive profit from their enemies as
-well as from their friends. In the same way those who are attentive and
-alert derive benefit from a speaker not only when he is in the right,
-but also when he is in the wrong. Paltry thought, empty phrase, affected
-bearing, vulgar delight and excitement at applause, and the like, are
-more palpable to a listener in another’s case than to a speaker in his
-own. It is well, therefore, to take the criticism which we apply to him,
-and apply it to ourselves, asking whether we commit any mistake of the
-kind without being aware of it. It is the easiest thing in [Sidenote: D]
-the world to find fault with our neighbour, but it is a futile and
-meaningless proceeding, unless made to bear in some way upon the
-correction or prevention of similar faults. When lapses are committed,
-let us always be prompt to exclaim to ourselves in the phrase of Plato,
-‘Am I, perhaps, as bad?’ As in the eyes of our neighbour we see the
-reflection of our own, so we should find a picture of our own speech in
-that of another. In that way we shall avoid treating others with
-over-confident contempt, and shall also look more carefully to our own
-deliverances.
-
-There is another way in which comparison serves this useful [Sidenote:
-E] purpose. I mean if, when we get by ourselves after the lecture, we
-take some point which appears to have been wrongly or unsatisfactorily
-treated, and attack the same theme, doing our best to fill in, to
-correct, to re-word, or to attempt an entirely original contribution to
-the subject, as the case may be—doing, in fact, as Plato did[45] with
-the speech of Lysias. While to argue against a certain deliverance is
-not difficult, but, on the contrary, very easy, to set up a better in
-its stead is an extremely hard matter. As the Lacedaemonian said on
-hearing that Philip had razed Olynthus to the ground: ‘Yes, but to
-create a city as good is beyond the man’s power’. Accordingly,
-[Sidenote: F] when we find that in dealing with the same subject we can
-do but little better than the speaker in the case, we make a large
-reduction in our contempt and speedily prune down that self-satisfied
-conceit which has been exposed during such process of comparison.
-
-Nevertheless, though admiration, as opposed to contempt, certainly
-betokens a fairer and gentler nature, it is a thing which, in its own
-turn, requires no little—perhaps greater—caution. [Sidenote: 41] For
-while a contemptuous and over-confident person derives too little
-benefit from a speaker, an enthusiastic and guileless admirer derives
-too much injury. He forms no exception to the rule of Heracleitus that
-‘_Any dictum will flutter a fool_‘. One should be frank in yielding
-praise to the speaker, but cautious in yielding belief to the assertion;
-a kindly and candid observer of the diction and delivery of the arguer,
-but a sharp and exacting critic of the truth and value of his argument.
-[Sidenote: B] While we thus escape dislike from the speaker, we escape
-harm from the speech. How many false and pernicious doctrines we
-unawares accept through esteeming and trusting their exponent! The
-Lacedaemonian authorities, after examining a measure suggested by a man
-of evil life, instructed another person, famous for his conduct and
-character, to move it—a very proper and statesmanlike encouragement to
-the people to be led more by the character of an adviser than by his
-speech. But in philosophy we must put aside the reputation of the
-speaker and examine the speech in and by itself. In lecturing, as in
-war, there is much that is mere show. The speaker’s grey hairs, his
-vocal [Sidenote: C] affectations, his supercilious airs, his
-self-glorification; above all, the shouting, applauding, and dancing of
-the audience overwhelm the young and inexperienced student and sweep him
-along with the current. There is deception in the language also, when it
-streams upon the question in a delightful flood, and when it contains a
-measure of studied art and the grandiose. As, in singing to the
-accompaniment of the flageolet, mistakes are generally undetected by an
-audience, so an elaborate and pretentious diction dazzles the hearer and
-blinds him to the sense. I believe it was Melanthius who, when asked
-about [Sidenote: D] Diogenes’ tragedy, replied: ‘I could not get a sight
-of it; it was hidden behind the words.’ But with the discourses and
-declamations of the majority of our professors it is not merely a case
-of using the words to screen the thoughts. They also dulcify the
-voice—modulating, smoothing, and intoning—till the hearer is carried
-away with a perfect intoxication. They give an empty pleasure, and are
-paid with an emptier fame. Their case, in fact, is one for the quip
-given by Dionysius. It was he, I think, who, during the performance of a
-distinguished harp-player, promised him a liberal reward, but
-subsequently gave [Sidenote: E] him nothing, on the ground that he had
-made a sufficient return. ‘For as long a time as I was enjoying your
-singing’, said he, ‘you were enjoying your expectations.’ The deliverer
-of the lectures in question finds that they represent a joint
-contribution of the same kind. He receives admiration as long as his
-entertainment lasts. As soon as no more pleasure is forthcoming for the
-ear, there is no more glory left for him. The one party has wasted his
-time, the other his professional life.
-
-Let us, then, strip aside all this empty show of language, and make for
-the actual fruit. It is better to imitate the bee than [Sidenote: F] the
-garland-maker. The latter looks for the bright-coloured fragrant petals,
-and, by twining and plaiting them together, produces an object which is
-pleasant enough, but short-lived and fruitless. Bees, on the contrary,
-frequently skim through meadows of violets, roses, or hyacinths, to
-settle upon the coarsest and bitterest thyme. To this they devote
-themselves
-
- _Contriving yellow honey_,
-
-and then fly home to their proper business with something worth the
-getting. So a student who takes his work in real earnest will pay no
-regard to dainty flowery words nor to showy [Sidenote: 42] theatrical
-matter. These he will consider as fodder for drones who play the
-sophist. For his own part he will probe with keen attention into the
-sense of a speech and the quality of the speaker. Therefrom he will suck
-such part as will be of service and profit. He will remember that he has
-not come to a theatre or concert-hall, but to a classroom in the
-schools, and that his object is to get his life corrected by means of
-reason. Hence he should form a critical judgement of the lecture from
-his own case, that is to say, from a calculation of its effect upon
-himself. Has it been the chastening of a passion, the lightening
-[Sidenote: B] of a grief? Has it been courage, firmness of spirit,
-enthusiasm for excellence and virtue? Upon rising from the barber’s
-chair he will stand at the glass and put his hands to his head,
-inspecting the trim and arrangement of the hair. No less should he,
-immediately on leaving a lecture in the philosophic school, look at
-himself and examine his own mind, to see if it has got rid of any
-useless and uncomfortable growth and become lighter and more at ease.
-‘There is no use’, says Aristo, ‘in either a bath or a speech, unless it
-cleanses.’
-
-[Sidenote: C] By all means let a young man, while profiting from a
-discourse, find pleasure in the process. But he must not treat the
-pleasure of the lecture as its end, nor expect to come out of the
-philosopher’s school with a beaming face and humming a tune. He must not
-ask for scented unguents when what he needs is a lotion or a poultice.
-On the contrary, he should be grateful if a pungent argument acts upon
-his mind like smoke upon a hive, and clears out all the darkness and
-mistiness that fill it. Though it is quite right for a speaker not to be
-altogether without concern for an attractive and persuasive style of
-language, that should be a matter least regarded by the young student,
-at any rate in the first instance. Later, no doubt, the case may be
-[Sidenote: D] different. It is when they are no longer thirsty that
-persons engaged in drinking will turn a cup about and inspect the
-chasing upon it. Similarly during a breathing-time, after taking our
-fill of the lesson, we may be permitted to examine any uncommon elegance
-in the language. But if from the very first, instead of taking a grip
-upon the substance, you insist upon ‘good pure Attic’ expression, you
-are like a person who refuses to take an antidote unless the vessel is
-made of the best Attic earthenware; or who declines to put on a thick
-cloak in winter unless the wool is from Attic sheep, preferring to sit,
-stubborn and impracticable, in the thin napless mantle of the ‘style of
-Lysias’. Perversities of this kind are responsible for a plentiful
-[Sidenote: E] lack of good sense and an abundance of loquacious claptrap
-in the schools. Young fellows keep no watch upon the life, the practical
-action, or the public services of a philosopher, but make a great merit
-of diction, phrase, and fine method of statement, while they possess
-neither the ability nor the desire to find out whether the statement is
-valuable or worthless, whether it is vital or a mere futility.
-
-The next rule concerns the propounding of difficulties. A guest at a
-dinner is bound to accept what is put upon the [Sidenote: F] table, and
-neither to ask for anything else nor to find fault. When the feast
-consists of a discourse, any one who comes to it should listen and say
-nothing, if there is an understanding to that effect. Persons who cannot
-listen in a pleasant and sociable manner, but keep drawing the speaker
-off to other topics, interposing questions and mooting side-issues, get
-no benefit themselves and confuse both the speaker and the speech. When,
-however, he invites the audience to ask questions and advance
-difficulties, any that are proposed should prove to be useful and
-important. Odysseus, when in the suitors’ company, incurs ridicule
-through
-
- _Begging for morsels and scraps, and not for a sword or a cauldron._
-
-[Sidenote: 43] regard it as a sign of lofty-mindedness not only to give,
-but to ask for, something of value. It is, however, more a case for
-ridicule when a hearer poses a speaker with petty little problems of the
-kind often propounded by young men, when they are talking claptrap in
-order to make a show of attainments in logic or mathematics—for example,
-concerning ‘division of the indeterminate’ and the nature of ‘lateral’
-or ‘diagonal’ [Sidenote: B] motion. The proper answer to such persons is
-the remark of Philotimus to a man who was suffering with abscesses and
-consumption, but who had been talking to him for some time about
-requiring ‘some little thing to cure a whitlow’. Perceiving the man’s
-condition from his complexion and breathing, Philotimus observed: ‘My
-good sir, a whitlow is not the question with you.’ Nor in your case,
-young sir, is it worth while to be discussing such questions as yours,
-but how you are to get rid of conceit, swaggering about love-affairs,
-and such-like nonsense, and how you are to plant your feet on the way to
-a healthy and sober-minded life.
-
-Especially are you bound, in putting your questions, to accommodate
-yourself to a speaker’s range of knowledge or natural [Sidenote: C]
-ability—to his special _forte_. A philosopher who is more concerned with
-ethics should not be attacked with difficulties in natural science or
-mathematics, nor should one who prides himself upon his scientific
-knowledge be dragged into determining hypothetical syllogisms or solving
-fallacies. If you attempted to chop your wood with the key and to open
-your door with the axe, it would not be thought that you were making
-sport of these implements, but that you were depriving yourself of their
-respective powers and uses. In the same way, if you ask of a speaker a
-thing for which he has no gift or training, while you make no harvest of
-what he possesses and offers, [Sidenote: D] you not only do yourself
-harm to that extent, but you incur condemnation for malicious
-ill-nature.
-
-Be careful also not to propound difficulties yourself in too great
-numbers or too frequently. This is, in a sense, another way of showing
-off. Meanwhile, to listen equably when some one else is mooting them,
-shows that you are a clubbable person and a student. This is assuming
-you have no harassing and urgent trouble of your own, no mental
-disturbance to be controlled or malady to be comforted. It may not,
-after all, be (as Heracleitus says) ‘better to conceal ignorance’, but
-to bring it into the open and cure it. If your mind is upset by a fit of
-anger, an attack of superstition, a violent quarrel with your friends,
-or a mad amorous passion which
-
- _Stirreth the heart-strings that should rest unstirred_,
-
-[Sidenote: E] you must not run away from a discourse which searches it
-home, and fly to others of a different nature. On the contrary, these
-are the very topics to which you should listen, both at lectures and
-also by privately approaching the lecturer afterwards and asking for
-further light.
-
-The opposite course is the one too generally followed. So long as the
-philosopher is dealing with other persons, his hearers are all delight
-and admiration. But when he leaves those others alone and frankly
-administers some important reminder to themselves personally, they are
-disgusted with him for not minding his own business. Generally speaking,
-they think [Sidenote: F] a philosopher is entitled to a hearing inside
-his school, as the tragedian is in the theatre; but in matters beyond it
-they do not consider him in any way superior to themselves. Towards a
-sophist their attitude is natural enough; for when he rises from his
-chair, lays aside his books and his introductory manuals, and makes his
-appearance in the practical departments of life, he ranks in the popular
-mind as an unimportant and inferior person. But towards a philosopher in
-the real sense their attitude is wrong. They do not recognize that a
-tone of earnestness or jest, a sign of approval or disapproval, a smile
-or a frown, [Sidenote: 44] on his part—and, above all, his direct
-handling of their individual cases—are fruitful in good to those who
-have learned the art of listening with submission.
-
-Applause, again, has its duties, which call for a certain caution and
-moderation. A gentleman bestows neither too little nor too much of it. A
-hearer shows churlishly bad taste when nothing whatever in a lecture
-will make him thaw or unbend; when he is diseased with festering conceit
-and chronic self-complacency, and is all the time thinking he could
-improve upon the deliverance; when he neither makes any appropriate
-movement of the brow nor utters any sound to prove that he is [Sidenote:
-B] a considerate and willing listener; when he is seeking a reputation
-for solidity and depth by means of silence, an affected gravity, and
-attitudes of pose, under the notion that applause is like money, and
-that whatever amount you give to another you take from yourself. The
-fact is that there are many who take up the well-known saying of
-Pythagoras and sing it to a false tune. His own gain from philosophy, he
-said, was to ‘_wonder at [Sidenote: *] nothing_‘; whereas theirs is to
-‘praise nothing’ or to ‘honour nothing’. With them wisdom lies in
-contempt, and the way to be dignified is to be disdainful. While, by
-means of knowledge [Sidenote: C] and the ascertainment of the cause in a
-given case, philosophic reason does away with the wonder and awe due to
-unenlightenment and ignorance, it does not destroy a generous
-appreciation. Those whose excellence is genuine and firmly seated find
-it the highest honour to bestow honour, the highest distinction to
-bestow distinction, where honour and distinction are due. Such conduct
-implies that they have fame enough and to spare, and are free from
-jealousy, whereas those who are niggards of praise to others are in all
-probability pinched and hungry for praise of their own.
-
-On the other hand, the opposite type of hearer is the fluttering
-feather-head who uses no discrimination, but punctuates with loud cheers
-at every word and syllable. While he is frequently obnoxious to the
-disputant himself, he is invariably a nuisance [Sidenote: D] to the
-hearers. He worries them on to their feet against their judgement, and
-drags them willy-nilly to join in the chorus because they are ashamed to
-refuse. Thanks to his applause deranging the lecture and making an
-imbroglio of it, he gets no good from it, but goes home with one of
-three descriptions to his credit—fleerer, sycophant, or ignoramus.
-
-It is true that, when hearing a case in court, we must lean [Sidenote:
-E] neither towards hostility nor towards favour, but towards justice as
-we best understand it. But at a lecture on a subject of learning there
-is neither law nor oath to debar us from granting the speaker an
-indulgent reception. The reason why the ancients placed the statue of
-Hermes in the company of the Graces was that speaking has a special
-claim to a gracious friendliness. It is impossible for any one to be so
-complete a failure or so utterly astray as to offer us nothing deserving
-of a cheer, in the shape of a thought, a reference to others, the mere
-choice of theme or purpose, or, possibly, in the wording or arrangement
-of the matter,
-
- _As among urchin-foot or mid coarse broom
- The tender snowflake springeth into bloom._
-
-[Sidenote: F] There are persons who, for exhibition purposes, can lend a
-fair measure of plausibility to a panegyric upon vomiting or fever, or
-even a pot; and surely a deliverance by a man who has some sort of claim
-to be thought, or to call himself, a philosopher cannot absolutely fail
-to afford a well-disposed or courteous audience some opportunity of
-finding relief in applause.
-
-According to Plato young persons in the bloom of life can always manage
-somehow to excite a lover’s passion. If they are white he calls them
-‘saint-like’; if swarthy, ‘virile’. [Sidenote: 45] A hook-nose is
-‘regal’, a snub nose ‘piquant’; a sallow skin is a ‘complexion of
-honey’. He uses these pretty names, and is pleased and satisfied. Love
-has, indeed, an ivy-like gift for clinging to any pretext. Much less
-will an eager and earnest student of letters ever fail in inventiveness.
-In every speaker he will discover some grounds for reasonable applause.
-In the speech of Lysias, though Plato objects to its want of
-arrangement, and though he has no praise for its inventiveness, he
-nevertheless commends him for his manner of statement, and because there
-is ‘a clear round finish in the chiselling of every word’. [Sidenote: B]
-We might find fault with Archilochus for his subject-matter, Parmenides
-for his versification, Phocylides for his commonplaceness, Euripides for
-his garrulity, Sophocles for his inequality. Similarly one of the
-orators has no characterization, another exerts no passion, a third is
-lacking in grace and charm. Nevertheless each wins praise for a power to
-move and sway us in his own peculiar way.
-
-The hearer, then, has ample scope for showing good feeling to a speaker.
-In some instances it is sufficient if, without further declaration by
-word of mouth, we contribute a kindly eye, a genial expression, a
-friendly and agreeable mood. There are certain things for which even the
-man who is a total failure may [Sidenote: C] look, and which are but
-ordinary items of common etiquette for any and every audience. I mean an
-upright posture in our chairs, with no lolling or lounging; eyes kept
-directly upon the speaker; an air of businesslike attention; composure
-of countenance, with no sign, I need not say of insolence or
-peevishness, but of being taken up with other thoughts.
-
-If in every exacting task beauty is made up of a number of factors
-happily combined in a due proportion and harmony, ugliness is the prompt
-and immediate outcome of the faulty [Sidenote: D] omission or addition
-of this or that one element. And in this particular matter of listening,
-not only is there impropriety in a scowling brow, a disagreeable
-expression, a roving glance, a twisting of the body, and a crossing of
-the legs; but nodding or whispering to a neighbour, smiling, yawning
-sleepily, looking at the ground, and actions of a similar nature, are
-censurable and should be studiously avoided.
-
-There are some who think that, though the speaker has a duty, the hearer
-has none. They expect the former to present himself with his thoughts
-studiously prepared; yet, without a thought or care for their own
-obligations, they drop casually in and take their seats, for all the
-world as if they had come to a dinner to enjoy themselves while others
-are doing the work. Yet even a polite table-companion has his part to
-play, much [Sidenote: E] more a polite hearer. He is a partner in the
-speech and a coadjutor of the speaker; and he has no right to be sharply
-criticizing the mistakes, and taking every phrase and fact to task,
-while himself free from responsibility for the impropriety and the
-frequent solecisms which he commits as a hearer. In ball-play the
-catcher has to regulate his movements according to those of the thrower.
-So, in the case of a speech, there is a certain consonance of action in
-which both speaker and listener are concerned, if each is to sustain his
-proper part. [Sidenote: F]
-
-Our expressions in applauding must not, however, be used without
-discrimination. It is an unpleasing phrase of Epicurus when, in speaking
-of the little epistles from his friends, he says, ‘We give them a
-rattling clapping.’ But what of those who nowadays introduce such
-_outré_ expressions into our lecture-rooms? The _Capital!_ _Well said!_
-and _Very true!_ which were the terms of commendation used by the
-hearers of Plato, Socrates, and Hypereides, are not enough for these
-persons. With their exclamations _Divine!_ _An inspiration!_ or
-_Unapproachable!_ they commit a gross impropriety, libellously making
-out that the speaker requires far-fetched eulogies of an [Sidenote: 46]
-outrageous kind. Highly obnoxious also are those who accompany their
-attestations with an oath, as if they were in a court of law. And
-equally so those who blunder in their descriptive terms; for instance,
-when the lecturer is a philosopher and they call out, _A shrewd hit!_,
-or an old man and they exclaim _Cleverly put!_ or _Brilliant!_, thus
-misapplying to a philosopher the expressions used at academic exercises,
-where the speaking is not serious but merely an exhibition of
-adroitness. To offer [Sidenote: B] to a sober discourse such
-meretricious praise is like crowning an athlete with a wreath of lilies
-or roses instead of laurel or wild olive. Once when the poet Euripides
-was going over a song [Sidenote: *] with an original setting for the
-benefit of the members of his chorus, and one of them happened to laugh,
-he observed: ‘If you had not been an ignorant dolt, you could not have
-laughed while I was teaching you a mixolydian[46] piece.’ So, I take it,
-a serious and practical philosopher might very well make short work of
-the airs and affectations of a hearer by saying, ‘I presume your case is
-one of foolishness or ill breeding; otherwise you would not have been
-piping out and jigging about at my remarks, when I was teaching, or
-admonishing, or arguing concerning religion, statesmanship, or the
-duties of [Sidenote: C] office.’ Just frankly consider what it means,
-when a philosopher is speaking, and the shouting and hurrahing inside
-the building make people outside wonder whether it is a flute-player, a
-harpist, or a dancer who is being applauded.
-
-Meanwhile, in listening to admonition and reproof, the pupil must be
-neither insensible nor unmanly. There are some who bear the
-philosopher’s reproaches with an easy-going indifference, laughing under
-the correction and applauding the corrector, just as parasites applaud
-in sheer impudence and recklessness when they are abused by those who
-keep them. The shamelessness which such persons display is no proper or
-genuine proof of courage. When a jibe containing no insult, and uttered
-in [Sidenote: D] a playful and tactful way, is borne cheerfully and
-without annoyance, it shows neither a want of spirit nor a want of
-breeding. On the contrary, it is exactly what a gentleman of the true
-Spartan style would do. But it is different when admonition takes in
-hand the correction of character by means of a stinging remedy in the
-shape of rational reproof. If a young man does not cower under the
-lesson and feel his soul burning with shame, till he breaks into a sweat
-and is ready to faint; if, on the contrary, he is unperturbed, gives a
-broad grin of self-depreciation, and refuses to take the matter
-seriously, then he is an extremely vulgar creature beyond all sense of
-shame, a constant habituation to misconduct having made his soul no more
-capable of a bruise than a thick callus in the flesh.
-
-These form the one class. Youths of the opposite disposition, [Sidenote:
-E] if a single hard word is said to them, turn deserters from philosophy
-and run away without a glance behind them. While nature has given them,
-in the shape of modesty, an excellent start towards moral salvation,
-they are so squeamish and timid that they throw their chance away.
-Unable to put up with reproof or to accept correction with spirit, they
-turn away to listen to the soft and agreeable utterances of some
-time-server or sophist, who charms them with melodious phrases as
-useless and futile as they are pleasing. If a man runs away from the
-surgeon after the operation and objects to be bandaged, he is submitting
-to the pain of the treatment but refusing to put up with its benefit. So
-when a lesson has lanced and probed his [Sidenote: F] folly, if he will
-not permit it to close and dress the wound, he is abandoning philosophy
-after feeling the sting and the pain but before deriving any advantage
-therefrom.
-
-Euripides says that the wound of Telephus was
-
- _Soothed by the filings ground from the same spear._
-
-It is no less true that the sting implanted by philosophy in [Sidenote:
-47] a youth of parts is cured by the same reasoning that caused the
-wound. While, therefore, it is right that the subject of reproof should
-feel some pain from the sting, he must not be crushed or dispirited,
-but, after undergoing the first discomposing rites of purification, he
-should look for some sweet and splendid revelation to follow the
-distress and confusion of the moment. For though the reproof may appear
-to be unjust, the proper course is to endure it with all patience until
-the speaker concludes. Then he may be met by a plea in self-defence, and
-by [Sidenote: B] a request to reserve for some real fault all the
-vigorous candour which he has shown in the present instance.
-
-To proceed to the next consideration. In reading and writing, playing
-the lyre, or wrestling, the first lessons are very harassing, laborious,
-and unsure; but, as we advance step by step, it is much as in dealing
-with mankind. By dint of frequent and familiar acquaintance we find that
-it all becomes pleasant and manageable, and every word or action easy.
-It is the same with philosophy. No doubt the language and matter, as
-first met with, contain something both hard and strange. But we must not
-take fright at the rudiments and prove so timid and spiritless
-[Sidenote: C] as to abandon the study. On the contrary, our duty is to
-grapple with every question, to persevere, to be resolved on making
-progress, and then to wait for that familiarity which converts all right
-action into a pleasure. It will not be long before it arrives, casting
-upon the study a flood of light, and inspiring an ardent passion for
-excellence. To be without such passion and to put up with the ordinary
-type of life because one is driven from philosophy by a lack of mettle,
-is to be a miserable or cowardly creature.
-
-We may also expect that at first the argumentation will prove somewhat
-difficult for young and inexperienced students to understand. For the
-most part, however, the obscurity and want of comprehension are due to
-themselves. Opposite dispositions [Sidenote: D] lead to the same
-mistake. Thus one class, through bashfulness and a desire to spare the
-teacher, will shrink from putting questions and making sure of the
-argument, and will ostensibly assent as if they quite understood. The
-others, led by misplaced ambition and meaningless rivalry to make a show
-of cleverness and quickness, pretend to have mastered a thing before
-they take it in, and so will not take it in at all. The consequence is
-that when the former—the modest and silent kind—go home, they will worry
-themselves with their perplexities, and in the end they will be driven
-perforce to trouble the speaker by harking back with their questions at
-a later date, when they will feel still more ashamed. Meanwhile the bold
-and ambitious kind will be perpetually cloaking their ignorance and
-hiding the fact that it haunts them.
-
-Let us then thrust aside all this pretentious silliness, and march
-[Sidenote: E] on towards learning. Let our business be to get an
-intelligent grasp upon valuable instruction. And let us put up with the
-laughter of those who are thought to be clever. Remember how Cleanthes
-and Xenocrates, though to all appearance slower than their
-fellow-pupils, refused to give up or run away from their studies. On the
-contrary, they were the first to joke at their own expense, comparing
-themselves to a narrow-necked bottle or a brass tablet, inasmuch as,
-though slow at taking their instruction in, they were safe and sure at
-retaining it. Not only must we, as Phocylides puts it,
-
- _Oft-times be baulked of our hope while seeking to come unto
- goodness_;
-
-we must also ‘oft-times’ be laughed at, and bear with scoffing
-[Sidenote: F] and jeering, meanwhile putting all our heart and energy
-into winning the struggle against our ignorance.
-
-We must, however, be quite as careful not to err in the opposite
-direction. Some do so from sloth, which makes them a wearisome
-infliction. Unwilling to trouble themselves when [Sidenote: 48] alone,
-they keep troubling the teacher by repeatedly asking for information on
-the same questions. Like unfledged birds in the nest, they are
-perpetually agape to be fed from another’s mouth, and expect to receive
-everything ready masticated by someone else.
-
-Another kind, in the misplaced quest of a reputation for alertness and
-acumen, worry the lecturer with their fussy garrulity, perpetually
-mooting some unimportant difficulty or demanding some unnecessary
-demonstration,
-
- _Till a short journey so becometh long_
-
-[Sidenote: B] —as Sophocles says—not only to themselves but to every one
-else. By continually arresting the teacher with superfluous and futile
-questions, as if they were merely chatting with a companion, they
-interfere with the continuity of the lesson by a series of checks and
-delays. Persons of this class are (to quote Hieronymus) like wretched
-cowardly puppies, who bite the skins and tear the odds and ends of wild
-animals at home, but who never touch the animals themselves.
-
-As for the former and lazy class, let us give them this advice. When
-they have managed to comprehend the main points, let them piece the rest
-together for themselves, using their [Sidenote: C] memory as a guide to
-independent thought. And let them take the reasoning they hear from
-another as a beginning—a seed which they are to make grow and thrive.
-
-The mind is not a vessel which calls for filling. It is a pile, which
-simply requires kindling-wood to start the flame of eagerness for
-original thought and ardour for truth. Suppose someone goes to borrow
-from his neighbour’s fire, and then, on finding a large bright blaze,
-persists in staying and basking on the spot. It is the same when a man
-comes to another to borrow reason, and does not realize that he must
-kindle a light of his own in the shape of thinking for himself, but sits
-enchanted with enjoyment of the lecture. He derives from the lesson
-[Sidenote: D] a ruddy glow or outward brilliance, but he fails to drive
-out the mould and darkness from within by the warming power of
-philosophy.
-
-If therefore any advice is needed for the hearing of lectures, it is to
-remember the rule just given—to practise independent thought along with
-learning. We shall thus attain, not to the ability of a sophist or the
-‘well-informed’ man, but to a deep-seated philosophic power. Right
-listening will be for us the introduction to right living.
-
-Footnote 44:
-
- The _paedagogus_, an attendant slave, who accompanied the boy and
- watched over his conduct.
-
-Footnote 45:
-
- In his _Phaedrus_.
-
-Footnote 46:
-
- i. e. in the mixolydian mode, which was of a sad and dirgelike
- character.
-
-
-
-
- ON MORAL IGNORANCE IN HIGH PLACES
-
-
-[Sidenote: 779 D] When Plato was invited by the Cyrenaeans to draw up a
-code of laws for their use and to organize their constitution, he begged
-to be excused, on the ground that it was difficult to legislate for so
-prosperous a people:
-
- _For nought so arrogant_—
-
-nor so impracticable and headstrong—
-
- _as human kind_,
-
-when prosperity—or what is so considered—lies within its grasp.
-
-[Sidenote: E] No less difficult is the task of advising a ruler how to
-rule. To admit reason, he fears, is to admit a ruler, whose law of duty
-will make a slave of him and curtail the advantage he derives from
-power. He has yet to learn a lesson from Theopompus, the Spartan king,
-who was the first to modify the powers of the throne by means of that of
-the Ephors. When his wife reproached him for proposing to leave to his
-children less authority than he had inherited, he replied: ‘Nay,
-greater, because more assured.’ By relaxing its excessive absolutism he
-escaped the [Sidenote: F] consequent ill-feeling, and therewith its
-dangers. But note. Theopompus, in diverting into other channels a
-portion of the full stream of power, deprived himself of just so much as
-he gave away. But when philosophic reason becomes the established
-colleague and protector of a ruler, it merely removes the perilous
-element and leaves the healthy—a process as necessary to power as to
-sound health.
-
-In most cases, however, monarchs or rulers show as little wisdom as a
-tasteless sculptor, who fancies that to represent a figure with a huge
-stride, strained muscles, and gaping mouth, is to make it appear massive
-and imposing. They imagine that [Sidenote: 780] an arrogant tone, harsh
-looks, short temper, and exclusiveness give them the true regal air of
-awe and majesty. In reality they are not a bit better than a colossal
-statue with the outward shape and form of a god or demigod, while the
-inside is a mass of earth, stone, or lead. Indeed, in the case of the
-statue, these heavy materials serve to keep it erect and prevent it from
-warping; whereas, with an unschooled governor or chief, the unreason
-within is often the cause of instability and collapse. [Sidenote: B] His
-foundation being out of plumb, the lofty power which he builds upon it
-is correspondingly unstable. Now it is only when the builder’s square is
-itself faultless in line and angle, that it can make other things true
-to line by adjustment to, and comparison with, itself. So a ruler must
-begin by acquiring rule within himself. Let him set his own soul
-straight, and make his own character firm, and then begin adjusting his
-subjects thereto. You cannot set upright, when you are falling; teach,
-when you are ignorant; discipline, when unruly; command, when
-disobedient; govern, when ungoverned. And yet it is a common error to
-suppose that the chief blessing of authority [Sidenote: C] is to be
-above authority. To the King of Persia every one was a slave except his
-own wife, the very person whose master he ought to have been.
-
-By whom, then, is the ruler to be ruled? By the
-
- _Law,
- Sovereign of mortals and immortals all_,
-
-as Pindar says; not a law written outwardly in books or on wooden
-tables, but a living law of reason in himself, abiding with him,
-watching him, and never leaving his soul destitute of guidance. The King
-of Persia kept one chamberlain whose special function was to enter in
-the morning and say to him: ‘Rise, Sire, and attend to matters which
-Great Oromazdes [Sidenote: D] meant for your concern.’ The ruler who has
-learned wisdom and self-control hears the same voice of exhortation from
-within. It was a saying of Polemo that love is ‘_serving the Gods in the
-care and protection of the young_‘. With more truth it might be said
-that a ruler serves God in the care and protection of men, by
-dispensing, or safeguarding, the blessings which God gives to mankind.
-
- _See’st thou yon boundless sky and air aloft,
- How in soft arms it clasps the world about?_
-
-From it descend the first principles of seeds in due kind; earth brings
-them forth; their growth is fostered by rains or winds or the warmth of
-moon and stars; while the sun brings everything [Sidenote: E] to beauty
-and tinctures all creation with that peculiar love-spell which is his.
-But though the Gods may lavish these great boons and blessings, who can
-enjoy or use them rightly, if there be no law, justice, or ruler?
-Justice is the end of law; law is the work of the ruler; and a ruler is
-an image of the God who orders all things. He needs no Pheidias or
-Polycleitus or Myro to fashion him, but brings himself into likeness
-with deity [Sidenote: F] by means of virtue, and so creates the fairest
-and most divine of effigies. In the heavens the sun and moon were set by
-God as His own beauteous image; and, in a state, the same shining
-embodiment is to be found in the ruler
-
- _Godfearing, who justice upholdeth_,
-
-—that is to say, when he holds, not a sceptre, but a mind which is the
-reason of God; not when he holds the thunderbolt or trident with which
-some represent themselves in statue or picture, rendering their folly
-odious to Heaven by such impossible assertion. For God visits with
-righteous wrath him who makes pretence of thunder or thunderbolt or
-darting sun-ray; but when a man studies to emulate His goodness, and to
-take [Sidenote: 781] a pattern by His virtue and benevolence, He
-delights in furthering him and bestowing a portion of His own
-righteousness, justice, truth, and mercy. Not fire or light, not the
-course of the sun, the risings and settings of the stars,
-everlastingness and immortality, are more divine that these attributes.
-For it is not by reason of length of life that God is happy, but by
-reason of the virtue which rules. This is ‘divine’. ‘Noble’, however, is
-the virtue whose part it is only to obey.
-
-When Alexander was in sore distress at killing Cleitus, Anaxarchus told
-him, by way of comfort, that Right and Justice were [Sidenote: B] but
-the ‘assessors’ of Zeus—making out that any act was right and lawful for
-a king. A false and pernicious salve for his repentance at his sin, this
-encouragement to repeat it! If we are to use such figures of speech,
-Right is no ‘assessor’ of Zeus, but He himself is Right and Justice, the
-oldest and most consummate Law. What the ancients tell and write and
-teach is that, without Justice, not even Zeus can properly rule.
-According to Hesiod
-
- _A virgin is she_,
-
-the incorruptible partner of feeling, self-control, and beneficence.
-[Sidenote: C] Hence are kings called ‘merciful’, for mercy best becomes
-those who are least afraid. A ruler’s fear should be of doing harm
-rather than of suffering it; for the former action is the cause of the
-latter, and this kind of fear on the part of a ruler is creditable to
-humanity. There is nothing ignoble in a fear for his subjects and of
-possible injury to them. Such rulers are like
-
- _Dogs that keep ward o’er the sheep in the farmstead, anxiously
- watching
- At sound of a fierce wild beast_—
-
-their anxiety being not for themselves, but for their charges.
-
-Once when the Thebans had recklessly abandoned themselves [Sidenote: D]
-to feasting and carousal, Epaminondas went the round of the walls and
-the military posts all by himself, remarking that he was keeping sober
-and wakeful so that the rest might be drunk and asleep. When Cato, after
-the defeat at Utica, gave orders that every one else should be sent to
-sea, saw them on board, prayed that they might have a prosperous voyage,
-and then went back home and stabbed himself, it was a lesson on the
-text, ‘For whose sake should a ruler feel fear, and for what should he
-feel contempt?’ On the other hand, Clearchus, despot of Pontus, used at
-bedtime to crawl like a snake into a chest. [Sidenote: E] Similarly,
-Aristodemus of Argos crept into an upper room entered by a trap-door.
-Over this he would put the couch upon which he passed the night with his
-mistress. Meanwhile her mother dragged away the ladder from below,
-bringing it back and putting it in place in the morning. How, think you,
-must he have shuddered at the theatre, at the Government offices, at the
-Senate-House, at the banquet, when he turned his own bedchamber into a
-prison? Yes, kings are afraid _for_ their subjects, despots are afraid
-_of_ them. It follows that, as they add to their power, they add to
-their alarms; the more people they rule, the more people they fear.
-
-[Sidenote: F] It is an improbable and unworthy view to hold of God—as
-some philosophers do—that He exists as an element in matter to which all
-sorts of things may happen, and in entities which are subject to
-innumerable accidents, chances and changes. In reality He is stablished
-somewhere aloft ‘_on holy pedestal_’ (as Plato puts it) in the realm of
-nature uniform and constant, and there ‘_moves according to Nature in a
-straight line towards the accomplishment of His end_‘. And as in heaven
-the sun, His beauteous counterfeit, shows itself as His reflection in a
-mirror to those who have the power to see Him through it, so, in the
-justice and reason which shine in a state, He sets up a likeness of that
-which is in Himself, and, by copying that likeness, men [Sidenote: 782]
-whom philosophy has gifted and chastened model themselves after the
-highest pattern.
-
-This condition of mind nothing can implant except reason acquired from
-philosophy. Otherwise we are in the position of Alexander, when he went
-to see Diogenes at Corinth. In delight at his talent, and in admiration
-of his proud and lofty spirit, he exclaimed: ‘If I had not been
-Alexander, I would have been Diogenes.’ And what did this virtually
-mean? That he was vexed at his own high fortune, splendour, and
-[Sidenote: B] power, because they were an obstacle to the virtue for
-which he could find no time, and that he envied the cloak and the
-wallet, which made Diogenes as invincible and unassailable as he himself
-was made by armour and horses and spears. And yet by the practice of
-philosophy he might have secured the moral character of a Diogenes while
-retaining the position of an Alexander. Nay, he should have become all
-the more a Diogenes for being an Alexander, since his high fortune, so
-liable to be tossed by stormy winds, required ample ballast and a master
-hand at the helm.
-
-In the case of private men without strength or standing, folly is so
-qualified by impotence that in the end no mischief is done. It is as
-with a bad dream, in which, though the mind is excited with passion, no
-harm results, inasmuch as it is unable to rise and act in accordance
-with the desires. When, on the other [Sidenote: C] hand, vice is adopted
-by power, the passions acquire sinew and strength. Dionysius spoke truly
-when he said that the highest advantage of power was to give speedy
-effect to a wish. A most parlous thing, if you can give effect to a
-wish, and yet wish what is wrong!
-
- _No sooner the word had been utter’d, than straightway the deed was
- accomplish’d._
-
-Vice, when enabled by power to run rapid course, forces every passion
-into action, converting anger into murder, love into adultery, greed
-into confiscation.
-
- _No sooner the word hath been utter’d_,
-
-than your opponent has met his doom. No sooner a suspicion, than the
-victim of slander is a dead man.
-
-[Sidenote: D] Scientists tell us that, whereas lightning really follows
-and issues from thunder like blood from a wound, it is perceived first
-because, while the hearing waits for the sound, the vision goes out to
-meet the light. So with rulers. The punishment outstrips the charge; the
-condemnation does not wait for the proof.
-
- _For forthwith anger slips and loses hold,
- Like anchor’s tooth in sand when seas swell high_,
-
-unless reason with all its weight puts a heavy drag on power; unless,
-that is, the ruler acts like the sun, whose motion is least [Sidenote:
-E] when its height is greatest, namely, at the time of its northern
-altitude, its course being steadied by the diminished speed.
-
-Vice in high places cannot be hid. When an epileptic is placed upon a
-height and made to turn round, he is seized with giddiness and begins to
-totter, his malady being betrayed thereby. So with an unschooled and
-ignorant person. After a brief uplifting by wealth or fame or place, the
-same fortune which raised him up immediately reveals how ready he is to
-fall. To put it another way; when a vessel is empty, you cannot detect
-the crack or flaw, but when you begin to fill it, the leak appears.
-[Sidenote: F] So with a mind which is too unsound to hold power and
-authority; its leaks are to be seen in its exhibitions of lust, anger,
-pretentiousness, and ignorance. Yet why speak of this, when holes are
-picked in eminent and distinguished men for the merest peccadilloes?
-Cimon was reproached for his addiction to wine, Scipio for his addiction
-to sleep, and Lucullus for his extravagance at table[47]....
-
-Footnote 47:
-
- The rest of the essay is missing.
-
-
-
-
- FAWNER AND FRIEND
- (WITH AN EXCURSUS ON CANDOUR)
-
-
-MY DEAR ANTIOCHUS PHILOPAPPUS, [Sidenote: 48 E]
-
-‘Every one,’ says Plato, ‘will pardon a man for admitting that he has a
-strong affection for himself,’ but—not to mention [Sidenote: F] numerous
-other defects to which he is subject—there is one chief weakness which
-precludes him from giving a just and incorruptible verdict in his own
-case. ‘The lover is blind where the beloved object is concerned,’ unless
-he has learned the habit of prizing things, not because they are his own
-or related to himself, but because they are beautiful. Hence, there is
-ample opportunity for the flatterer to obtain a place among our friends.
-He delivers his attack from an excellent point of vantage in the shape
-of that self-love which makes every man his own [Sidenote: 49] first and
-greatest flatterer, ready and willing to welcome such external testimony
-as will endorse his own conceits and desires. For the man who is
-reprobated as a lover of toadies is an ardent lover of himself. Out of
-fondness for himself he not only entertains the wish to possess, but
-also the conceit that he possesses, all manner of qualities; and though
-the desire may be natural enough, the conceit is fallacious and calls
-for the greatest watchfulness.
-
-And if truth is divine, and—as Plato asserts—the first principle
-[Sidenote: B] of ‘all good things both with Gods and men’, the toady
-must be an enemy of the Gods, and especially of the Pythian. For, in
-perpetual antagonism to the doctrine of _Know Thyself_, he produces
-self-deception in a man, self-ignorance, and error as to his virtues and
-vices. The virtues he renders defective and abortive; the vices he
-renders incorrigible.
-
-Now if the flatterer had been like most other mischievous things, and
-had solely or chiefly attacked mean and petty victims, the harm would
-have been neither so great nor so difficult to prevent. But it is into
-soft and sweet kinds of wood that worms prefer to bore, and it is
-estimable and capable characters—characters with a love of
-approbation—that give access and supply nourishment to the flatterer who
-fastens upon [Sidenote: C] them. ‘_The breeding of the steed_,’ says
-Simonides, ‘_sorts not with Zacynthus,[48] but with wheat-bearing
-plains_.’ Similarly we do not find toadyism in attendance upon the poor,
-the insignificant, or the uninfluential, but sapping and debilitating
-great houses and great fortunes, and frequently subverting rulers and
-thrones. Consequently no slight effort or common precaution is required
-in considering how it can be most readily detected and so prevented from
-doing injury and discredit to friendship.
-
-[Sidenote: D] Vermin quit a dying man and desert the body when the blood
-which feeds them becomes exhausted. So with the time-server. You will
-never find him approaching a person whose fortune is destitute of sap
-and warmth. It is the famous and influential whom he attacks; it is out
-of them that he makes capital; and when their circumstances change he
-promptly beats a retreat. We should not, however, wait for that test; it
-is then not merely useless but fraught with injury and danger. It is a
-grievous thing to find out who is not your friend only at the moment
-when a friend is needed, since the discovery does not enable you to
-exchange the uncertain and counterfeit for the genuine and certain. You
-should possess friends as you possess coin—tested [Sidenote: E] before
-the occasion, not waiting to be proved by the occasion. Discovery should
-not come through injury, but injury should be prevented by our acquiring
-a scientific insight into the nature of the toady. Otherwise we shall be
-in the position of those who distinguish a deadly poison by tasting it;
-we shall meet our death in the effort of judging.
-
-One can neither approve of such a course, nor yet of those who, because
-they regard a ‘friend’ as implying a high and wholesome influence,
-imagine that an agreeable associate is immediately and manifestly proved
-to be a time-server. For there is nothing disagreeable or
-uncompromisingly severe about a friend, nor does the high respect we pay
-to friendship depend upon harshness or austerity. Nay, its high
-influence and claim to respect are actually an agreeable and desirable
-thing in themselves, [Sidenote: F]
-
- _And close at its side do the Graces and Longing Desire set their
- dwellings._
-
-Not only may the unfortunate man say, with Euripides,
-
- _’Tis sweet to look into a friend’s fond eyes_,
-
-but friendship is a comrade who adds as much pleasure and gratification
-to our blessings as it brings relief to the pains and perplexities of
-our mishaps. According to Euenus ‘_the best of [Sidenote: 50] seasonings
-is fire_‘. So, by making friendship an ingredient of life, God has
-rendered all things bright and sweet and enjoyable through its presence
-and participation. How, indeed, could the fawner have wormed himself
-into our pleasures, if he had seen that friendship refuses all
-admittance to what is pleasant? The thing is absurd. No; the toady is
-like the mock-gilt and tinsel which merely mimic the sheen and lustre of
-gold. It is in order to imitate the attractiveness and charm of a friend
-that he makes a constant show of agreeableness and amiability, and never
-opposes or contradicts you. It is therefore wrong, [Sidenote: B] when a
-person praises you, to suspect at once that he is simply a flatterer.
-Friendship is quite as much called upon to praise in season as it is to
-blame. In fact, perpetual peevishness and fault-finding is the negation
-of friendship and sociability; whereas, when affection bestows zealous
-and ungrudging praise upon our good deeds, we also submit readily and
-cheerfully to its candid remonstrances, being satisfied with the belief
-that the man who is glad to praise will only blame because he must.
-
-[Sidenote: C] ‘It is a hard matter then,’ we may be told, ‘to
-distinguish between flatterer and friend, if they are equally pleasant
-and equally laudatory, especially when we find that toadyism is often
-more than a match for friendship in the tendering of services.’
-Naturally so, we reply, if the object of our search is the genuine
-toady, with a past-master’s skill at the business; if, that is, we do
-not adopt the common view and mean by ‘toady’ your poverty-stricken
-trencherman, who ‘begins’—as some one has said—‘to declare himself with
-the first course,’ and whose lickspittle character betrays itself by
-gross and vulgar [Sidenote: D] buffoonery at the first dish and the
-first glass. It needed no test to expose Melanthius, the parasite of
-Pherae. It was enough that, when asked ‘how Alexander was stabbed,’ he
-replied, ‘Through the ribs, into my belly.’ Nor is there any such need
-with those who besiege ‘an opulent table’, and whom
-
- _Not fire, nor steel, nor bronze can keep_
-
-from making their way to a dinner. Nor yet with those female toadies of
-Cyprus, who, after their transference to Syria, were [Sidenote: E]
-called ‘pair o’ steps’ from the fact that they used to allow the king’s
-wife to mount her carriage over their bent backs.
-
-Against whom, then, are we to be on our guard? Against the man who is
-not confessedly or apparently a toady; one who is not to be found
-hanging about the kitchen, nor to be caught watching the dial with a
-dinner in prospect; one who is not to be made tipsy and then pitched
-into any corner; but one who for the most part keeps sober and bustling,
-thinking it his business to take part in all your doings, and to be
-privy to your confidential talk—the man, in short, who acts the rôle of
-friend, not in the satyric[49] or comic style, but in the high tragic.
-According to Plato, ‘the extreme of dishonesty is to appear honest when
-you are not.’ So with time-serving. It is [Sidenote: F] to be regarded
-as dangerous, not when confessed, but when undetected; when it wears a
-serious, not an amusing, air. In this form, unless we are careful, it
-casts a slur of discredit even upon genuine friendship, the points of
-coincidence being numerous. When the Mage was trying to escape and
-Gobryes had plunged with him into a dark room and was grappling with
-him, Darius stood at a loss what to do. ‘Stab,’ said Gobryes, ‘though
-you stab both.’ With us it is not so easy, inasmuch as we can by no
-means give any sanction to the maxim: ‘_Perish friend, if so perish
-foe._’ There are so many points of similarity to complicate the fawner
-with the friend that we must find it a most parlous business to tear the
-one from the other. We may either be casting out the good thing along
-with the bad, [Sidenote: 51] or, in trying to spare the right thing, we
-may let the wrong one bring us to grief. There are wild plants of which
-the seeds are similar in shape and size to those of wheat. When the two
-are mixed it is difficult to sift these out; they will not fall through
-smaller holes, and, if the holes are wider, one falls through as much as
-the other. No less difficult is it to separate time-serving from
-friendship, when it blends itself with every feeling, every movement,
-need, and habit.
-
-Friendship being the most pleasant and delightful thing in the world, it
-follows that the toady also uses pleasure for his [Sidenote: B] bait. To
-give pleasure is his main concern. And since agreeableness and
-usefulness are concomitants of friendship—whence the saying that ‘_a
-friend is more indispensable than fire and water_‘—it follows that the
-toady insists on rendering services, and is all eagerness to show
-unfaltering promptitude and zeal. But the surest foundation of
-friendship is similarity of pursuits and character. The foremost agent
-in mutual attraction is similarity of temperament—the liking and
-disliking of the same things. This the time-server perceives, and
-therefore he adapts himself [Sidenote: C] like wax to the proper shape
-and form, endeavouring by imitation to mould himself so as exactly to
-fit his victim. His supple versatility, his genius for mimicry, is so
-great that it is a case of
-
- _Thou art
- Achilles’ self, and not Achilles’ son._
-
-And note his craftiest device. He observes that candour is called (what
-it appears to be) ‘the characteristic note of friendship’, while lack of
-candour is the negation of friendship and spirit. He does not fail,
-therefore, to imitate this quality also. As a skilful _chef_ will use
-some bitter or piquant juice for a sauce in order to prevent sweets from
-cloying, so with the candour [Sidenote: D] of the toady. It is not
-genuine, nor is it useful; it is given, as it were, with a wink, and
-serves simply as an excitant. The result is that he is as hard to detect
-as one of those creatures which possess the natural power of altering
-their colour so as to match the spot on which they happen to lie. Since,
-therefore, it is under cover of resemblances that he deceives us, our
-proper course is to find in the non-resemblances a means of stripping
-off his disguise and showing that—as Plato puts it—he is ‘beautifying
-himself with borrowed forms and colours through lack of any of his own’.
-
-Let us begin at the very beginning. In most instances, we remarked,
-friendship commences with similarity of temperament [Sidenote: E] and
-disposition, a taste for very much the same habits and principles, and a
-delight in the same pursuits, occupations, and pastimes. Such a
-similarity is implied in the lines:
-
- _Most welcome to the old is old men’s speech;
- Child pleaseth child, and woman pleaseth woman,
- Sick men the sick, and one who meets disaste
- Brings solace to another suffering it._
-
-The toady knows that it is natural to find pleasure in one’s like and to
-be fond of his society. This, therefore, is his first device [Sidenote:
-F] for approaching you and getting neighbours with you. He acts like
-herdsmen on a pasture. He works gently up to you and rubs shoulders with
-you in the same pursuits, amusements, tastes, and way of life, until you
-give him his chance and let yourself grow tame and accustomed to his
-touch. He condemns such circumstances, such conduct, and such persons as
-he notices you dislike; while of those that please you he cannot say too
-much in praise, exhibiting boundless delight and admiration [Sidenote:
-52] for them. He thus confirms you in your loves and hatreds, as being
-the results, not of feelings, but of judgement.
-
-How, then, is he to be exposed? By what points of difference are we to
-prove that he is not, nor is on the way to be, our like, but only a
-pretender thereto? In the first place we must look for consistency and
-permanence in his principles. We must see whether he takes pleasure in,
-and gives praise to, the same things at all times; whether he directs
-and establishes his own life after one pattern, as a frank and free
-lover of single-minded friendship and fellowship ought to do. A friend
-does act in this manner. On the other hand, the time-server possesses no
-one fixed hearthstone to his character. He does not live a life
-[Sidenote: B] chosen for himself, but a life chosen for another.
-Moulding and adapting himself to suit others, he possesses no singleness
-or unity, but adopts all manner of varying shapes. Like water poured
-from one vessel into another, he is perpetually flowing hither and
-thither and accommodating himself to the form of the receptacle.
-
-The ape, we are told, is captured through endeavouring to imitate man by
-copying his motions in dancing. The time-server, on the contrary, is one
-who allures and decoys others. Nor does his mimicry take the same form
-in all cases. One person he will help to dance and sing: with another he
-will share a taste for wrestling and athletics. If he gets hold of a
-sportsman devoted to hunting, he follows his lead, and all but shouts,
-in the words of Phaedra, [Sidenote: C]
-
- _I long, ye Gods, to cheer the hounds
- Close-pressing on the dappled deer_,
-
-whereas he feels no interest whatever in the animal, but is setting his
-toils to catch the huntsman himself. If his next quarry is a young man
-with a taste for study and intellectual improvement, he is all for
-books, and grows a beard down to his feet; it is a case of wearing the
-philosopher’s cloak and his air of ‘indifference’,[50] and of prating
-about Plato’s ‘numbers’ and ‘right-angled triangles’. If, next, there
-happens along some easy-going bibulous person with plenty of money,
-
- _Then forthwith are his rags cast off by the wily Odysseus._
-
-[Sidenote: D] Away goes the cloak; shorn off is the beard—’tis a crop
-that bears no corn: to the fore are wine-coolers and wine-cups, laughter
-in the streets and mockery of the philosophic student.
-
-We are told, for instance, that at Syracuse, when Plato visited the
-place and Dionysius was seized with a mania for philosophy, the host of
-geometricians turned the palace into a perfect whirl of dust.[51] But
-when Dionysius came to logger-heads with Plato, had had enough of
-philosophy, and abandoned himself to drink and women and to silly talk
-and wanton [Sidenote: E] behaviour, in a moment it was as if Circe had
-transformed them every one, and there came a reign of vulgarity,
-oblivion, and folly. Examples are also to be found in the conduct of
-time-servers on a large scale, such as demagogues. Greatest was
-Alcibiades. At Athens he joked, kept horses, and lived like a wit and a
-man of the world. At Lacedaemon he cropped his hair close, wore a short
-cloak, and bathed in cold water. In Thrace he fought and drank. But when
-he attached himself to Tissaphernes, he indulged in luxury, effeminacy,
-and ostentation, and sought to win the good graces of his company by
-adapting himself in all cases to their likeness and becoming one of
-them. Not so Epaminondas or Agesilaus. Despite [Sidenote: F] all their
-intercourse with so many persons, communities, and standards of conduct,
-they everywhere maintained—in dress, way of life, speech, and
-behaviour—their own proper character. So with Plato. He was the same at
-Syracuse as at Athens, the same to Dionysius as to Dion.
-
-Our easiest method of exposing the polypus-like changes of the
-time-server is to make a show of frequent changes on our own part,
-finding fault with conduct of which we formerly approved, and all of a
-sudden countenancing actions, conduct, [Sidenote: 53] or talk which used
-to fill us with disgust. We shall then perceive that he has no sort of
-settled and specific character; that his loves, hatreds, pleasures, and
-pains are not matters of his own feeling; that he is merely a mirror
-reflecting extraneous moods, principles, and emotions. For observe the
-man’s ways. Should you speak disparagingly to him of one of your
-friends, he will remark: ‘You have been slow in finding the fellow out;
-_I_ never did like him.’ If, on the contrary, you change your tone and
-speak in his praise, he will declare that he is ‘right glad and thankful
-on the man’s behalf’, because he ‘believes in him’. If you propose to
-adopt a different mode of life—if, for example, [Sidenote: B] you are
-converted from a political career to a life of quiet inactivity—he will
-say, ‘We ought to have got quit of brawlings and jealousies long before
-this.’ If, on the other hand, you appear eager for office and the
-platform, he seconds you with, ‘A very proper spirit! A quiet life is
-pleasant, no doubt, but it lacks honour and distinction.’ We ought
-immediately to answer that kind of man with the words:
-
- ‘_Different, sir, dost thou show thyself now from the man thou wert
- erstwhile._
-
-I do not want a friend who shifts his ground when I do and who nods when
-I nod—my shadow can do that better—but one who helps me to truth and
-sound judgement.’
-
-[Sidenote: C] Such is one way of applying a test. There is a second
-point of difference to be watched, as against the points of resemblance.
-It is not in all matters that a genuine friend is prompt to copy or
-commend us, but only in the best.
-
- _Not his to share our hates, but share our loves_,
-
-as Sophocles has it. Yes, and to share our right conduct and high
-principles, not our wrong and wanton deeds, unless perhaps—as a result
-of familiar association—some contaminating effluence, like that of
-ophthalmia, affects him to some extent with a blemish or a fault against
-his will. For instance, it is said that [Sidenote: D] Plato’s stoop,
-Aristotle’s lisp, King Alexander’s crook of the neck and harshness of
-voice in conversation, were tricks borrowed by their respective
-intimates. There are persons who, without knowing it, pick up from both
-the temperament and conduct of their friends most of what is
-characteristic of them. The time-server, however, is exactly like the
-chameleon. As the latter assimilates himself to every colour but white,
-so the time-server, though utterly unable to arrive at a likeness to
-your valuable qualities, leaves no discreditable one uncopied. He is
-like a bad painter, who, because beauty lies beyond the reach of his
-weak capacity, makes the strikingness of his portraiture [Sidenote: E] a
-matter of wrinkles, moles, and scars. So the toady becomes an imitator
-of dissoluteness, superstition, irascibility, harshness to servants, and
-distrust of friends and relatives. Not only is he by nature and of his
-own accord prone to the lower course; it is by imitating a baseness that
-he appears to be farthest from blaming it. A man who takes the higher
-line, and shows distress and vexation at his friends’ misdeeds, is
-dubiously regarded—a fact which accounts for the ruin of Dion with
-Dionysius, of Samius with Philip, and of Cleomenes with Ptolemy. But
-when a man desires to be, and to be thought, agreeable and to be
-depended upon, the worse the thing is, the more display he makes of
-liking it, as if the strength of his affection will not permit him to
-dislike even your vices, but makes him your [Sidenote: F] natural
-sympathizer in all circumstances. Such persons therefore insist upon
-sharing even involuntary and accidental shortcomings. When toadying an
-invalid, they pretend to suffer with the same complaint. In company with
-a person who is somewhat blind or deaf, they pretend to be dim-sighted
-and hard of hearing, like the flatterers of Dionysius, whose sight was
-so dull that they stumbled against each other and knocked over the
-dishes at dinner.
-
-Sometimes they work themselves into closer and more intimate touch with
-a trouble or a malady, till they come to participate in afflictions of
-the most secret kind. If they see [Sidenote: 54] that the patron is
-unhappy in his marriage or on bad terms with his sons or his relatives,
-they do not spare themselves, but make lamentations about their own
-children, or wife, or relatives, or friends, on certain alleged grounds
-which they divulge as a miserable secret. Such similarity creates a
-closer understanding with their patron. He has received a sort of
-hostage, thereupon betrays to them some secret or other, and, because of
-that betrayal, keeps friends with them and is afraid to leave his
-confidence to its fate. I know of one time-server who, when the patron
-divorced his wife, turned his own wife also out of doors. It was,
-however, found out—through a discovery [Sidenote: B] of the patron’s
-wife—that he was visiting and sending messages to her in secret. The
-toady must have been but little known to the man who thought that the
-lines:
-
- _Body all belly, and an eye that looks
- All round; a thing that crawls upon its teeth_,
-
-were as apt a description for a crab as they are for the flatterer. The
-picture is that of the parasite:
-
- _The friend of saucepan-time and dinner-hour_,
-
-as Eupolis expresses it.
-
-This point, however, we will reserve till its proper place. Meanwhile we
-must not omit to mention another shrewd trick played by the time-server
-when he imitates you. If he goes so far as to copy some good quality in
-the person whom he [Sidenote: C] toadies, he is careful to leave the
-advantage with him. Friends in the true sense are neither jealous nor
-envious of each other, and, whether they reach or fail to reach the same
-degree of excellence, they accept the situation fairly and without a
-grudge. But the toady—who never forgets to play second rôle—lets his
-resemblance fall short of equality, and owns to being distanced at
-everything but vices. In vices, however, he insists on first prize. If
-the patron is irritable, he says, ‘_I_ am all bile;’ if superstitious,
-‘_I_ am a mass of fears;’ if love-sick, ‘_I_ am frantic.’ [Sidenote: D]
-‘It was wrong of you to laugh,’ he will say, ‘but _I_ was absolutely
-dying with laughter.’ But where virtues are concerned it is the other
-way about. ‘I am a fast runner, but _you_ positively fly.’ ‘I am a
-tolerable horseman, but nothing to a centaur like our friend here.’ ‘I
-have a neat turn for poetry, and can write a line better than some, but
-
- _Thunder is not for me, ’tis work for Zeus._’
-
-He thus appears to do two things at once—to give an air of merit to his
-patron’s tastes by imitating them, and of unapproachableness to his
-ability by failing to match it.
-
-So much for the differences between fawner and friend in the midst of
-their resemblances.
-
-Since, as we have observed, pleasure is another point in common—a good
-type of man taking as much delight in his friends as a weak man does in
-his flatterers—we may proceed to make a distinction here also. The
-distinction lies in the relation between the pleasure and its end. Thus,
-not only unguents [Sidenote: E] have an agreeable smell; a medicine may
-have it also. But there is the difference that the object of the former
-is pleasure and nothing else, while in the other case the purgative,
-warming, or flesh-making quality happens to be combined with fragrance.
-Again, a painter mixes engaging colours and dyes, and there are also
-certain medical preparations with a taking appearance and an attractive
-colour. Where is the difference? Clearly our distinction will lie in the
-end for which they are used. Just so with the case before us. In the
-agreeable relations of [Sidenote: F] friend with friend the
-pleasant-giving element is a kind of gloss upon a substance of high
-value and utility. Sometimes sportiveness, the table, wine, and even
-mockery and nonsense are used by them as a seasoning to high and serious
-purposes. Hence such expressions as:
-
- _Then had they joyance in talk and in speaking the one to the
- other_;
-
-or:
-
- _Nor should aught else have parted us twain in our love and our
- joyance._
-
-But, with the time-server, it is his function and end to be [Sidenote:
-55] perpetually dishing up in a spicy form something amusing, something
-done or something said which pleases and is meant to please.
-
-To put it briefly, the toady thinks the purpose of his every action
-should be to make himself agreeable, whereas the friend will only do
-what is right, and therefore, though often agreeable, he is often the
-contrary, not because he wishes it, but because, when it is the proper
-course, he does not avoid it. It is as with the physician. When it helps
-matters he will throw in a pinch of saffron or spikenard, and will
-frequently order a pleasant bath and an inviting diet. But there are
-times when he will have none of these, but will shake in a dash of
-castor
-
- _Or polium foul of odor, that men e’en shudder to smell it._
-
-[Sidenote: B] Or he will pound a dose of hellebore and make you drink it
-off. Neither the unpleasantness in the one case nor the pleasantness in
-the other is the end in his mind, but in both cases he has only one
-object in view for the patient, and that object is his good. In the same
-way there are times when a friend will lead you in the path of duty by
-inspiriting you with praise or gratifying you with courtesies, as the
-speaker does in
-
- _Teucer, Telamon’s son, dear prince of a warrior people,
- Shoot as now thou dost_,
-
-or in:
-
- _How then should I, if ’tis so, be forgetful of godlike Odysseus?_
-
-But when, on the contrary, you need calling to attention, he will
-upbraid you in biting terms and with the plain-speaking of a guardian:
-[Sidenote: C]
-
- _Foolish art thou, Menelaus Zeus-foster’d: no time is this present
- For folly like thine._
-
-There are also times when he makes the deed accompany the word, like
-Menedemus, when he taught the prodigal and dissolute son of his friend
-Asclepiades a wholesome lesson by shutting the door in his face and
-refusing to speak to him. Similarly Arcesilaus forbade Bato the
-lecture-room for having attacked Cleanthes in a verse of a comedy. He
-was reconciled to him, however, when he repented and made his peace with
-Cleanthes. For though one must give a friend pain when it does him good,
-one must not, while giving the pain, make an end of the friendship. The
-sting should be used only as a medicine, for the care and salvation of
-the patient. A friend is therefore [Sidenote: D] like a musician. In
-converting us to right and salutary courses he will sometimes loosen and
-sometimes tighten the strings. Pleasure you will get from him often,
-profit always. On the other hand, the time-server, who harps in a single
-key and is accustomed to strike no note but that of your pleasure and
-gratification, has no notion of any action to check you or word to pain
-you. He merely plays the accompaniment to your wishes, with which both
-his time and his words are invariably in accord. Xenophon says of
-Agesilaus that he welcomed praise from those who were no less ready to
-blame. So we should regard that which gives pleasure and gratification
-as in the category of ‘friend’, if it can also on occasion oppose us and
-give us pain. But a companionship which is uniformly pleasurable and
-maintains [Sidenote: E] a perpetual graciousness unqualified by any
-sting, calls for suspicion. We ought, in fact, to be ready to ask, like
-the Laconian on hearing praise of King Charillus, ‘How can a man be
-honest, when he cannot be angry even with a rascal?’
-
-It is close to the ear, we are told, that the gadfly gets into a bull
-and the tick into a dog. In the case of a man of ambition, the
-time-server with his flatteries takes hold of his ears and sticks so
-fast that it is hard to rub him off. Particularly, therefore, in such
-circumstances must we keep our judgement vigilant. It must be on the
-alert to see whether the praise is given to the [Sidenote: F] thing or
-to the man. It is given to the thing when men praise us in our absence
-more than in our presence; when they wish and strive for the same
-objects themselves, and praise not only us but every one else who does
-the like; when we do not find them doing and saying first one thing and
-then the opposite; and—most important of all—when our sense does not
-tell us that we are repenting or ashamed of the things for which we are
-praised, or wishing that we had rather done and said the [Sidenote: 56]
-contrary. This inward judgement, which testifies against a flattery and
-refuses to accept it, is immune from contamination, and proof against
-the time-server.
-
-It is a strange thing that most men, when they meet with a misfortune,
-cannot bear to be consoled, but are better pleased with those who will
-join in the lamentations; but when they are guilty of a blunder or a
-fault, if you make them feel the sting of repentance by means of a
-reproof or a reprimand, they think you an enemy and an accuser; whereas,
-if you eulogize their conduct, they regard you as a loyal friend and
-receive you with open arms.
-
-Now when people give you praise and applause for something [Sidenote: B]
-you do or say, whether in sober earnest or in careless jest, the harm
-they do is only for the moment, and only affects the matter in hand. But
-when their praises go so far as to influence your moral being, and their
-flatteries to affect your character, they are as bad as servants who
-pilfer ‘_not from the stack, but from the seed_‘. For the moral
-disposition and the moral character—first principle and fountain-head of
-conduct—are the seed of actions, and these they corrupt by clothing vice
-in the titles of virtue. Thucydides tells us that in the midst of war
-and faction ‘_the customary acceptation of words was arbitrarily changed
-to suit an end. Reckless daring came to be thought devoted courage;
-[Sidenote: C] cautious hesitation, an excuse for cowardice; moderation,
-weakness in disguise; complete insight, complete inertia_‘. So, when
-flattery is at work, we should warily note how prodigality is called
-‘generosity’; cowardice, ‘caution’; light-headed caprice, ‘life and
-vigour’; meanness, ‘moderation’; the amorous man, ‘amiable and
-affectionate’; the arrogant and irascible person, ‘a man of spirit’; a
-poor meek creature, ‘civil and obliging’. [Sidenote: D] Remember, how
-Plato tells us that the lover—the flatterer of the beloved—calls a snub
-nose ‘piquant’, a hook-nose ‘regal’, a swarthy face ‘virile’, a white
-face ‘saint-like’, while ‘honey-colour’ is simply the coinage of a lover
-who indulgently invents a pretty name for pallor. Yet when an ugly man
-is persuaded that he is beautiful, or a little man that he is tall, his
-deception is short-lived, and the harm which he sustains is slight and
-easily repaired. But flattery may teach him to treat vices as if they
-[Sidenote: E] were virtues, and to rejoice in them instead of sorrowing.
-It may remove all sense of shame at misconduct. Such flattery spelled
-destruction to the Siceliots, when it called the cruelty of Dionysius
-and Phalaris a ‘hatred of wickedness’. It spelled ruin to Egypt, when it
-gave to Ptolemy’s effeminacy, to his hysterical superstition, to his
-shriekings and bangings of tambourines, the name of piety and worship.
-It came once within an ace of utterly subverting Roman morals, when it
-glossed over Antony’s dissolute and ostentatious self-indulgence with
-pretty terms as a ‘festive and genial appreciation of the boons of
-unstinted [Sidenote: F] power and fortune’. What made Ptolemy tie on the
-mouth-strap and its pair of flutes? What made Nero cultivate the tragic
-stage and don the mask and buskin? What else but praise from flatterers?
-Is not a king regularly called an Apollo if he warbles, a Dionysius if
-he gets drunk, a Hercules if he wrestles? And is he not so pleased with
-it, that there is no way of disgracing himself to which flattery will
-not lead him? It is therefore in the matter of praise that we should
-chiefly beware of the time-server. He is himself alive to the fact, and
-[Sidenote: 57] is deft at avoiding suspicion. If therefore he gets hold
-of some dull-witted and thick-skinned grandee, he fools him to the top
-of his bent. Remember how Strouthias makes a hobby-horse of Bias and
-dances his fling upon the man’s stupidity by praising him with:
-
- _You have drunk more than royal Alexander_,
-
-or:
-
- _I laugh to think o’ the quip you gave the Cyprian._
-
-But with persons of more discernment he perceives that in this direction
-they are particularly on the alert, that in this quarter they keep a
-special watch. He does not therefore adopt a direct line of attack with
-his flattery, but fetches a circuitous course from a distance, and
-
- _Advances noiselessly, as when a beast_
-
-[Sidenote: B] is tentatively approached and fingered. At one moment he
-will describe how you have been praised by some one else, using the
-public speaker’s device of putting the words in another person’s mouth.
-He will say, for instance, that he had the great pleasure of being
-present in the market-place when some ‘visitors’—or some ‘elderly
-people’—were relating a good many admiring and complimentary stories
-about you. At another time he will concoct a number of trivial and
-fictitious charges against you, which he purports to have heard from
-others, and he will say that he has hastened to find you and desires to
-know where you said such-and-such a thing or did so-and-so. If you deny
-them—as you naturally will—he at [Sidenote: C] once has you in the trap
-for his compliments: ‘It did surprise me that you should speak ill of a
-friend, seeing that it is not your nature to do so even of an enemy;’ or
-‘that you should have designs on other people’s property, when you are
-so liberal with your own’.
-
-Others, again, are like a painter who brings the light and bright parts
-into relief by the juxtaposition of dark and shaded portions. By
-blaming, abusing, belittling, and ridiculing the opposite qualities,
-they give a concealed praise and encouragement to the defects of the
-person flattered. To a spendthrift they disparage economy and call it
-stinginess. To a grasping knave [Sidenote: D] who makes money by mean
-and shabby practices they depreciate honest self-support and call it
-want of enterprise and business capacity. When they associate with some
-careless idler who shuns the busy centres of affairs, they are not
-ashamed to style public life a ‘meddling with other people’s business’,
-and public spirit a ‘sterile vanity’. Sometimes, in order to flatter a
-public speaker, a philosopher is belittled, or the favour of profligate
-women is won by miscalling faithful and loving wives ‘provincial and
-unattractive’. Most pitiful in its baseness is the fact that the toady
-does not even spare himself. As a wrestler crouches his body in order to
-throw another, so he insidiously contrives to compliment his neighbour
-by disparaging himself. [Sidenote: E] ‘I am a nervous wretch at sea,’
-says he. ‘I cannot face trouble. Hard words make me frantically angry.
-But our friend here has no nerves; nothing troubles him. He is a
-peculiar person, always good-tempered, never ruffled.’ But if a man
-thinks himself particularly sensible, and is so desirous of being
-severely matter-of-fact that—out of what he calls straightforwardness—he
-is always on the defensive with
-
- _Tydeus’ son, bepraise me not much, nor, prithee, upbraid me_,
-
-the artist in flattery will not adopt this manner of approaching
-[Sidenote: F] him. Such cases are met by another device. He will come
-and consult him, as a person of superior wisdom, about affairs of his
-own. ‘Though,’ he will say, ‘there are others with whom I am more
-intimate, I am compelled to trouble you. For where are we to take refuge
-when we need advice? In whom are we to put confidence?’ Then, after
-listening to what he has to say, he will take his leave with the remark
-that what he has received is ‘not an opinion; it is an oracle’. And if
-he sees that you make pretensions to being a judge of literature, he
-gives you something he has [Sidenote: 58] written himself, and asks you
-to read and correct it. When King Mithridates had a fancy for doctoring,
-some of his courtiers actually put themselves in his hands to be lanced
-and cauterized. This was flattery by deeds in place of words, since he
-accepted their confidence as a sufficient voucher for his skill.
-
- _Of many shapes are means divine_,
-
-and this negative class of praise requires to be countered with some
-craftiness. The way to confute it is by deliberately offering counsel
-and suggestion which are nonsensical, and making corrections [Sidenote:
-B] which are absurd. If your man objects to nothing, says ‘Yes’ to
-everything, and exclaims ‘Good!’ ‘Capital!’ at every item, he exposes
-himself as one who
-
- _The watchword asks, while other are his aims_,
-
-—those aims being to encourage your self-conceit with his laudations.
-
-Take another case. Painting has been styled ‘silent poetry’. So there is
-a way of praising by silent flattery. The sportsman’s purpose is better
-concealed from the game when he pretends to be upon other
-business—walking, tending cattle, or tilling the soil. In the same way a
-toady drives home his eulogies most effectively when the eulogy is
-disguised under some different form of action. It may be by giving up
-his seat, or his place [Sidenote: C] at table, when you appear upon the
-scene. Or if he is addressing the Assembly or Council, and notices that
-some wealthy man desires to speak, he may stop his speech and yield him
-the platform. His silence indicates more clearly than the loudest
-acclamation that he regards the person in question as a better man and
-his intellectual superior. Such persons may therefore be seen taking
-possession of the front seats at an entertainment or in the
-meeting-hall, not because they claim any right to them, but in order
-that they may play the toady by giving up their places to rich people.
-Or you may see them begin the discussion at a congress or a
-board-meeting, and subsequently give way to ‘superior argument’ and
-shift round with the [Sidenote: D] greatest readiness to the opposite
-view, if their opponent is a person of influence, wealth, or note. The
-clearest exposure of such complaisances and concessions is to be sought
-in the fact that it is not to knowledge or high abilities or age that
-the deference is paid, but to riches and reputations. When Megabyzus
-took a seat at Apelles’ side and wanted to prate to him about ‘line’ and
-‘shading’, the painter remarked, ‘Do you see those boys yonder grinding
-my mixing-earth? When you were silent, they were all eyes of admiration
-for your purple and your jewels. But now that you have begun to talk
-about things [Sidenote: E] you do not understand, they are laughing at
-you.’ Similarly Solon, when Croesus questioned him about ‘happiness’,
-declared that Tellus, an Athenian of humble rank, as well as Cleobis and
-Biton, were more favoured by fortune. A flatterer, on the contrary, not
-only avers that a king, a rich man, or a man in power, is prosperous and
-fortunate; he also declares that he is pre-eminent in wisdom, art, and
-every form of excellence. Hence while there are persons who have no
-patience to listen when the Stoics describe the sage as at the same time
-‘rich, beautiful, noble, and king’, a toady will make out that the rich
-man is at the same time an orator, a poet, and—if he so wishes—a painter
-and a musician. He makes him out swift of foot and [Sidenote: F] strong
-of thew by letting himself be thrown in wrestling and outstripped in
-running, as Criso of Himera did in a race against Alexander—much to
-Alexander’s disgust when he detected it. Carneades used to say that the
-only thing that kings’ and rich men’s sons understand is how to ride;
-they receive no proper instruction in anything else. For their teacher
-flatters them in school with his praises, and their antagonists in the
-wrestling-ring by courting defeat; whereas a horse, who neither knows
-nor cares whether you are in or out of office, poor or rich, pitches you
-head first if you cannot keep your seat. It was therefore a silly and
-stupid thing for Bion to say: ‘If by [Sidenote: 59] eulogizing a field
-we could make it bear a prolific crop, would it not be a mistake for a
-man to go digging and moiling instead? Neither, then, is it irrational
-for you to praise a human being, if your praise is productive of good
-fruit.’ A field suffers no injury from being praised, whereas insincere
-and undeserved compliment puffs a man up and ruins him.
-
-On this point we have said enough. The next consideration is that of
-candour.
-
-[Sidenote: B] When Patroclus, on going out to fight, dressed himself in
-Achilles’ armour and drove his team, the one thing he let alone and did
-not venture to touch was the Pelian spear. So it might have been
-expected of the flatterer that, when dressing himself up carefully for
-the part of ‘friend’, with its proper tokens and badges, the one thing
-he would leave untouched and uncopied would be plain-speaking—a special
-attribute,
-
- _Heavy and huge and stubborn_,
-
-to be wielded only by friendship. But in his fear that laughter, strong
-drink, jest, and fun may mean his betrayal, we find him [Sidenote: C]
-putting a solemn face on the business, flattering with a frown and
-administering dashes of blame and admonition. Here again, therefore, we
-must apply our tests. In a comedy of Menander, the Mock-Hercules comes
-in carrying a club which has no strength or solidity, but is merely a
-hollow sham. So, I take it, with the flatterer’s plain-speaking. On
-trial you will find that it is soft and without weight or vigour; that
-it behaves like a woman’s cushion, which, while seeming to offer a firm
-support to the head, actually yields it more of its own way. [Sidenote:
-D] This spurious candour, with its hollow fullness, its false and
-superficial puffiness, is merely meant to shrink and collapse, so as to
-induce the person who leans upon it to make himself more comfortable.
-The genuine candour of a friend attacks only our misdeeds; it hurts only
-out of care and protection; like honey, it merely stings our sores in
-cleansing them, its general uses being grateful and sweet. This,
-however, is a theme for special discussion.
-
-With the flatterer it is different. In the first place, when he displays
-sharpness or heat or inflexibility, it is in dealing with others than
-yourself. He is severe upon his own servants; he is terribly hard upon
-the misdeeds of his own relations; he shows no admiration or respect for
-a stranger, but treats [Sidenote: E] him with contempt; his scandalizing
-is merciless when exacerbating other people. His object is to make it
-appear that he detests low practices, and that he would not consent to
-abate a jot of his candour in your behalf, or to do or say anything to
-curry favour. In the next place, when there is something really and
-seriously wrong, he pretends to be completely ignorant and unconscious
-of it, while he will pounce upon some little immaterial shortcoming and
-take it rigorously and vehemently to task—if, for instance, he sees an
-implement carelessly placed, or a fault of domestic management, or
-negligence in the cut of your hair or the wearing of your clothes, or
-lack of [Sidenote: F] proper attention to a dog or a horse. But should
-you slight your parents, neglect your children, humiliate your wife,
-despise your relatives, and waste your money, it becomes no business of
-his. In such circumstances not a word does he venture to utter, but he
-is like a trainer who permits an athlete to get drunk and dissipated,
-while he is severe upon him in the matter of an oil-flask or a
-scraping-iron; or like a grammar-master who scolds a boy for the state
-of his slate and pencil, but pretends not to hear his slips of grammar
-and expression. The toady is the kind of man who, in dealing with a
-ridiculously incompetent public speaker, has nothing to say about his
-matter, but finds fault with his voice-production, and blames him
-severely for spoiling [Sidenote: 60] his larynx by drinking cold drinks;
-or who, when requested to peruse some miserable composition, finds fault
-with the roughness of the paper and calls the copyist a slovenly wretch.
-It was so in the case of Ptolemy, when he made pretence to literary
-tastes. They would fight with him about some out-of-the-way word or bit
-of a verse or point of information, and would keep it up till midnight.
-But to his indulgence in cruelty and outrage, to his tambourine-playing
-and initiating, not one of [Sidenote: B] all their number offered any
-opposition. Imagine a man suffering with tumours and abscesses, and some
-one taking a surgeon’s knife and cutting—his hair or his nails! That is
-what the flatterer does. He employs his candour upon those parts which
-feel no pain or soreness.
-
-There is a still craftier species, who make their plain-speaking and
-fault-finding an actual means of pleasing. When Alexander was once
-making large gifts to a jester, envy and vexation drove Agis, the
-Argive, to bawl out, ‘How utterly absurd!’ The king turned upon him
-angrily and asked, ‘_What_ is that you say?’ ‘I confess,’ was the reply,
-‘to being annoyed and [Sidenote: C] indignant when I see how much alike
-all you sons of Zeus are in your fondness for flatterers and ridiculous
-persons. Heracles found pleasure in his Cercopes, Dionysus in Sileni,
-and we can see what a high regard you have yourself for people of the
-kind.’ One day when the emperor Tiberius entered the Senate, one of his
-flatterers got up and said that, as free men, they were bound to speak
-frankly and to treat important interests without reticence or
-reservation. When he had thus aroused every one’s interest and had
-secured silence and the attention of Tiberius, he said, ‘Listen, Caesar,
-to the charge which we all make against you, but which no one dares to
-utter openly. You are neglecting yourself, sacrificing your health and
-wearing it out by perpetually working and thinking for us, and giving
-yourself [Sidenote: D] no rest day or night.’ As he continued with a
-good deal more in the same strain, the orator Cassius Severus is said to
-have exclaimed, ‘Such plain-speaking will be the man’s death!’
-
-These devices, however, are of minor moment. The matter becomes grave—as
-meaning ruin to foolish people—when a man is accused of the opposite
-disorders to those with which he is afflicted; as when the parasite
-Himerius used to scold the meanest and most avaricious plutocrat in
-Athens by calling him a reckless prodigal, bent on bringing himself and
-his children to starvation; or when, on the contrary, a toady reproaches
-[Sidenote: E] a prodigal spendthrift with sordid parsimony, as Titus
-Petronius did Nero; or when he urges a ruler who behaves with savage
-cruelty towards his subjects to divests himself of ‘all that gentleness
-and ill-timed and mistaken clemency’.
-
-To the same class belongs the man who pretends to look upon some silly
-nincompoop as a clever rogue of whom he is afraid and wary. Or if an
-ill-conditioned person who delights in perpetual fault-finding and
-scandalizing does happen to be led into praising some distinguished man,
-he may take him to task and raise objections, for ‘it is a weakness of
-yours, this praising [Sidenote: F] of even quite insignificant people.
-What remarkable thing has he ever said or done?’
-
-Love-affairs are favourite ground for the flatterer to play upon his
-victim by further inflaming his passion. If he sees you at variance with
-your brothers, or neglecting your parents, or contemptuous towards your
-wife, he offers neither remonstrance nor reproach, but actually
-intensifies the bad feeling. ‘No: you don’t appreciate yourself,’ or,
-‘It is you that are to blame, for always playing the humble servant.’
-But if anger [Sidenote: 61] and jealousy provoke a tiff with a mistress
-of whom you are enamoured, in comes flattery at once with a fine blaze
-of frankness, and adds fuel to the fire by pleading cause and accusing
-the lover of all sorts of unloverlike, unfeeling, and unforgivable
-conduct:
-
- _O ingrate! after all that rain of kisses!_
-
-Thus, when Antony was becoming passionately enamoured of the Egyptian
-queen, his friends did their best to persuade him that the love was on
-her side, and they upbraided him with being ‘cold and supercilious’.
-‘The lady has forsaken all that royal state and that life of delightful
-enjoyments to go wandering [Sidenote: B] about on the march with you,
-like any concubine.
-
- _But, for thee, the heart in thy breast is past all moving or
- charming_,
-
-and you leave her to suffer as she will.’ It gratified Antony to be thus
-put in the wrong; no praise could please him like these accusations; and
-unconsciously he became perverted to the standard of the man who
-pretended to be reproving him. For candour of this kind is like the bite
-of a lascivious woman; while pretending to give pain, it arouses a
-provoking sensation of pleasure.
-
-Though unmixed wine is, generally speaking, a corrective of hemlock,
-yet, if you add it to that drug in the form of a mixture, [Sidenote: C]
-you make it impossible to counteract the power of the poison, the heat
-driving it rapidly to the heart. So, while aware that candour is a
-potent corrective of flattery, your rogue actually uses ‘candour’ as his
-instrument for flattering you. Bias was therefore wrong in his answer to
-the question: ‘What animal is the most dangerous?’ when he replied,
-‘Among wild animals, the despot, among tame animals, the toady.’ It
-would have been truer to say that, among toadies, those who merely
-frequent your bath and your table are tame, while those who thrust the
-[Sidenote: D] tentacles of their slanderous and malicious meddling into
-bedchamber and boudoir are savage and unmanageable beasts.
-
-The one method of protecting ourselves appears to lie in recognizing and
-never forgetting that our mental being is made up of two parts—one
-high-principled and rational, the other irrational, mendacious and
-passionate—and that a friend is the unfailing supporter and champion of
-the better part—a physician who promotes and watches over good
-health—while a flatterer acts as prompter to the passionate and
-irrational part, exciting, titillating, coaxing, and divorcing it from
-reason by inventing [Sidenote: E] low forms of self-indulgence on its
-behalf. There are some kinds of food which yield no benefit to blood or
-breath, and put no vigour into muscle or marrow, but simply excite the
-sensual appetites and make the flesh flabby and unsound. So with the
-advice of a fawner. If does nothing to help sane thought and judgement;
-but watch it, and you will find it cosseting an amorous pleasure,
-aggravating a foolish fit of anger or provoking an attack of envy,
-puffing you up with vulgar and empty pride, encouraging your doleful
-dumps, or, where there is a tendency to be ill-natured or mean-spirited
-or mistrustful, making the [Sidenote: F] feeling more bitter or shy or
-suspicious by constantly suggesting and anticipating evil. For he is
-perpetually in wait for some passion or other, which he proceeds to feed
-up; and whenever there is a festering or inflammation of your mental
-state, you will always find him a kind of bubo, bringing it to a head.
-Are you angry? ‘Then punish.’ Do you crave a thing? ‘Then buy it.’ Are
-you afraid? ‘Then let us run away.’ Are you suspicious? ‘Then trust the
-feeling.’
-
-If it is hard to catch him in connexion with such affections as
-these—their strength being so overpowering as to baffle the reason—he
-will give you a better opening in smaller matters; for he will be just
-the same with them. If you are apprehensive [Sidenote: 62] of a headache
-or a surfeit, and are doubtful as to bathing or taking food, a friend
-will try to check you and will urge you to be cautious, whereas the
-toady will drag you to the bath, or ask them to put some novel dish on
-the table, begging you not ‘to keep so tight a hand upon your body as to
-be cruel to it’. If he sees you inclined to shirk a journey, a voyage,
-or a piece of work, he will say that there is no immediate hurry, and
-that it will do just as well if you postpone the matter or send someone
-else. If, after promising a friend to make him a loan or a present of a
-sum of money, you repent, but have your scruples, the toady [Sidenote:
-B] throws his weight into the less honourable scale; he corroborates
-‘the argument of the purse’, and makes short work of your sense of shame
-by urging you to be economical, ‘seeing that you have so many expenses
-and so many persons to support.’
-
-If, therefore, we are able to perceive our own covetousness,
-shamelessness, or cowardice, we shall also be able to see when a man is
-a toady. Such he is when he is always playing the advocate to those
-passions and ‘speaking his mind’ when we deviate from them.
-
-Enough having been said upon this topic, we may next proceed to the
-question of the practical services rendered. In this [Sidenote: C]
-respect the flatterer makes his distinction from the friend a very
-obscure and perplexing matter; he always appears so prompt and
-indefatigable in his zeal. While a friend’s way, like the ‘speech of
-truth’ as described by Euripides, is ‘single’, open, and unaffected,
-that of the flatterer
-
- _Sick in itself, needs antidotes full shrewd_
-
-—uncommonly so, indeed, and plenty of them. When you meet a friend, he
-sometimes passes on without uttering or receiving a word, and with no
-more than a glance or a smile; he simply manifests by his expression,
-and gathers from yours, the kindly [Sidenote: D] understanding within.
-But the toady is on the run to overtake you, greets you from a long way
-off, and, if you catch sight of him and speak to him first, he excuses
-himself over and over again, calling his witnesses and taking his oath.
-So in the matter of actions. A friend will neglect many a trifle; he is
-no precisian and makes no fuss; he does not insist upon serving you at
-every turn. But the other is persistent, unremitting, unwearied; he
-leaves no opportunity or room for any one else to serve you; he is eager
-to receive your orders, and, if he does not get them, he is piqued, nay,
-absolutely heart-broken with disappointment. A sensible man, then, may
-take these as some indications that a friendship is not sincere and
-single-minded, [Sidenote: E] but is like a harlot who forces her
-embraces upon you before they are asked for.
-
-The first place, however, in which to look for the difference is in
-promises. It has already been well said by previous writers that a
-friend will put his promise in the form familiar in
-
- _If I have power to achieve it, and if ’tis a thing for
- achievement_,
-
-while a time-server will put it in this:
-
- _Voice me the thought in thy mind._
-
-The comedians present us with such characters:
-
- _Nicomachus, pit me against the soldier.
- I’ll make ripe pulp of him; I’ll make his face
- Softer than sponge: if not, then flog me soundly._
-
-In the next place no friend will be a party to your actions [Sidenote:
-F] unless he has first been a party to planning them. He must first have
-looked into the business and helped to put it on a right and proper
-footing. Not so the flatterer. Even if you do grant him a share in
-weighing the matter and expressing an opinion about it, he is not only
-so anxious to gratify you with his complaisance, but is in such dread of
-leading you to suspect him of unreadiness to face the action, that he
-leaves you to take your course, or only lends spurs to your desire. It
-is not easy to find a rich man or a grandee who is ready to say:
-[Sidenote: 63]
-
- _Give me a man, a beggar—nay, no matter,
- Lower than beggar, if he means me well—
- To put fear by, and speak his heart to me._
-
-Like the tragedian, he must have the support of a chorus of friends who
-keep his tune, or of an audience who give applause. Merope in the
-tragedy advises:
-
- _Get thee for friends such men as, when they speak,
- Yield not; but when a man will for thy pleasure
- Make himself knave, lock thou thy door against him._
-
-[Sidenote: B] But such persons do the opposite. If, ‘when you speak’ you
-‘yield not’, but oppose them for their good, they abominate you; but if
-‘for their pleasure’ you are a ‘knave’ and a servile charlatan, they
-receive you not merely inside their locked doors but inside their most
-secret passions and concerns. The simple kind of flatterer, it is true,
-does not aim at so much. What he asks in such important matters is not
-to be your adviser, but your minister and servant. But the more crafty
-person will stand still—puzzling over the question with puckered brow
-and appropriate changes of countenance—but will say nothing. And if you
-give your own idea, he will exclaim, ‘How strange! You just managed to
-anticipate me. I was about to make exactly your suggestion.’
-
-[Sidenote: C] Mathematicians tell us that lines and surfaces, being
-mental perceptions and incorporeal, have in themselves no such thing as
-bending, stretching, or motion, but that they are bent, stretched, and
-changed in position along with the bodies of which they are the
-boundaries. So you will discover that, with the time-server, his assent,
-his opinion, even his pleasure and anger, are always dependent. Here,
-therefore, it is perfectly easy to detect the difference. It is still
-more apparent in the manner in which a service is rendered. With the
-good feeling of a friend, as with a living creature, its most vital
-functions lie [Sidenote: D] deep. It is marked by no ostentatious
-display; but very often, like a physician who conceals the fact that he
-is doctoring you, a friend does you a good turn by a word of
-intercession or by bringing about an understanding, and so consults your
-interests without your knowing it. Arcesilaus was a man of this type.
-Not to mention other instances, when Apelles the Chian was ill and
-Arcesilaus had discovered how poor he was, he came back later with
-twenty drachmae. Taking a seat close to him, he exclaimed, ‘There is
-nothing here beyond Empedocles’ four elements:
-
- _Fire and water and earth and the gentle air of the heavens._
-
-Why, even your bed is made all askew.’ With that he moved his pillow and
-meanwhile slipped the coins under it. When the [Sidenote: E] old woman
-in attendance found them and told Apelles in amazement, he laughed and
-said, ‘It is that thief Arcesilaus.’[52]
-
-And here we may note how philosophy produces ‘_children like unto their
-sires_‘. Cephisocrates, who had been impeached, was on his trial, and
-beside him, with the rest of his friends, stood Lacudes, one of the
-coterie of Arcesilaus. The accuser having asked for his ring,
-Cephisocrates quietly dropped it at his side, and Lacudes, who noticed
-the action, put his foot upon it and hid it. On that ring depended the
-proof of the charge. When Cephisocrates, after his acquittal, went
-shaking hands with members of the jury, one of them, who had apparently
-[Sidenote: F] seen what occurred, bade him thank Lacudes, and gave an
-account of the affair, which Lacudes had mentioned to no one. We may
-believe that it is the same with the Gods, and that for the most part
-they confer their benefits unperceived, it being their nature to find
-pleasure in the mere act of bestowing favours and doing good. But in a
-deed done by a flatterer there is nothing honest, sincere,
-single-minded, or generous. It is a case of sweating, bawling, bustling,
-and of a tense look upon the face, intended to convey the impression of
-arduous and urgent business. The thing resembles, in fact, an overdone
-painting, [Sidenote: 64] which strives to secure realistic effect by the
-use of blatant colours and affected folds, wrinkles, and angles.
-
-He is also offensive enough to relate how the business has meant running
-about and anxiety, and he goes on to describe how he has got into
-trouble with other people and had no end of worry and some terrible
-experiences, until you declare that the thing was not worth it all. Any
-obligation thrown in your teeth will cause an unbearable and distressing
-sense of annoyance, but with an obligation from a time-server your sense
-of reproach and shame is felt at once, from the very moment that the
-service [Sidenote: B] is being rendered. A friend, on the other hand, if
-he has occasion to speak of the matter, qualifies his account of it, and
-about himself he says nothing. For example, the Lacedaemonians once sent
-the people of Smyrna some corn at a time of need, and, to their
-expressions of admiration of the kindness, they replied, ‘Not at all! To
-scrape this together we had only to vote the forgoing of one day’s
-dinner for ourselves and our beasts.’ A favour so rendered is not only a
-generous one; it is made the more welcome to the recipients by the
-thought that no great harm is done to the benefactor.
-
-It is not, however, by the flatterer’s offensive way of rendering his
-services nor by the recklessness of his promises that one [Sidenote: C]
-can best recognize the breed; an easier criterion consists in the
-creditable or discreditable nature of the service, and in the different
-character of the pleasure or benefit. A friend will not, as Gorgias
-asserted, expect his friend to render him honest services and yet
-himself oblige that friend in many ways which are not honest:
-
- _’Tis his to share the wisdom, not the folly._
-
-Rather, therefore, he will dissuade him also from improper courses. And,
-if he fails, there is virtue in Phocion’s answer to Antipater, ‘You
-cannot use me both as friend and toady’—that is to say, both as friend
-and not friend. We must help a friend in his need, not in his knavery;
-in his planning, not in his plotting; with testimony, not conspiracy.
-Yes, and we must share in his misfortunes, though not in his misdeeds.
-We [Sidenote: D] should not choose even to be privy to the baseness of
-our friends; how then to be a party to their misbehaviour? When the
-Lacedaemonians, after their defeat by Antipater, were making terms, they
-stipulated that, though he might impose any penalty he liked, he should
-impose no disgrace. It is the same with a friend. Should occasion call
-for expense or danger or hard work, he is foremost in his claim to be
-summoned and take a prompt and zealous part; but when disgrace attaches
-to it, he will as promptly beg to be spared and left alone. But with the
-fawner it is the reverse. In services of difficulty and danger he cries
-off, and, if you give him a tap to sound him, his excuse—whatever
-[Sidenote: E] it may be—rings false and mean. But in vile and degrading
-little jobs, do as you like with him; trample on him; nothing shocks or
-insults him.
-
-Look at the ape. He cannot watch the house like a dog, nor carry like a
-horse, nor plough the ground like an ox. He is therefore the bearer of
-scurrilous insult and buffoonery and the butt of sport, his function
-being to serve as a tool for laughter. Precisely so with the toady. He
-is unequal to any form of labour and serious effort, and incapable of
-helping you by a speech, with a contribution, or in a fight; but in
-business which shuns the light he is promptitude itself—a most competent
-[Sidenote: F] agent in an amour, an adept at ransoming a strumpet, alert
-at checking the bill for a drinking-bout, no sloven in the ordering of
-your dinner, deft at attentions to your mistress, and, if you bid him
-show insolence to your wife’s relations or bundle her out of doors, he
-is beyond all pity or shame.
-
-This, therefore, is another easy means of finding him out. Order him to
-do any disreputable and discreditable thing you [Sidenote: 65] choose,
-and he is ready to spare no pains in gratifying you accordingly.
-
-A very good indication of the wide difference between our fawner and a
-friend may be found in his attitude towards your other friends. The one
-is delighted to have many others giving and receiving affection with
-him, and his constant aim is to make his friend widely loved and
-honoured. He holds that ‘_friends have all things in common_‘, and their
-friends, he thinks, [Sidenote: B] should be more ‘in common’ than
-anything else. But the other—the false, bastard, and spurious
-article—realizes, better than any one, how he is himself sinning against
-friendship by—so to speak—debasing its coinage. While, therefore, he is
-jealous by nature, it is only against his like that he gives his
-jealousy play, by striving to surpass them in grovelling and lickspittle
-tricks. Of his betters he stands in fear and dread, we cannot say
-because he is
-
- _Plodding on foot against a Lydian car_,
-
-but because, as Simonides has it, he
-
- _Hath not e’en lead
- To match the pure refinèd gold._
-
-If, therefore, light in weight, surface-gilt and counterfeit, he finds
-himself put in close comparison with genuine friendship, [Sidenote: C]
-full-carat and mint-made, he cannot bear the test, and must be detected.
-Consequently he acts like the painter whose cocks in a picture were
-wretchedly done, and who therefore ordered his slave to drive any real
-cocks as far from his canvas as possible. In the same way the flatterer
-drives away real friends and prevents them coming near. If he fails,
-while openly he will fawn upon them and pay them court and deference as
-being his betters, in secret he will throw out calumnious hints and
-suggestions. And if the word in secret has given a scratch without at
-once absolutely producing a wound, he never forgets Medius’s maxim. This
-Medius was what may be called the [Sidenote: D] fugleman or expert
-conductor of the chorus of toadies who surrounded Alexander, and was at
-daggers drawn with the highest characters. His maxim was, ‘Be bold in
-laying on and biting with your slanders, for even if the man who is
-bitten salves the wound, the slander will leave its scar.’ It was
-through these scars, or rather because he was eaten up with gangrenes
-and ulcers, that Alexander put Callisthenes, Parmenio, and Philotas to
-death. Meanwhile he surrendered himself unreservedly to a Hagnon, a
-Bagoas, an Agesias, or a Demetrius, and allowed them to give him a fall
-by salaaming to him and dressing him up after the fashion of an oriental
-idol. So powerful an effect [Sidenote: E] has complaisance, and
-apparently most of all with those who think most of themselves. Their
-wish for the finest qualities goes with the belief that they possess
-them, and so the flatterer acquires both credit and confidence. For
-while lofty places are difficult of approach or assault for all who have
-designs upon them, the lofty conceit produced in a foolish mind by the
-gifts of fortune or talent offers the readiest footing to those who are
-small and petty.
-
-As therefore we urged at the beginning of this treatise, so we urge
-again here; ‘Let us make a clearance of self-love and self-conceit.’
-These, by flattering us in advance, render us more [Sidenote: F]
-amenable to flattery from outside: we come prepared. But if, in
-obedience to the God, we recognize how all-important the maxim _Know
-Thyself_ is to each of us; if we therefore examine our own nature,
-training, and education, and observe how all alike fall short of
-excellence in countless ways, and how they all contain a large admixture
-of weakness in the things we do or say or feel, we shall be very slow in
-allowing the flatterer to abuse us at his pleasure. Alexander remarked
-that what made him give least credence to those who called him a God was
-his sleep and his sexualities, his excesses in those things falling
-below his own standard. On our own part we shall [Sidenote: 66] always
-discover that at many a point and in many a way our qualities are ugly
-or a source of pain, defective or misdirected. We shall see ourselves in
-our true light, and find that what we need is not a friend who will pay
-us compliments and eulogies, but one who will bring us to book when we
-are really doing wrong. But only then. There are in any case very few
-with the courage to treat a friend with candour rather than
-complaisance; yet among these few it will be hard to find such as
-understand their business. It will be easier to find persons who imagine
-that they are using candour because they abuse and scold. Yet it is with
-plain-speaking as with any other medicine. [Sidenote: B] When it is
-given at the wrong time the effect is to upset and pain you to no
-purpose. In a certain sense it does painfully what flattery does
-pleasantly, inasmuch as unseasonable blame works as much harm as
-unseasonable praise. More than anything else it is a thing which drives
-a man headlong into the arms of the flatterer. Like water, he turns from
-the steep unyielding surface and glides away into the receptive
-shallows. Candour, therefore, must be tempered by rational courtesy,
-which will divest it of excess and over-severity. The light must not be
-so strong that in our pain and distress at the invariable reproving and
-fault-finding we turn away to escape discomfort and fly to find shade
-with the flatterer.
-
-[Sidenote: C] In shunning a vice, Philopappus, our object should always
-be virtue, not the contrary vice. Some people think they escape being
-shamefaced by being shameless; that they escape being rustic by being
-ribald; that their behaviour becomes furthest from timidity and
-cowardice when they appear nearest to impudence and insolence. Some
-plead to themselves that they would rather be irreligious than
-superstitious, rather [Sidenote: D] knaves than simpletons. Their
-character may be likened to a piece of wood, which, through lack of the
-skill to straighten it, they crook to the opposite side. The ugliest way
-of refusing to flatter is to give useless pain. Our social intercourse
-must be boorishly ignorant of all the rules of good feeling when it is
-by being harsh and disagreeable that we avoid any creeping humbleness in
-our friendship, just as if we were the freedman in the comedy, who
-thinks that, to be properly enjoyed, ‘speech on equal terms’ means
-abusive speech.
-
-Since, therefore, it as an ugly thing when our striving to be agreeable
-lands us in flattery, and an ugly thing when, in the avoidance of
-flattery, all the spirit of friendly sympathy is ruined by immoderate
-plain-speaking; and since we ought to commit neither mistake, but—in
-candour as in other things—draw ‘success from moderation’, mere logical
-sequence seems to [Sidenote: E] dictate the conclusion to our treatise.
-
-Plain-speaking, we find, is liable to be, as it were, tainted in various
-ways. The first thing is to divest it of its selfish aspect, by taking
-the greatest care not to let it appear as if your reproaches were due to
-a kind of injury or grievance of your own. When the speaker is concerned
-about himself, we regard his words as the outcome of anger, not of
-goodwill; as grumbling, not as reproof. For whereas candour is a mark of
-friendliness which compels respect, grumbling is petty and selfish. We
-therefore respect and admire the person who is frank, while a
-fault-finder provokes recrimination and contempt. Though Achilles
-[Sidenote: F] imagined he was speaking with but reasonable frankness,
-Agamemnon lost his temper; but when Odysseus attacked him bitterly in
-the words
-
- _Madman, thou shouldst have commanded some other, some pitiful
- army_,
-
-he patiently gave way, the friendly purpose and good sense of the speech
-causing him to draw in his horns. The reason was that, while the
-plain-speaking of Odysseus, who had no private [Sidenote: 67] grounds
-for anger, was only for the sake of Greece, the vexation of Achilles was
-thought to be chiefly on his own account. Nay, Achilles himself, though
-possessed of no sweet or gentle temper, but
-
- _A terrible man, who must blame, e’en though it be blaming the
- blameless_,
-
-silently permitted Patroclus to give him many such hard blows:
-
- _Man of no pity, no father of thine was Peleus the horseman,
- Thetis no mother of thine; from the green-grey sea wert thou gotten
- By beetling crags; so comes it thy heart is void of all mercy._
-
-[Sidenote: B] The orator Hypereides used to urge the Athenians to
-consider not merely whether he was angry, but whether his anger was
-gratuitous. So with the admonition of a friend. When pure from any
-private feeling, it is a thing of awe, which we cannot face unabashed.
-And if, when a man is speaking his mind, it is manifest that he is
-casting aside any wrongs his friend may have done to himself; that it is
-other misdemeanours on his part which he is bringing home—other reasons
-for which he does not shrink from giving him pain—such candour produces
-an irresistible effect, the sharpness and severity of the admonition
-being intensified by the kindliness of the admonisher. Doubtless,
-[Sidenote: C] as has been well said, ‘it is most of all when we are
-angry or at variance with our friends that we should do or devise
-something to their advantage or credit’; but we show no less true a
-friendliness if, when we think ourselves slighted or neglected, it is on
-behalf of other victims of neglect that we give them a plain-spoken
-reminder. Plato, at a time when his relations with Dionysius were
-strained and dubious, asked for an interview. Dionysius granted it, in
-the belief that Plato was coming with a tale of grievance of his own.
-The conversation, however, took the following shape. ‘Suppose,
-Dionysius, you discovered [Sidenote: D] that some ill-disposed person
-had made a voyage to Sicily with the intention of doing you an injury,
-but that he could find no opportunity. Would you allow him to leave the
-country and get away scot-free?’ ‘Certainly not, Plato,’ said Dionysius:
-‘enemies must be hated and punished not only for what they do, but for
-what they propose to do.’ ‘Then suppose,’ said Plato, ‘some one comes
-here in a friendly spirit, with the intention of rendering you a
-service, but that you afford him no chance. Is it a proper thing to cast
-him aside with ingratitude and contempt?’ Upon Dionysius asking who it
-was, he answered, ‘Aeschines, a man who, in rightness of character, will
-compare with any of Socrates’ associates, and whose teaching cannot fail
-to set any hearer firmly on his feet. Though he has [Sidenote: E] made a
-long voyage for the sake of philosophic intercourse with you, he has
-been left in neglect.’ These words stirred Dionysius so deeply that, in
-admiration of his kindliness and magnanimity, he promptly embraced Plato
-with effusion and proceeded to pay to Aeschines the most distinguished
-attentions.
-
-In the second place, our candour must be cleared of all excrescences, so
-to speak. We must allow it no coarse flavourings in the shape of
-insulting ridicule or buffoonish mockery. When a surgeon is performing
-an operation, a certain ease and neatness [Sidenote: F] should be
-incidentally apparent in his work, but there should be no supple
-juggleries of the hand in the way of fantastic and risky _fioriture_. In
-the same way candour admits of a dexterous touch of wit, so long as it
-is so prettily put as to maintain our respect; but impertinent and
-insolent buffoonery utterly destroys that feeling. Hence the harpist
-chose a polite as well as a forcible way of stopping Philip’s mouth,
-when that monarch attempted to argue with him on a question of musical
-note. ‘Sire,’ said he, ‘Heaven forbid you should ever become so badly
-off as to know more about these things than I do!’ [Sidenote: 68]
-Epicharmus, on the other hand, chose the wrong way, when Hiero, a few
-days after putting some of his familiars to death, invited him to
-dinner. ‘Nay, but,’ said he, ‘the other day there was no invitation to
-your sacrifice of your friends.’[53] It was also a mistake for Antiphon,
-when the question: ‘What sort of bronze is the best?’ was under
-discussion in the presence of Dionysius, to say, ‘That kind out of which
-they made the statues of Harmodius and Aristogeiton at Athens.’ No good
-is done by the stinging bitterness of such speeches, nor is any pleasure
-given by their scurrilous pleasantry. Language of the [Sidenote: B] kind
-comes only from a want of self-command—which is partly insolent
-ill-nature—combined with enmity. Those who use it are courting their own
-destruction as well; they are veritably dancing a ‘dance at the well’s
-edge’. Antiphon was put to death by Dionysius; Timagenes was banished
-from Caesar’s friendship, not because of any free word he ever uttered,
-but because, at dinner-parties or when walking, he would perpetually and
-with no serious purpose whatever, but
-
- _For whatsoever him thought might move the Argives to laughter_,
-
-advance some charge against his conduct as a friend, merely by way of
-pretext for upbraiding him.
-
-It is the same with the comic poets. Their work contained many serious
-and statesmanlike appeals to the audience; but [Sidenote: C] these were
-so much mixed up with farce and ribaldry—like good food in a hotch-potch
-of greenstuff—that their plain-speaking lost all nutritive power and
-use, with the result that the speaker was looked upon as an ill-natured
-buffoon, and the hearer derived no benefit from the speech.
-
-In other cases by all means have your fun and laugh with your friends,
-but when you give them a piece of your mind, let it be done with
-earnestness and with courtesy. And if the matter is one of importance,
-impart a cogent and moving effect to your words by your emotions,
-gestures, and tone of voice.
-
-There is also the question of the right moment. To disregard it is in
-all cases a serious mistake, but is particularly ruinous to good results
-when you are ‘speaking your mind’. That we should beware of doing
-anything of the kind when wine and inebriation are to the fore, is
-obvious. It is to bring a cloud [Sidenote: D] over the bright sky, if,
-in the midst of fun and gaiety, you moot a topic which puckers the brow
-and stiffens the face, as if to defeat the ‘Relaxing God’, who—to quote
-Pindar—
-
- _Unbends the harassed brow of care._
-
-Nay, there is actually great danger in such unseasonableness. Wine
-renders the mind perilously testy, and tipsiness often takes command of
-candour and converts it into enmity. Moreover, instead of showing spirit
-and courage, it shows a want of manliness for a person who dare not
-speak his mind when sober to become bold at table, like a cowardly dog.
-
-There is, however, no need to dwell further upon this theme. Let us
-proceed.
-
-There are many who, when affairs are going well with their [Sidenote: E]
-friends, neither make any claim nor possess the courage to put restraint
-upon them. Prosperity, they think, lies quite beyond the reach of
-admonition. But should one stumble and come to grief, they set upon him.
-He is tame and humbled, and they trample upon him. The stream of their
-candour has been unnaturally dammed up, and now they let the whole flood
-loose upon him. He was once so disdainful, and they so feeble, that they
-thoroughly enjoy his change of fortune and make the most of it. It is as
-well, therefore, to discuss this class also.
-
-If Euripides asks:
-
- _When fortune blesses, what the need of friends?_
-
-the answer must be that it is the prosperous man who has most [Sidenote:
-F] need of friends to speak their minds and take down any excess of
-pride. There are few who can be both prosperous and wise at the same
-time. Most men require to import wisdom from abroad; they require that
-reasoning from outside should put compression upon them when fortune
-puffs them up and sets them swaying in the wind. But when fortune
-reduces their inflated bulk, the situation itself carries its own lesson
-and brings repentance home. There is consequently no occasion for
-friendly candour or for language which bites and distresses. When such
-reverses happen, verily [Sidenote: 69]
-
- _’Tis sweet to look into a friend’s fond eyes_,
-
-while he gives us solace and encouragement. Xenophon says of Clearchus
-that in battle and danger there appeared upon his face a look of
-geniality which put greater heart into those who were in peril. But to
-employ your mordant candour upon a man who is in trouble, is like
-administering ‘sharp-sight drops’ to an eye suffering with inflammation.
-It does nothing to cure or relieve the pain, but only adds anger to it
-by exasperating [Sidenote: B] the sufferer. For instance, when a man is
-in health he is not in the least angry or furious with a friend for
-blaming his looseness with the other sex, his drinking, his shirking of
-work and exercise, his continual bathings and ill-timed gorgings. But
-when he is sick, the thing is intolerable. It is more sickening than the
-disease to be told, ‘This is the result of your reckless
-self-indulgence, your laziness, your rich dishes, and your women.’ ‘What
-an unseasonable man you are! I am writing my will; the doctors are
-getting castor and scammony ready for me; and you come preaching and
-philosophizing!’ So, when a man is in trouble, the situation is not one
-for speaking your mind and moralizing. What it requires is sweet
-reasonableness [Sidenote: C] and help. When a little child has a fall,
-the nurse does not rush up in order to scold it. She picks it up, washes
-off the dirt, and straightens its dress. It is afterwards that she
-proceeds to reprimand and punish.
-
-An apposite story is told of Demetrius Phalereus, when he was in
-banishment and was living at Thebes in mean and obscure circumstances.
-It was with no pleasure that he saw Crates coming towards him, inasmuch
-as he expected to hear some plain-spoken cynic abuse. Crates, however,
-accosted him gently, and then spoke upon the subject of exile—how there
-was no calamity in it, and how little need there was to be distressed,
-[Sidenote: D] since it meant getting rid of cares, with their dangers
-and uncertainties. At the same time he urged him to have confidence in
-himself and his inner man. Cheered and heartened by such language,
-Demetrius exclaimed to his friends: ‘Alas, for all that engrossing
-business which prevented me from getting to know a man like this!’
-
- _To one in grief a friend should speak kind words,
- But to great folly words of admonition._
-
-Such is the way of a noble friend. But the mean and ignoble flatterer of
-the prosperous man is like those ‘ruptures and [Sidenote: E] sprains’ of
-which Demosthenes tells us that ‘when the body meets with an injury,
-then you begin to feel them’. He seizes upon your change of fortune with
-every appearance of delight and enjoyment. If you do require any
-reminder when your own ill-advised conduct has brought you to the
-ground, it should suffice to say:
-
- _’Twas not with approval of mine: full oft did I seek to dissuade
- thee._
-
-In what cases, then, ought a friend to be uncompromising? When should he
-exert his candour to the full? It is when the proper moment calls for
-him to stem the vehement course of pleasure, anger, or insolence; to put
-the curb on avarice; to [Sidenote: F] restrain a reckless folly. It was
-in this way that, when the precarious favours of fortune had corrupted
-Croesus with the pride of luxury, Solon spoke his mind to him, bidding
-him wait and see the end. It was in this way that Socrates was wont to
-put control on Alcibiades, to wrench his heart and draw genuine tears
-from him by bringing his errors home. Such was the method of Cyrus with
-Cyaxares. Such too, when Dion’s splendour was at its height and he was
-drawing all men’s eyes upon him by the brilliance and greatness of his
-exploits, was [Sidenote: 70] the method of Plato, who bade him keep
-anxious watch against
-
- _Self-will, house-mate of Solitude._
-
-Speusippus also urged Dion in his letters not to be proud because he had
-a great name among children and women-folk, but to take care and ‘make
-glorious’ the Academy by adorning Sicily with piety and justice and the
-best of laws. But not so Euctus and Eulaeus, the associates of Perseus.
-In his prosperity they followed him like the rest, always assenting,
-always complaisant. But when he met the Romans at Pydna, was defeated,
-and fled, they attacked him with bitter censure, reminding him of his
-errors and oversights and throwing them one after the other in his
-teeth, until the man became so utterly sore and [Sidenote: B] angry that
-he made an end of both by stabbing them with his dagger.
-
-This, then, may serve for the general rule as to place and time.
-
-But opportunities are often offered by a man himself, and no one who
-cares for his friend should let these occasions slip or omit to use
-them. Sometimes a question asked, a story told, blame or praise of a
-similar action in the case of other people, gives you the cue for a
-piece of plain-speaking. For instance, the story goes that Demaratus
-visited Macedonia at a time when [Sidenote: C] Philip was at variance
-with his wife and son. Upon Philip welcoming him and inquiring how far
-the Greeks were in harmony with each other, Demaratus—who was his
-well-wisher and intimate friend—remarked, ‘It becomes you excellently,
-Philip, to be asking about the harmonious relations of Athens and the
-Peloponnese, while you allow your own house to be so full of feud and
-discord.’ A good hit was also made by Diogenes. Philip was on his way to
-fight the Greeks, and Diogenes, who had entered the camp, was brought
-before him. Philip, being unacquainted with him, asked him if he was a
-spy. ‘Certainly I am,’ he replied. ‘I am a spy upon the short-sighted
-foolishness which induces you to come, without any compulsion, and risk
-[Sidenote: D] your throne and person upon the cast of a single hour.’
-This, however, was perhaps somewhat too forcible.
-
-Another good opportunity for admonition occurs when a man has been
-abused for his mistakes by some one else and is feeling small and
-humbled. A person of discretion will make a happy use of the occasion by
-sending the abusive parties to the right about and himself taking his
-friend in hand, reminding him that, if there is no other reason for
-being careful, he should at least give his enemies no encouragement.
-‘How can they open their mouths or say another word, if you cast aside
-once for [Sidenote: E] all these faults for which they abuse you?’ By
-this means the abuser gets the credit of the pain, and the admonisher
-that of the benefit.
-
-Some are more subtle. They convert their familiar friends by blaming
-some one else, accusing others of the things they know that those
-friends do. Once at a lecture in the afternoon our professor, Ammonius,
-aware that some of his class had not lunched as simply as they might,
-ordered his freedman to give his own boy a whipping, on the charge that
-‘he must have vinegar with his lunch’. Meanwhile the glance he threw at
-us brought the reproach home to the guilty parties.
-
-In the next place, we should be cautious of speaking plainly to a friend
-before company. Remember the case of Plato. [Sidenote: F] Socrates
-having handled one of his associates somewhat vigorously in conversation
-at table, Plato remarked, ‘Would it not have been better if this had
-been said in private?’ ‘And,’ retorted Socrates, ‘would you not have
-done better if you had said that to _me_ in private?’ The story goes
-that, when Pythagoras once dealt rather roughly with a pupil before a
-number of persons, the youth hanged himself, and from that time
-Pythagoras never again reproved anyone in another’s presence. A fault
-should be treated like a humiliating complaint. The uncovering and
-[Sidenote: 71] prescribing should be secret, not an ostentatious display
-to a gathering of witnesses or spectators. It is not the act of a
-friend, but of a sophist, to use another’s slips to glorify oneself,
-showing off before the company like those medical men who perform
-surgical operations in the theatre in order to advertise themselves. And
-apart from the insult—which has no right to accompany any curative
-treatment—we have to consider the contentiousness and obstinacy of a man
-in the wrong. Not merely is it the case that—as Euripides has it—
-
- _Love, when reproved,
- Is but more tyrannous_,
-
-[Sidenote: B] but if you make no scruple about offering reproof in
-public, you drive any moral disease or passion into becoming shameless.
-Plato insists that, if old men are to inculcate reverence in the young,
-they must themselves first show reverence towards the young. In the same
-way the friendly candour which most abashes is that which itself feels
-abashed. Let it be gently and considerately that you approach and handle
-the offender; then you undermine and destroy his vice, since regard is
-contagiously felt where regard is shown. Excellent, therefore, is the
-notion:
-
- _Putting his head close down, to the end that the rest should not
- hear it._
-
-[Sidenote: C] Least propriety of all is there in exposing a husband in
-the hearing of the wife, a father before the eyes of his children, a
-lover in the presence of the beloved, or a teacher in that of his
-pupils. He becomes frantic; so sore and angry is he at being set right
-before persons in whose eyes he is all anxiety to shine. When Cleitus
-enraged Alexander, it was, I imagine, not so much the fault of the wine
-as that he appeared to be humbling him before a large company. Another
-case is that of Aristomenes, the tutor[54] of Ptolemy. Once, when an
-embassy was in the room, Ptolemy fell asleep and Aristomenes gave him a
-hit to wake him up. The flatterers seized the opportunity, and affected
-to be indignant on the king’s behalf. ‘If,’ said [Sidenote: D] they,
-‘you did drop off, thanks to hard work and want of sleep, we ought to
-set you right privately, not lay hands on you before so many people.’ As
-the result, he sent Aristomenes a cup of poison and ordered him to drink
-it off. Aristophanes also tells us how Cleon tried to exasperate the
-Athenians against him by making it a charge that he
-
- _Abused the country before foreigners._
-
-This, then, is another of the mistakes to be avoided, if your desire is
-not so much to make a self-advertising display as to make your candour
-produce helpful and healing results.
-
-In the next place, your plain-speaker ought to bear in mind [Sidenote:
-E] the principle which Thucydides makes the Corinthians so properly
-express, in saying that they ‘had a right to find fault’ with others. It
-was Lysander, I believe, who said to the man from Megara, when he was
-delivering himself at the Federal Council concerning the interests of
-Greece, ‘You need a country to back your talk.’ In any case, doubtless,
-you need character for plain-speaking, but in no case is this so true as
-when you are admonishing and lecturing other people. Plato used to say
-that it was by his life he admonished Speusippus, and the mere sight of
-Xenocrates at lecture, and a glance from him, [Sidenote: F] sufficed to
-convert Polemon to better ways. When we lack weight and strength of
-character the result of any attempt at plain-speaking on our part is to
-draw upon ourselves the words:
-
- _Why physic us, thyself one mass of sores?_
-
-Nevertheless it often happens that, though a man’s own character is as
-weak as that of his neighbour, circumstances drive him to administer
-reproof. In that case the civillest behaviour is to contrive somehow to
-imply that the speaker is included in the reproach. In this tone are the
-words:
-
- _Tydeus’ son, what ails us, forgetting our prowess and valour?_
-
-[Sidenote: 72] and:
-
- _But no match are we now for Hector alone...._
-
-Socrates’ way of quietly setting young men right was of the same kind.
-He would not be taken as being himself free from ignorance, but as
-feeling it a duty to share with them in the cultivation of virtue and
-the quest of truth. We inspire affection and confidence when it is
-thought that, being equally to blame, we are applying to our friends the
-same correction as to ourselves. But if, when rebuking your neighbour,
-you put on the superior air of a flawless and passionless being, unless
-you are much the senior or possess an acknowledged eminence of character
-and reputation, you do no good and only make yourself [Sidenote: B]
-offensive and a nuisance. For this reason, when Phoenix introduced the
-story of his own misfortunes—how in anger he set to work to kill his
-father, but speedily repented:
-
- _Lest the Achaeans should name me ‘the man who murdered his
- father’_—
-
-it was of set purpose, that it might not seem as if, in reproving
-Achilles, he claimed to be an impeccable person whom anger had no power
-to corrupt. In such cases the moral effect sinks in, since we yield more
-readily to a show of fellow-feeling than to one of contempt.
-
-Another point. Since a mind diseased can no more bear unqualified
-candour and reproof than an inflamed eye can [Sidenote: C] be submitted
-to a brilliant light, one most useful resource among our remedies is to
-add a slight tincture of praise. For example:
-
- _Ugly is this that ye do, to cease from your valour and prowess,
- All ye best of the host! I would not move me to quarrel,
- If ’twere some other who thus might hold his hand from the fighting,
- Some craven man; but with you is my heart exceedingly anger’d_:
-
-or:
-
- _Pandarus, where is thy bow, and where thy feathery arrows?
- Where thy glory, the which no man among us doth challenge?_
-
-If a man is giving way, there is also a vigorous rallying power in such
-language as
-
- _Where now
- Is Oedipus and all his far-famed rede?_
-
-or:
-
- _Is ‘t Heracles,
- He who hath borne so many a brunt, speaks thus?_
-
-Not only does it temper the harshness of the punishment [Sidenote: D]
-inflicted by the reproach; it sets a man at rivalry with himself. When
-reminded of the things which stand to his credit, he is ashamed of those
-which degrade him, and he finds an elevating example in his own person.
-But when we make comparisons with others—with mates, fellow citizens, or
-kinsmen—the contentiousness which belongs to his failings is piqued and
-exacerbated. It has a habit of retorting angrily, ‘Then why don’t you go
-to my betters, instead of harassing _me_?’ We must therefore beware of
-belauding one person while we are speaking our minds to another—always,
-of course, with the exception of his parents. Thus Agamemnon can say:
-
- _Truly, a son little like to himself hath Tydeus begotten_;
-
-[Sidenote: E] or Odysseus, when in Scyrus:
-
- _But thou o’ersham’st the brilliance of thy race,
- Wool-spinner! thou, whose sire was Greece’s hero!_
-
-By no means should we use reproof to answer reproof, or plain-speaking
-in counter-attack to plain-speaking. Otherwise we quickly produce heat
-and create a quarrel. Moreover, such disputatiousness is naturally
-regarded, not as a return of candour, [Sidenote: F] but as intolerance
-of it. It is better, therefore, to listen with a good grace when a
-friend believes he is reproving you. For this, if at a later time some
-offence of his own calls for reprobation, is the very thing which gives
-your plain-speaking its right—as it were—to speak. When, without bearing
-any grudge, you remind him that it has not been his own habit to let his
-friends go wrong, but to teach them better and set them right, he will
-be the more ready to give in and accept the proffered correction; for he
-will believe that it is good feeling and good intention, not anger and
-fault-finding, which prompt this payment in return.
-
-[Sidenote: 73] In the next place, remember the saying of Thucydides:
-‘Well advised is he who accepts unpopularity in a great cause.’ It is
-the duty of a friend to accept the odium of reproof when questions of
-great moment are at stake. But if he is everywhere and always being
-displeased; if he behaves to his intimates as if he were their tutor and
-not their friend, his reproofs will possess no edge and produce no
-effect when it comes to matters of importance. He will have frittered
-away his candour, after the manner of a physician who takes a pungent or
-bitter drug [Sidenote: B] of a sovereign and costly character, and
-parcels it out in a large number of petty doses for which there is no
-necessity. No! while a friend will, for his own part, carefully avoid
-such unremitting censoriousness, the incessant niggling and pettifogging
-of some other person will afford him an opening to attack those faults
-which are more serious. Once when a man with an ulcerated liver showed
-the physician Philotimus a sore on his finger, the doctor observed, ‘My
-good sir, your case is not a matter of a whitlow!’ So when some one is
-finding fault with a number of insignificant peccadilloes, the real
-friend will be offered the opportunity of saying to him, ‘What have his
-tippling and foolery to do with us? My good sir, let our friend here
-dismiss his mistress or stop dicing, and he is otherwise an admirable
-fellow.’ If a man finds that allowance is made [Sidenote: C] for his
-trifling errors, he will take it in good part when a friend speaks his
-mind against those which are of more moment. But to be everlastingly
-girding, to be bitter and harsh on all occasions, to be continually
-meddling and taking cognisance of every action, is intolerable even to a
-child or a brother, nay, unendurable even to a slave.
-
-Again, it is no more true of the folly of our friends than it is—despite
-Euripides—of old age, that
-
- _All things are wrong with it._
-
-Our friends have their right actions, and we should keep an eye upon
-these no less than upon their errors. We should, in fact, begin by
-zealously praising them. In dealing with iron we have first to soften it
-with heat before the chilling process [Sidenote: D] can impart to it the
-consistency and hardness of steel. So with our friends. First we warm
-and fuse them with praise; then a quiet application of candour serves as
-a tempering douche. We have, for instance, the opportunity of saying,
-‘Is there any comparison between the other conduct and this? Do you see
-what good fruit comes of doing the right thing? This is what your
-friends expect of you; it is like you, and what nature meant you for.
-The other conduct is abominable; away with it
-
- _To the mountain or to the wave of the surging tumultuous ocean!_‘
-
-A sensible physician will always rather cure a sick man with sleep and
-feeding than with castor and scammony; and a right-minded friend, or a
-kind father or teacher, prefers to use praise [Sidenote: E] rather than
-blame as his means of moral correction. For a candid friend to cause
-least pain and work most benefit, there is nothing like showing the
-least possible anger and treating the offender with polite good feeling.
-We must not, therefore, sharply confute him if he denies a thing, nor
-try to stop him if he defends himself. On the contrary, we must help him
-to contrive some kind of plausible excuse; and, when he refuses to own
-to the more discreditable motive, we must ourselves concede him a less
-heinous one. Thus Hector says to his brother:
-
- _Not well is this wrath, foolish man, that thus thou hast stored in
- thy bosom_,
-
-[Sidenote: F] as if his retirement from the battle, instead of being a
-dastardly running away, was an exhibition of temper. So Nestor to
-Agamemnon:
-
- _Thou didst yield to the pride of thy spirit._
-
-It is manifestly more courteous to say, ‘You did not stop to think,’ or,
-‘You failed to perceive,’ than ‘You behaved badly’, or ‘You behaved
-unfairly’; to say, ‘Do not be hard upon [Sidenote: 74] your brother,’
-than ‘Do not be jealous of your brother’; to say, ‘Flee from the woman’s
-seductions,’ than ‘Stop trying to seduce the woman’. This is the manner
-cultivated by curative [Sidenote: *] candour; the other belongs to
-vexatious candour.
-
-Suppose a person is about to do wrong and that we are called upon to
-check him—to stem the current of some vehement impulse. Or suppose that
-he is inclined to be unready in the performance of duty, and we wish to
-brace him up and stimulate him. We should do so by making charges which
-put the matter in an outrageously unbecoming light. For instance, in
-Sophocles, when Odysseus is working upon Achilles, he makes out, not
-that Achilles is angry at the affair of the banquet, but [Sidenote: B]
-
- _Now that thou hast the Trojan burghs in sight,
- Thou art afraid._
-
-And when, in answer to this, Achilles is so enraged that he declares he
-is off home:
-
- _I know what ’tis thou flyest—not reproach:
- Hector is nigh, and ’tis not well to stay._
-
-In inciting to high courses and dissuading from low ones, we may
-frighten a man with the reputation he will win: a man of courage and
-spirit with that of coward; a man of temperance and self-control with
-that of profligate; a man of magnificent generosity with that of miser
-and cheeseparer. Where a thing is past cure, we must show ourselves
-reasonable; our candour [Sidenote: C] must display more sorrow and
-sympathy than blame. But when we are preventing a misdeed or fighting
-against a passion, we must be vigorous, inflexible, and insistent. Then
-is the right moment for incorruptible affection and genuine frankness.
-
-To blame an action when it is done is no more than we find enemies doing
-to each other. Diogenes used to say that, if you are to be kept right,
-you must possess either good friends or red-hot enemies. The one will
-warn you, the other will expose you. But it is better to avoid errors by
-taking advice than to repent of an error because of abuse. For this
-reason [Sidenote: D] we must study tact even in the matter of candour.
-As it is the most effective drug that can be employed in friendship, so
-it stands in most need of unfailing discretion as to time and moderation
-as to strength.
-
-And, finally, since, as I have said, it is in the nature of
-plain-speaking that it should often cause pain to the person under
-treatment, we must take a pattern by the medical man. He does not use
-his lancet and then leave the part to suffer; he eases it with gentle
-lotions and fomentations. Similarly, if our admonitions are to be
-tactful, we do not administer a sharp sting and then run away. We adopt
-a different strain, and soothe [Sidenote: E] and calm the patient with
-courteous language, much as sculptors put smoothness and gloss upon a
-statue where they have chipped it with hammer and chisel. If we strike
-and gash a man with plain-speaking and then leave him in the rough—lumpy
-and uneven with anger—it is a hard matter afterwards to call him back
-and smooth him over. This, therefore, is a result against which the
-admonisher must be especially on his guard. He must not leave the
-patient too soon, nor allow the last words of his conversation to be
-such as pain and exasperate his intimate friend.
-
-Footnote 48:
-
- i.e. a rough and mountainous island.
-
-Footnote 49:
-
- A ‘satyric’ drama was a half-comic interlude or sequel to tragedies.
-
-Footnote 50:
-
- In the Stoic sense of _adiaphoria_.
-
-Footnote 51:
-
- Since diagrams were often drawn with sticks in the dust.
-
-Footnote 52:
-
- The Greek jest does not admit of translation. The same word may mean
- both ‘theft’ and a ‘stealthy act’.
-
-Footnote 53:
-
- The point lies in an ambiguity which is possible only in the Greek.
- The words may equally mean: ‘You issued no invitation when sacrificing
- your friends,’ and ‘when sacrificing, you did not invite your
- friends’.
-
-Footnote 54:
-
- Or what French would call the _gouverneur_.
-
-
-
-
- ON BRINGING UP A BOY[55]
-
-
-I propose to offer some remarks upon the bringing-up of [Sidenote: 1]
-free-born children, as a means of securing soundness of character.
-
-Perhaps the best starting-point is that at which they are brought into
-existence.
-
-Upon one who desires to become the father of reputable [Sidenote: B]
-children I would urge that he should be careful as to his consort. She
-must be no mistress or concubine. Base birth, whether on mother’s or
-father’s side, is an indelible reproach. It sticks to a man all the days
-of his life; it offers a handle to those who are minded to discredit or
-vilify him; and it is a wise saying of the poet that
-
- _When the foundation of a stock is laid
- Amiss, needs must the issue be unhappy_.
-
-A sure fund of confidence for facing the world lies therefore in
-honourable birth, and this must be a first consideration with all who
-are anxious for a right and proper procreation of children.
-
-It is quite natural that those whose birth is of base metal which will
-not bear scrutiny should tend to be weak-spirited and abject. The poet
-is quite right in saying: [Sidenote: C]
-
- _It slaves a man, stout-hearted though he be,
- To know his mother or his father base._
-
-It is no doubt equally the case that persons of distinguished parentage
-become full of pride and self-assertion. Thus Themistocles’ son,
-Diophantus, is reported to have said on many occasions and to many
-persons that he had only to wish for a thing and the Athenian people
-voted for it. ‘What he liked, [Sidenote: D] his mother liked; what his
-mother liked, Themistocles liked; and what Themistocles liked, all
-Athens liked.’
-
-A most praiseworthy pride was that exhibited by the Lacedaemonians, when
-they mulcted their own king Archidamus for condescending to marry a
-woman of small stature, their plea being that he intended to provide
-them with kinglets instead of kings.
-
-In this connexion there is one observation which my predecessors also
-have duly made. It is that those who approach their wives with a view to
-offspring should do so either while wholly abstaining from wine or at
-least after tasting it in moderation. [Sidenote: 2] This explains the
-remark of Diogenes on seeing a youth in a state of mad excitement:
-‘Young fellow, your father begat you when he was drunk.’
-
-So much for the question of birth. We will now turn to that of
-upbringing.
-
-Speaking generally, we must say of virtue what it is customary to say of
-the arts and sciences—that for right action three things must go
-together, namely, nature, reason, and habit. By reason I mean
-instruction; by habit I mean exercise. The [Sidenote: B] first elements
-come from nature; progress, from instruction; the actual use, from
-practice; the consummation, from all combined. In so far as any of these
-is defective, character must necessarily be maimed. Nature without
-instruction is blind; instruction without nature is futile; practice
-without both is abortive. In farming, the soil must first be good; next,
-the farmer must know his business; third, the seeds must be sound.
-Similarly with education. Nature is the soil, the teacher is the farmer,
-[Sidenote: C] the lessons and precepts are the seed. It may be
-confidently asserted that all three were harmoniously blended in the
-souls of those men whose renown is universal—Pythagoras, Socrates,
-Plato, and others who have won imperishable glory.
-
-Blest indeed, and divinely favoured, is the man on whom Heaven has
-bestowed each and all. Yet it would be a great, or rather a total,
-mistake to suppose that, when natural gift is defective, no right moral
-instruction and practice will lead one to improve his faulty nature in
-some attainable degree. For while neglect will ruin an excellent natural
-gift, teaching will correct an inferior one. Be careless, and you miss a
-thing, however easy: take pains, and you secure it, however difficult.
-You have only to glance at a number of everyday facts in order
-[Sidenote: D] to perceive how complete is the success of persistent
-effort. Drops of water will hollow a rock; iron and bronze are worn away
-by the touch of the hands; wood bent by pressure into a carriage-wheel
-can never recover its original straightness. To straighten the curved
-sticks used by actors is impossible, the unnatural form having become,
-by dint of straining, stronger than the natural.
-
-Nor are these the only examples to prove the efficacy of painstaking.
-Instances are countless. Soil may be naturally [Sidenote: E] good; but
-neglect it, and it becomes a waste. Indeed, the better it is by nature,
-the more hopeless a wilderness will your neglect make of it. On the
-other hand, it may be too hard and rugged; yet cultivation will speedily
-cause it to produce excellent crops. Is there any tree which will not
-grow crooked and cease to bear fruit if left untended, whereas, when
-properly trained, it bears well and brings its fruit to perfection? Does
-not bodily strength invariably become effete when you take your ease and
-neglect to keep in good condition, whereas a feeble physique gains
-immensely in strength through gymnastic and athletic exercise? Is there
-any horse which a rider cannot render obedient by [Sidenote: F] a
-thorough breaking-in, whereas, if left unbroken, it will prove
-stiff-necked and full of temper?
-
-But why dwell longer on such cases, when there are so many examples of
-the most savage creatures being tamed and made amenable to hard work?
-
-When a Thessalian was asked which of his countrymen were the gentlest in
-manner, his answer was a good one: _Those who are giving up war._ But it
-is useless to multiply instances. Character is long-standing habit, and
-it would scarcely be beside [Sidenote: 3] the mark to speak of the
-virtues of the mind as the virtues ‘of minding’.[56] One more
-illustration, and we will dispense with further elaboration of the
-subject. The Spartan legislator Lycurgus once took two puppies belonging
-to the same parents and brought them up in entirely different ways. The
-one he turned into a gluttonous good-for-nothing, the other into a keen
-and capable hunting-dog. Subsequently he got the Lacedaemonians together
-and said to them: ‘A great factor [Sidenote: B] in engendering virtue
-consists of habit and education—of instruction in the conduct of life—as
-I am about to prove to you here and now.’ He then brought forward the
-two young dogs, put down directly in front of them a plate of food and a
-hare, and let the dogs loose; whereupon the one darted after the hare,
-while the other made for the plate. The Lacedaemonians, who were not yet
-in the secret, failed to perceive the meaning of his demonstration,
-until he told them: ‘Both these dogs come from the same parents, but the
-difference in their education has turned the one into a glutton and the
-other into a hunter.’
-
-No more need be said of habit and conduct of life. We may [Sidenote: C]
-proceed to the question of nurture.
-
-In my opinion mothers should nurse their own children and offer them the
-breast; for their nursing will be of a more sympathetic and painstaking
-kind, since their love is from the heart, or, as the saying goes, ‘down
-to the finger-tips,’ whereas the affection of professional nurses and
-foster-mothers—who are paid for it—can only be spurious and factitious.
-That it is the duty of the mother herself to suckle and nurse her
-offspring is evident from the arrangement of nature, which has supplied
-every animal after parturition with the necessary provision of milk.
-Here Providence further shows its wisdom, inasmuch as it has furnished a
-woman with a pair of breasts, [Sidenote: D] so that, even if she bears
-twins, there may be a double source for them to draw upon. Moreover she
-will by so acting become more tender and affectionate to her child. It
-can, indeed, scarcely be otherwise; the connexion of nurse and nursling
-is the means of raising affection to its highest pitch. One can see how
-even a brute beast will yearn for its nursling, if you tear them apart.
-
-If possible, then, the mother should endeavour to nurse the child
-herself. But if—as may sometimes happen—she is prevented by physical
-weakness, or if other children are speedily on the way, it is at least
-desirable not to accept as foster-mother or nurse the first that offers,
-but to choose the best possible. [Sidenote: E] To begin with, her
-character should be Greek. It is as with the treatment of the body. As
-soon as children are born, we have to mould their limbs in order that
-they may grow straight and shapely. Similarly their characters ought to
-be regulated from the first. For youth is supple and plastic, and it is
-while the mind is still soft and yielding that it acts as a mould for
-instruction, whereas it is always difficult to knead into shape
-[Sidenote: F] anything hard. As it is in soft wax that we make the
-impression of a seal, so it is in the minds of those who are still
-little children that we imprint a lesson.
-
-That great thinker Plato is right, it seems to me, in exhorting a nurse
-to use discretion in the tales she tells to young children; otherwise
-their minds may become infected from the first with folly and
-corruption. It is also sound advice which the poet Phocylides gives in
-the words:
-
- _While yet but a child, it behoveth
- To learn such deeds as are good._
-
-Another point which we cannot afford to omit concerns the slave children
-who are to serve the young master and to be brought up with him. Pains
-must be taken, first, of course, that [Sidenote: 4] they shall be
-well-behaved, but also that they shall talk Greek, and talk it with good
-articulation. Otherwise, through rubbing against barbarians and bad
-characters, he will pick up something of their vices. The proverb-makers
-have good reason for saying: _If you have a lame man for a neighbour,
-you will learn to limp._
-
-When children reach the age to be put under a mentor, it becomes
-especially necessary to take pains in the appointment of such a person.
-Otherwise we shall have them entrusted to some uncivilized or rascally
-fellow. What actually happens [Sidenote: B] is often in the highest
-degree absurd. Respectable slaves are made into farmers, skippers,
-traders, stewards, or money-lenders, while any low specimen who is found
-to be a glutton and a tippler and of no use in any kind of business is
-taken and put in charge of the sons. A fit and proper attendant should
-possess the same qualities of mind as Phoenix, the attendant of
-Achilles.
-
-We now reach a topic more important and vital than any yet treated—that
-of the right teachers for our children. The kind to be sought for are
-those whose lives are irreproachable, whose characters are unimpugned,
-and whose skill and experience [Sidenote: C] are of the best. The root
-or fountain-head of character as a man and a gentleman lies in receiving
-the proper education. As farmers put stakes beside their plants, so the
-right kind of teacher provides firm support for the young in the shape
-of lessons and admonitions, carefully chosen so as to produce an upright
-growth of character.
-
-As things are, the behaviour of some fathers is contemptible. Before
-making inquiry as to the proposed teachers, they put their children into
-the hands of frauds and charlatans, without knowing what they are about,
-or, maybe, because they are not competent to judge. In the latter case
-their behaviour is not so ridiculous, but there is another case in which
-it is in the last degree absurd. I mean, when they know, either from
-their own [Sidenote: D] observation or from the accounts of others, how
-ignorant and [Sidenote: *] bad certain educators are, and yet entrust
-their children to them. Sometimes this is because they cannot resist the
-fawning of some obsequious flatterer; sometimes it is done to gratify
-the whim of a friend. It would be just as reasonable for a sick man to
-gratify a friend by rejecting the doctor whose science could save him,
-and preferring the ignoramus who will kill him; or for a man to dismiss
-the best ship’s-captain and appoint the worst, because a friend asked
-for it. In the name of all that is sacred, can any one called a ‘father’
-set the pleasing of [Sidenote: E] somebody who asks a favour above the
-education of his children? There was good sense in a frequent saying of
-famous old Socrates, ‘If it could be done, one ought to mount the
-loftiest part of the city and shout: _Good people, what are you after?
-Why in such deadly earnest about making money, while troubling so little
-about the sons to whom you are to leave it?_’ We may add that the
-conduct of such fathers is like that of a man who is anxious as to his
-shoe, while his foot may look after itself. Many fathers go to such
-lengths in the way of fondness for their money and [Sidenote: F] want of
-fondness for their children, that, to avoid paying a larger fee, they
-choose utterly worthless persons to educate their sons, their object
-being an inexpensive ignorance. This reminds one of Aristippus and his
-neat and witty repartee to a foolish father. Questioned as to what fee
-he asked for educating the child, he replied, ‘Forty pounds.’ ‘Good
-heavens!’ said the father: ‘What an extravagant demand! For forty pounds
-I can buy a slave.’ ‘Very well,’ was the answer: ‘then you [Sidenote: 5]
-will have two slaves—your son, and the one you buy.’
-
-To put it shortly, it is surely absurd to train little children to
-receive their food with the right hand, and to scold them if they put
-out the left, and yet to take no precautions that they shall be taught
-moral lessons of a sound and proper kind.
-
-What the consequence is to these admirable fathers, when they bring up
-their sons badly and educate them badly, is soon told. On coming of age
-and taking rank as men, the sons show an utter disregard of a wholesome
-and orderly life, and throw themselves headlong into low and irregular
-pleasures. Then [Sidenote: B] at last, when it is of no use, and when
-their wrongdoing has brought him to his wits’ end, the father repents of
-having sacrificed his children’s education. Some of them take up with
-toadies and parasites, wretched nondescripts who are the ruin and bane
-of youth; others with haughty and expensive mistresses and strumpets,
-whom they ransom from their employers. Some spend recklessly on
-gormandizing; some are wrecked upon dice and carousals; some go so far
-as to venture on the more daring vices—they commit adultery, and think
-death not too much [Sidenote: C] to pay for a single pleasure. Had these
-last studied philosophy, they would in all probability not have
-succumbed to temptation of this kind. They would have been told of the
-advice of Diogenes—who, however coarse in his language, is right in his
-facts—‘Go to a brothel, my boy, and you will find that the [Sidenote: *]
-expensive article is not a bit better than the cheap one.’
-
-In brief, then, I assert—and it would be fairer to regard me as
-repeating an oracle than as giving advice—that in these matters the one
-and essential thing, the first, middle, and last, is a sound upbringing
-and right education. It is this, I say, which leads to virtue and
-happiness.
-
-[Sidenote: D] Other blessings are on the human plane; they are slight
-and not worth serious pursuit. Good birth is a distinction, but the boon
-depends on one’s ancestors. Wealth is a prize, but its possession
-depends on fortune, which often carries it off from those who have it
-and bestows it on those who never hoped for it. Moreover, great wealth
-is a target exposed to any rogue of a servant or blackmailer who is
-minded to ‘aim a purse’ at it. And, worst of all, even the basest of men
-have their share of it. Fame, again, is imposing, but uncertain. Beauty,
-though greatly courted, is short-lived; health, though highly prized, is
-unstable; strength is a thing to be envied, but it falls an easy prey to
-disease and age. Let us tell any one who prides himself [Sidenote: E] on
-his bodily strength that he is manifestly under a delusion. How small a
-fraction is human strength of the might of other animals, such as the
-elephant, the bull, and the lion!
-
-Meanwhile culture is the only thing in us that is immortal and divine.
-In the nature of man there are two sovereign elements—understanding and
-reason. It is the place of the understanding to direct the reason and of
-the reason to serve the understanding. Fortune cannot overcome them,
-calumny cannot rob us of them, disease cannot corrupt them, old age
-cannot impair them. The understanding is the only thing that renews its
-youth as it grows old, and, while time carries off everything else, it
-brings old age one gift—that of knowledge. When, again, war comes like a
-torrent, tearing and sweeping everything away, it is of our mental
-culture alone that it cannot rob us. Stilpo, the Megarian philosopher,
-made what seems a memorable answer when Demetrius, after enslaving the
-city and razing it to the ground, asked him if he had lost anything. ‘O
-no!’ said he, ‘for virtue is not made spoil of war.’ The reply of
-Socrates is evidently to the same tune and purpose. [Sidenote: 6] It was
-Gorgias, I believe, who asked him his opinion of the Great King, and
-whether he considered him happy. ‘I have no knowledge,’ said Socrates,
-‘as to the state of his character and culture.’ He assumed that
-happiness depended upon these, and not upon the gifts of fortune.
-
-Not only should the education of our children be treated as of the very
-first importance, but I once more urge that we should insist upon its
-being of the sound and genuine kind. From pretentious nonsense our sons
-should be kept as far aloof [Sidenote: B] as possible. To please the
-many is to displease the wise, an assertion in which I have the support
-of Euripides:
-
- _I am not deft of words before the crowd,
- More skilled when with my compeers and the few.
- ’Tis compensation: they who ‘mid the wise
- Are naught, surpass in gift of speech to mobs._
-
-My own observation tells me that persons who make a business of speaking
-in a way to please and curry favour with the rabble, generally prove
-correspondingly dissolute and pleasure-loving in their lives. Nor,
-indeed, should we expect anything else; for if they have no regard to
-propriety when catering for the [Sidenote: C] gratification of other
-people, it is not likely that they will permit right and sound
-principles to have the upper hand of their own voluptuous
-self-indulgence, nor that they will cultivate self-control rather than
-enjoyment.
-
-[Sidenote: *] And how can children learn from them anything admirable?
-Among admirable things is the practice of neither saying nor doing
-anything at random; and, as the proverb goes, ‘admirable things are
-difficult.’ Meanwhile, speeches made offhand are a mass of reckless
-slovenliness, without a notion where to begin or where to end.
-
-Apart from other faults, extempore speakers drop into a terrible
-prolixity and verbiage, whereas premeditation keeps [Sidenote: D] a
-speech safe within the lines of due proportion. When Pericles, ‘as
-tradition informs us,’ was called upon by the assembly, he frequently
-refused the call, on the ground that his thoughts were ‘not arranged’.
-Demosthenes, who took him for his own political model, acted in the same
-way. If the Athenians called upon him to address them, he would resist,
-with the words, ‘I have not arranged my thoughts.’ This, it is true, may
-be unauthentic and a fabrication; but in the speech against Meidias we
-have an explicit statement as to the advantage of preparation. His words
-are: ‘_I admit, gentlemen, that I come prepared; and I have no wish to
-deny it. I have even conned over my speech to the best of my poor
-ability. It would have been insane conduct, if, after and amid such
-harsh treatment, I had paid no regard to what I meant to say to you on
-the subject._’
-
-That impromptu speaking should be rejected altogether, or, [Sidenote: E]
-failing this, that it should be practised only on unimportant subjects,
-I do not say. I am recommending a tonic regimen. Before manhood, I claim
-that there should be no speaking on the spur of the moment. But when the
-ability has taken firm root, it is only right for speech to enjoy free
-play as occasion invites. Though persons who have been in prison for a
-long time may subsequently be liberated, they are unsteady on their
-feet, [Sidenote: F] a protracted habit of wearing chains making them
-unable to step out. Similarly if those who have for a long time kept
-their speaking under close constraint some day find it necessary to
-speak offhand, they nevertheless retain the same style of expression.
-But to let mere children make extempore speeches is to become
-responsible for the worst of twaddle and futility. There is a story of a
-wretched painter who showed Apelles a picture, with the remark, ‘I have
-just painted this at one [Sidenote: 7] sitting.’ ‘I can see,’ said
-Apelles, ‘without your telling me, that it has been quick work. But my
-wonder is that you haven’t painted more than one as good.’
-
-While (to return to the original matter in hand) we must be careful to
-avoid a style which is theatrical and bombastic, we must be equally on
-our guard against one which is low and trivial. If the turgid style is
-unbusinesslike, too thin a style is ineffective. Just as the body should
-be not only healthy but also in good condition, so language must be full
-of strength [Sidenote: B] and not simply free from disease. Keep on the
-safe side, and you are merely commended: face some risk, and you are
-admired. I take the same view of the mental disposition also. One should
-neither be over-bold, and so become brazen, nor yet timid and bashful,
-and so become mean-spirited. The rule of art and taste is _The middle
-course in all things_.
-
-[Sidenote: *] While I am still upon the subject of this part of
-education there is an opinion which I desire to express. A style
-consisting of single clauses I regard in the first instance as no slight
-evidence of poor taste, and, in the next, as too finical a thing ever to
-[Sidenote: C] be maintained in practice. Here, as in everything else
-that caters for ear or eye, monotony is as cloying and irksome as
-variety is delightful.
-
-There is no subject in the ‘regular curriculum’ of which the eye or ear
-of a freeborn boy should be permitted to remain uninformed. But while he
-receives a cursory education in those subjects in order to taste their
-quality, the most important place—complete all-round proficiency being
-impossible—must belong to philosophy. We may explain by a comparison
-with [Sidenote: D] travel, in which it is an excellent thing to visit a
-large number of cities, but good policy to settle in the best. As the
-philosopher Bion wittily remarked, when the suitors could obtain no
-access to Penelope they satisfied themselves with her handmaids, and
-when a man is unable to get hold of philosophy he makes dry bones of
-himself upon the remaining subjects, which are of no account.
-
-Philosophy, then, should be put at the head of all mental culture. The
-services which have been invented for the care of the body are
-two—medicine and gymnastics—the one imparting health, the other good
-condition. But for the weaknesses and ailments of the soul philosophy is
-the only thing to be prescribed. It is from and with philosophy that we
-can tell what is becoming or disgraceful, what is just or unjust,
-[Sidenote: E] what course, in short, is to be chosen or shunned. It
-teaches us how to behave towards the Gods, our parents, our elders, the
-laws, our rulers, friends, wives, children, and servants: that we should
-worship the Gods, honour our parents, respect our elders, obey the laws,
-give way to our rulers, love our friends, be continent towards our
-wives, show affection to our children, and abstain from cruelty to our
-slaves. Above all, it warns us against excess of joy when prosperous and
-excess of grief when unfortunate; against dissoluteness in our
-pleasures, or fury and brutality in our anger. These I judge to be chief
-among [Sidenote: F] the blessings conferred by philosophy. To bear
-adversity nobly is to act the brave man,[57] to bear prosperity
-unassumingly, the [Sidenote: *] modest mortal. To get the better of
-pleasures by reason needs wisdom; to master anger requires no ordinary
-character.
-
-Perfect men I take to be those who can blend practical ability
-[Sidenote: 8] with philosophy, and who can achieve both of two best and
-greatest ends—the life of public utility as men of affairs, and the calm
-and tranquil life as students of philosophy. For there are three kinds
-of life: the life of action, the life of thought, and the life of
-enjoyment. When life is dissolute and enslaved to pleasure, it is mean
-and animal; when it is all thought and fails to act, it is futile; when
-it is all action and destitute of philosophy, it is crude and
-blundering. We should therefore do our best to engage both in public
-business and in the pursuit [Sidenote: B] of philosophy, as occasion
-offers. Of this kind was the public career of Pericles, of Archytas of
-Tarentum, of Dion of Syracuse, and of Epaminondas of Thebes. Of these
-Dion actually attached himself to Plato as his pupil.
-
-There is no need, I think, to deal at any greater length with mental
-cultivation. It is, however, further desirable—or rather it is
-essential—that we should not neglect to possess the standard treatises,
-but should collect a stock of them, with the result of keeping our
-knowledge from starvation.[58] Farmers stock [Sidenote: *] [their
-fertilizers], and the employment of books is instrumental to culture in
-the same way.
-
-[Sidenote: C] Meanwhile we must not omit to exercise the body also. Our
-boys must be sent to the teacher of gymnastics and receive a sufficient
-amount of physical training, both to secure a good carriage and also to
-develop strength. Good condition is the foundation laid in childhood for
-a hale old age, and, just as our preparations for wintry weather should
-be made while it is fine, so we should store up provision for age in the
-shape of regular and temperate behaviour in youth. Physical exertion
-should, however, be so regulated that a boy does not become too
-exhausted to devote himself sufficiently to mental culture. [Sidenote:
-D] As Plato observes, sleep and weariness are the enemies of study.
-
-Upon this topic I need not dwell, but will pass on at once to the most
-important consideration of all—the necessity of training a boy for
-service as a fighting-man. For this he must go through hard drill in
-hurling the javelin, in shooting with the bow, and in hunting. ‘The
-goods of the vanquished,’ it has been said, ‘are prizes offered to the
-victor.’ There is no place in war for the physical condition of the
-cloister, and a lean soldier accustomed to warlike exercises will break
-through [Sidenote: *] a phalanx of fleshy prize-fighters.
-
-[Sidenote: E] ‘Well but,’ some one may urge, ‘while you promised us a
-set of rules for the upbringing of free men, it turns out that you have
-nothing to say concerning that of poor and common people, but are
-satisfied to confine your suggestions to the rich.’ There is a ready
-reply to the objection. If possible, I should desire the proposed
-education to be applicable to all alike. But if there are cases in which
-limited private circumstances make it impossible to carry my rules into
-practice, the blame should be laid upon fortune, not upon him who offers
-the advice. Though a man is poor, he should make every possible effort
-to bring up his children in the ideal way. Failing this, he must come as
-near to it as he can.
-
-After thus encumbering our discussion with this side-issue, [Sidenote:
-F] I will now proceed with the connected account of such other
-[Sidenote: *] matters as contribute to the right upbringing of the
-young.
-
-And first, children should be led into right practices of persuasion and
-reasoning: flogging and bodily injury should be out of the question.
-Such treatment is surely more fit for slaves than for the free, whom the
-smart, or even the humiliation, of a beating deprives of all life and
-spirit, making their tasks a horror to them. The freeborn find praise a
-more effective [Sidenote: 9] stimulus to the right conduct, and blame a
-more effective deterrent from the wrong, than any kind of bodily
-assault. In the use of such praise and reprimand there should be a
-subtle alternation. When a child is too bold, it should first be shamed
-by reproof and then encouraged by a word of praise. We may take a
-pattern by nurses, who may have to make an infant cry, but who
-afterwards comfort it by offering it the breast. We must, however, avoid
-puffing children up with eulogies, the consequence of excessive praise
-being vanity and conceit.
-
-I have noticed more than one instance in which the over-fondness
-[Sidenote: B] of a father has proved to be a lack of fondness. To make
-my meaning clear, I will use an illustration. Being in too great haste
-for their children to take first place in everything, they impose
-extravagant tasks, which prove too great for their strength and end in
-failure, besides causing them such weariness and distress that they
-refuse to submit patiently to instruction. Water in moderation will make
-a plant grow, while a flood of water will choke it. In the same way the
-mind will thrive under [Sidenote: C] reasonably hard work, but will
-drown if the work is excessive. We must therefore allow children
-breathing-time from perpetual tasks, and remember that all our life
-there is a division of relaxation and effort. Hence the existence of
-sleep as well as waking, of peace as well as war, of fine weather as
-well as bad, of holidays as well as business. In a word, it is rest that
-seasons toil. The fact is obvious, not merely in the case of living
-things, but in that of the inanimate world. We loosen a bow or a lyre,
-so that we may be able to tighten it. In fine, the body is kept sound by
-want and its satisfaction, the mind by relaxation and labour.
-
-[Sidenote: D] There are some fathers who have a culpable way of
-entrusting their sons to attendants and teachers, and then entirely
-omitting to keep the instruction of such persons under their own eye or
-ear. This is a most serious failure in their duty. Every few days they
-should personally examine their children, instead of confiding in the
-character of a hireling, whose attention to his pupils will be more
-conscientious if he is to be brought continually to book. In this
-connexion there is aptness in the groom’s dictum that _nothing is so
-fattening to a horse as the eye of the king_.
-
-[Sidenote: E] Above all things one should train and exercise a child’s
-memory. Memory serves as the storehouse of culture, and hence the fable
-that Recollection is the mother of the Muses—an indirect way of saying
-that memory is the best thing in the world to beget and foster wisdom.
-Whether children are naturally gifted with a good memory, or, on the
-contrary, are naturally forgetful, the memory should be trained in
-either case. The natural advantage will be strengthened, or the natural
-shortcoming made up. The former class will excel others, the latter will
-excel themselves. As Hesiod well puts it: [Sidenote: F]
-
- _If to the thing that is little you further add but a little,
- And do the same oft and again, full soon it becometh a great thing._
-
-This, then, is another fact for fathers to recognize—that the mnemonic
-element in education plays a most important part, not only in culture,
-but also in the business of life, inasmuch as the recollection of past
-experience serves as a guide to wise policy for the future.
-
-Our sons must also be kept from the use of foul language. ‘The word,’
-says Democritus, ‘is the shadow of the deed.’ More than that, we must
-render them polite and courteous, [Sidenote: 10] for there is nothing so
-detestable as a boorish character. One way in which children may avoid
-becoming disagreeable to their company is by refraining from absolute
-stubbornness in discussion. Credit is to be gained not merely by
-victory, but also by knowing how to accept defeat where victory is
-harmful. There is unquestionably such a thing as a ‘Cadmean victory’. _À
-propos_ I may quote the testimony of that wise poet Euripides:
-[Sidenote: B]
-
- _When two men speak, and one is full of anger,
- Wiser the one who strives not to reply._
-
-This is the time to remember certain other habits quite as necessary—and
-more so—for the young to cultivate as any yet mentioned. These are
-modesty of behaviour, restraint of the tongue, mastery of the temper,
-and control of the hands. Let us see how important each of them is. We
-may take an illustration to bring home the notion more clearly. And we
-will begin with the last. There have been those who, by lowering their
-hands to ill-gotten gains, have thrown away all the reputation won by
-their previous career. This was the case with the Lacedaemonian,
-Gylippus, who was driven into exile from Sparta [Sidenote: C] for
-secretly broaching the money-bags. Absence of anger, again, is a quality
-of wisdom. Socrates once received a kick from a very impudent and gross
-young buffoon, but on seeing that his own friends were in such a violent
-state of indignation that they wanted to prosecute him, he remarked: ‘If
-a donkey had kicked me, would you have condescended to kick him back?’
-The fellow did not, however, get off scot-free, but finding himself
-universally reproached and nicknamed ‘Kicker’, he hanged himself. When
-Aristophanes brought out the _Clouds_, and poured all manner of abuse
-upon Socrates, one of those present asked: ‘Pray, are you not indignant
-at his ridiculing you in this manner?’ [Sidenote: D] ‘Not I, indeed,’
-replied Socrates; ‘this banter in the theatre is only in a big convivial
-party.’ A close counterpart of this attitude will be found in the
-behaviour of Plato and of Archytas of Tarentum. When the latter, on his
-return from the war in which he had held command, found that his land
-had gone out of cultivation, he summoned his manager and remarked: ‘You
-would have suffered for this, if I had not been too angry.’ When Plato,
-again, was once worked into a passion with a greedy and impudent slave,
-he called his sister’s son Speusippus and said, ‘Go and give this fellow
-a thrashing: I am myself in a great passion.’
-
-But, it may be argued, it is difficult to reach so high a standard
-[Sidenote: E] as this. I am well aware of it. We can therefore only do
-our best to take a pattern by such conduct, and minimize any tendency to
-ungovernable rage. As in other matters, we are no match for either the
-moral mastery or the finished character of those great models.
-Nevertheless we may act towards them as we might towards the Gods,
-serving as hierophants and torch-bearers of their wisdom and
-endeavouring to imitate in our nibbling way as much as lies in our
-power.
-
-As for the control of the tongue—the remaining point to be considered
-according to our promise—any one who regards it as of trivial moment is
-very much in the wrong. In a timely [Sidenote: F] silence there is a
-wisdom superior to any speech. It is apparently for this reason that men
-in old times invented our mystic rites and ceremonies. The notion was
-that, through being trained to silence in connexion with these, we
-should secure the keeping of human secrets by carrying into them the
-same religious fear. Moreover, though multitudes have repented of
-talking, no man has repented of silence, and while it is easy to utter
-what has been kept back, it is impossible to recall what has been
-uttered.
-
-My own reading affords countless instances of the greatest disasters
-resulting from an ungoverned tongue. I will content [Sidenote: 11]
-myself with mentioning one or two typical examples. When, upon the
-marriage of Philadelphus with his sister, Sotades composed a scurrilous
-verse, he paid ample atonement for talking out of season by rotting for
-a long time in prison. He thus purchased a laugh in others by long
-weeping of his own. The [Sidenote: *] story is closely matched by that
-of the sophist Theocritus, who endured similar, but much more terrible,
-consequences for a similar remark. Alexander had ordered the Greeks to
-provide a stock of purple garments, with a view to the thanksgiving
-[Sidenote: B] sacrifice on his return from his Persian victories, and
-the various peoples were contributing at so much per head. Hereupon
-Theocritus observed: ‘I have now become clear upon a point which used to
-puzzle me. This is what is meant by Homer’s “purple death”‘—words which
-earned him the enmity of Alexander. Antigonus, the Macedonian king, had
-but one eye, and Theocritus made him excessively angry by a taunt at
-this disfigurement. Eutropion, the chief cook, who had become a person
-of importance, was sent to him by the king with a request that he would
-come to court and engage him in argument. On receiving repeated visits
-from Eutropion with this message, he [Sidenote: C] remarked, ‘I am well
-aware that you want to dish me up raw to the Cyclops,’ thus twitting the
-one with being disfigured, the other with being a cook. ‘Then,’ replied
-Eutropion, ‘it will be without your head, for you shall be punished for
-such mad and reckless language.’ Thereupon he reported the words to the
-king, who sent and put Theocritus to death.
-
-The last and most sacred requirement is that children should be trained
-to speak the truth. Lying is a servile habit; it deserves universal
-detestation and is unpardonable even in a decent slave.
-
-[Sidenote: D] So far I have had no doubt or hesitation in what I have
-said of the modesty and good behaviour of children. But upon the matter
-which now calls for mention I am dubious and undecided, my judgement
-swaying in the balance first one way and then the other, without finding
-it possible to turn the scale in either direction. It concerns a
-practice which I can neither recommend nor discountenance without great
-reluctance. Nevertheless one must venture a word upon it. The question
-is whether a man who is enamoured of a boy is to be allowed to keep
-intimate [Sidenote: E] company with him, or whether, on the contrary,
-association with such a person is to be tabooed. When I look at fathers
-whose disposition is uncompromisingly harsh and austere, and who regard
-such association as an intolerable insult to their children, I have many
-scruples in recommending it or speaking in its favour. When, on the
-other hand, I think of Socrates, Plato, Xenophon, Aeschines, Cebes, and
-all those great men who have with one accord approved of love between
-males, while they have led youths on to culture, to public leadership,
-and to [Sidenote: F] a virtuous character, I change my mind and am
-inclined to copy those great exemplars. Euripides is on their side, when
-he says:
-
- _Nay, men may feel passion of other sort,
- Love of a just, chaste, virtuous mind and soul._
-
-Nor must we omit the saying of Plato, partly serious and partly
-humorous, that those who have shown special excellence should have the
-right to kiss any beautiful person they choose. The proper course is to
-drive away those who are enamoured of the person, but, generally
-speaking, give a sanction to those who are in love with the mind and
-soul. While we must have nothing to say to the connexions in vogue at
-Thebes or in Elis, or to the so-called ‘abduction’ of Crete, we may well
-imitate that kind [Sidenote: 12] which is usual at Athens or in
-Lacedaemon.
-
-On this matter it is for every man to hold such convictions as he has
-formed for himself. I will now leave it, and, having spoken of the
-discipline and good behaviour of the boy, will pass on to deal with the
-age of adolescence. I shall do so in very few words, for I have often
-expressed my disapproval of those who encourage vicious habits by
-proposing to put a boy under the charge of tutors and teachers, whereas,
-with a stripling, they would permit his inclinations to range at will.
-As a matter of [Sidenote: B] fact, there is need of more anxious
-precautions in the case of the stripling than in that of the boy. Every
-one is aware that the faults committed by a boy are small matters, which
-can be cured without difficulty—such as paying no heed to his tutor, or
-trickery and inattention in school. But the sins of adolescence often
-reach a flagrant and shocking pitch—stealing the father’s money,
-gormandizing, dicing, roistering, drinking, loose passion for young
-girls, or corruption of married women. The propensities of young manhood
-ought therefore to be carefully watched and kept closely under the
-chain. When capacity for [Sidenote: C] pleasure is at its prime, it
-rejects control, kicks over the traces, and requires the curb. If
-therefore we do not take a firm hold upon this time of life, we are
-giving folly a licence to sin. This is the moment when wise fathers
-should be most watchful and alert; when they should bring their lads
-within bounds by warnings, threats, or entreaties, and by pointing out
-instances of disaster caused by devotion to pleasure, and of praise and
-good repute won by continence. These two things form what may be called
-first principles of virtue, namely, hope of honour and fear of
-punishment, the one producing a greater eagerness [Sidenote: D] for the
-noblest pursuits, the other a shrinking from bad actions.
-
-One general rule of duty is to keep boys from associating with vicious
-persons; otherwise they will pick up something of their vice. This has
-been urged by Pythagoras among a number of dark sayings. Since these
-also possess great value as aids to the attainment of virtue, I will
-proceed to quote them, adding their explanation. _Do not taste
-black-tails_[59]—keep no company with persons who are malignant and
-therefore ‘black’. _Do not [Sidenote: E] step over a beam_—justice must
-be scrupulously respected and not ‘overstepped’. _Do not sit on a
-quart-measure_—beware of idleness, and see to the providing of daily
-bread. _Do not clasp hands with every man_—we should form no sudden
-connexions. _Do not wear a tight ring_—one should carry out the practice
-of [Sidenote: *] life, and not fasten it to any chain. _Do not poke a
-fire with iron_—do not irritate a wrathful man (the right course being
-to let angry men go their own way). _Do not eat the heart_—do not injure
-[Sidenote: F] the mind with worry and brooding. _Abstain from
-beans_—avoid public life (office in former times being determined by
-voting with beans). _Do not put victuals in a chamber-vessel_—clever
-speech ought not to be put into a wicked mind, since speech, which is
-the food of thought, is polluted by the wickedness in a man. _Do not
-turn back on coming to the border_—when about to die, and with the end
-of life close in sight, behave calmly and without losing heart.
-
-To return to the topic with which we were dealing before this
-digression. While, as I observed, boys should be kept from every kind of
-vicious company, especially should they be kept [Sidenote: 13] from
-parasites. I venture to repeat here what I am continually urging upon
-fathers. There is no set of creatures so pernicious—none which so
-quickly and completely brings youth to headlong destruction—as
-parasites. They are utter ruin to both father and son, filling the old
-age of the one and the youth of the other with vexation. To gain their
-purpose they offer an irresistible bait in the shape of pleasure. In the
-case of rich men’s sons, the father preaches sobriety, the parasite
-drunkenness. The father urges temperance and economy, the parasite
-profligacy and extravagance. The father says: ‘Be industrious’; the
-parasite says: ‘Be idle; for life is only a moment altogether.
-[Sidenote: B] One ought to live, not merely exist. Why trouble about
-your father’s threats? He is an old driveller with one foot in the
-coffin, and we will promptly pick him up on our shoulders and carry him
-off to his grave.’ One person tempts him with a drab, or with the
-seduction of a married woman, plundering and stripping the father of all
-the provision for his old age. They are an abominable crew; their
-friendship is a sham; of candour they have no idea; they toady the rich
-and despise the poor. They are drawn to young men like puppets on a
-string; they [Sidenote: *] grin, when those who feed them laugh; they
-counterfeit the possession of a mind, and give a spurious imitation of
-details of real life. They live at the rich man’s beck, and though
-fortune [Sidenote: C] has made them free, their own choice makes them
-slaves. If they are not insulted, they regard it as an insult, their
-maintenance in that case being without a motive. If, therefore, a father
-is concerned for the obedient conduct of his children, he must keep
-these abominable creatures at a distance. And he must by all means do
-the same with vicious fellow-pupils, who are capable of corrupting the
-most moral of natures.
-
-While these principles are right and expedient, I have a word to say
-upon a human aspect of the matter. I have no desire, all this time, that
-a father’s disposition should be altogether [Sidenote: D] harsh and
-unyielding. I would have him frequently condone a fault in his junior
-and recollect that he was once young himself. The physician mixes his
-bitter drugs with syrup, and so finds a way to work benefit through the
-medium of enjoyment. In the same way a father should blend his severe
-reprimande with kindliness, at one time giving the boy’s desires a loose
-or easy rein, at another time tightening it. If possible, he should
-[Sidenote: E] take misdeeds calmly; failing that, his anger should be
-seasonable and should quickly cool down. It is better for a father to be
-sharp-tempered than sullen-tempered; to sulk and bear malice goes far to
-prove a lack of parental affection. Sometimes, when a fault is
-committed, it is a good thing to pretend ignorance, turning to advantage
-the dim sight and defective hearing of old age, and refusing to see or
-hear certain occurrences which one hears and sees. We put up with the
-lapses of a friend. Is it strange to do so with those of a child? A
-slave is often heavy-headed from a debauch, without our taking him to
-task. The other day you refused the boy money; there are times to meet
-his requests. The other day you were indignant; there are times to be
-lenient. Perhaps he has cozened you through a servant; [Sidenote: F]
-restrain your anger. Has he borrowed the team from the farm? Does he
-come reeking of yesterday’s bout? Do not notice it. Smelling of
-perfumes? Say nothing. Such is the way to manage the restiveness of
-youth.
-
-A son who cannot resist pleasure and is deaf to remonstrance should be
-put into matrimonial harness, that being the surest way of tying a young
-man down. The woman who becomes his wife should not, however, be to any
-great extent his superior either in birth or means. _Keep to your own
-level_ is a sound maxim, and a man who marries much above him finds
-himself, [Sidenote: 14] not the husband of the woman, but the slave of
-the dowry.
-
-A few words more, and I will conclude my list of principles.
-
-Above all things a father should set an example to his children in his
-own person, by avoiding all faults of commission or omission. His life
-should be the glass by which they form themselves and are put out of
-conceit with all ugliness of act or speech. For him to rebuke his erring
-sons when guilty of the same errors himself, is to become his own
-accuser while ostensibly theirs. Indeed, if his life is bad, he is
-disqualified from reproving even a slave, much more his son. Moreover,
-he will naturally [Sidenote: B] become their guide and teacher in
-wrongdoing. Where there are old men without shame, inevitably there are
-quite shameless young ones also. To obtain good behaviour from our
-children we should therefore strive to carry out every moral duty. An
-example to follow is that of Eurydice, who, though belonging to a
-thoroughly barbarous country like Illyria, nevertheless took to study
-and self-improvement late in life for the sake of her children’s
-education. Her maternal affection finds apt expression in the lines
-inscribed upon her offering to the Muses: [Sidenote: C]
-
- _In that, when mother to grown boys, she won
- Her soul’s well-known desire—the skill to use
- The lore of letters—this Eurydice
- From Hierapolis sends to each Muse._[60]
-
-To compass the whole of the foregoing elements of success is [Sidenote:
-*] perhaps visionary—a counsel of perfection. But to cultivate the
-majority of them, though itself requiring good fortune as well as much
-care, is at any rate a thing within the reach of a human being.
-
-Footnote 55:
-
- This article is in all probability not the work of Plutarch. See the
- Introduction.
-
-Footnote 56:
-
- The play upon words (_ēthikas_, ‘moral’ and _ĕthikas_, ‘of habit’) is
- not adequately translatable.
-
-Footnote 57:
-
- The Greek text is here corrupt; the translation represents the
- probable sense.
-
-Footnote 58:
-
- The Greek text is again faulty. The sense here given is approximate.
-
-Footnote 59:
-
- These maxims were probably in the first instance merely hygienic, or
- even popular superstitions, but subsequently they received recondite
- interpretations.
-
-Footnote 60:
-
- The Greek verse is doggerel, and no attempt is made to better it in
- the English.
-
-
-
-
- NOTES ON PERSONS AND PLACES
-
-
-The following brief notes are intended to supply the bare amount of
-information necessary for an understanding of the text. The
-pronunciation marks are, of course, added only for the sake of those who
-have no Greek. An accent marks the syllable which should bear the stress
-in the English pronunciation, and the signs [ă ĕ ĭ ŏ ŭ] and [ā ē ī ō ū],
-imply that the vowels are short or long respectively. q.v. = see the
-note on that name.
-
-=Ábaris=: a legendary Scythian or ‘Hyperborean’ priest of Apollo, to
-whom miraculous powers were attributed in the way of cures and prophecy.
-
-=Aeolians=: inhabitants of Aeolis, the NE. coast of the Aegean, with the
-island of Lesbos.
-
-=Aeschĭnes=: (1) a philosopher, pupil of Socrates (hence Aeschines
-Socraticus). In the eyes of Plato he was a sophist, for the reason that
-he took fees. His character was not of the highest. Like Plato, he
-visited Syracuse during the philosophic pose of the elder Dionysius.
-
-(2) Athenian orator, constant opponent of Demosthenes, who charged him
-with being bribed by Philip. Died in exile 314 B.C.
-
-=Aeschylus=: the first in date and most severe in style of the three
-great Attic tragedians, 525-466 B.C. A master of condensed and sonorous
-language and of powerful situations.
-
-=Aesop=: the famous writer (or promulgator) of fables, _c._ 620-564 B.C.
-Said to have been an emancipated slave, who spent some time at the court
-of Croesus and was sent by him on a mission to Delphi to distribute
-largess. Practically nothing definite is known of him. His fables were
-most probably of Indo-Persian origin. Those which now pass under his
-name are a comparatively late compilation from various sources.
-
-=Agésilāus=: Agesilaus II, king of Sparta, 398-361 B.C.; the most
-important man in the Greek world of his day. His wars were numerous, the
-most important being with the Thebans. His character was noble, his
-ability great, but his physique and appearance poor.
-
-=Agis=: (1) Agis II, king of Sparta, 427-399 B.C.; commander against the
-Athenians in the Peloponnesian War, his greatest exploit being the
-victory of Mantinea.
-
-(2) Base and toadying poet of Argos, who accompanied Alexander into
-Asia. The histories of the expedition agree with Plutarch as to his
-character.
-
-=Alcibíades=: a handsome noble of Athens; a type of ostentatious,
-ambitious, and unscrupulous brilliancy. After a measure of military and
-political prominence he was banished from Athens for sacrilege (415
-B.C.). Becoming hostile to his country he first found a home at Sparta,
-thence migrated to Asia Minor and joined the Persian satrap,
-Tissaphernes, whom he endeavoured to bring over to the Athenian side as
-a means to his own recall. He returned to Athens for a brief space in
-407 B.C., then removed to Thrace, and thence again to the Persian
-satrap.
-
-=Alcméōn=: son of Amphiaraus (q.v.), who avenged his father by putting
-to death his mother Eriphyle.
-
-=Alexander=: (1) the Great, of Macedon.
-
-(2) of Pherae, a despot who dominated Thessaly from 369 B.C. A cruel
-tyrant, assassinated through the agency of his wife.
-
-=Alexis=: poet of the ‘Middle Comedy’, who had migrated from South Italy
-to Athens. Plutarch says that he lived to the age of 106, and Suidas
-that his plays numbered 245.
-
-=Alyáttes=: king of Lydia and father of Croesus, carried on wars with
-the Greeks of the Aegean coast of Asia Minor and had apparently some
-designs upon the islands.
-
-=Amásis=: an insurgent Egyptian general who secured the throne (569
-B.C.). His rule was beneficent and prosperous, and he cultivated the
-friendship of the Greeks, handing over to them the town of Naucratis (q.
-v.). When reproached with his humble origin he converted his bronze
-foot-pan into the effigy of a deity by way of instructive parable. He
-was visited by Solon and had amicable relations with Croesus.
-
-=Ammónius=: Peripatetic philosopher from Attica, teacher of Plutarch,
-who speaks elsewhere of his great erudition.
-
-=Amphiaráus=: legendary seer of Argos, who accompanied the ‘Seven’ in
-their expedition against Thebes. A pious and just man, who was led into
-this false step by the persuasions of his wife, who had been bribed.
-
-=Amphíctyons=: members of a religious Council meeting at Delphi and
-representing the older Greek communities.
-
-=Amphídămas=: ‘hero’ (i. e. demigod) of Chalcis in Euboea, conceived as
-a historical personage.
-
-=Amphitrítë=: wife of Poseidon and queen-goddess of the sea.
-
-=Anacharsis=: Scythian prince (of N. Thrace). To Greek literature he is
-the type of the observant and critical visitor from abroad. A pattern of
-the simple life and direct thinking. Said to have visited Athens about
-600 B.C.
-
-=Anaxarchus=: an easy-going and witty philosopher of the school of
-Democritus (q. v.); in the suite of Alexander on his Asiatic expedition.
-
-=Antígŏnus=: a general of Alexander. On the partition of the empire he
-received Phrygia, Lycia, and Pamphylia, but afterwards extended his rule
-over all the Asiatic portion. He fell before a combination of the other
-Diadochi in 301 B.C.
-
-=Antímăchus=: epic poet of Colophon, who wrote at great length on the
-story of Thebes. He also composed a voluminous elegy on ‘Lyde’. Both
-pieces were crammed with mythological and other learning, and Plutarch
-appears to treat him as a type of the diffuse. He was a contemporary of
-Plato.
-
-=Antípăter=: (1) regent of Macedonia during the Asiatic expedition of
-Alexander and after his death (334-320 B.C.). A war with a Greek league
-headed by Athens ended in the submission of the latter.
-
-(2) A Stoic philosopher of Tyre; a friend of Cato the younger, about the
-middle of the first century B.C.
-
-=Antiphōn=: several persons were so named, e. g.:
-
-(1) an orator of the fifth century B.C.
-
-(2) An Athenian tragic poet, put to death by the elder Dionysius at
-Syracuse.
-
-(3) A sophist, epic poet, and antagonist of Socrates.
-
-=Apéllēs=: (1) of Colophon or Cos, _fl._ _c._ 335-305 B.C. The greatest
-painter of antiquity, especially favoured by Alexander the Great. His
-maxim for draughtsmen _nulla dies sine linea_ is famous.
-
-(2) Of Chios, apparently unknown beyond Plutarch.
-
-=Appius Claudius= (=Caecus=): Roman censor 312 B.C., originator of the
-Appian Way.
-
-=Aráspēs=: a Mede, friend of Cyrus, who became enamoured of Panthea (q.
-v.).
-
-=Arcĕsiláus=: latter part of third century B.C.; first a disciple of
-Theophrastus (q. v.), but took an independent line in philosophy as
-founder of the sceptical New Academy. A man of amiable character and a
-wit.
-
-=Archeláus=: king of Macedonia 413-399 B.C.; a lover of art and
-literature and a patron of Euripides and other Athenian men of letters.
-
-=Archidámus=: Archidamus II, king of Sparta, 469-427 B.C. There were
-several other kings of the name.
-
-=Archílŏchus=: of Paros, _fl._ _c._ 710-675 B.C. A lyrist of whom only
-fragments are extant; particularly famous for his iambic lampoons.
-
-=Archimédes=: the Newton of antiquity; an eminent scientist of Syracuse
-287-212 B.C.; student of astronomy, applied mathematics, and
-engineering. He served as mechanical engineer in defending his city from
-the Romans, by whose soldiers he was killed in ignorance.
-
-=Archytas=: of Tarentum, in the early part of the fourth century B.C.,
-noted as a mathematician and philosophic statesman of the Pythagorean
-order. Both in generalship and civil business of state he was eminently
-successful and was trusted with extraordinary powers.
-
-=Arēs=: the Greek War-God, answering generally to the Roman Mars.
-
-=Arȋdaeus= (=Arrhidaeus=): (1) feeble half-witted king of Macedonia
-after his brother Alexander’s death.
-
-(2) A general of Alexander, joint regent in 321 B.C., afterwards
-governor on the Hellespont.
-
-=Aríōn=: _c._ 600 B.C.; the famous bard and harp-player of Lesbos, and
-supposed inventor of the dithyramb. His favourite abode was at the court
-of Periander.
-
-=Aristarchus=: the prince of Greek grammarians and critics; flourished
-at Alexandria 181-146 B.C. Chiefly known for his commentaries on the
-language and matter of Homer, and his recension of the divergent
-manuscripts.
-
-=Aristeides= (=Aristídes=): with the sobriquet of ‘the Just’; a noble of
-Athens, statesman and general, who figures in the stirring times of the
-war with Persia. Died _c._ 470 B.C.
-
-=Aristíppus=: of Cyrene, disciple, but not imitator, of Socrates. A
-student and teacher of ethics, and founder of the Cyrenaic philosophy
-and its cult of pleasure: _fl._ _c._ 380-366 B.C. For a time he was at
-the court of Dionysius (q. v.) of Syracuse.
-
-=Arísto=: (1) the chief bearer of the name was a philosopher who became
-head of the Peripatetic school about 230 B.C. Anciently considered a
-writer of more elegance than weight.
-
-(2) A son of Sophocles, and probably himself a tragedian.
-
-=Aristómĕnes=: practically regent of Egypt from 202 B.C.; a sound
-adviser of the young Ptolemy Epiphanes (q. v.), who put him to death for
-his frankness in 192 B.C.
-
-=Aristóphănes=: of Athens, 444-380 B.C.; by far the greatest comic poet
-of antiquity. His comedy was of the ‘Old’, or personal-political type.
-Eleven of his plays are extant.
-
-=Arístŏphōn=: painter, brother of Polygnotus (who _fl._ _c._ 420 B.C.).
-
-=Aristotle=: of Stageira, but commonly domiciled in Athens or in
-Macedonia. Pupil of Plato and subsequently tutor of Alexander. Founder
-of the Peripatetic school, with its head-quarters in the Lyceum (q. v.).
-His whole tone of mind is strikingly unlike that of his teacher, being
-eminently precise, logical, and scientific. His writing is without
-literary charm. He aimed at sound and comprehensive knowledge as the
-basis of right principles in society, conduct, and the arts (384-322
-B.C.).
-
-=Asclépius=: (= Aesculapius), the Greek ‘hero’ of medicine, converted by
-legend into a son of Apollo and ultimately into a god.
-
-=Atreides= (=Atrídes=): = ‘son of Atreus’, a title of Agamemnon and
-Menelaus.
-
-=Áttălus= (brother of Eumenes): Attalus Philadelphus, king of Pergamus,
-allied with the Romans in the middle of the second century B.C.
-Philopoemen was his controlling minister.
-
-=Bacchýlȋdes=: lyric poet of Ceos, _fl._ _c._ 470 B.C., principally at
-the court of Hiero of Syracuse. In general he may be called a smoother
-and weaker Pindar.
-
-=Bagóas=: a handsome young eunuch of Darius, afterwards taken into the
-service and affections of Alexander.
-
-=Báthycles=: an artist in metal-work, of uncertain date, but probably to
-be placed in the early part of the age of the Seven Sages.
-
-=Bato=: comic poet of Athens, _fl._ _c._ 280 B.C.; satirized
-philosophers.
-
-=Bias=: of Priene; precise date unknown, but _fl._ _c._ 550 B.C. He is
-invariably included in the list of the Seven Sages.
-
-=Biōn=: _fl._ _c._ 250 B.C., a philosopher from Olbia on the Black Sea,
-who settled at Athens, tried various systems, and ended by being a
-Peripatetic. He was noted for his keen sententious sayings, but was of
-dissolute character. Has been called ‘the Greek Voltaire’.
-
-=Brīséïs=: captive woman assigned to Achilles, but taken from him by
-Agamemnon when he surrendered Chryseis.
-
-=Busírites=: the people of Busiris (modern Abousir), about the middle of
-the Delta; one of the traditional birthplaces of Osiris.
-
-=Calchas=: the seer of the Achaean army before Troy.
-
-=Callísthĕnes=: philosopher and rhetorician; accompanied Alexander into
-Asia, where he used over-bold language in reproving him. Put to death
-328 B.C. He wrote an account of the expedition and other historical
-works.
-
-=Calýpso=: nymph, on whose island the shipwrecked Odysseus was detained
-for seven years.
-
-=Carnĕădes=: of Cyrene, 213(?)-129 B.C.; a student of Stoicism, but
-leader of the Academics. He was ambassador on behalf of Athens (155
-B.C.) to Rome, where he delivered striking discourses on ethics. His
-cardinal doctrine was the ‘withholding of assent’ to doctrines.
-
-=Cato=: (1) the elder (or ‘the Censor’), 234-149 B.C. The type of severe
-old-fashioned Roman morality; soldier, statesman, orator, and writer.
-
-(2) The younger (or ‘Uticensis’), 95-46 B.C.; modelled himself on his
-great-grandfather in respect of the moral and simple life, but was much
-inferior in gifts. Committed suicide 46 B.C., when the struggle against
-the domination of Julius Caesar had become hopeless.
-
-=Cĕbēs=: of Thebes, a pupil of Socrates and a _persona_ in Plato’s
-_Phaedo_. He is chiefly known for his (if it is his) symbolic picture or
-‘table’ of human life.
-
-=Cĕrămeicus (-í-)=: a suburb without, and a broad street within, the
-west walls of Athens.
-
-=Cercópes=: mythical gnomes, mischievous and thievish, who annoyed
-Heracles by their monkey-like tricks.
-
-=Chábrȋas=: Athenian commander at various times between 392 and 357
-B.C., gaining some successes by land and sea against the Spartans. An
-able tactician, adventurous, but of somewhat dissolute life.
-
-=Chalcis=: chief town of Euboea (Negropont), once a most important
-commercial centre.
-
-=Charēs=: Athenian general, of whose various operations we have records
-for 367-333 B.C. A man of little principle. He effected little against
-the Macedonians, and often followed independent and useless lines of
-action.
-
-=Chármȋdes=: uncle of Plato, who names one of his Socratic dialogues
-after him. At the supposed date he was a beautiful and charming youth,
-and the discussion is upon ‘self-control’.
-
-=Chīlōn=: of Lacedaemon: _fl._ _c._ 600-570 B.C. Poet and coiner of
-maxims, and shrewd man of affairs.
-
-=Chryséïs=: captive woman assigned to Agamemnon; surrendered by him at
-the bidding of Apollo, in order to check a pestilence.
-
-=Cimōn=: son of Miltiades, became prominent as a commander against the
-Persians in 477 B.C. His chief exploit was the victory of Eurymedon, 466
-B.C. A handsome, liberal, affable, but somewhat self-indulgent person.
-
-=Cīnésias=: Athenian dithyrambic poet, much satirized by Aristophanes
-and others. His verse, music, and character appear all to have been of
-an inferior order.
-
-=Claudia=: Roman maiden, who, in full vindication of her chastity, was
-enabled to move the vessel containing the image of Cybele when it stuck
-fast in the Tiber.
-
-=Cleánthes=: Stoic philosopher, pupil and successor of Zeno (q. v.) 263
-B.C. The only fragment of his writing still extant is from a Hymn to
-Zeus.
-
-=Cleárchus=: (1) of Heraclea on the Black Sea; availed himself of
-faction to make himself despot and tyrant (365 B.C.). Despite the
-precautions described by Plutarch he was assassinated in 353 B.C.
-
-(2) Of Sparta, leader of the 10,000 Greeks in the expedition of Cyrus
-the Younger against Babylon; decoyed and put to death by the Persians,
-401 B.C. The retreat was led by Xenophon (q.v.).
-
-=Cleisthĕnes=: Athenian noble, who adopted the popular cause and made
-important democratic changes in the constitution; _fl._ from 510 B.C.
-
-=Cleitus= (=Clītus=): a Macedonian commander under Alexander, whose life
-he saved at the battle of Granícus (334 B.C.). He was killed (328 B.C.)
-by Alexander with a spear-thrust, after a quarrel at a carousal, in
-which he had spoken with excessive freedom to his chief.
-
-=Cleobulínë=: daughter (as the name implies) of Cleobulus (q.v.). Though
-her father is said to have named her Eumetis (‘sagacious’), the word may
-be suspected of being an afterthought.
-
-=Cleobúlus=: _c._ 610-560 B.C. A citizen of Lindus in Rhodes, who became
-its despot. His position may have been similar to that of Pittacus
-(q.v.).
-
-=Cleómĕnes=: Cleomenes III, high-minded king of Sparta, 240-222 B.C. On
-his defeat by the Achaeans he fled to Ptolemy Euergetes, with whom he
-was in alliance. The next Ptolemy (Philopator) suspected and imprisoned
-him.
-
-=Cleōn=: a tanner of Athens; an able but coarse-grained leader of the
-popular party 428-422 B.C. A special enemy of Aristophanes (q.v.), whose
-fiercest political attacks are delivered against him. A self-sufficient
-amateur in military operations, in one of which he was slain.
-
-=Clódius=: P. Clodius Pulcher; a daring and unscrupulous person, who
-became quaestor in 61 B.C. and tribune of the plebs in 59 B.C. The
-notorious and relentless enemy of Cicero. Killed by Milo on the high
-road 52 B.C.
-
-=Colónus=: a suburb of Athens outside the north wall, with a small hill,
-grove, and sanctuary.
-
-=Cólophōn=: Greek town of Asia Minor, near the Aegean coast, about ten
-miles north of Ephesus.
-
-=Cornelia=: daughter of Scipio Africanus; the famous ‘mother of the
-Gracchi’; the type of matronly virtue, dignity, cultivation, and high
-example.
-
-=Crátĕrus=: a noble type of Macedonian; one of Alexander’s generals.
-After the death of his chief (323 B.C.) he became colleague with
-Antipater in the Graeco-Macedonian portion of the empire. See also under
-Eumenes.
-
-=Cratēs=: of Thebes; pupil of Diogenes (q.v.) at Athens; _fl._ _c._ 320
-B.C. A Cynic philosopher in practice as well as theory, he renounced his
-wealth and led the simple life in a cheerful manner. A philosophic
-writer and a tragic poet.
-
-=Croesus=: king of Lydia 560-546 B.C. A wealthy and powerful ruler, who
-made war upon the Persians when their empire was growing rapidly under
-Cyrus. Was defeated and carried off in the train of the conqueror. While
-in power he was in friendly or hostile relations with various Greek
-states, and was particularly noted for his liberality to the Delphian
-oracle. Whether Solon ever actually had the famous interview with
-Croesus is chronologically doubtful, but it is not impossible.
-
-=Cyáxares=: king of Media, appears in Xenophon’s _Cyropaedia_ as uncle
-of Cyrus the Great, but the whole book is something of a romance.
-
-=Cýpsĕlus=: father of Periander, established himself as despot of
-Corinth _c._ 656 B.C. His name was commonly associated with _cypsele_
-(‘chest’). The designs upon him in his infancy were those of a
-Corinthian noble house, and were made in consequence of an oracle
-foretelling danger from the child.
-
-=Cyrus=: (1) the elder: the famous Persian monarch, founder of the
-empire, and subjugator of Babylon. The stories told of him in the
-_Cyropaedia_ of Xenophon are largely romance.
-
-(2) the younger: satrap of Lydia, Phrygia, &c., who sought, but failed,
-to dispossess his brother Artaxerxes with the assistance of a Greek
-force (401 B.C.). This was the expedition related in Xenophon’s
-_Anabasis_.
-
-=Daphnūs=: a river running into the Corinthian Gulf on the north side
-not far from the entrance.
-
-=Dāríus=: (1) Darius I; strong and able king of Persia (521-485 B.C.),
-previously satrap under Cyrus the Great. This is the Darius mentioned in
-connexion with Gobryas.
-
-(2) Darius II (Ochus or Nothus), or Darius the Younger, a weak monarch
-endangered by perpetual rebellions, 424-405 B.C.
-
-(3) Darius Codomannus, overthrown by Alexander. Died 330 B.C.
-
-=Délos=: central island of the south half of the Aegean, with a temple
-of Apollo, the gathering-place of a great religious confederacy of
-Ionians.
-
-=Dēmarátus=: of Corinth, in friendly relations with Philip and a
-mediator between him and Alexander after their quarrel in 337 B.C.
-
-=Dēmétrius=: (1) Demetrius I (or Poliorcetes), king of Macedonia. His
-father Antigonus, king of Asia, sent him in 307 B.C. to annex Greece,
-then under Cassander and Ptolemy. It was at this time that he took
-Megara and met with Stilpo (q. v.).
-
-(2) Demetrius Phaléreus: Athenian orator and writer (345-283 B.C.); an
-able and cultivated man, put in charge of Athens by the Macedonians, 317
-B.C. First highly honoured, then expelled, he made his way to Thebes and
-subsequently to Alexandria.
-
-(3) The name of several Macedonian officers in the army of Alexander.
-
-=Dēmócrȋtus=: _c._ 460-360 B.C. Of Abdēra in Thrace. A great traveller
-and student, who developed (though he did not invent) the ‘Atomic
-Theory’. Ethically his aim was cheerfulness of mind (hence ‘the laughing
-philosopher’). His character was of the highest for truth and
-simplicity.
-
-=Dicaeárchus=: philosopher from Massana in Sicily; writer on history and
-geography. A follower of Aristotle, _fl._ _c._ 300 B.C.
-
-=Díŏcles=: the narrator of the Dinner of the Seven Sages: professional
-seer, and interpreter and expiator of omens and dreams. Nothing is known
-of such a person outside Plutarch.
-
-=Diógĕnes=: (1) the Cynic philosopher of Sinope, who migrated to Athens,
-and after being captured by pirates was sold as a slave to a Corinthian.
-Whether or not he ever lived in the famous (earthenware) ‘tub’ is
-doubtful. He was distinguished for his plainness of life, his shrewd
-good sense, his independence, and his caustic tongue.
-
-(2) Tragic poet of Athens, _c._ 404 B.C.
-
-=Diōn=: of Syracuse, brother-in-law of the elder Dionysius (q. v.). On
-the visit of Plato to Sicily he became a disciple of that philosopher.
-The younger Dionysius resented his reputation and his harshness. Dion
-therefore removed to Athens and other parts of Greece, whence he
-returned with a force, expelled Dionysius, and was himself appointed
-practically dictator. Assassinated 353 B.C.
-
-=Dionysius=: (i) the elder: despot of Syracuse (‘sole general’) 405-367
-B.C. He extended its power over a great part of Sicily, and strongly
-fortified the city itself. In the end he became a veritable tyrant. Like
-many other despots he affected literature and philosophy, and himself
-wrote bad verses. After inviting Plato to Syracuse he quarrelled with
-and dismissed that philosopher.
-
-(2) the younger, who succeeded his father. For a time he was under the
-influence of Dion (q.v.) assisted by Plato. Of weaker character and more
-licentious than his father, he was compelled to abandon Syracuse after a
-rule of eleven years. Insecurely restored ten years later he was again
-driven out by Timoleon (343 B.C.). The remainder of his life was spent
-in poverty at Corinth, where he is said to have taught an elementary
-school.
-
-=Dōdóna=: in Epirus, near the modern Janina; a very ancient seat of the
-worship of Zeus.
-
-=Dolōn=: a Trojan in the _Iliad_, who undertakes to penetrate the
-Achaean camp as a spy, but is slain in the attempt.
-
-=Dryópians=: a people of Central Greece.
-
-=Elephantínë= = Djesiret-el-Sag; a garrisoned island in the Nile (First
-Cataract) opposite the modern Assouan; the frontier town of Egypt
-towards Ethiopia.
-
-=Empédŏcles=: Sicilian physical and practical philosopher of Acragas (=
-Girgenti); _fl._ _c._ 450 B.C. His studies of nature specially qualified
-him for the cure or ‘purification’ of epidemics due to insanitary
-conditions. His travels took him to Athens and other parts of Greece.
-The legend went that he threw himself into the crater of Etna.
-
-=Eōs=: = Aurora, dawn-goddess; wife of Tithonus; mother of Memnon, the
-opponent of Achilles.
-
-=Epáminōndas=: a type of patriotism, particularly to his compatriot
-Plutarch. The greatest of Theban commanders and statesmen, especially
-famous for his victory over the Spartans at Leuctra (371 B.C.). So far
-as he applied any philosophy to life, it was that of Pythagoras.
-
-=Éphŏrus=: historian of Cumae, _fl._ _c._ 340 B.C. His history, once
-very famous and much discussed, covered a period of 750 years.
-
-=Epichármus=: _c._ 540-450 B.C.; the great comic poet of Sicily, chiefly
-associated with the court of Hiero I (q.v.) at Syracuse.
-
-=Epicúrus=: 342-270 B.C. Athenian philosopher and founder of the
-Epicurean school, of which the aim was ‘peace of mind’ or ‘freedom from
-emotional disturbance’. His own life (as his tenets required) was simple
-and wholesome, and the self-indulgence of the sect in later days was
-either a parody or a misconception of his teachings. A voluminous writer
-on physics and ethics, but with a bad style.
-
-=Epiménȋdes=: priest-prophet and bard of Crete, with peculiar knowledge
-of medicine and methods of purification. Many fables were current
-concerning him (e.g. of his sleep of fifty-seven years). He was called
-in by the Athenians (_c._ 596 B.C.) to cleanse their city of a plague.
-
-=Epimétheus=: brother of Prometheus (q.v.). The name was taken to mean
-‘After-thinker’, and hence arose a notion that he ‘thought too late’.
-
-=Erasístrătus=: a very distinguished physician in the earlier part of
-the third century B.C. He practised and taught in Syria and Alexandria.
-An eminent student of anatomy.
-
-=Eratósthĕnes=: librarian of Alexandria under the Ptolemies; a writer on
-mathematical geography, history, and grammar. Died about 196 B.C.
-
-=Érĕsus=: a town on the south-west coast of Lesbos (Mytilene);
-birthplace of Theophrastus.
-
-=Erétria=: the second town of Euboea, a little south of Chalcis. See
-Lelantum.
-
-=Erínys=: a spirit of vengeance sent up from the underworld to punish
-unnatural crimes and offences.
-
-=Éteŏcles=: (legendary): son of Oedipus, joint king of Thebes with
-Polyneices, whom he expelled through a selfish desire to rule alone.
-
-=Euénus=: two poets of Paros are so named, one of the date of Socrates
-and one earlier. It is, and was anciently, difficult to distinguish
-between the two.
-
-=Eúmĕnes=: an eminent and very able general (and also secretary) of
-Alexander, after whose death he obtained (322 B.C.) the chief command in
-Asia. His subordinate Neoptolemus, governor of Armenia, made head
-against him with the help of Craterus. Their defeat, mentioned in the
-article on Garrulity, took place in Cappadocia in 321 B.C.
-
-=Eúpŏlis=: one of the three chief poets of the ‘old’ comedy of Athens, a
-contemporary of Aristophanes (q.v.).
-
-=Eurípides=: 480-406 B.C.; third in date of the three great Athenian
-tragedians. His works were numerous and uneven. His poetical merits were
-(and are) variously estimated.
-
-=Fabius Maximus=: the best known person of the name was Q. Fabius
-Maximus Cunctator, who saved Rome by his waiting tactics against
-Hannibal; but the one who was associated with Polybius, as pupil and
-patron, was Q. F. M. Aemilianus, consul in 145 B.C., who served against
-Macedonia and in Spain.
-
-=Góbryes=: one of the seven Persian nobles (Darius being another) who
-conspired against the usurper Smerdis the Mage. Darius was raised to the
-throne and Gobryes became one of his lieutenants.
-
-=Górgȋas=: of Leontini in Sicily: orator, rhetorical teacher, and
-sophist, who visited Athens 427 B.C. and subsequently. His style, which
-was highly artificial, was widely imitated. He is the Gorgias of Plato’s
-dialogue.
-
-=Gorgo=: of Sparta; wife of Leonidas and daughter of Cleomenes I.
-Stories of her wisdom and sagacity are told by Herodotus (6. 49, 7.
-239).
-
-=Gylippus=: Spartan general who came to the rescue of Syracuse and
-chiefly caused the utter collapse of the Athenian attack upon that city.
-After the fall of Athens (404 B.C.) it was his business to convey to
-Sparta the 1,500 talents of booty. He opened the seams of the sacks,
-filched about one-fifth of the amount, but was betrayed by the
-inventories enclosed.
-
-=Harmódius=: a handsome youth of Athens associated with Aristogeiton
-(the older man) in the assassination of Hipparchus, brother of the
-despot Hippias in 514 B.C. Though Athens was not liberated till four
-years later, these tyrannicides were canonized as saviours of their
-country.
-
-=Hecuba=: the aged wife of Priam, and mother of Hector.
-
-=Hephaestus=: practically the Greek equivalent of the Latin Vulcan or
-Fire-God. He is represented as a lame, but sturdy and somewhat humorous
-deity, a master of smithcraft.
-
-=Hēracleides= (=Héraclides=): It is not clear to which person of the
-name Plutarch refers. The best known was Heracleides Ponticus, a pupil
-of Plato and a miscellaneous writer.
-
-=Hēracleitus= (=Hēraclítus=): physical philosopher of Ephesus, _fl._
-_c._ 515 B.C. Famous for the compression of his style, which became so
-cryptic that he earned the title of the ‘Obscure’. He was something of a
-hermit and favoured the simple vegetarian life. The ‘weeping
-philosopher’.
-
-=Hermíŏne=: daughter of Menelaus and Helen; married to Neoptolemus (son
-of Achilles) and jealous of Andromache, whom she tried to put to death.
-
-=Hēródŏtus=: _c._ 484-400 B.C.; the so-called ‘Father of History’. He
-travelled widely in the East and in the Grecian world, and wrote on
-Lydia, Babylonia, Egypt, Persia, and the great Persian war. His desire
-is to get at the facts, but he displays a naïve fondness for
-story-telling and for wonders and miracles.
-
-=Hēróphȋlus=: of Chalcedon; a most eminent physician and a discoverer in
-anatomy and physiology; _fl._ _c._ 300 B.C.
-
-=Hiero I=: or the Magnificent, despot of Gelon and Syracuse (478-467
-B.C.), and most powerful Sicilian of his day. Poets at one time or other
-associated with his court were Epicharmus, Xenophanes, Simonides,
-Aeschylus, Pindar, and Bacchylides.
-
-=Hierónymus=: tragic and dithyrambic poet of Athens and apparently a
-writer on poets.
-
-=Hippócrătes=: of Cos; the ‘father of medicine’; the most renowned
-physician and medical teacher and writer of antiquity: _c._ 460-357 B.C.
-
-=Hypereides= (=Hyperídes=): Attic orator; patriot, contemporary and, for
-the most part, supporter of Demosthenes in his anti-Macedonian policy.
-Put to death by Antipater (q.v.), 322 B.C. An elegant speaker, of
-dubious private life.
-
-=Íbycus=: of Rhegium, _fl._ _c._ 540 B.C. at the court of the despot of
-Samos; a lyric poet of the erotic type. The proverb, ‘the cranes of
-Ibycus’, arose from the story that, when being murdered by brigands near
-Corinth, he invoked a flock of cranes, then flying past, to avenge his
-death. Plutarch tells the sequel (_Garrulity_).
-
-=īno=: or Leucóthea; a mythological personage, daughter of Cadmus and
-wife of Athamas. One story went that, when she leapt into the sea, she
-was carried to Corinth by a dolphin. Hence the allusion in the story of
-Arion.
-
-=īphícrătes=: Athenian general in early part of the fourth century B.C.
-An innovator in tactics and military equipment, noted for his prudence
-and foresight.
-
-=Ischómăchus=: a character of the name appears in Xenophon’s
-_Oeconomicus_ as lecturing his wife upon the principles of domestic
-management. Such a philosophically disposed person may be the associate
-of Socrates mentioned by Plutarch.
-
-=Ithacans=: the people of Odysseus, king of Ithaca, one of the Ionian
-islands, south of Corfu.
-
-=Ixíon=: mythical Thessalian king, who made illicit love to Hera, wife
-of Zeus, and was punished by being fastened to a perpetually revolving
-wheel in Hades.
-
-=Laelius=: C. Laelius Sapiens, friend of Scipio Africanus Minor. Consul
-140 B.C. Cicero’s _De Amicitia_ is otherwise named his _Laelius_.
-Philosopher, orator, and scholar.
-
-=Laértes=: aged father of Odysseus; superannuated king of Ithaca.
-
-=Lĕchaeum=: the port of Old Corinth, with which it was connected by
-walls one and a half miles in length.
-
-=Lēlántum=: a river of Euboea, flowing through the fertile Lelantine
-plain (between Chalcis and Eretria), which was long a bone of contention
-between the two cities.
-
-=Leónȋdas=: the famous Spartan king, who so stubbornly held the pass of
-Thermopylae against the Persians with his ‘Three Hundred’, 480 B.C.
-
-=Leptis=: a town in Africa near the modern Tripoli; a Phoenician
-settlement and afterwards a Roman colony.
-
-=Lesches=: one of the post-Homeric (‘Cyclic’) poets, and writer of the
-_Little Iliad_; a native of Lesbos, _fl._ _c._ 705 B.C.
-
-=Leuctra=: Boeotian village; the scene of the great defeat of the
-Spartans by Epaminondas, 371 B.C.
-
-=Livia=: Livia Drusilla, 56 B.C.-A.D. 29. Her first husband was Tiberius
-Claudius Nero, by whom she was the mother of Tiberius, the future
-emperor. Married to Augustus (then Octavianus) in 38 B.C., and having no
-children by him, she was anxious to keep the succession in her own
-family. A woman of strong character, she exerted a tactful control over
-Augustus and attempted one more imperious over Tiberius, but failed.
-
-=Locri=: Locri Epizephyrii, an important Greek town of South Italy,
-about the modern Gerace. Its constitutional code was often regarded as a
-model.
-
-=Locris=: a Greek community lying along the north side of the middle of
-the Corinthian Gulf.
-
-=Loxias=: Apollo as God of Oracles. The name was commonly interpreted as
-‘Riddling’ or ‘Indirect’.
-
-=Lucullus=: Roman conqueror of Mithridates, succeeded in his command by
-Pompey, 66 B.C. Famous for his wealth and luxury, and particularly for
-his lavish feasts. A byword for self-indulgence.
-
-=Lycéum=: an exercise ground with terraces (‘walks’) and colonnades just
-outside the wall to the east of Athens. It was here that Aristotle
-discoursed on the ‘Walk’ (_peripatos_), whence the name ‘Peripatetic’
-became applied to his school.
-
-=Lycurgus=: (1) the more or less legendary lawgiver and
-constitution-maker of Sparta. His date and personality are quite
-uncertain, and he is not improbably as mythical as Heracles.
-
-(2) son of Dryas, a legendary Thracian king who resisted the worship of
-Dionysius and hacked down his sacred plant, the vine. Dionysius punished
-him with madness, during which he killed his own son, thinking him a
-vine. The story is much varied in particulars.
-
-=Lysander=: Spartan admiral, who won the battle of Aegospotami against
-the Athenians and concluded the reduction of Athens in 404 B.C. He was
-afterwards distinguished for his ostentation and arrogance.
-
-=Lysias=: orator and professional rhetorician of Athens, distinguished
-for the purity and lucidity of his diction and his grace of style: _fl._
-_c._ 403 B.C. The majority of his 230 speeches were written for
-litigants.
-
-=Lysímăchus=: of Macedonia; became king of Thrace on the partition of
-Alexander’s empire. A man of powerful physique and an able soldier.
-Later his territory included the western half of Asia Minor. Killed in
-battle 281 B.C.
-
-=Masinissa=: king of Numidia; first a supporter, then an enemy, of
-Carthage, he lent great assistance to the Romans from 204 B.C. to 148.
-His reign was long and he died at ninety.
-
-=Meidias= (=Mídias=): an Athenian citizen and bitter enemy of
-Demosthenes, one of whose best known speeches is a violent, and possibly
-a rather scurrilous, attack upon him.
-
-=Melánthius=: of Athens: an inferior tragic and elegiac poet of
-worthless character: a contemporary of Aristophanes and Plato.
-
-=Meleáger=: legendary prince of Calydon. Having slain his mother’s
-brothers, he was cursed by her, and thereupon refused to take further
-part in the war against the Curetes. No offers could induce him to leave
-his chamber and rout the enemy, until he yielded to the prayers of his
-wife Cleopatra.
-
-=Menander=: chief poet of the Athenian New Comedy (or comedy of
-manners), 342-291 B.C.; a polished and easy-tempered man of the world.
-His sententious writings lent themselves to quotation and were much read
-in schools. To moralizing critics of a later age he was to comedy what
-Homer was to epic.
-
-=Mĕnedémus=: philosopher and statesman of Euboea, of the ‘Megarian’
-school. Died _c._ 277 B.C.
-
-=Méropë=: the name of several mythological semi-goddesses, mostly
-connected with the heavenly bodies.
-
-=Metellus=: Q. Caecilius Metellus, who successfully conducted the
-Numidian War against Jugurtha (109 B.C.) until superseded by Marius. A
-man of high character, military ability, and intellectual culture.
-
-=Mētrodórus=: favourite pupil of Epicurus (q.v.) and almost co-master of
-his school. Died 277 B.C.
-
-=Mithridátes=: Mithridates VI, or the Great, king of Pontus 120-63 B.C.,
-a Hellenized oriental famed for his physical and intellectual ability,
-his ambition and daring; of importance in history for his wars with the
-Romans under Lucullus and Pompey. He made a special study of poisons and
-their antidotes.
-
-=Mnēsíphȋlus=: Athenian statesman of sound practical ability, taken by
-Themistocles as his model. It was he who urged Themistocles to force on
-the battle of Salamis (480 B.C.). In the _Dinner-Party_ Plutarch borrows
-the name for an imaginary friend of Solon.
-
-=Molycréa=: a town just inside the entrance to the Corinthian Gulf on
-the north side.
-
-=Myrōn=: Boeotian sculptor; _fl._ 430 B.C. Best known by his Discobolus
-and his ‘Cow’. His work included animal forms, and human figures in a
-state of muscular activity or tension.
-
-=Mýrsȋlus=: see Pittacus.
-
-=Naucrătis=: a Greek town in the Delta of Egypt, thirty miles from the
-sea. At first only a trading-station, it was granted privileges of
-internal self-government by Amasis (q.v.).
-
-=Neoptólĕmus=: see Eumenes.
-
-=Nestor=: the typical wise old man of the _Iliad_.
-
-=Nicander=: poet and physician of Colophon; _fl._ in earlier half of
-second century B.C. Two of his poems are extant: the _Theriaca_ on
-venomous animals, and the _Alexipharmaca_ (or ‘_Antidotes_‘) on poisons
-and their remedies. The verse in itself is poor.
-
-=Nícias=: (1) Athenian general in the calamitous expedition against
-Syracuse (415-413 B.C.). A man of wealth, but religious to the point of
-disastrous superstition; a commander of experience, though wanting in
-promptitude and self-reliance. He was put to death by the victors.
-
-(2) painter of Athens, _fl._ _c._ 310 B.C., particularly noted for his
-chiaroscuro and for improvements in encaustic painting.
-
-=Nilóxĕnus=: a character probably invented by Plutarch, with a name
-geographically suitable.
-
-=Numa=: Numa Pompilius, second king of Rome, famed for his piety and the
-excellence of his legislation. Much of his history is legendary.
-
-=Olympias=: wife of Philip (q.v.) and mother of Alexander. An imperious
-and vindictive woman, with good reasons for jealousy, who often figures
-in Macedonian feuds.
-
-=Olynthus=: a Greek town on the Chalcidic peninsula, south of
-Thessalonica.
-
-=Ómphălë=: queen of Lydia, to whom Heracles was for a time enslaved and
-for whom he played an effeminate part. In a sense she played the Delilah
-to his Samson.
-
-=Orchómĕnus=: a very ancient town in Boeotia.
-
-=Oromazdes=: = Ahuramazda, the great God of the Zoroastrians; deity of
-light and good, as opposed to Ahrimanes.
-
-=Pándărus=: a Lycian warrior on the Trojan side, famous for his skill as
-an archer.
-
-=Panthéa=: beautiful wife of Abradatas, king of Susa. Cyrus, who had
-captured her, showed her such respect that Abradatas came over to his
-side.
-
-=Parménȋdes=: philosopher and legislator of Elea, _fl._ _c._ 476 B.C.
-His writings were in the hexameter verse then usual as the vehicle of
-literary philosophy.
-
-=Parménio=: general under Philip and Alexander, and right-hand
-lieutenant of the latter. Accused of taking part in a conspiracy against
-his chief, he was assassinated at the age of seventy in 330 B.C.
-
-=Parrhásius=: painter of Ephesus, domiciled at Athens, _c._ 400 B.C.;
-famed for his accurate drawing and proportion. As a man he was arrogant
-and luxurious.
-
-=Pāsíphaë=: (legendary): wife of Minos of Crete; enamoured of a bull and
-mother of the Minotaur.
-
-=Patróclus=: the ‘squire’ and beloved friend of Achilles. Killed by
-Hector in battle, and avenged by Achilles.
-
-=Peísistrătus=: a younger relative of Solon; intrigued himself into the
-position of despot of Athens 560 B.C. He was twice expelled, but
-re-established himself. A highly capable ruler, beautifier of Athens,
-and a lover of literature.
-
-=Pēleides= (-=ī=-): (i.e. ‘son of Peleus’) = Achilles.
-
-=Péleus=: aged father of Achilles; superannuated king in Thessaly.
-
-=Periander=: despot of Corinth, _c._ 625-585 B.C. An able and powerful
-ruler, patron of literature and art, generally (but not invariably)
-included among the Seven Sages. His early mildness is commonly reported
-to have passed into tyranny (see Thrasybulus). His wife was Melissa.
-
-Pericles: the highest name among what may be called ‘Prime Ministers’ of
-Athens. His career may be dated 470-429 B.C., but his leadership became
-most pronounced about 444 B.C. A man of large conceptions, brilliant
-oratorical powers, and philosophic tastes, but of an aristocratic and
-exclusive temperament.
-
-=Perséphŏnë=: daughter of Demeter, wife of Pluto, and therefore, in one
-of her aspects, Queen of the Dead.
-
-=Perseus=: king of Macedonia, on whom the Romans made war in 171 B.C. At
-first victorious or equal, he was defeated at Pydna by L. Aemilius
-Paulus 168 B.C. He was carried to Rome and lived for some years at Alba.
-A weak, vacillating and parsimonious monarch.
-
-=Petrónius=: Titus (or Gaius) Petronius, the famous ‘arbiter of taste’
-under Nero and director of his pleasures. Whether he was the author of
-the famous _Satyricon_ is doubtful.
-
-=Phaeácians=: seafaring inhabitants of the rich and fertile island of
-Phaeacia, traditionally identified with Corfu, but possibly Crete. When
-Odysseus arrived at the island on his raft he was hospitably entertained
-by King Alcinous and sent home to Ithaca by him on a ship.
-
-=Phaedra=: wife of Theseus and step-mother of Hippolytus, of whom she
-became enamoured. The allusion in Plutarch refers to the fondness of
-Hippolytus for hunting.
-
-=Phálăris=: despot of Agrigentum in Sicily _c._ 570 B.C. His name was in
-some legends proverbial for cruelty, and with him is associated the
-legend of roasting his victims in a brazen bull. Put he is sometimes
-represented otherwise and as a student of letters and philosophy.
-
-=Pheidias= (=Phíd=-) of Athens, the most eminent sculptor of antiquity:
-died 432 B.C. He is best known for his work upon the Parthenon and his
-colossal statue of Zeus at Olympia.
-
-=Phérae=: a town in Thessaly, somewhat west of the modern Volo, which
-became dominant under the despots Jason and Alexander (q.v.).
-
-=Philadolphus=: see Ptolemy (1).
-
-=Philémōn=: Athenian poet of the New Comedy, reckoned second only to
-Menander. Lived _c._ 360-262 B.C., and wrote ninety-seven plays.
-
-=Philétas=: of Cos, _c._ 300 B.C.; elegiac poet and critic, tutor of
-Ptolemy II. His thinness was a matter of jest for the comedians.
-
-=Philip=: 382-336 B.C. king of Macedon, father of Alexander, and, in a
-large measure, conqueror of Greece. Demosthenes’ _Philippics_ and other
-speeches were directed against him. An able, hard-working, ambitious,
-and rather unscrupulous man; a hard drinker and a sensualist, especially
-fond of rude jest, but with intellectual tastes.
-
-=Philíppȋdes=: one of the better Athenian poets of the New Comedy; _fl._
-_c._ 335 B.C. At first he attacked the Macedonian rulers, but later
-became a friend of Lysimachus (q.v.).
-
-=Philóchŏrus=: Athenian writer on the history, antiquities, and legends
-of his country, and on miscellaneous subjects: _fl._ _c._ 300-260 B.C.
-
-=Philócrătes=: Athenian orator, first a supporter, then an opponent, of
-Demosthenes. His policy was consistently to abet the pretensions of
-Philip of Macedon, who had bribed him lavishly, to the detriment of
-Athens. He was ultimately impeached and compelled to go into exile, 330
-B.C.
-
-=Philoctétos=: Greek hero (in the expedition to Troy) left desolate on
-the island of Lemnos, where he suffered deprivations and the agonies of
-a gangrened foot.
-
-=Philopoemen=: (1) the most distinguished Greek soldier of his day; head
-of the Achaean League several times from 208 B.C.; a man of culture and
-high character.
-
-(2) controlling minister of Attalus II (q.v.).
-
-=Philótas=: there were several Macedonians of the name in the service of
-Alexander. The two chief were (1) the son of Parmenio, a favourite of
-Alexander, but found guilty of conspiracy and executed; (2) a general
-who subsequently became governor of Cilicia.
-
-=Philotímus=: a distinguished physician and writer on medicine of the
-date of Erasistratus and Herophilus (q.v.), _c._ 300 B.C.
-
-=Philóxĕnus=: a dithyrambic poet of high repute: _fl._ at Athens 400
-B.C. He thence moved to the court of Dionysius (q.v.), by whom he is
-said to have been imprisoned for his scathing criticism on the despot’s
-verses.
-
-=Phóciōn=: 402-317 B.C. An upright Athenian general and statesman, who
-favoured, though probably not in an unpatriotic spirit, the submission
-of Athens to the Macedonian power under Alexander (335) and Antipater
-(q.v.). He was frequently opposed to Demosthenes, and was put to death
-by his countrymen on a charge of treason.
-
-=Phōcýlȋdes=: epic and elegiac poet of Miletus, _fl._ _c._ 530 B.C. Many
-of his lines passed into current maxims, and were so intended.
-
-=Phoenix=: a fugitive kindly received by Peleus and entrusted with the
-bringing-up of his son Achilles. He had quarrelled with his own father,
-whose young mistress he had corrupted at the request of his jealous
-mother.
-
-=Pindar=: of Thebes, the most eminent lyrist of Greece, composer of
-songs, choral and processional odes, dirges, &c.; lived _c._ 522-442
-B.C.
-
-=Píttăcus=: of Mytilene, _c._ 650-569. Contemporary of Sappho. During
-the struggles of the oligarchical and popular parties he was appointed
-by the latter ‘elective autocrat’ and legislator. The chief
-representative on the other side had been Myrsilus. A philosophic poet
-and the originator of moral maxims.
-
-=Plato=: the aristocratic and cultured philosopher of Athens, follower
-of Socrates, founder of the Academy, and writer of the Dialogues which
-go under his name.
-
-=Pólĕmo=: (1) of Athens, who in his youth abandoned profligate habits
-for the cult of the Platonic philosophy under the influence of
-Xenocrates (q.v.), whom he succeeded 315 B.C.
-
-(2) a Stoic philosopher, traveller, and geographer, who wrote copiously
-on inscriptions, &c.; _fl._ _c._ 195 B.C.
-
-=Polýbius=: Greek historian from Arcadia, carried to Italy by the Romans
-167 B.C., and taken under the patronage of Q. Fabius Maximus and Scipio
-Aemilianus. He accompanied Scipio against Carthage and in Spain. Wrote a
-sound, useful, unimaginative history of the years 220-146 B.C. A
-practical statesman and a student of the military art.
-
-=Polycleitus= (-=clít=-): of Argos, _fl._ _c._ 450-412 B.C.; a sculptor
-of the first rank, particularly distinguished for his representation of
-human forms, to which he imparted his ideals of strength and beauty
-according to a ‘canon of proportions’. These were best typified in his
-_Doryphorus_ (‘spear-bearer’), which was itself sometimes called ‘the
-Canon’. His chief colossal statue was the chryselephantine Hera of
-Argos.
-
-=Pontus=: in two senses: (1) the Black Sea; (2) a province or region on
-the eastern half of the south coast of that sea.
-
-=Praxítĕles=: the second greatest name in Athenian sculpture; _fl._ _c._
-365 B.C. He is the head of the ‘later’ (or more graceful) Attic school,
-Pheidias (q.v.) representing the earlier, more massive and majestic. He
-particularly excelled with his statues of Aphrodite (e.g. the ‘Venus of
-Cnidos’).
-
-=Priam=: aged king of Troy, father of Hector, whose dead body he came to
-Achilles to ransom.
-
-=Priénë=: an Ionian Greek town in Asia Minor a little south of Ephesus;
-the home of Bias.
-
-=Pródȋcus=: of Ceos, sophist and rhetorical teacher; a contemporary of
-Plato and a frequent visitor to Athens. His bodily weakness was
-notorious.
-
-=Prométheus=: mythical semi-deity, gifted with great foresight; a
-benefactor of mankind by giving them fire stolen from heaven (an offence
-for which he was cruelly punished by Zeus), and by the invention of the
-civilizing arts. His name was commonly interpreted ‘Fore-thinker’.
-
-=Ptolemy=: (1) Ptolemy II (Philadelphus), king of Egypt 285-247 B.C.
-
-(2) Ptolemy III (Euergetes), king of Egypt 247-222 B.C.
-
-(3) Ptolemy IV (Philopator), king 222-205 B.C.; a vicious and sensual
-monarch, ruled by his minister Sosibius.
-
-(4) Ptolemy V (Epiphanes), king 205-181 B.C. See _Aristomenes_. It was
-in the early part of his reign that Egypt became a Roman protectorate.
-He came to the throne at the age of four.
-
-=Publius Nigidius=: contemporary of Cicero; a man of great scientific
-and mathematical learning, as became a Pythagorean.
-
-=Pūpius Piso=: Roman orator, and consul in 61 B.C.; a supporter of
-Clodius and therefore hostile to Cicero.
-
-=Pyrrhus=: king of Epirus, called in by the people of Tarentum against
-the Romans. After a dearly won victory in 280 B.C. he sent his eloquent
-minister to Rome to offer humiliating terms of peace. These were
-rejected, and after a practically equal contest he retired from Italy.
-
-=Pythagoras=: of Samos, _fl._ _c._ 540-520 B.C. He had apparently
-travelled in the East and acquired, besides mathematical knowledge (in
-which he made some advances), mystical theological views and probably
-also his doctrine of the transmigration of souls. He migrated to Croton
-in South Italy, and there became the founder of a close and aristocratic
-philosophical brotherhood, to whom the word of the master was sufficient
-(_ipse dixit_). Many legends gathered about him and a mystical
-interpretation was put upon his rather compressed maxims.
-
-=Pythian=: = ‘belonging to Pytho’, i.e. to Delphi, the seat of the chief
-oracle of Apollo.
-
-=Rhium=: the promontory on the south side of the mouth of the Corinthian
-Gulf, the north promontory being Antirrhium.
-
-=Rusticus=: L. Junius Arulenus Rusticus, a Roman noble of the Stoic
-school and champion of liberty, so far as that was possible under the
-Roman emperors. Put to death by Domitian (emperor A.D. 81-96).
-
-=Samius=: lyrist and writer of epigrams at the Macedonian court, _c._
-300 B.C.
-
-=Scipio=: (1) P. Cornelius Scipio Africanus Major; the brilliant and
-almost ideal Roman general who conquered Hannibal in 202 B.C.
-
-(2) P. Cornelius Scipio Aemilianus Africanus Minor, who completed the
-conquest of Carthage 146 B.C.; a student of letters and philosophy.
-
-=Scirōn=: a spot on the Sacred Way from Athens to Eleusis.
-
-=Scyros=: island in the Aegean off north-east of Euboea. Here Achilles
-was for a time hidden by his mother in woman’s dress, and occupied in
-feminine tasks to keep him from the dangers of Troy.
-
-=Seleucus=: called Callinicus (the ‘Victorious’); king of Syria 246-226
-B.C. He was defeated by Antiochus with the help of Gauls (= Galatians)
-at Ancyra, and it was for a time thought that he had perished in the
-rout. He managed, however, to retain his kingdom.
-
-=Silániōn=: Athenian portrait sculptor _c._ 324 B.C. His _Jocasta_
-represented her as dying, her pallor being realistically rendered by the
-unworthy device of mixing silver with bronze.
-
-=Siléni=: a class of tipsy satyrs associated with Dionysus. _The_
-Silenus was in a sense the Falstaff of Greek legend.
-
-=Simónȋdes=: a most distinguished poet of Ceos, writer of elegies,
-choral and processional odes, epigrams, and drinking songs (556-467
-B.C.). He spent part of his life as a kind of court poet in Thessaly and
-at Syracuse, and visited Athens. His compositions were of a high order,
-and his moral maxims much in vogue, but he was notorious for worldliness
-and a love of money.
-
-=Sísyphus=: legendary king of Corinth; type of fraudulent and criminal
-cunning; punished in Hades by being compelled to roll a stone up a hill
-for ever and never establishing it at the top.
-
-=Socrates=: the Athenian philosopher (468-399 B.C.), from whose thinking
-most of the later schools were in some way descended. His object was to
-bring philosophy down to earth, and to arrive at true and universal
-definitions. His simple character, his whimsical irony, and his
-dialectical skill formed the groundwork for many stories. His method was
-conversational and non-didactic. He wrote nothing, and what we know of
-him is due to his disciples Plato and Xenophon, and to later writers.
-
-=Solōn=: of Athens, _c._ 638-558 B.C.; aristocrat, trader, traveller,
-poet and thinker. Chosen at a time of political and financial crisis as
-mediator between parties in Attica, and as constitution-maker, he
-behaved with strict impartiality and self-effacement. We may believe
-that he visited Egypt, but his intercourse with Croesus (q.v.) is of
-doubtful warrant. Author of much proverbial wisdom.
-
-=Sophocles=: 496-406 B.C.; second in date, and perhaps in merit, of
-three great Athenian tragedians; a genial and practical man of the
-world.
-
-=Sótădes=: a poet at Alexandria _c._ 280 B.C. He wrote songs and satires
-of a lascivious kind. One account states that in consequence of his
-abuse he was thrown into the sea in a leaden chest.
-
-=Speusippus=: of Athens, nephew and disciple of Plato, and his successor
-as head of the Academy (347-339 B.C.); a writer on ethical and
-dialectical subjects. His character is said to have excelled his
-intellect.
-
-=Spínthărus=: the best known person of the name was an inferior tragic
-poet of Heraclea on the Black Sea satirized by Aristophanes and other
-comedians.
-
-=Stilpo=: a high-minded and sane philosopher of great dialectical
-acuteness. Founder of the Megarian school, which made a cult of virtue
-while denying the possibility of knowledge. See also under Demetrius.
-
-=Sulla=: the distinguished Roman general, 138-78 B.C. He took charge of
-the war against Mithridates in 87 B.C., his capture of Athens taking
-place in the next year. His love of pleasure resulted in the pimpled
-face referred to in Plutarch’s article on _Garrulity_. Caecilia Metella
-was his fourth wife.
-
-=Sýbăris=: the oldest Greek settlement in the southernmost part of
-Italy, once large, prosperous, and a by-word for effeminate luxury
-(whence ‘sybarite’); afterwards completely overthrown and destroyed, its
-place being taken by Thurii (q.v.).
-
-=Taenărum=: now Matapan; cape at the end of the middle prong of the
-Peloponnese.
-
-=Télĕphus=: king of Mysia at the time of the Trojan war. He was wounded
-by Achilles, and could only be cured by ‘that which had wounded him’.
-The remedy turned out to be the rust of Achilles’ spear.
-
-=Tháïs=: a witty and beautiful courtesan of Athens, first associated
-with Alexander during his Asiatic campaigns and then with Ptolemy in
-Egypt.
-
-=Thales=: of Miletus, _c._ 635-555 B.C. Famous as a physical
-philosopher, mathematician, and shrewd practical man. He is regularly
-mentioned first among the Seven Sages.
-
-=Theaetétus=: a high-minded Athenian youth, eager for knowledge, who
-plays his part in Plato’s dialogue of that name.
-
-=Theágĕnes=: Theban general at Chaeronea (338 B.C.).
-
-=Theánō=: wife or pupil (or both) of Pythagoras (q.v.), herself a writer
-on philosophy and a pattern of virtue.
-
-=Themistŏcles=: became political leader at Athens 483 B.C., and
-commanded the Athenian contingent at the battle of Salamis. Subsequently
-(471 B.C.) this extremely able, but apparently not extremely honest, man
-was ostracised. His last days were spent in the service of Persia. His
-son Diophantus is of no note.
-
-=Theócritus=: of Chios, rhetorician and sophist, noted for his caustic
-wit. The Antigonus who put him to death was Antigonus the ‘One-Eyed’.
-
-=Theógnis=: elegiac poet of the sententious order. He flourished at
-Megara _c._ 550-540 B.C. Amid the feuds of his country he sides with the
-aristocrats, and allusions to political injustice are frequent. Many
-current maxims of proverbial wisdom were fathered on ‘Theognis’ as a
-matter of course.
-
-=Theōn=: painter of Samos, contemporary of Apelles (q.v.) and Alexander;
-spoken of by Pliny as ‘next to the first’.
-
-=Theophrastus=: of Lesbos and afterwards of Athens; disciple and
-successor of Aristotle as head of the Peripatetics (322 B.C.). An
-encyclopaedic writer on logic, physics, history, biology, zoology, &c.
-His best-known work is his _Characters_.
-
-=Theopompus=: king of Sparta, _fl._ _c._ 750 B.C. To his reign belonged
-the change of the form of government by the establishment of the popular
-‘ephors’ to control the royal power.
-
-=Thersítes=: misshapen and virulent demagogue in the Greek army before
-Troy.
-
-=Thĕtis=: sea-goddess; mother of Achilles.
-
-=Thrasybúlus=: despot of Miletus, contemporary and friend of Periander
-(q.v.), over whom he exercised a bad influence, as in advising him to
-‘cut down the tall poppies’.
-
-=Thúrii=: Greek city in South Italy on the west side of the Gulf of
-Tarentum, noted for its special democratic system.
-
-=Tīmágĕnes=: an Alexandrian or Syrian rhetorician and historian. He
-taught and wrote at Rome under Augustus, whose friendship he obtained,
-losing it, however, through his caustic freedom.
-
-=Tīmocléa=: of Thebes. Plutarch tells of her noble and daring spirit in
-his _Life of Alexander_ (c. 12).
-
-=Tīmomăchus=: painter of Byzantium, first century B.C.; particularly
-famed for his _Ajax_ and _Medea_, which were bought by Julius Caesar.
-Medea was represented meditating the murder of her children.
-
-=Timóthëus=: (1) an able and spirited Athenian general, who obtained
-several rather roving successes, chiefly against the Lacedaemonians.
-Something of a free lance; of popular character and considerable
-culture; _fl._ 378-354 B.C.
-
-(2) poet and musician of Miletus, settled at Athens; _fl._ _c._ 400-360
-B.C. His poems were mainly dithyrambs (high-flown and wordy
-compositions) or cognate lyrics. His music, at first ill received on
-account of its vulgarizing innovations, became immensely popular.
-
-=Tissaphernes=: Persian satrap of lower Asia Minor. See Alcibiades.
-
-=Tīthónus=: a mortal beloved of Eos (Aurora), who obtained for him
-immortality, but forgot to obtain him immortal youth.
-
-=Troezen=: a town in the east of the Peloponnese near the entrance of
-the Saronic Gulf.
-
-=Tyndareus’ sons=: Castor and Pollux, the traditional preservers of
-seamen.
-
-=Typhōn=: = Set; Egyptian malignant deity; brother, enemy, and slayer of
-Osiris.
-
-=Xenócrătes=: 396-314 B.C.: philosopher from Chalcedon, disciple of
-Plato, and philosophic teacher and writer. His earnestness of character
-and application to study atoned for his lack of the Graces. Became head
-of the Academic school next but one after Plato.
-
-=Xenóphănes=: philosopher of Colophon, and afterwards of Elea in Italy,
-in later part of sixth century B.C. Noted for his high conception of a
-Deity as neither anthropomorphic nor subject to human passions. His
-doctrines were embodied in hexameter verse.
-
-=Xenophōn=: of Athens; the well-known historian, and leader of the
-retreat of the ‘Ten Thousand’ as recorded in his _Anabasis_. A
-philosophical adherent of Socrates and a voluminous writer. Lived _c._
-444-359 B.C.
-
-=Zacýnthus= = Zante, the southernmost of the Ionian islands.
-
-=Zéno=: (1) of Citium in Cyprus and subsequently of Athens; founder of
-the Stoic philosophy; a man of simple, if rather dour, character, and
-capable of an apt retort: _fl._ _c._ 270 B.C. A writer on ethical,
-physical, and other philosophic subjects.
-
-(2) Philosopher of Elea; disciple of Parmenides (q.v.); upholder of
-popular liberty against a usurping despot.
-
-
-
-
- APPENDIX
- NOTES ON THE GREEK TEXT
-
-
-4 D ἐνίοτε γὰρ εἰδότες αἰσθομένοις μᾶλλον αὐτοῖς τοῦτο λεγόντων. Read
-... εἰδότες, (ἢ) αἰσθόμενοι ἢ καὶ ἄλλων αὐτοῖς τοῦτο λεγόντων.
-
-5 C ἵνα μάθῃς ὅτι τῶν ἀναξίων τὰ τίμια οὐδὲν διαφέρει. The sense
-requires ἀξίων ‘cheap’.
-
-6 C πρὸς δὲ τούτοις τί ἄν τοὺς παῖδας ... καλὸν γάρ τοι κτλ. The cause
-of the lacuna is obvious if we read τί ἄν τοὺς παῖδας (καλὸν
-διδάσκοιεν;) καλὸν γάρ τοι κτλ.
-
-7 B ἕως ἔτι μέμνημαι τῆς παιδείας. Rather ... (ταύτης) τῆς παιδείας.
-
-7 F τὸ μὲν γὰρ εὐγενῶς εὐτυχεῖν ἀνδρός, τὸ δ᾽ ἀνεπιφθόνως εὐηνίου
-ἀνθρώπου. Read τὸ μὲν γὰρ εὐγενῶς ἀτυχεῖν ἀνδρός, τὸ δ᾽ ἀνεπιφθόνως
-εὐθηνεῖν ἀνθρώπου.
-
-8 B καὶ ἀπὸ πηγῆς τὴν ἐπιστήμην τηρεῖν συμβέβηκεν. Read ἀπὸ πείνης ...
-
-8 D ἰσχνὸς δὲ στρατιώτης πολεμικῶν ἀγώνων ἐθὰς ἀθλητῶν καὶ πολεμίων
-φάλαγγας διωθεῖ. Read ... ἀθλητῶν καταπιμέλων ...
-
-8 F καὶ ταῦτα μὲν δὴ τῷ λόγῳ παρεφορτισάμην, ἵν᾽ ἐφεξῆς καὶ τἄλλα ...
-συνάψω. Read ... νῦν δ᾽ ἐφεξῆς.
-
-11 A ἵνα δὲ γέλωτα παράσχῃ τοῖς ἄλλοις, αὐτὸς πολὺν χρόνον ἔκλαυσεν. We
-require the antithesis γέλωτα (βραχὺν) παράσχῃ.
-
-12 E ὅτι δεῖ τὸν βίον ἐπιτηδεύειν καὶ μὴ δεῖν δεσμῷ προσάπτειν. Read ...
-καὶ μηδενὶ δεσμῷ ...
-
-13 B ὡς ἐκ λυρικῆς τέχνης. The sense requires νευροσπαστικῆς, to which
-νευρικῆς may be equivalent.
-
-14 C τὸ μὲν οὖν πάσας τὰς προειρημένας ... συμπεριλαβεῖν εὐχῆς ἴσως ἢ
-παραινέσεως ἔργον ἐστί. The word most easily lost would be (εὐημερίας).
-Also (μἂλλον) is to be supplied.
-
-44 B ἐν τῷ καταφρονεῖν τιθέμενοι καὶ τὸ σεμνὸν ὑπεροψίᾳ διὼκοντες. Read
-ἐν τῷ καταφρονεῖν (τὸ φρονεῖν) τιθέμενοι ...
-
-46 B ᾠδήν τινα πεποιημένην ἐφ᾽ ἁρμονίας. Read ἐφ᾽ ἁρμονίας (νέας) or the
-like.
-
-74 A τοιοῦτον γὰρ ἡ θεραπευτικὴ παρρησία ζητεῖ τρόπον, ἡ δὲ πρακτικὴ τὸν
-ἐναντίον. The sense requires ἡ δὲ ταρακτικὴ ...
-
-152 A εἰ μὴ μόνος εἴη φρόνιμος. Probably εἰ ἐμμόνως εἴη ...
-
-152 D σὺ δὲ δεινὸς εἶ κοράκων ἐπαΐειν καὶ κολοιῶν, τῆς δὲ σοῦ φωνῆς οὐκ
-ἀκριβῶς ἐξακούεις. For τῆς δὲ σοῦ (δεσου) read τῆς (δεδουσ i.e.) δ᾽
-Αἰδοῦς ...
-
-158 D δεινὸν μὲν οὖν ... καὶ τὸ γεωργίας αὐτῇ. The sense requires αὐτῆς.
-
-159 D ὥσπερ ἐν μυλῶνι τῷ σώματι τὴν ψυχὴν ἐγκεκαλυμμένην. Read
-ἐγκεκλῃμένην.
-
-160 F ἐπὶ τὸν τόπον οἷ προσέμελλε. Read προσέκελλε.
-
-163 D ... ἀπαντῆσαι μόνον ... θαλάττῃ ἕπεσθαι κτλ. The sense would be
-given by ... ἀπαντῆσαι μόνον (θαρρῆσαι, τὸ δ᾽ ἀπαλλάττεσθαι, καὶ ἐκ τῆς)
-θαλάττης ἕπεσθαι κτλ.
-
-504 B ὅτι πρεσβύτης ἐστὶν ἐν Ἀθήναις παρὰ πότον σιωπᾶν δυνάμενος. Rather
-... πρεσβύτης (εἷς) ...
-
-504 C ἀλλ᾽ ὅμως εἰπὼν καὶ ἀναφωνήσας ἐκεῖνο περὶ αὑτοῦ τὸ ... Probably
-ἀλλ᾽ ὅμως (τὸ τοῦ Ὀδυσσέως) εἰπὼν κτλ.
-
-513 A Φιλίππου γράψαντος εἰ δέχονται τῇ πόλει αὐτόν, εἰς χάρτην ΟΥ μέγα
-γράψαντες ἀπέστειλαν. There would be more point in ... εἰς χάρτην (τὴν
-αὐτὴν) ... Moreover, what they wrote was simply Ο.
-
-514 F τὸ γὰρ μάτην καὶ διακενῆς οὐχ ἧττον ἐν τοῖς λόγοις ἢ τοῖς ἔργοις
-ἔστιν. Read ... οὐχ ἧττον (εὐλαβητέον) ἐν ...
-
-515 D ὅσσον ὕδωρ κατ᾽ Ἀλίζονος ἢ δρυὸς ἀμφὶ πέτηλα. Perhaps ὅσσον ὕδωρ
-καταχεῖ νότος ἦ ...
-
-
-
-
- ● Transcriber’s Notes:
- ○ Missing or obscured punctuation was silently corrected.
- ○ Typographical errors were silently corrected.
- ○ Inconsistent spelling and hyphenation were made consistent only
- when a predominant form was found in this book.
- ○ Text that was in italics is enclosed by underscores (_italics_).
- ○ Text that was in bold face is enclosed by equals signs (=bold=).
- ○ Page references printed in the margin of the book have been moved
- into the paragraphs near where they appear, contained in square
- brackets, and begun with the word "Sidenote".
- ○ Footnotes have been moved to follow the chapters in which they are
- referenced.
-
-
-
-
-
-End of Project Gutenberg's Selected Essays of Plutarch, Vol. I., by Plutarch
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-<pre>
-
-Project Gutenberg's Selected Essays of Plutarch, Vol. I., by Plutarch
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you'll
-have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using
-this ebook.
-
-
-
-Title: Selected Essays of Plutarch, Vol. I.
-
-Author: Plutarch
-
-Translator: Thomas George Tucker
-
-Release Date: July 11, 2020 [EBook #62618]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SELECTED ESSAYS OF PLUTARCH ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Turgut Dincer, David King, and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net. (This
-file was produced from images generously made available
-by The Internet Archive.)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
-
-<div class='figcenter id001'>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_on'>on</span>
-<img src='images/cover.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c000' />
-</div>
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_1'>1</span>
- <h1 class='c001'>Selected Essays of Plutarch</h1>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='xxlarge'><b>SELECTED ESSAYS OF PLUTARCH</b></span></div>
- <div class='c000'><span class='large'><b>TRANSLATED WITH INTRODUCTION</b></span></div>
- <div class='c000'><span class='large'><b>BY</b></span></div>
- <div class='c000'><span class='xxlarge'><b>T. G. TUCKER</b></span></div>
- <div class='c000'><span class='large'><b>LITT.D. (CAMB.), HON. LITT.D. (DUBLIN)</b></span></div>
- <div><span class='large'><b>PROFESSOR OF CLASSICAL PHILOLOGY IN THE UNIVERSITY OF MELBOURNE</b></span></div>
- <div class='c000'><span class='xlarge'><b>Volume I.</b></span></div>
- <div class='c000'>OXFORD</div>
- <div>AT THE CLARENDON PRESS</div>
- <div>1913</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><span class='pageno' id='Page_2'>2</span>HENRY FROWDE, M.A.</div>
- <div>PUBLISHER TO THE UNIVERSITY OF OXFORD</div>
- <div>LONDON, EDINBURGH, NEW YORK, TORONTO</div>
- <div>MELBOURNE AND BOMBAY</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_3'>3</span>
- <h2 class='c003'>PREFACE</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c004'>The essays here rendered into English have not been selected
-as the very best pieces in Plutarch’s <i>Moralia</i>, but, first, as typical
-examples of his writing in that kind, and, second, as covering
-between them a tolerably large field of interesting matter. The
-<i>Moralia</i> offer us perhaps the best of all extant material for
-judging the civilization of the middle classes of society just
-before and after the year 100 of our era. From them and from
-Pliny’s <i>Letters</i> we are able to form a fairly complete picture of
-a large part of that sounder social element which lay between
-the froth and the dregs.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>In the Introduction some remarks are offered concerning
-Plutarch’s literary style. Here it will suffice to say that the
-English version does not seek to be either more formal or more
-vivacious, either more imposing or more humorous, than the
-original. An attempt has been made to preserve the tone as
-faithfully as the substance. In making Plutarch write as he
-does in the following pages the translator hopes that <i>il ne luy
-a au moins rien presté qui le desmente ou qui le desdie</i>. It is fair
-to add that no modern version of the <i>Moralia</i> has been consulted
-for the purposes of this rendering. In the Introduction, however,
-one cannot fail to owe much suggestion to Gréard and
-Volkmann.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>In the spelling of Greek proper names every modern scholar
-must follow his own best judgement. It does not follow that,
-because it is necessary to say ‘Plato’ and usual to say ‘Parmenio’,
-it is equally judicious to say ‘Chilo’. Nor can any
-safe rule be laid down for a choice between ‘Pisistratus’ and
-‘Peisistratus’. Perhaps the most advisable course is to safeguard,
-as far as possible, the pronunciation of those who are
-unfamiliar with Greek, and the spelling ‘Pheidias’ may do
-something towards correcting the common English tendency to
-pronounce the first syllable as it is pronounced in ‘fiddle’.
-Notes upon the proper names will be found after the text by
-readers who may require them.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_4'>4</span>The text generally adopted is that of Bernardakis in the
-Teubner series, but recourse has been had throughout to
-Wyttenbach, and in a number of places which are commonly
-acknowledged to be corrupt the translator has ventured on
-a modest emendation of his own. These places are marked
-in the translation by an asterisk in the margin, and the readings
-adopted will be found at the end of the book in an appendix
-on the Greek text. Critics would have saved themselves much
-trouble if they had observed that, though hiatus is regularly
-avoided in the genuine writings of Plutarch, no hiatus is created
-by a word ending in iota or upsilon, vowels which carry a semi-vowel
-glide in themselves.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The orthodox order, Greek and Latin titles, and sectional
-references of the pieces here chosen are as follows. The English
-titles belong to the present version.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='sc'>On Bringing up a Boy</span> (περὶ παίδων ἀγωγῆς: <i>De liberis
-educandis</i>), 1-14 <span class='fss'>C</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>On the Student at Lectures</span> (περὶ τοῦ ἀκούειν: <i>De recta
-ratione audiendi</i>), 37 <span class='fss'>C</span>-48 <span class='fss'>D</span></p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>On Fawner and Friend</span> (πῶς ἄν τις διακρίνειε τὸν κόλακα τοῦ
-φίλου: <i>Quomodo adulator ab amico internoscatur</i>), 48 <span class='fss'>E</span>-74 <span class='fss'>E</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Advice to Married Couples</span> (γαμικὰ παραγγέλματα: <i>Coniugalia
-praecepta</i>), 138 <span class='fss'>B</span>-146.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Dinner-Party of the Seven Sages</span> (τῶν ἑπτὰ σοφῶν συμπόσιον:
-<i>Septem sapientum convivium</i>), 146 <span class='fss'>B</span>-164 <span class='fss'>D</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>On Garrulousness</span> (περί ἀδολεσχίας: <i>De garrulitate</i>), 502 <span class='fss'>B</span>-515.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Concerning Busybodies</span> (περὶ πολυπραγμοσύνης: <i>De curiositate</i>),
-515 <span class='fss'>B</span>-523 <span class='fss'>B</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>On Moral Ignorance in High Places</span> (πρὸς ἡγεμόνα ἀπαίδευ
-τον: <i>Ad principem ineruditum</i>), 779 <span class='fss'>D</span>-782 <span class='fss'>F</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>On Old Men in Public Life</span> (εἰ πρεσβυτέρῳ πολιτευτέον: <i>An
-seni respublica gerenda sit</i>), 783 <span class='fss'>B</span>-797 <span class='fss'>F</span>.</p>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_5'>5</span>
- <h2 class='c008'>INTRODUCTION</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c004'>The age in which Plutarch was educated and in which he
-wrote his <i>Ethica</i> is, from the literary point of view, closely
-similar to the so-called ‘Augustan’ age of English writing. Of
-all the periods of English style and thought, he would probably
-have found himself most at home in that of Pope, Addison, and
-Steele, or in its continuation with Goldsmith and Johnson.
-He flourished at a time when intellectual interests were remarkably
-keen, if not very profound; when literature, if for the
-most part it ventured on no high imaginative flights, did at
-least aim at some practical bearing upon the conduct of life;
-when men found entertainment, and probably some measure
-of moral or social help, in the readable essay or the friendly
-epistle; when facts, merely as such, were accepted as interesting
-if interestingly set forth; and when Philosophy, if she deigned
-to keep her feet upon the ground and to speak as one of the
-mortals, met with a due welcome from either sex. An eighteenth-century
-Plutarch might conceivably have written the moral
-papers of Johnson without Johnson’s ponderousness, or have
-contributed to the <i>Spectator</i> papers more full than Addison’s
-of those ‘ideas’ in which Matthew Arnold found that writer
-so deficient. He might have written, though in a prose form,
-the <i>Essay on Man</i>, being meanwhile as willing as Pope to owe
-the bulk of his matter to other minds, but not so willing as
-Pope to play the expositor without first playing the earnest and
-critical student. Plutarch did not, so far as we are aware, try
-his hand at verse. To judge by his comments upon poetic
-duty and by his quotations—which are regularly taken from the
-best writers of a classical age already far remote—his conception
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_6'>6</span>of the poetic office was too exalted to permit of his dabbling
-in that domain. Had he done so, and had he followed the
-fashion of his times, he would perhaps have come nearer to our
-‘Augustans’ even than in his prose. In poetry it was the age
-of description, reflection, satire, and moralizing, in the highest
-degree sensible, studiously informed with ‘wit’—in the broader
-Queen Anne sense of that word—and characterized by extreme
-deftness of pointed and quotable phrase, but in no sense creative,
-imaginative, or inspired. Its ideal contents consisted of ‘what
-oft was thought, but ne’er so well expressed’. The attitudes
-of both prose-writer and poet belonged to the intellectual and
-aesthetic spirit of the period, and so far as that spirit finds an
-individual embodiment in the Greek half of the Roman Empire,
-it finds him in Plutarch of Chaeronea.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>It would be difficult to suggest with any precision the place
-which Plutarch might have filled in Victorian literature. A distinguished
-and popular ‘man of letters’ and an educator of
-public opinion he assuredly would have been. Given a width
-of reading, a persistent self-culture, and a careful but unpedantic
-style, corresponding to those which he practised in his own
-generation, he might have made—as he did then—an admirable
-biographer and essayist. He might have been a contributor
-of substantial papers to the quarterlies and other higher reviews.
-He might, and probably would, have been an eminent lecturer;
-possibly, with a broad practical Christianity substituted for his
-broad practical Platonism, a preacher not only eminent but also
-in the best sense popular. He would certainly have made
-a brilliant expositor of whatever he undertook to expound. He
-was no Plato or Aristotle; he would have been no Carlyle or
-Herbert Spencer; but he might have been much that Macaulay
-was outside of politics.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>As to the date of Plutarch’s birth there can be no certainty.
-Approximately it may be put down as <span class='fss'>A. D.</span> 48. It is accepted
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_7'>7</span>that his death did not occur before the year 120; it may have
-taken place somewhat, though not much, later. Born in the days
-of Claudius, he lived through the reigns of Nero, Galba, Otho,
-Vitellius, Vespasian, Titus, Domitian, Nerva, and Trajan, and
-saw at least the first three years of the rule of Hadrian. He
-must have been nearly fifty before the last tyrant of the early
-Empire fell, but the remainder of his life was spent under the
-most beneficent régime, and amid the greatest peace and prosperity,
-ever experienced in the ancient world. The <i>pax Romana</i>
-was at its profoundest, the sense of security at its fullest; the
-fact of general well-being was everywhere most palpable. There
-was at the same time, or in consequence, a vigorous revival of
-intellectual life. At no period of antiquity would it have been
-possible for a man of studious habits and of mild and genial
-disposition to enjoy a leisure so undisturbed or a society so
-free from those forms of preoccupation which preclude an
-engrossing interest in things purely of the mind. For the orator
-who is fired by the natural heat of democratic politics, for the
-patriotic poet from whom thrilling verse must be wrung by the
-wrongs, the decline, or the yet unrealized aspirations of his
-country, there was indeed no stimulation or scope. But for
-the cultivation of the humanities, for the indulgence of a taste
-for art and <i>belles-lettres</i>, for the satisfaction of intellectual
-curiosity, for the search after interesting knowledge—physical,
-mathematical, antiquarian, historical, philological—and for the
-thoughtful observation of men and manners, the time was
-almost ideal. In the absence of anxious and absorbing problems
-of the present there was leisure for a contemplative and critical
-survey of the past, and for making acquaintance with ‘the best
-that had been thought and said’ by it. Since the immediate
-human environment was no longer distracted and distracting
-with the clamorous urgencies of external or internal strife and
-danger, it was possible to look abroad over a wider field, to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_8'>8</span>contemplate the more spacious world of man and his work,
-of Nature and her facts, beauties, and marvels. It was therefore
-the age of the encyclopaedist, the traveller, the commentator,
-the describer, the collector—collector of curiosities, of objects
-of art, of books, of stories from history, of apophthegms, of
-pointed and interesting quotations. The prevailing aim was
-mental and social culture. This was the one object of education,
-however much its professors might dissent from each other
-according to the degrees of philistinism in their respective
-temperaments.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The aim of contemporary education—generally realized with
-more definiteness than educational aims are wont to be in
-modern times—was to turn the pupil into a gentleman, to equip
-him for the art of living and conducting himself as such. There
-could, of course, hardly fail to be those who regarded this
-<i>kalokagathia</i> too much from the exterior point of view, while
-others fixed their attention more decidedly, and often perhaps
-too exclusively, upon the inward and spiritual grace. There
-were also considerable differences between the Greek and Roman
-conceptions of a gentleman. But in the main this end was
-universally avowed—to turn the raw material of the boy into
-a man both capable and clubbable, whether from a public or
-a private standpoint. The things to be sought were the right
-accomplishments, the right morals, and the right manners.
-The accomplishments included, beyond all else, literary information
-and culture, argumentative dexterity, and a capacity for
-speech. The right morals were based mainly upon reasoned
-self-command. The right manners were chiefly those of
-urbanity, dignity, and that care of the person, the voice, the
-dress, and the deportment upon which all ages have insisted
-according to their several lights or tastes. It might be that
-the teaching ‘philosopher’, whose concern was with the
-soundness of the morals, had his quarrel with the teaching
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_9'>9</span>‘sophist’, whose business was with the rhetoric and its excellence
-for exhibition purposes or for the gaining of various forms of
-influence. The philosopher might think the sophist superficial,
-showy, and often actually pernicious, while the sophist might
-look upon the philosopher as visionary, pedantic, and often
-a positive clog upon practical efficiency. Nevertheless no
-typically cultured person of the day would have questioned
-that, in order to be complete—or, as Coleridge calls it,
-‘orbicular’—education must include its due measure of both
-forms of teaching.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>After his years of infancy the boy, under the supervision of his
-<i>paedagogus</i>—ideally a slave of superior character, but too often
-a person who was merely useless for harder work—passed into
-a school, where he was first taught his letters and then proceeded
-to the reading, learning, and recital of classical poetry, to the
-study of music, and to some acquaintance with elementary
-arithmetic and geometry. Next, taken in hand by the rhetorical
-teacher in a higher school, he was made to write and deliver
-descriptions and essays, mostly on trite and unreal themes of
-a historical or pseudo-historical nature, to develop his powers
-of invention on either side of a chosen topic, and to cultivate
-a fastidious diction, pointed phrase, and the elocutionary
-arts and graces. From artificial harangues and the ‘speaking
-of a piece’ he advanced to the imaginary pleading of forensic
-cases, in which the law was often as fictitious as the facts.
-When, upon reaching the age for assuming the <i>toga virilis</i>, he
-was emancipated from the custody of the <i>paedagogus</i> and the
-discipline of the school, his formal education commonly ceased.
-If he proceeded further, as many did, to what may be considered
-as the equivalent of a university course, he might elect to study
-philosophy, to study ‘sophistic’, or to dally with both in such
-measure as seemed likely to set off the abilities or consolidate the
-culture of a gentleman. Even in the more mature years of life
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_10'>10</span>the intellectually-disposed grandee had a habit of maintaining
-near his person a salaried philosopher as a kind of domestic
-monitor, and audiences of wealth and fashion readily gathered
-in Rome and elsewhere to listen to lectures on philosophy by
-professors who properly understood the art of clear and pleasant
-exposition. For the most part the typical Roman, less genuinely
-impassioned than the Greek for thought pure and simple,
-looked upon any ‘specializing’ in philosophy as likely to lead
-either to too cloistered a virtue or to the acquisition of eccentric,
-if not dangerous, views. A certain modicum of philosophical
-knowledge might be an adornment to life, and a certain modicum
-of philosophical training might impart a steadiness to character,
-but the study must not be pursued to the point at which the
-student himself stood in danger of becoming a ‘philosopher’.
-With the Greeks philosophical specializing was commonly
-subject to no such reprehension, partly because of the inborn
-Hellenic ardour for study and esteem of learning, partly because
-in this domain, even more than in the rhetorical, the Greeks were
-the accepted teachers throughout the Roman sphere.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>This, or nearly this, was the attitude of the educational world
-in the first decades of the second century, and it was in this
-world that Plutarch of Chaeronea became a figure of special
-eminence and distinction. For in whatever light the modern
-reader may regard Plutarch as a man of letters, to his own times
-he was first and foremost an educator. It is from this point of
-view that we must consider both his <i>Parallel Lives</i> and his
-<i>Moral Essays</i>, if we are to perceive in them that unity of character
-and purpose which he intended all his work to possess.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Plutarch, then, was born about <span class='fss'>A. D.</span> 48 in the very heart
-of Greece, at the comparatively small town of Chaeronea,
-famous as the scene of the decisive victory of the Macedonians
-over the southern Greeks, and also of that in which the forces
-of Mithridates were routed by Sulla. His family must have
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_11'>11</span>been of high local standing, and the fact that his father—a man
-of cultivated tastes and refined manners—was the owner of the
-‘finest kind of horses’ is enough to show, to those who appreciate
-the significance of the word <i>hippotrophia</i>, that he must
-have been possessed of considerable means. The same conclusion
-may be drawn both from what Plutarch himself incidentally
-reveals concerning his brothers, Lamprias and Timon, as well
-as other members of the family circle, and also from what is
-known of his own life and upbringing. That as a boy he passed
-through the orthodox curriculum, is obvious from his wide
-acquaintance with literature and his intelligent, if not particularly
-profound, references to both music and mathematics.
-When of an age to receive an education in philosophy, he was
-placed, or placed himself, chiefly under the distinguished
-Ammonius, an Alexandrian philosopher of a broad semi-Platonist,
-semi-Peripatetic school, who had become established
-in a prominent intellectual and public position at Athens.
-It was the accepted rule for the student to attend, but not
-necessarily to confine himself to, the lectures of a selected
-teacher. Often he lived in that teacher’s house, or at least, in
-intimate connexion therewith. If the philosopher was strictly
-conscientious he felt it his duty to watch over the developing
-character of his pupil, to visit him with any deserved reproof,<a id='r1' /><a href='#f1' class='c009'><sup>[1]</sup></a>
-to serve as his father confessor, to answer his questions, and to
-meet his moral and intellectual difficulties. The familiar phrase
-‘guide, philosopher, and friend’ perhaps describes the relations
-with unusual exactness. We find both Plutarch and his brother
-in the company of Ammonius at Delphi when Nero, in the
-year 66, graced that city with his imperial and artistic presence.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>His formal education completed, we discover little of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_12'>12</span>younger manhood of Plutarch, except that he must have been
-in high local estimation, partly, perhaps, from the position of
-his family, but doubtless no less on account of his own conspicuous
-gifts. Had this not been the case, he would hardly
-have been appointed as one of a delegation of two sent on a
-mission to the Roman proconsul of the province. At what age
-he was first entrusted with civic functions as aedile, or with
-a Delphic priesthood (then merely a ceremonial office open to
-any layman), or with other public positions, we cannot say.
-We can only be sure that to his learning he added a recognizable
-capacity for public business. However many hours he may
-have devoted to study and to the compilation of those
-ample commonplace-books which evidently served him in such
-good stead, he prided himself on carrying his philosophic attainments
-into the local Chamber or on to the local platform.
-In his judgement this procedure was not only a vindication of
-philosophy and a method of keeping the faculties energetic;
-it was also a patriotic duty.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>As has been already said, this was an age of travel. Facilities
-of transport were plentiful; the seas and main roads were secure
-from pirate or enemy; journeys were at least as expeditious as
-at any modern time until the employment of steam. We know
-of visits made by Plutarch to Alexandria, various parts of Greece,
-Rome, and the north of Italy. Rome he must have visited at
-least twice, and in this metropolis and ‘epitome of the world’
-he made acquaintance with a large circle of men of distinction,
-transacted public business (presumably on behalf of his native
-town, of which he may have been sent as representative),
-delivered lectures,<a id='r2' /><a href='#f2' class='c009'><sup>[2]</sup></a> and apparently acted as a sort of consulting
-physician to morally perturbed members of Roman society.
-He must have spoken always in Greek, for he confesses that—like
-most other Greek writers—he had given almost no attention
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_13'>13</span>to Latin; nor is any such avowal needed from a person who,
-even after looking into the language, believed <i>sine patris</i> to be
-the Latin for ‘without a father’. Greek, however, was then
-as much the universal language of the cultured as, until recently,
-French was the universal accomplishment of fashion, diplomacy,
-and the traveller.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The Rome with which Plutarch was immediately acquainted
-was the Rome of Vespasian and of the earlier half of Domitian’s
-reign. Had his sojourn in the capital taken place some fifteen
-or twenty years later, it is in the highest degree probable that
-he would have been further known to us through an acquaintance
-with Pliny or some other Roman writer of that date. That
-a Greek, and especially one who had a difficulty in reading Latin,
-should make no mention of contemporary Latin authors—that
-in his heart he should rather despise them—is only characteristic
-of the Hellenic attitude of the time. But that the amiable
-Pliny, who has an appreciative word to say of almost every one
-within his social horizon, including comparatively obscure
-philosophers like Euphrates, should say nothing of so eminent
-a figure as Plutarch, amounts to evidence that the two had never
-met. A man who could make close friends of consulars like
-Sosius Senecio and Mestrius Florus, and who enjoyed an
-intimacy with Paccius and Fundanus, could not have failed to
-win the notice of the Horace Walpole of his day. Quintilian,
-Silius, Statius, Martial, Pliny, Suetonius, and Juvenal were all
-writing when Plutarch was already the coryphaeus of Greek
-culture, and if not one of them mentions his name, it is because
-he was living in remote Chaeronea and forgathering only with
-his chosen circle of philosophers, men of letters, artists, or
-musicians in that town or in Athens, Corinth, and other Greek
-centres near at hand.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>To Chaeronea Plutarch must have retired by middle life.
-There he married Timoxena, a lady of position, but of quiet
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_14'>14</span>tastes, had issue four sons and a daughter, identified himself
-with the civic and religious concerns of his town, delivered
-lectures, imparted instruction on the lines of a modified or
-latitudinarian Platonic philosophy, industriously read the books
-in his moderate but useful library, made copious extracts therefrom,
-wrote his <i>Lives</i> and those occasional papers known as his
-<i>Ethica</i> or <i>Moral Essays</i>, and enjoyed the discussion of many
-a knotty question—often perhaps of little or no importance
-beyond the fact of its forming a problem—in the agreeable
-society of his relatives or his cultivated friends and guests.
-At such gatherings he was the leader, doubtless dominating the
-conversation—though in his more courteous way—somewhat as
-Johnson dominated the coterie described by Boswell. Often, we
-gather, he varied this quiet course of life by means of excursions
-to other Greek cities—Athens, Sparta, Aedepsus—where he
-most probably delivered an occasional lecture, and where, as
-we are certain, he thoroughly enjoyed himself in table-talk.<a id='r3' /><a href='#f3' class='c009'><sup>[3]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c005'>That he gave philosophical education, though apparently not
-of a systematic and pedagogic kind, to persons of both sexes
-is known from his own references to the practice. Whether
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_15'>15</span>he did so for money or not, we cannot tell. The later Platonists
-by no means felt bound to adopt the attitude of Socrates and
-Plato towards the taking of fees. The world had changed, and
-the <i>res angusta</i> was often more powerful than a principle which
-had ceased to appear entirely rational. But there is every reason
-to suppose that Plutarch was a man of independent means;
-we know further that a genial frugality was the rule of his
-household, and that he entertained a becoming contempt for
-the obsequious or the advertiser. The day of the endowed
-professor, whether of philosophy or sophistic, was still to dawn
-for Greece under Marcus Aurelius, and it never dawned at all
-for so small a town as Chaeronea. We may take it therefore
-that, whether with or without fee or present, Plutarch was able
-to choose his own pupils—in all likelihood the sons and daughters
-of his friends—and that, in dealing with them or with a wider
-audience, he maintained the fullest dignity and independence,
-and practised all the amiable candour which he explicitly
-recommends.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>For any lack of originality, of speculative audacity, of profundity
-(or the obscurity which is so often mistaken for that
-virtue), Plutarch fully compensates. To his generation he served
-as a milch-cow of practical philosophy on its ethical side. He
-browsed on literature and thought, secreted the most valuable
-constituents, and yielded the cream to his hearers or readers.
-So far as he belonged to a philosophic school, it was that of the
-Old Academy. In other words, he would have labelled himself
-a Platonist. It is probable that he was as much attracted by the
-superb literary style of Plato, the nature of the man, and the
-nobility of his conceptions, as by anything capable of crystallization
-into a philosophy. These qualities attracted even the
-dilettante, while in the more specially philosophic world time
-had done much to refract the real Plato, to extract dogma from
-him, and to create a large <i>Aberglaube</i> about his writings. Be
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_16'>16</span>that as it may, there is much in Plato that Plutarch does not
-accept, and there is much outside of Plato to which he gives a
-welcome. Towards Stoics and Epicureans—whose doctrines, like
-those of the Christians, would logically withhold men from public
-activity—he is distinctly, though never virulently, hostile, and
-when his pen ranges itself against particular schools, it is against
-these.<a id='r4' /><a href='#f4' class='c009'><sup>[4]</sup></a> It is easier, in fact, to say to what sect Plutarch did not
-belong than to associate him definitively with any other. Nevertheless
-it is as a Platonist that he would have classed himself,
-and it is especially by the later Neo-Platonists that he was quoted
-as a divinely gifted writer who lent literary charm and potency
-to wisdom. So broad, however, was his teaching, and in many
-respects so adaptable even to Christianity, that early writers of
-the Church had no scruple in borrowing liberally from him.<a id='r5' /><a href='#f5' class='c009'><sup>[5]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Into whatever shape he may have systematized his views, and
-however popular his treatment of them, Plutarch ranked with
-the philosophers. If he was opposed to Stoicism and Epicureanism,
-he was, like other philosophers, no less opposed to
-sophistic. To him the representatives of that art were apt to
-seem shallow and showy.<a id='r6' /><a href='#f6' class='c009'><sup>[6]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c005'>He held, with the Socratics in general, that the basis of right
-action is knowledge, and he had no belief in empiricism. Not
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_17'>17</span>that he rejected either established moral views or established
-religion. He was no sceptic, still less an atheist. As Friedländer
-has well argued, there was no ancient cult of atheism. Plutarch,
-indeed, is remarkably receptive in the matter of deities. The
-Egyptian worship of Isis and Osiris, which had made great
-progress throughout the Roman Empire, appeared to him
-equally tenable with the worship practised by his own ancestors.
-In the polytheism in which he acquiesced, such divinities were
-only other forms of those known in Hellas, and he found no
-difficulty in reconciling and combining the two sets of notions
-and cults. He was deeply tinged with Orientalism, though his
-culture and his natural good taste made him despise corybantic
-demonstrations and what Friedländer has called ‘dirty mortifications’.
-He held the Eranian belief in daemonic agencies, which
-acted upon mankind from the one side as the gods did from the
-other. If he appears to rise to the conception of ‘God’ in the
-singular, the word is rather to be taken as denoting the sum of
-divine wisdom and beneficent dispensation. Like all the best
-minds of his own and many a previous generation, he found
-moral difficulties in accepting the characters ascribed to the
-deities in the best literature of earlier Greece, and therefore,
-while approving of the established education in poetry, he
-necessarily felt some qualms as to the possible effects. Poetry
-served in the schools ‘as introduction to philosophy, history,
-geography, and astronomy’, and it had much to do with the
-formation of religious and ethical notions. Homer, Pindar,
-Sophocles, and Menander were ‘learned and wise’, and boys
-were brought to regard them as inspired. Hence Plutarch’s
-treatise on <i>Poets as Moral Teachers of the Young</i>. The point
-of view in that essay is not, indeed, entirely rational. It was
-not so easy for Plutarch as it is for us to realize that moral and
-religious ideas in Greek literature had passed through an
-evolution corresponding to the development of intellect and
-society. Instead of frankly recognizing the limitations of Homer
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_18'>18</span>or the inconsistencies of the dramatists in this respect, he puts
-a highly ingenious constraint upon the connexion between any
-dubious sentiment and its context. It is only when he fails in
-such a <i>tour de force</i> that he consents to censure the poet. In this
-procedure he was by no means the first. The battle of the
-‘takers of objection’ (προβληματικοί) and the ‘solvers of
-difficulties’ (λυτικοί) was centuries old. That Plutarch should
-range himself as far as possible with the solvers is a circumstance
-which would naturally follow both from his love of literature
-and from his constitutionally reverential temperament.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>As has been often observed, the purpose running through the
-<i>Parallel Lives</i> and the <i>Moral Essays</i> is one and the same. The
-philosophy of Plutarch was ethical. For logic and dialectic he
-shows no liking. His object was to relate philosophy to life,
-to bring home a philosophy which could be lived. By philosophy
-he meant the best conduct of life, based on an understanding
-of the nature of virtue—τὸ καλόν, the right, the honourable,
-the becoming. From philosophy we are to learn not only what
-is due to ourselves, but what is due to the gods, to the laws,
-to parents, children, friends, enemies, fellow-citizens, and
-strangers. The <i>Essays</i>, like those of Seneca or Bacon, deal with
-separable components or manifestations of right and wrong
-character, with duties and circumstances: the <i>Lives</i> meanwhile
-afford us concrete examples or object lessons from history.<a id='r7' /><a href='#f7' class='c009'><sup>[7]</sup></a>
-Yet life, even that of a philosopher, is not made up entirely of
-preaching and exhortation, least of all when the philosopher is
-at the same time a man of the world and a man of letters.
-Plutarch felt a lively interest in all such posers as were mooted
-in the talk of the table or of the loungers’ club. He therefore
-includes among his occasional papers—whether written by
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_19'>19</span>request or under the fashionable fiction of a request—a number
-of treatises on physical, antiquarian, literary, and artistic topics
-which can hardly be said to bear with any immediateness upon
-the ethical perfection of the reader. As a change, therefore,
-from the treatment of <i>Superstition</i> or <i>Inquisitiveness</i> or <i>The
-Restraint of Anger</i>, of <i>Rules for Married Couples</i> and <i>Rules of
-Health</i> and rules for <i>The Student at Lecture</i>, he may in a spare
-moment discuss such matters as <i>The Face in the Moon</i> or questions
-in Roman custom.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The majority of the pieces in the present selection speak for
-themselves. With the one exception to be mentioned immediately,
-they all bear the impress of the man. There is the same
-moral broadmindedness and sobriety, the same shrewd sense of
-<i>le bonhomme Plutarque</i>, the same faculty for popularizing<a id='r8' /><a href='#f8' class='c009'><sup>[8]</sup></a>
-without descending to vapidity, the same knack of relieving the
-sermon by means of anecdote, quotation, or interesting item of
-information at the point where the discourse threatens to become
-tedious. It is true that the German critic, in his indefatigable
-search for the <i>unecht</i>, has impugned the authorship of the
-<i>Dinner-Party of the Seven Sages</i><a id='r9' /><a href='#f9' class='c009'><sup>[9]</sup></a> on grounds unintelligible to
-those who do not expect a dinner-table conversation to be
-a systematic treatise, and who are satisfied to believe that a
-mixture of serious talk, banter, and narrative, and a frequent
-transition of subject, are precisely the things for which one
-would look on such an occasion. Every feature of the style
-is Plutarchan, and, if Plutarch did not write the piece, we can
-only feel unmixed regret that he did not, and unmixed surprise
-that its real author should sacrifice the credit of his performance.
-With the article on <i>The Bringing-up of a Boy</i> the case is different.
-Wyttenbach has sufficiently pointed out its frequent feebleness
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_20'>20</span>of argument, its turbid arrangement, the exceeding triteness
-of its ideas, and its unaccountable omissions. To us moderns
-it is of great interest for the light which it throws on the education
-of the period, and for its incidental revelations of the conditions
-of domestic life and the domestic affections. Otherwise
-it is a puerile performance and savours of nothing but the
-student essay. If it be argued that it is one of Plutarch’s juvenile
-works, the answer is that it is unlike him to be disingenuous;
-and disingenuous he must be, if in his early youth he pretends
-to have ‘often impressed upon parents’ this or that. Antiquity
-produced far too many amateur essays in imitation of great
-authors—imitations actually ascribed to those authors by a
-recognized fiction of the schools—for us to do an injustice to
-Plutarch when an easier solution lies so close to our hands.
-Perhaps, again, the piece on <i>Fawner and Friend</i><a id='r10' /><a href='#f10' class='c009'><sup>[10]</sup></a> suffers from an
-occasional <i>longueur</i>, but there are few writers who do not at
-some less felicitous moment perpetrate paragraphs less vivacious
-than their average.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>As a stylist Plutarch is apt to be underrated. He is, it is true,
-no laborious atticist, and makes no point of writing like a purist
-in the classic manner of a Plato or a Lysias. But this does not
-mean that he is in the least negligent in either word or sentence.
-On the contrary, his words are selected with extreme care, and
-his sentences—where the text is sound, as for the most part
-it is—are rounded off and interlinked as watchfully as any
-natural writing need require. It is true that his vocabulary
-is large and his expression full, but, when his words are properly
-weighed and their metaphorical and other differentiations duly
-perceived, no understanding reader will call him verbose.<a id='r11' /><a href='#f11' class='c009'><sup>[11]</sup></a> He
-displays an immense command of language, but no word plays
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_21'>21</span>an idle part, and if (like Cicero, whom in many respects he
-resembles) he is fond of joining what are erroneously called
-synonyms, it needs but little appreciation of verbal values to
-realize that the added words invariably carry some amplification,
-some more precise definition, or some emphasis helpful to
-a full grasp upon the sense. It is true also that his sentences
-are apt to appear—like the sentences of Ruskin’s earlier days—somewhat
-lengthy; nevertheless they commonly atone by
-lucidity of construction for any demand they may make upon
-sustained attention.<a id='r12' /><a href='#f12' class='c009'><sup>[12]</sup></a> In a modern English dress they must
-necessarily be broken up, but a practised reader of Plutarch
-finds no more difficulty with them in the original than he would
-find with a passage of Demosthenes or Plato. To one who
-becomes familiar with them they are at least as agreeable as the
-staccato brevities of Seneca. What chiefly exacts some effort
-from the reader of Plutarchan Greek is the fact that its words
-are extraordinarily charged with metaphor and allusion.<a id='r13' /><a href='#f13' class='c009'><sup>[13]</sup></a> His
-choice of one word rather than another is always nicely calculated.
-This truth once recognized, a reader cannot fail to admire both
-the consistency with which the writer maintains his similitude
-while he is upon it, and also the copious resources of vocabulary
-upon which he draws for the purpose. Meanwhile, despite any
-length of sentence and fullness of praise, Plutarch neither
-irritates with tricks and mannerisms nor wearies with pedantry
-and ponderousness. A pedant he could not be. He is no writer
-of Johnsonese. To him the best words are those which best
-suit their context, and he has no objection whatever to a dash
-of the colloquial or a touch of the homely or naïve. It is one
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_22'>22</span>of his characteristic merits that he knows when to take the
-higher and when the lower road of diction. He also knows when
-he is in danger of stylistic monotony. Plutarch was a teacher,
-but, like all truly intelligent members of that profession, he
-recognized that the most uninspiring attitude to adopt is the
-severely and unremittingly pedagogic. ‘The knack of style,’
-it has been said, ‘is to write like a human being,’ and Plutarch,
-a professor of humanity without a chair, is always and entirely
-human. That his pen must have moved with extraordinary
-facility is evident from the number of his publications. Apart
-from his <i>Lives</i> (of which not all are extant), his <i>Moralia</i> include
-over eighty pieces, long or short, and it is certain that many
-others had disappeared<a id='r14' /><a href='#f14' class='c009'><sup>[14]</sup></a> before the present collection became
-available in its eleventh-century MS.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>It is not here implied that he is never culpable, never over-loaded.
-There are times, though rare ones, at which we feel
-that his memory or his notebook has been unduly exploited.
-We feel that he might have spared us an illustration which does
-not illustrate or a similitude which is deficient in similarity.
-To a certain extent he is a Euphuist, and though Guevara
-perhaps owed nothing directly to him (as he did to Seneca<a id='r15' /><a href='#f15' class='c009'><sup>[15]</sup></a>),
-it is manifest that Plutarch sometimes strains a point in order
-to achieve an over-ingenious comparison. The contagion of the
-thing, like that of Euphuism in the Elizabethan age, was in
-the air, and Plutarch assuredly does not err more often or more
-heinously with one generation than Shakespeare did with another.
-Wide reading and natural fecundity easily slip into sins which
-narrow resources and slow invention are impotent to commit.</p>
-
-<hr class='c010' />
-
-<p class='c005'>There are numerous signs that the pendulum of classical interest
-is swinging in the direction of the literature of the early Empire.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_23'>23</span>The exclusive <i>toujours perdrix</i> of the Attic and Ciceronian
-periods has apparently begun to jade the palate, and writers
-like Seneca and Plutarch are coming into their own once more.
-There was a time when these authors were perhaps better
-known than any others. That they were worthy of prime
-consideration is manifest from the immense influence which they
-exercised upon the ardent and inquiring spirits of the sixteenth
-and following centuries, in England no less than on the Continent.
-Authors who could make such an appeal to Montaigne, to the
-Elizabethan dramatists, to Bacon, or to Jeremy Taylor,<a id='r16' /><a href='#f16' class='c009'><sup>[16]</sup></a> are
-surely not to be despised because they belong stylistically to
-a ‘silver’ age, or because their strength lies mostly in the fact
-that they are a mine of ideas, wise saws, and pointed moral
-instances. Seneca, as being a writer of Latin, was naturally the
-earlier and more widely read,<a id='r17' /><a href='#f17' class='c009'><sup>[17]</sup></a> but from the publication of the
-<i>editio princeps</i> of Plutarch by Aldus in 1509 our author sprang into
-peculiar estimation among the recovered spirits of antiquity.
-It was, however, due to Amyot that both his <i>Lives</i> and his
-<i>Essays</i> became accessible to those who had little or no Greek.
-The <i>Essays</i> were rendered into idiomatic French by that admirable
-translator in the year 1572,<a id='r18' /><a href='#f18' class='c009'><sup>[18]</sup></a> and Montaigne was by no
-means the only reader among <i>nous autres ignorans</i> who made
-the Plutarch of Amyot his breviary, and who ‘drew his water
-incessantly’ from him. It was not the literary etiquette of the
-Elizabethan age to acknowledge all the obligations one might
-owe even to a contemporary, much less to the ancients, and
-the stores of Plutarch might be rifled without much fear of
-detection, and certainly with no fear of reproach. When Lyly,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_24'>24</span>in <i>Euphues and his Ephoebus</i>,<a id='r19' /><a href='#f19' class='c009'><sup>[19]</sup></a> takes it in hand to bring up a child
-in the way he should go, he is in a large measure simply translating,
-expanding, and emphasizing the pseudo-Plutarch on the
-<i>Bringing-up of a Boy</i> and interspersing the discourse with
-pickings from other essays, particularly that on <i>Garrulousness</i>.<a id='r20' /><a href='#f20' class='c009'><sup>[20]</sup></a>
-Montaigne, of course, with his bland unreserve, credits Plutarch
-via Amyot with a multitude of observations, while Bacon,
-when following the new vogue of the essay, sometimes refers
-us to ‘Plutarke’, and at least on one occasion informs us
-that ‘Mountaigny saith’ a thing which on reference to the
-said ‘Mountaigny’ we find to be Plutarchan.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Though it is no part of the present Introduction to examine
-in detail the influence of the philosopher of Chaeronea upon
-modern writers, or to make an inventory of his contributions to
-English literature, it is at least worth asking whether an author
-whom genius once delighted to exploit, and from whom so
-many good things have filtered down to us through various
-channels, may not be well worth reading at first hand. To Professor
-Mahaffy<a id='r21' /><a href='#f21' class='c009'><sup>[21]</sup></a> Plutarch ‘is a pure and elevating writer, full
-of precious information, and breathing a lofty moral tone’,
-and to Professor Gilbert Murray<a id='r22' /><a href='#f22' class='c009'><sup>[22]</sup></a> he is ‘one of the most
-tactful and charming of writers, and one of the most lovable
-characters in antiquity’. Said Emerson<a id='r23' /><a href='#f23' class='c009'><sup>[23]</sup></a>: ‘Plutarch will be
-perpetually rediscovered from time to time as long as books last.’</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_25'>25</span>
- <h2 class='c003'>CONTENTS</h2>
-</div>
-<table class='table0' summary=''>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='88%' />
-<col width='11%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011'>Dinner-Party of the Seven Sages</td>
- <td class='c012'><a href='#chap01'>27</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011'>On Old Men in Public Life</td>
- <td class='c012'><a href='#chap02'>65</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011'>Advice to Married Couples</td>
- <td class='c012'><a href='#chap03'>96</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011'>Concerning Busybodies</td>
- <td class='c012'><a href='#chap04'>113</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011'>On Garrulousness</td>
- <td class='c012'><a href='#chap05'>130</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011'>On the Student at Lectures</td>
- <td class='c012'><a href='#chap06'>157</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011'>On Moral Ignorance in High Places</td>
- <td class='c012'><a href='#chap07'>180</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011'>Fawner and Friend</td>
- <td class='c012'><a href='#chap08'>187</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011'>On Bringing up a Boy</td>
- <td class='c012'><a href='#chap09'>241</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011'>Notes on Persons and Places</td>
- <td class='c012'><a href='#chap10'>267</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011'>Appendix: Notes on the Greek Text</td>
- <td class='c012'><a href='#appendix'>295</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_26'>26</span><i>In the following imaginary ‘Dinner-Party of the Seven Sages’
-the supposed narrator is a certain Diocles of Corinth, a professional
-diviner and expiator of omens connected with the court of Periander,
-who was despot of Corinth from 625</i> <span class='fss'>B. C.</span> <i>to 585</i> <span class='fss'>B. C.</span> <i>The dramatic
-date is towards the close of that period. It must not be assumed
-that Plutarch is pretending to be historical, and anachronisms must
-be disregarded.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c005'><i>The Seven Sages are here Thales, Bias, Pittacus, Solon, Chilon,
-Cleobulus, Anacharsis (see Notes on Persons and Places). The
-list varies with different writers, but Thales, Bias, Pittacus, and
-Solon are invariably, and Chilon is regularly, included in the
-canon. Periander is himself sometimes made one of the number, and
-a certain Myson also appears.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c005'><i>The qualities which constituted a ‘sage’ in this connexion were
-those of keen practical sense and insight, and a power of crystallizing
-the results into pithy maxims. He was not a ‘philosopher’ in
-the later sense of that word.</i></p>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_27'>27</span>
- <h2 id='chap01' class='c003'>DINNER-PARTY OF THE SEVEN SAGES</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c004'>We <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>146 <span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> may be sure, Nicarchus, that in process of time facts
-will become so obscured as to be altogether beyond ascertainment,
-seeing that in the present instance, where they are so
-fresh and recent, the world accepts accounts of them which are
-pure concoctions. In the first place, the party at dinner did
-not consist—as you have been told—merely of seven, but of
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-more than twice that number. I was myself included, both as
-being professionally intimate with Periander and as the host
-of Thales, who had taken up his quarters with me by Periander’s
-directions. In the second place, whoever related the conversation
-to you, reported it incorrectly. Presumably he was not
-one of the company. Inasmuch, therefore, as I have plenty of
-spare time and my years do not warrant me in putting off the
-narrative with any confidence, I will—since you are all so
-eager—tell you the whole story from the beginning.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Periander <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> had prepared his entertainment, not in the city,
-but in the banquet-hall at Lechaeum, close to the temple of
-Aphrodite, the festival being in her honour. For after having
-refused to sacrifice to Aphrodite since the love-affair which led
-to his mother’s suicide, he was now for the first time, thanks to
-certain dreams on the part of Melissa, induced to pay honour
-and court to that goddess.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Inasmuch as it was summer-time and the road all the way
-to the sea was crowded with people and vehicles, and therefore
-full of dust and a confusion of traffic, each of the invited guests
-was supplied with a carriage and pair handsomely caparisoned.
-Thales, however, on seeing the carriage at the door, simply
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_28'>28</span><span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> smiled and sent it away. Accordingly we turned off the road
-and proceeded to walk quietly through the fields, a third member
-of our party being Niloxenus of Naucratis, a man of high
-character who had formed a close acquaintance with Solon and
-Thales in Egypt. His presence was due to his having been sent
-on another mission to Bias. Of its purpose he was himself
-unaware, although he suspected that the sealed document of
-which he was the bearer contained a second problem for solution.
-He had been instructed, in case Bias could do nothing, to show
-the missive to the wisest of the Greeks. ‘It is a godsend to me,’
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> said Niloxenus, ‘to find you all here, and, as you perceive’—showing
-us the paper—‘I am bringing the letter to the dinner.’
-At this Thales remarked with a laugh, ‘In case of trouble, once
-more to Priene!<a id='r24' /><a href='#f24' class='c009'><sup>[24]</sup></a> For Bias will solve the difficulty, as he did
-the first, without assistance.’ ‘What do you mean,’ said I,
-‘by “the first”?’ ‘The king,’ replied Thales, ‘sent him an
-animal for sacrifice, and bade him pick out and send back the
-worst and best portion of the meat. Thereupon our friend,
-with excellent judgement, took out and sent the tongue; and
-he is manifestly held in high repute and admiration in consequence.’
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>147<span class='hidev'>|</span></span> ‘That is not the only reason,’ said Niloxenus,
-‘Bias does not object—as you do—to be, and to be called, a
-friend of kings. In your own case the king not only admires
-you on general grounds, but he was hugely delighted with your
-method of measuring the pyramid. Without any fuss or the
-need of any instrument, you stood your stick at the end of the
-shadow thrown by the pyramid, and the fall of the sunlight
-making two triangles, you showed that the pyramid stood in the
-same ratio to the stick as the one shadow to the other.<a id='r25' /><a href='#f25' class='c009'><sup>[25]</sup></a> But, as
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_29'>29</span>I observed, you were charged with being a king-hater, and <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-certain outrageous expressions of yours concerning despots were
-reported to him. For example, when asked by the Ionian
-Molpagoras what was the strangest sight you had seen, you
-answered, “An aged despot.” Again, at a drinking-party,
-when the talk fell upon animals, you stated that among wild
-animals the worst was the despot, and among tame animals
-the sycophant. However much a king may claim to differ from
-a despot, he does not welcome language of that kind.’ ‘Nay,’
-said Thales, ‘the former remark belongs to Pittacus, who once
-made it in a playful attack on Myrsilus. My own observation <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-was that I should regard as a strange sight, not an aged despot,
-but an aged navigator. None the less, my feelings at the altered
-version are those of the young fellow who, after throwing at
-the dog and hitting his step-mother, remarked, “Not so bad,
-after all.” Yes, I regarded Solon as very wise in refusing to
-act the despot. Our Pittacus also, if he had kept clear of monarchy,
-would not have said that “<i>it is hard to be good</i>”. As for
-Periander, his despotism may be regarded as an inherited disease,
-from which he is making a creditable recovery, inasmuch as up
-to the present he keeps wholesome company, cultivates the
-society of sensible men, and will have nothing to say to that
-“cutting down of the tall poppies” suggested by my fellow-countryman <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-Thrasybulus. A despot who desires to rule over
-slaves rather than men is no better than a farmer who is ready
-to reap a harvest of darnel and cammock in preference to wheat
-and barley. Among the many undesirable features of despotic
-rule, the one desirable element is the honour and glory, in a case
-where the subjects are good but the ruler is better, and where
-they are great but he is regarded as greater. If he is satisfied with
-safety without honour, his right course would be to rule over a
-herd of sheep, horses, or oxen, not over human beings. However, <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-your visitor here has launched us upon an inopportune topic. We
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_30'>30</span>are walking to a dinner, and he should have remembered to moot
-questions suited to the occasion. For you will doubtless admit
-that there is a certain preparation necessary for the guest as well
-as for the host. The people of Sybaris, I understand, send their
-invitations to the women a year in advance, so that they may have
-plenty of time to prepare their dress and their jewelry before
-coming to dinner. In my own opinion one who is to play the
-diner in the proper way requires still more time for real and true
-preparation, inasmuch as it is harder to arrive at the appropriate
-adornment of character than at the useless and superfluous
-adornment of the person. When a man of sense comes to
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> dinner, he does not bring himself to be filled like a vessel, but
-to contribute something either serious or sportive. He is to
-listen or talk about such matters as the occasion asks of the
-company, if they are to find pleasure in each other’s society.
-An inferior dish may be put aside, and if a wine is poor, one may
-take refuge with the Nymphs.<a id='r26' /><a href='#f26' class='c009'><sup>[26]</sup></a> But when your table-companion
-is an ill-bred bore who gives you a headache, he utterly ruins
-the enjoyment of any wine or dish or musical entertainment.
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>148<span class='hidev'>|</span></span> Nor have you the resource of an emetic for that kind of annoyance,
-but in some cases the mutual antipathy lasts all your life,
-an insulting or angry incident at your wine having resulted in
-a kind of nausea. Chilon was therefore quite right when, on
-receiving his invitation yesterday, he only accepted after
-ascertaining the full list of the guests. As he remarked, when
-people cannot help going to sea or on a campaign, and a shipmate
-or tentmate proves disagreeable, they are obliged to put
-up with him; but no sensible man will form one of an indiscriminate
-wine-party. The mummy which the Egyptians
-regularly bring in and exhibit at their parties, bidding you
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> remember that you will very soon be like it, may be an unwelcome
-and unseasonable boon-companion; yet the custom
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_31'>31</span>is not without its point. Even if it may not incite you to drink
-and enjoy yourself, it does incite to mutual liking and regard.
-“Life,” it urges, “is short in duration; do not make it long by
-vexations.”’</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>After talk of this nature on the way we arrived at the house.
-As we had anointed ourselves, Thales decided not to take a bath,
-but proceeded to visit and inspect the race-tracks, the wrestling-grounds,
-and the handsomely decorated park along the shore.
-Not that he was greatly taken with anything of that kind, but
-he would not appear to despise or slight Periander’s display <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-of public spirit. The other guests, as soon as each had anointed
-himself or bathed, were being led by the servants through the
-cloister into the dining-room. Anacharsis, however, was seated
-in the cloister, and in front of him stood a girl, who was parting
-his hair with her hands. Upon her running to meet Thales
-in the frankest possible manner, he kissed her and said with
-a laugh, ‘That’s right: make our foreign visitor beautiful,
-so that he may not frighten us by looking like a savage, when he
-is really a most civilized person.’ Upon my asking him who the
-child was, he replied, ‘Don’t you know the wise and far-famed <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-Eumetis? That, by the way, is her father’s name for her,
-though most people call her Cleobuline, after him.’ ‘I presume,’
-said Niloxenus, ‘your compliment refers to the girl’s cleverness
-in constructing riddles. Some of her puzzles have found their
-way as far as Egypt.’ ‘Not at all,’ rejoined Thales. ‘Those
-are merely the dice with which, on occasion, she plays a match
-for fun in conversation. There is more in her than that: an
-admirable spirit, a practical intellect, and an amiable character,
-by which she renders her father’s rule over his fellow country-men
-more gentle and popular.’ ‘Yes,’ remarked Niloxenus, ‘one <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-can see it by looking at her simplicity and unpretentiousness.
-But how is it she is attending to Anacharsis so affectionately?’
-‘Because,’ was the answer, ‘he is a man of virtue and learning,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_32'>32</span>and has given her zealous and ungrudging instruction in the
-Scythian manner of dieting and purging the sick. I should say
-that at the present moment, while looking after the gentleman
-so amiably, she is getting some lesson and talking it over.’</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>As we were just approaching the dining-room, we were met
-by Alexidemus of Miletus, the natural son of the despot Thrasybulus.
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> He was coming out in a state of excitement and angrily
-muttering something which conveyed no meaning to us. When
-he saw Thales he collected himself a little, stopped, and said:
-‘Look how we have been insulted by Periander! He would
-not allow me to take ship home when I was anxious to do so,
-but begged me to stay for the dinner; and, when I come to it,
-he assigns me a degrading place at table, and lets Aeolians,
-islanders, and goodness knows whom, take precedence of
-Thrasybulus. For since I was commissioned by Thrasybulus, it
-is evident that, in my person, he means to insult and humiliate
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>149<span class='hidev'>|</span></span> him, by treating him as if he were nobody.’ ‘I see,’ said Thales,
-‘what you are afraid of. In Egypt they say of the stars, according
-to their increase or decrease of altitude in the regions they
-traverse, that they become ‘better’ or ‘worse’ than themselves.
-You are afraid that in your own case your place at table may mean
-a similar loss of brightness and eminence, and you propose to
-show less spirit than the Lacedaemonian, who, upon being put
-by the director in the last place in a chorus, remarked, “A capital
-way of making even this place one of honour.” When we take
-our places,’ continued Thales, ‘we should not ask who have
-seats above us, but how we are to make ourselves agreeable to
-our immediate neighbours. As a means of immediately securing
-a beginning of friendly feeling on their part, we should cultivate,
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> or rather bring with us, instead of irritation, a tone of satisfaction
-at being placed in such good company. The man who is annoyed
-with his place at table is more annoyed with his next neighbour
-than with his host, and he earns the dislike of both.’ ‘That,’
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_33'>33</span>retorted Alexidemus, ‘is mere talk. In practice I notice that
-even you sages are greedy for precedence’—and therewith he
-passed us and went off. Upon our expressing surprise at the
-man’s peculiar behaviour, Thales said, ‘A crazy person, constitutionally
-wrong-headed. When he was still a mere lad and
-a quantity of valuable perfume had been presented to Thrasybulus,
-he emptied it into a big wine-cooler, poured in some
-neat wine, and drank it off, thereby bringing ill-odour upon <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-Thrasybulus instead of the contrary.’</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>At this point an attendant came up and said, ‘Periander
-requests you to take Thales here along with you and examine
-an object which has just been brought to him, to see whether
-it is a mere matter of accident or signifies something portentous.
-He appears himself to be greatly agitated, regarding it as a
-pollution, and as a smirch upon the festival.’ Whereupon he
-proceeded to lead us to one of the apartments off the garden.
-Here a youth, apparently a herdsman, still beardless and with
-considerable handsomeness of person, opened a leather wrapper
-and displayed a baby thing which he told us was the offspring
-of a mare. The upper parts, as far as the neck and arms, were
-human, the lower parts equine; its voice when it cried was that <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-of a new-born child. Niloxenus, exclaiming ‘Heaven help us!’
-turned away from the sight; but Thales took a prolonged look
-at the young fellow, and with a smile remarked—in accordance
-with his regular habit of twitting me in connexion with my
-profession—‘I suppose, Diocles, you are thinking of setting your
-purifications to work and giving trouble to the averting powers,
-in the belief that a great and terrible thing has happened?’
-‘Of course I am, Thales,’ said I, ‘for the token indicates strife
-and discord, and I am afraid it may affect no less a matter
-than marriage and its issue. As you see, before we have expiated
-the original offence, the goddess is giving warning of a second.’
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> To this Thales made no answer, but began to move off—laughing.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_34'>34</span>Upon Periander coming to the door to meet us, and putting
-questions as to what we had seen, Thales turned from me,
-took him by the hand, and said: ‘Anything Diocles bids you
-do, you will perform at your leisure. My own advice is to be
-more careful as to your herdsmen.’ On hearing this speech
-Periander appeared to be greatly delighted, for he burst out
-laughing and hugged and kissed Thales, who observed: ‘I should
-say, Diocles, that the sign has found its fulfilment already;
-for you see what a serious misfortune has befallen us in the
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> refusal of Alexidemus to be present at dinner.’</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>When we had actually entered the room, Thales, speaking
-in a louder tone, said: ‘And where was the seat to which the
-gentleman objected?’ Upon the place being pointed out, he
-went round and occupied it himself, taking me with him, and
-remarking: ‘Why, I would have paid something for the
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>150<span class='hidev'>|</span></span> privilege of sharing the same table with Ardalus.’ The Ardalus
-in question was a Troezenian, a flute-player and priest of the
-Ardalian Muses, whose worship was established by the original
-Ardalus of Troezen. Thereupon Aesop—who happened to have
-arrived recently on a simultaneous mission from Croesus to
-Periander and to the god at Delphi, and was present on a low
-stool close to where Solon was reclining above—said, ‘A Lydian
-mule, having caught sight of his reflection in a river and conceived
-an admiration for the size and beauty of his body, gave
-a toss of his mane and set out to run like a horse; but after
-a while, reflecting that he was the son of an ass, he quickly
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> stopped his career and dropped his pride and conceit.’ At this
-Chilon, speaking in broad Laconian, observed: ‘Ye’re slow
-yersel, an’ ye’re running the mule’s gait.’</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>At this point Melissa came in and reclined beside Periander,
-whereas Eumetis sat at her dinner.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Thales, addressing me—I was on the couch above Bias—said:
-‘Diocles, why don’t you inform Bias that our visitor from
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_35'>35</span>Naucratis has come to him again with royal problems to solve,
-so that he may be sober and capable of looking after himself
-when he receives the communication?’ Bias replied: ‘Nay,
-our friend here has been trying for a long time to frighten me
-with that warning. But I am aware that, besides his other
-capacities, Dionysus is styled <i>Solver</i><a id='r27' /><a href='#f27' class='c009'><sup>[27]</sup></a> in right of wisdom. I feel <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-no fear, therefore, that my being “filled with the god” will
-cause me to make a less hopeful fight of it.’</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>While jokes of this kind were passing between these great
-men over their dinner, I was noticing that the meal was unusually
-frugal, and I was led to meditate on the fact that to invite and
-entertain wise and good men means no additional expense, but
-rather a curtailment of it, since it eliminates fancy dishes,
-out-of-the-way perfumes and sweetmeats, and lavish decantings
-of costly wines. Though Periander, being a despot and a person <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-of wealth and power, indulged in such things pretty nearly
-every day, on this occasion he was trying to impress the company
-with a show of simplicity and modest expenditure. He put
-aside and out of sight not only the display usually made in other
-things, but also that used by his wife, whom he made present
-herself in modest and inexpensive attire.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The tables were removed; Melissa caused garlands to be
-distributed; and we poured libations. After the flute-girl had
-played a short piece to accompany them, and had then withdrawn,
-Ardalus, addressing Anacharsis, asked if there were any
-flute-girls among the Scythians. Instantly he replied, ‘No, nor <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-yet vines.’ When Ardalus rejoined: ‘Well, but the Scythians
-have gods;’ ‘Quite true,’ said he: ‘gods who understand
-human language. We are not like the Greeks, who imagine they
-speak better than the Scythians, and yet believe that the gods
-would rather listen to pieces of bone and wood.’ ‘Ah,’ said
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_36'>36</span>Aesop, ‘what if you knew, Sir Visitor, that the present-day
-flute-makers have given up using the bones of fawns and have
-taken to those of asses? They maintain that these sound better—a
-fact which explains Cleobuline’s riddle upon the Phrygian
-flute: <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span></p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>With a shin that was horned</i></div>
- <div class='line in2'><i>Did an ass that was dead</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>Deal a blow on my ear.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>It is a wonderful thing that the ass, who is otherwise particularly
-crass and unmusical, should supply us with a bone particularly
-fine and melodious.’ ‘Now that,’ said Niloxenus, ‘is precisely
-the objection which the Busirites bring against us of Naucratis;
-for asses’ bones for flutes are already in use with us. With them,
-on the contrary, it is profanation even to listen to a trumpet,
-because it sounds like the bray of an ass. You know, I presume,
-that the ass is treated contemptuously by the Egyptians because
-of Typhon?’</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>A silence here occurred, and, as Periander perceived that
-Niloxenus, though eager to enter upon the subject, was shy
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>151<span class='hidev'>|</span></span> of doing so, he said: ‘To my mind, gentlemen, it is a commendable
-practice, whether of community or ruler, to take the
-business of strangers first and of citizens afterwards. On the
-present occasion, therefore, I propose that for a short time we
-suspend any topics of our own, as being local and familiar, and
-that we treat ourselves as an Assembly and ‘grant an audience’
-to those royal communications from Egypt, of which our
-excellent friend Niloxenus is the bearer to Bias, and which
-Bias desires that you should join him in considering.’ ‘Yes,’
-said Bias: ‘for where, or with whom, could one more readily
-face the risk—if it must be faced—of answering in a case like
-this, especially when the king’s instructions are that, though
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> the matter is to begin with me, it is to go the round of you all?’
-Niloxenus thereupon offered him the document, but Bias bade
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_37'>37</span>him open it himself and read every word to the whole company.
-The contents of the letter were to the following effect:</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='sc'>Amasis, King of Egypt, to Bias, wisest of the Greeks</span></p>
-
-<p class='c007'><i>The King of Ethiopia is engaged in matching his wits against
-mine. Hitherto he has had the worst of it, but has finally concocted
-a terrible poser in the shape of a command that I should ‘drink
-up the sea’. If I meet it with a solution, I am to have a number
-of his villages and towns. If not, I am to surrender the cities in the
-neighbourhood of Elephantine. Do you, therefore, take the matter <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-in hand and send Niloxenus back to me at once. Any return which
-friends or countrymen of yours require from me will be made without
-hesitation on my part.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c015'>This part of the letter having been read, Bias was not long in
-answering. After a few moments of meditation and a brief
-conversation with Cleobulus, who was close to him at table, he
-said: ‘Do you mean to say, my friend from Naucratis, that
-Amasis, though reigning over so many subjects and possessed
-of so large and excellent a country, will be ready to drink up
-the sea in order to win a few miserable insignificant villages?’
-‘Take it that he will, Bias,’ replied Niloxenus, ‘and consider
-how it can be done.’ ‘Very well then,’ said he: ‘let him tell <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-the Ethiopian <i>to stop the rivers that run into the ocean, while
-he is himself drinking up the sea at present existing</i>. The command
-applies to the sea as it is, not as it is to be later on.’ Bias no
-sooner made this speech than Niloxenus was so delighted that
-he rushed to embrace and kiss him. After the rest of the company
-had cheered and applauded, Chilon said with a laugh,
-‘Sir Visitor from Naucratis, before the sea is all drunk up and
-lost, set sail and tell Amasis not to be asking how to make away
-with all that brine, but rather how to render his kingship sweet
-and drinkable for his subjects. Bias is a past master at teaching <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-such a lesson, and, if Amasis learns it, he will have no further
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_38'>38</span>occasion for his golden footpan<a id='r28' /><a href='#f28' class='c009'><sup>[28]</sup></a> in dealing with the Egyptians.
-They will all be courting and making much of him for his
-goodness, even if he is declared to be of a thousand times lower
-birth than he actually is.’ ‘Yes, and by the way,’ said Periander,
-‘it would be a good thing if all—“man after man”, as Homer
-has it—were to contribute a similar offering to His Majesty.
-A bonus of the kind thrown in would not only make the returns
-on his venture more valuable to him, but would also be the best
-thing in the world for us.’</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Chilon thereupon asserted that Solon was the right man to
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> make a beginning on the subject, not only because he was
-senior to all the rest and was in the place of honour at the table,
-but because, having legislated for the Athenians, he held the
-greatest and completest position as a ruler. At this Niloxenus
-remarked quietly to me, ‘People believe a good deal that is
-false, Diocles; and they mostly take a delight in inventing for
-themselves, and in accepting with avidity from others, mischievous
-stories about wise men. For instance, it was reported
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>152<span class='hidev'>|</span></span> to us in Egypt that Chilon had cancelled his friendship and
-his relations of hospitality with Solon, because Solon declared
-that laws were alterable.’ At this I answered, ‘The story is
-ridiculous; for in that case Chilon ought to begin by disclaiming
-Lycurgus and all his laws, as having altered the whole
-Lacedaemonian constitution.’</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>After a brief delay Solon said: ‘In my opinion a king or
-despot would win most renown <i>by furnishing his fellow-citizens
-with a popular, in place of a monarchical, government</i>.’ The
-second to speak was Bias, who said: ‘<i>By identifying his behaviour
-with the laws of his country.</i>’ Thales came next with the statement
-that he considered a ruler happy ‘<i>if he died naturally
-of old age</i>‘. Fourth Anacharsis: ‘<i>If good sense never failed him.</i>’
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>*<span class='hidev'>|</span></span> Fifth Cleobulus: ‘<i>If he trusted none of those about him.</i>’ Sixth
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_39'>39</span>Pittacus: ‘<i>If the ruler could get his subjects to fear, not him, but <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-for him.</i>’ Next Chilon said that ‘<i>the ruler’s conceptions should
-never be mortal, but always immortal</i>‘.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>After hearing these dicta, we claimed that Periander himself
-should express an opinion. With anything but cheerfulness,
-and pulling a serious face, he replied: ‘Well, the opinion I have
-to add is that every one of the views stated practically disqualifies
-a man of sense from being a ruler.’ Whereupon Aesop, as if in a
-spirit of reproof, said, ‘You ought, of course, to have discussed
-this subject by yourselves, and not to have delivered an attack
-upon rulers under pretence of being their advisers and friends.’ <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-‘Don’t you think,’ said Solon, taking him by the head and
-smiling, ‘that one can make a ruler more moderate and a despot
-more reasonable by persuading him that it is better to decline
-such a position than to hold it?’ ‘And pray who,’ he replied,
-‘is likely to follow you in the matter rather than the God, whose
-opinion is given in the oracle delivered to yourself:</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><i>Blessèd the city that hearkens to one commander’s proclaiming.</i>’</p>
-
-<p class='c015'>‘True,’ said Solon, ‘but, as a matter of fact, the Athenians,
-though with a popular government, do listen to one proclaimer <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-and ruler in the shape of the law. You have a wonderful gift
-at understanding ravens and jackdaws, but your hearing of the <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>*<span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-voice of modesty is indistinct. While you think that a state
-is best off when it listens, as the God says, to “one”, you believe
-that the best convivial party is that in which everybody talks
-on every subject.’ ‘Yes,’ said Aesop, ‘for you have not yet
-legislated to the effect that “<i>a slave shall not get tipsy</i>” is to
-stand on the same footing with those Athenian ordinances of
-yours which say “<i>a slave shall not indulge in love or in dry-rubbing
-with oil</i>”.’<a id='r29' /><a href='#f29' class='c009'><sup>[29]</sup></a> At this Solon broke into a laugh, and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_40'>40</span>Cleodorus the physician remarked: ‘But, in one respect,
-talking when the wine is taking effect does stand on the same
-footing with dry-rubbing—it is very pleasant.’ ‘Consequently,’
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> broke in Chilon, ‘it is the more to be avoided.’ ‘Yes,’ said
-Aesop again,<a id='r30' /><a href='#f30' class='c009'><sup>[30]</sup></a> ‘Thales did appear to recommend getting old
-as quickly as possible.’ Periander laughed, and said: ‘Aesop,
-we have been properly punished for dropping into other
-questions before bringing forward the whole of those from
-Amasis, as we proposed. Pray look at the rest of the letter,
-Niloxenus, and take advantage of the gentlemen being all here
-together.’ ‘As for that,’ replied Niloxenus, ‘whereas the command
-sent by the Ethiopian can only be called a “doleful
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> dispatch”—as Archilochus would say—your friend Amasis has
-shown a fine and more civilized taste in setting such problems.
-He bade him name the oldest thing, the most beautiful, the
-greatest, the wisest, the most universal, and—not stopping there—the
-most beneficent, the most harmful, the most powerful, and
-the easiest.’ ‘Well, and did his answers give the solution in
-each case?’ ‘His replies were these,’ said Niloxenus. ‘It is
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>153<span class='hidev'>|</span></span> for you to listen and judge; for the king is very anxious neither
-to be guilty of pettifogging with the answers, nor to let any
-slip on the part of the answerer escape without refutation.
-I will read you the replies as given. <i>What is the oldest thing?</i>—<i>Time.</i>
-<i>What the greatest?</i>—<i>The universe.</i> <i>What the wisest?</i>—<i>Truth.</i>
-<i>What the most beautiful?</i>—<i>Light.</i> <i>What the most
-universal?</i>—<i>Death.</i> <i>What the most beneficent?</i>—<i>God.</i> <i>What the
-most harmful?</i>—<i>Evil genius.</i> <i>What the strongest?</i>—<i>Fortune.</i>
-<i>What the easiest?</i>—<i>That which is pleasant.</i>’</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Well, Nicarchus, after the reading of this second passage
-there was a silence. Then Thales asked Niloxenus if Amasis
-was satisfied with the solutions. Upon his replying that he had
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> accepted some, but was dissatisfied with others, Thales said,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_41'>41</span>‘And yet not one of them is unassailable. There are great
-blunders and signs of ignorance all through. For instance,
-how can Time be the oldest thing, seeing that, while some of it
-is past and some present, some of it is future? Time which is
-to come after us must be regarded as younger than the events
-and persons of the present. Again, to call Truth wisdom
-appears to me as bad as making out that the light is the eye.
-Next, if he considered Light beautiful—as indeed it is—how
-came he to ignore the sun? As for the rest, the answer concerning
-gods and evil spirits is bold and dangerous, while in that <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-concerning Fortune the logic is exceedingly bad. Fortune
-would not be so readily upset if it was the strongest and most
-powerful thing in existence. Nor yet again is Death the most
-universal thing, for in the case of the living it has no existence.
-However, to avoid seeming merely to criticize the work of others,
-let us express views of our own and compare them with his.
-I am ready to be the first to be questioned point by point, if
-Niloxenus so desires.’</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>In relating the questions and answers I will put them exactly
-as they occurred. <i>What is the oldest thing?</i> ‘<i>God</i>,’ said Thales:
-‘for He is without birth.’ <i>What is greatest?</i> ‘<i>Space</i>: for <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-while the universe contains everything else, it is space that
-contains the universe.’ <i>What is most beautiful?</i> ‘<i>The cosmos</i>:
-for everything duly ordered is part of it.’ <i>What is wisest?</i>
-‘<i>Time</i>: for it is Time that has either discovered things or will
-discover them.’ <i>What most universal?</i> ‘<i>Expectation</i>: for
-those who have nothing else have that.’ <i>What most beneficent?</i>
-‘<i>Virtue</i>: for it makes other things beneficent by using them
-rightly.’ <i>What most harmful?</i> ‘<i>Vice</i>: for most things suffer
-from its presence.’ <i>What most powerful?</i> ‘<i>Necessity</i>: for it is
-invincible.’ <i>What most easy?</i> ‘<i>The natural</i>; not pleasure, for
-people often fail to cope with that.’</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The whole company being satisfied with Thales and his <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_42'>42</span>acumen, Cleodorus observed: ‘It is questions and answers of
-this kind, Niloxenus, that are proper for kings. On the other
-hand, the barbarian who gave Amasis the sea to drink, required
-the short answer made by Pittacus to Alyattes, when he wrote
-the Lesbians a letter containing an arrogant command. The
-reply was merely a recommendation to eat onions and hot
-bread.’<a id='r31' /><a href='#f31' class='c009'><sup>[31]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Here Periander joined in; ‘I may remind you, Cleodorus,
-that even in old times the Greeks had a habit of posing each
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> other with similar difficulties. We are told, for instance,
-that there was a gathering at Chalcis of the most distinguished
-poets among the wise men of the day, in order to celebrate
-the funeral of Amphidamas—a great warrior who had given
-much trouble to the Eretrians and had fallen in the fighting for
-Lelantum. The verses composed by the poets were so well
-matched, that it became a difficult and troublesome matter to
-judge between them, and the reputation of the competitors—Homer
-and Hesiod—caused the jury much diffidence and
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>154<span class='hidev'>|</span></span> embarrassment. Thereupon they had recourse to questions of
-the present kind, and Homer—as Lesches tells us—propounded
-the following:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Tell me, Muse, of such things as neither before have befallen,</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>Nor shall hereafter befall?</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>To which Hesiod instantly replied:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>When in eager pursuit of the prize the chariots, one ’gainst the other</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>Are dashed by the ringing-hoof’d steeds round the tomb where Zeus lieth buried.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>This answer, it is said, won particular admiration and secured
-him the tripod.’</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>‘But pray what is the difference,’ asked Cleodorus, ‘between
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_43'>43</span>such questions and Eumetis’s riddles? It is no doubt right <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-enough for her to set women such puzzles by way of amusement,
-constructing them as other women plait their bits of girdles or
-hair-nets. But for sensible men to treat them with any seriousness
-is absurd.’ Eumetis would apparently have liked to make
-some retort, but she was too shy, and checked herself, her face
-mantled with blushes. ‘Nay,’ said Aesop, by way of championing
-her, ‘it is surely more absurd to be unable to solve them.
-Take for example the one she set us just before dinner:</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><i>I saw a man glue bronze on a man; with fire did he glue it.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c015'>Can you tell me what that means?’ ‘No, and I don’t want <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-to be told either,’ answered Cleodorus. ‘And yet,’ said Aesop,
-‘no one is so familiar with the thing, or does it so well, as you.
-If you deny it, cupping-glasses<a id='r32' /><a href='#f32' class='c009'><sup>[32]</sup></a> will bear me out.’ At this
-Cleodorus laughed, for he made more use of cupping-glasses
-than any medical man of the day, and the estimation in which
-that remedy is held is especially due to him. ‘I beg to ask,
-Periander,’ said Mnesiphilus the Athenian, a close friend and
-admirer of Solon, ‘that the conversation, like the wine, shall
-not be limited to wealth or rank, but shall be put on a democratic
-footing and made to concern all alike. In what has just been <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-said about wealth and kingship there is nothing for us commoners.
-We think, therefore, that you should take a government with
-equal rights, and each of you again contribute some opinion,
-beginning once more with Solon.’ It was decided that this
-should be done. First came Solon. ‘Well, Mnesiphilus, you,
-like every other Athenian, have heard what opinion I hold
-about such a government. But if you desire to hear it again now,
-it seems to me that a community is in the soundest condition,
-and its popular government most securely maintained, <i>when the
-wrongdoer is accused and punished quite as much by those who <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_44'>44</span>have not been wronged as by the man that has</i>.’ The second to
-speak was Bias, who said that the best popular government is
-‘<i>that in which every one fears the law as he would a despot</i>.’
-Next came Thales with ‘<i>that in which there are no citizens either
-too rich or too poor</i>.’ Anacharsis followed with ‘<i>that in which,
-while everything else is treated as equal, superiority is determined
-by virtue and inferiority by vice</i>.’ In the fifth place Cleobulus
-affirmed that a democracy is most soundly conducted ‘<i>when its
-public men are more afraid of blame than of the law</i>‘. Sixth,
-Pittacus: ‘<i>Where the bad are not permitted to hold office and the
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> good are not permitted to decline it.</i>’ Last of all Chilon expressed
-the view that the best free government is ‘<i>that which pays least
-attention to the orators and most to the laws</i>.’ Periander once more
-summed up at the end by saying that they all appeared to him
-to be praising ‘that democratic government which most
-resembled an aristocratic.’</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Upon the conclusion of this second discussion I begged that
-they would also tell us the proper way to deal with a household;
-‘for while there are few who are at the helm of a kingdom or
-a commonwealth, we all play our parts in the hearth and home.’
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>155<span class='hidev'>|</span></span> At this Aesop said with a laugh: ‘No! not if in “all” you
-include Anacharsis. He has no home, but actually prides himself
-on being homeless, and on using a wagon—in the same way
-as they tell us the sun roams about in a chariot, occupying first
-one and then another region of the sky.’ ‘Yes,’ retorted
-Anacharsis, ‘and that is why, unlike any other—or more than
-any other—god, he is free and independent, ruling all and ruled
-by none, but always playing the king and holding the reins.
-You, however, fail to realize the surpassing beauty and marvellous
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> size of his car, otherwise you would not have tried to raise a
-laugh by jocosely comparing it with ours. It seems to me,
-Aesop, that to you a home means those coverings of yours made
-by clay and wood and tiles. You might as well regard a “snail”
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_45'>45</span>as meaning the shell instead of the animal. It is therefore natural
-that you should find cause to laugh at Solon, when he beheld
-all the costly splendour in the house of Croesus and yet refused
-to declare off-hand that its possessor was happy and blessed
-in his home; “for”—he argued—“I am more desirous of
-looking at the fine things in the man than at those in his house.”
-It appears, moreover, that you have forgotten your own fox.
-That animal, when she and the leopard were engaged in a dispute
-as to which was the more “cunningly marked”, begged the
-judge to examine her on the inside, inasmuch as she would be
-found to possess more “marks of cunning” from that point
-of view. But you go inspecting the productions of carpenters <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-and stone-masons, and regarding those as the “home”, instead
-of the inward and domestic constituents in the case—the
-children, wife, friends, and servants. If these have good sense
-and good morals, a man who shares his best means with them
-possesses a good and happy home, even if it be but an ant-hill
-or a bird’s-nest.’ ‘That,’ he continued, ‘is my answer to Aesop
-and my contribution to Diocles. But it is only fair that each
-of the others should express his own views.’</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Thereupon Solon said that in his opinion the best household
-was ‘<i>that in which the resources are acquired without dishonesty, <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-watched over without distrust, and expended without repentance</i>‘.
-According to Bias it was ‘<i>that inside which the master behaves
-for his own sake as well as he does outside for the law’s sake</i>‘.
-According to Thales, ‘<i>that in which the master can find most time
-to himself</i>‘. According to Cleobulus, ‘<i>where the master has more
-who love than fear him</i>.’ Pittacus would have it that the best
-house is ‘<i>that which wants no luxury and lacks no necessity</i>‘.
-Chilon’s view was that the house should be ‘<i>as like as possible
-to a state ruled by a king</i>‘, and he went on to observe that when
-some one urged Lycurgus to establish a republic at Sparta, he <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-answered: ‘You begin by creating a republic at home.’</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_46'>46</span>This topic also having been dealt with, Eumetis left the room
-in company with Melissa. Periander then pledged Chilon in
-a capacious goblet, and Chilon in turn pledged Bias. At this
-Ardalus got up, and, addressing Aesop, said: ‘Perhaps you
-will be good enough to pass yonder cup on to us, seeing that
-these gentlemen are passing theirs to each other, as if it were
-a Bathycles’s goblet,<a id='r33' /><a href='#f33' class='c009'><sup>[33]</sup></a> and are giving no one else a turn.’ ‘Nay,’
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>F<span class='hidev'>|</span></span> replied Aesop, ‘there is to be nothing democratic about this
-cup either, for Solon has been keeping it all to himself for quite
-an age.’ Thereupon Pittacus, addressing Mnesiphilus, asked
-why Solon, by not drinking, was testifying against the verses
-in which he had written</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Now do I welcome the tasks of the Cyprus-born goddess and Bacchus,</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>And tasks of the Muses that bring cheer to the heart of mankind.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>‘Because,’ said Anacharsis, before Mnesiphilus could speak,
-‘he is frightened at that cruel law of your own, Pittacus, where
-the words run, <i>If any one commit any offence when drunk, the
-penalty to be double that paid by a man who was sober.</i>’ ‘And
-you,’ retorted Pittacus, ‘showed such wanton contempt of
-the law that last year, when you had got intoxicated at that
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>156<span class='hidev'>|</span></span> party at Delphi, you asked for a prize and a victor’s wreath.’
-‘And why not?’ asked Anacharsis. ‘A prize was offered to
-him who drank most, and, since I was the first to get tipsy,
-I, of course, claimed the reward of victory. Otherwise will you
-gentlemen tell me what is the end and aim of drinking a large
-quantity of unmixed wine, if it is not to get intoxicated?’
-Pittacus laughed, while Aesop told the following story. ‘A wolf,
-having seen some shepherds eating a sheep in a tent, came close
-up to them, and said: “What a to-do you would have made
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_47'>47</span>if <i>I</i> had been doing that!”’ At this Chilon remarked, ‘Aesop
-has properly taken his revenge. A moment ago we put the
-muzzle on him, and now he sees that others have taken the words
-out of Mnesiphilus’ mouth. It was Mnesiphilus who was
-requested to answer on behalf of Solon.’ ‘Well, in doing so,’
-said Mnesiphilus, ‘I speak with knowledge. In Solon’s opinion <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-the concern of every art and faculty of man or God is with
-results rather than with agencies, the end rather than the
-means. A weaver, I take it, would consider his object to be
-a cloak or mantle rather than the arrangement of his shuttle-rods
-or the picking-up of his straightening-stones. To a blacksmith
-it is rather the welding of iron and putting an edge on an
-axe than any of the processes necessary thereto, such as the
-kindling of his charcoal or the preparation of lime. Still more
-would a master-builder object if, instead of a ship or a house,
-we declared his object to be the boring of wood or the mixing
-of mortar. The Muses would utterly scout the notion that their <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-concern is with a harp or flute, instead of with the cultivation
-of character and the soothing of the emotions of their votaries
-by means of melodies properly attuned. So—to come to the
-point—the object of Aphrodite is not sexual intercourse, nor
-that of Dionysus wine and tipsiness, but the friendly feeling,
-the longing, the companionship, and the close mutual understanding
-which they produce in us by those agencies. These
-are what Solon calls divine “tasks”, and he means that these
-are the objects which he appreciates and cultivates in his
-old age. Of reciprocal affection between men and women
-Aphrodite is the creator, using pleasure as the means of melting
-and commingling their souls at the same time with their bodies;
-while in ordinary cases, where persons are not very intimate or
-particularly acquainted, Dionysus uses wine as a kind of fire
-to soften and supple their dispositions, and so provides a starting-point
-towards a blending in mutual friendship.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_48'>48</span>‘But when such men meet together as Periander has invited
-in your persons, there is no need, I take it, of the goblet and the
-wine-ladle. The Muses set before you all, in the form of conversation,
-a mixing-bowl containing no intoxicant and yet
-abundance of pleasure, grave or gay. In this they stir friendly
-feeling, blend it, and pour it forth, while for the most part the
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> ladle is allowed to lie undisturbed “above the bowl”—a thing
-which Hesiod forbids where the company is better qualified
-for drinking than for conversation.’</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>‘As for pledging one another,’ he continued, ‘I gather that
-with the ancients the ceremony consisted of one large goblet
-going the round, each man drinking a measured “allowance”
-(as Homer tells us), and then letting his neighbour take his
-share, as he would do with a sacrificial portion.’</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>When Mnesiphilus had finished, the poet Chersias—who had
-ceased to be under censure and had lately been reconciled to
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> Periander through Chilon’s intercession—remarked, ‘Are we
-also to understand that, when the gods were the guests of Zeus
-and were pledging each other, he poured in their drink by
-measure, as Agamemnon did for his chieftains?’ ‘And pray,
-Chersias,’ said Cleodorus, ‘if Zeus has his ambrosia brought—as
-you poets say he does—by doves which find the greatest
-difficulty in flying over the Clashing Rocks, don’t you think
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>157<span class='hidev'>|</span></span> that his nectar is also scarce and hard to get, and that consequently
-he is sparing of it and doles it out economically?’
-‘Perhaps so,’ replied Chersias. ‘Since, however, the question of
-household economy has again been mooted, perhaps some one
-will deal with the remainder of the question. And that, I take
-it, is to discover what amount of property will be sufficient to
-meet all needs.’ ‘To the wise man,’ said Cleobulus, ‘the law
-has supplied the standard; but in reference to weak characters
-I will repeat a story which my daughter told her brother.
-The Moon, she said, asked her mother to weave a tunic to fit
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_49'>49</span>her; whereat the mother answered, “How can I possibly <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-weave one to fit? At one time I see you as a full moon, at
-another as a crescent, and at another gibbous.” Similarly, my
-dear Chersias, there is no way of determining the amount of
-means requisite for a weak and foolish person. His wants vary
-with his appetites and experiences, his case being that of
-Aesop’s dog, of whom our friend says that in winter he huddled
-and curled himself up with the cold, and contemplated making
-a house; but in summer it was different; he stretched himself
-out when he slept, thought himself a big fellow, and decided
-that it was both a laborious and an unnecessary task to build so
-large a house to cover him. Don’t you observe, Chersias’—he
-went on—‘that even insignificant people, though they will at
-one moment draw themselves into a very modest compass, with
-the idea of living a close and simple Spartan life, at another <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-time will fancy they are going to die of want unless they have
-all the money in the world—all the king’s and all the private
-people’s?’</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Chersias having nothing to say, Cleodorus joined in. ‘Well,
-but,’ he said, ‘I perceive that there is no equal distribution in
-the properties which even you sages respectively possess.’ ‘Yes,
-my dear sir,’ said Cleobulus, ‘because the law, like a weaver,
-allots us the amount which properly and reasonably fits each case.
-In your own profession, substituting reason for law, you feed <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-and diet and physic the sick by prescribing, not the same
-quantity for everybody, but the proper quantity for each case.’
-Here Ardalus interposed. ‘I suppose, then,’ he asked, ‘it is at
-the bidding of some law that Epimenides—the friend of you
-gentlemen and the guest of Solon—abstains from other kinds
-of food and passes the day without breakfast or dinner by merely
-putting in his mouth a little of that “anti-hunger essence”
-which he makes up for himself?’ This remark having arrested
-the attention of the party, Thales mockingly observed that
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_50'>50</span>Epimenides was a sensible man for refusing to be troubled—as
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> Pittacus was—with grinding and cooking his own food.
-‘You must know,’ he said, ‘that when I was at Eresus, I heard
-my hostess singing to the mill:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Grind, mill, grind;</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>For Pittacus is grinding,</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>As he kings it over great Mytilene.</i>’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>Then Solon expressed his surprise that Ardalus had not read the
-law ordaining the diet in question, seeing that it was written
-in the verses of Hesiod. ‘For it is he who first supplied
-Epimenides with hints for that form of nourishment, by
-teaching him to make trial <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span></p>
-
-<p class='c006'><i>How great and sustaining the food that in mallow and asphodel lieth.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c015'>‘Nay,’ said Periander, ‘do you imagine Hesiod conceived of
-anything of the kind? Don’t you suppose that, with his habitual
-praise of economy, he is merely urging us to try the most frugal
-dishes as being the most agreeable? The mallow makes good
-eating, and asphodel-stalk is sweet; but I am told that anti-hunger
-and anti-thirst drugs—for they are drugs rather than
-foods—include among their ingredients some sort of foreign
-honey and cheese, and a large number of seeds which are
-difficult to procure. Most certainly, therefore, Hesiod would
-find that the “<i>rudder</i>” hung “<i>above the smoke</i>” and</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><i>The works of the drudging mules and the oxen’s labour would perish</i>,</p>
-
-<p class='c015'><span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>158<span class='hidev'>|</span></span> if all that provision is to be made. I am surprised, Solon, if
-your guest, on recently making his great purification of Delos,
-failed to note how they present to the temple—as commemorative
-samples of the earliest form of food—mallow and asphodel-stalk
-along with other cheap and self-grown produce. The
-natural reason for which Hesiod also recommends them to us
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_51'>51</span>is that they are simple and frugal.’ ‘Not only so,’ remarked
-Anacharsis, ‘but both vegetables bear the highest possible
-character for wholesomeness.’ ‘You are quite right,’ said
-Cleodorus. ‘That Hesiod possessed medical knowledge is
-manifest from the careful and well-informed manner in which
-he speaks about diet, the mixing of wine, good quality in water, <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-bathing, women, and the way to seat infants. But it seems to
-me that there is more reason for Aesop to declare himself
-a pupil of Hesiod than there is for Epimenides. It is to the
-speech of the hawk to the nightingale that our friend owes
-the first promptings to his admirably subtle wisdom in many
-tongues. But for my part I should be glad to hear what Solon
-has to say. We may assume that, in his long association with
-Epimenides at Athens, he asked him what motive or subtle
-purpose he had in adopting such a diet.’</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>‘What need was there to ask him that question?’ replied
-Solon. ‘It was self-evident that the next best thing to the <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-supreme and greatest good is to require the least possible food.
-You allow, I suppose, that the greatest good is to require no
-food at all?’ ‘Not I, by any means,’ answered Cleodorus,
-‘if I am to say what I think, especially with a table in front of
-us. Take away food, and you take away the table—that is to
-say, the altar of the Gods of Friendship and Hospitality. As
-Thales tells us that, if you do away with the earth, the whole
-cosmos will fall into confusion, so the abolition of food means
-the dissolution of house and home. For with it you do away
-with the hearth-fire, the hearth, the wine-bowl, all entertainment
-and hospitality—the most humanizing and essential
-elements in our mutual relations. Or rather you do away
-with the whole of life, if life is “<i>a passing of the time on the part <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-of a human being involving a series of actions</i>”, most of those
-actions being evoked by the need, and in the acquirement, of
-food. Of immense importance, my good friend, is the question
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_52'>52</span><span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>*<span class='hidev'>|</span></span> of mere agriculture. Let agriculture perish, and the earth
-that it leaves us becomes unsightly and foul, a corrupt wilderness
-of barren forest and vagabond streams. The ruin of agriculture
-means the ruin of all arts and crafts as well; for she takes the
-lead of them, and provides them with their basis and their
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> material. Do away with her, and they count for nothing. There
-is an end also to our honouring the gods. Men will thank the
-Sun but little, and the Moon still less, for mere light and warmth.
-Where will you find altar or sacrifice to Zeus of the Rain,
-Demeter of the Plough, or Poseidon the Fosterer of Plants?
-How can Dionysus be Boon-Giver, if we need nothing that he
-gives? What sacrifice or libation shall we make? What offering
-of firstfruits? All this means the overthrow and confounding
-of our most important interests. Though to cling to every
-pleasure in every case is to be a madman, to avoid every pleasure
-in every case is to be a block. By all means let the soul have
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> other pleasures of a superior kind to enjoy; the body can find
-no pleasure more right and proper than that derived from
-taking food. All the world recognizes the fact, for this pleasure
-people take openly, sharing with each other in the table and the
-banquet, whereas their amorous pleasure is screened by night
-and all the darkness possible. To share that pleasure with others
-is considered as shameless and brutelike as it is not to share in
-the case of the table.’</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Here, as Cleodorus paused for a moment, I joined in: ‘And
-is there not another point—that in discarding food we also
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>159<span class='hidev'>|</span></span> discard sleep? If there is no sleep, there is no dreaming either,
-and we lose our most important means of divination. Moreover,
-life will be all alike, and there will be practically no purpose
-in wearing a body round our soul. Most of its parts, and the
-most important, are provided as instruments to feeding—the
-tongue, teeth, stomach, and liver. None of them is without its
-work, and none has other business to attend to. Consequently
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_53'>53</span>any one who has no need of food has no need of a body
-either. Which means that a person has no need of himself;
-for it is thanks to the body that each of us is a “self”.’ ‘Such,’
-I added, ‘are our contributions on behalf of the belly. If Solon
-or any one else has objections to bring, we will listen.’</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>‘Of course I have objections,’ replied Solon. ‘I have no <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-wish to be thought a poorer judge than the Egyptians. After
-cutting open a dead body, they take out the entrails and expose
-them to the sunlight. They then throw those parts into the
-river and proceed to attend to the rest of the body, which is
-now regarded as purified. Yes, therein in truth lies the pollution
-of our flesh. It is its Tartarus—like that in Hades—full of
-“dreadful streams”, a confused medley of wind and fire and
-of dead things. For while itself lives, nothing that feeds it can
-be alive. We commit the wrong of murdering animate things
-and of destroying plants, which can claim to have life through
-the fact that they feed and grow. I say destroying, because <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-anything that changes from what nature has made it into
-something else, is destroyed; it must perish utterly in order
-to become the other’s sustenance. To abstain from eating flesh,
-as we are told Orpheus did in ancient times, is more a quibble
-than an avoidance of crime in the matter of food. The only
-way of avoiding it, and the only way of attaining to justice by
-a complete purification, is to become self-sufficing and free of
-external needs. If God has made it impossible for a thing to
-secure its own preservation without injury to another, He has
-also endowed it with the principle of injustice in the shape of its
-own nature. Would it not, therefore, be a good thing, my dear
-friend, if, when cutting out injustice, we could cut out the
-belly, the gullet, and the liver, which impart to us no perception <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-of anything noble and no appetite for it, but partly resemble
-the utensils for cooking butcher’s meat—such as choppers and
-stew-pans—and partly the apparatus for a bakery—ovens, water-tanks,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_54'>54</span>and kneading-troughs? Indeed, in the case of most
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>*<span class='hidev'>|</span></span> people you can see their soul shut up in their body as if in
-a baker’s mill, and perpetually going round and round at the
-business of getting food. Take ourselves, for example. Just
-now we were neither looking at nor listening to one another,
-but we all had our heads down, slaving at the business of feeding.
-But now that the tables have been removed, we have—as you
-perceive—become free, and with garlands on our heads we are
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> engaged in sociable and leisurely conversation together, because
-we have arrived at the state of not requiring food. Well then,
-if the state in which we now find ourselves remains as a permanence
-all our lives, shall we not be at perpetual leisure to enjoy
-each other’s society? We shall have no fear of poverty. Nor
-shall we know the meaning of wealth, since the quest for
-luxuries is but the immediate consequence and concomitant of
-the use of necessaries.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>‘But, thinks Cleodorus, there must be food so that there may
-be tables and wine-bowls and sacrifices to Demeter and the
-Maid. Then let some one else demand that there shall be war
-and fighting, so that we may have fortifications and arsenals and
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> armouries, and also sacrifices in honour of slaying our hundreds,
-such as they say are the law in Messenia. Another, I suppose,
-is aggrieved at the prospect of the healthfulness which would
-follow. A terrible thing if, because there is no illness, there is
-no more use in soft bedclothes, and no more sacrificing to
-Asclepius or the Averting Powers, and if medical skill, with all
-its drugs and implements, must be put away into inglorious
-hiding! What is the difference between these arguments and
-the other? Food is, in fact, “taken” as a “remedy” for
-hunger, and all who use food are said to be “taking care” of
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>160<span class='hidev'>|</span></span> themselves and using some “diet”; and this implies that the
-act is not a pleasant and agreeable performance, but one which
-Nature renders compulsory. Certainly one can enumerate more
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_55'>55</span>pains than pleasures arising from feeding. Further still; whereas
-the pleasure affects but a small region of the body, and lasts
-but a short time, it needs no telling how full we become of
-ugly and painful experiences through the worry and difficulty
-of digesting.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Homer had these in view, I suppose, when he used as a proof
-that the gods do not die the fact that they do not feed:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>For they eat not the bread of corn, nor drink they the wine that is ruddy,</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>And therefore blood have they none in their veins, and are called the Immortals.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>Food, he gives us to understand, is the necessary means not only <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-for living, but for dying. From it come our diseases, feeding
-themselves with the feeding of our bodies, which suffer quite as
-much from repletion as from want. Very often it is an easier
-business to get together our supply of victuals than to make
-away with them and get quit of them again when once they are
-in the body. Just suppose it were a question with the Danaids
-what sort of life they would live and what they would do if
-they could get rid of their menial labour at filling the cask.
-When we raise the question, “Supposing it possible to cease
-from heaping into this unconscionable flesh all these things from <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-land and sea, what are we going to do?” it is because in our
-ignorance of noble things we are content with the life which our
-necessities impose. Well, as those who have been in slavery,
-when they are emancipated, do for themselves and on their own
-account what they used formerly to do in the service of their
-masters, so is it with the soul. As things are, it feeds the body
-with continual toil and trouble; but let it get quit of its menial
-service, and it will presumably feed itself in the enjoyment of
-freedom, and will live with an eye to itself and the truth, with
-nothing to distract and deter it.’</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>This, Nicarchus, concluded the discussion as to food.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_56'>56</span>While Solon was still speaking, Gorgos, Periander’s brother,
-entered the room. It happened that, in consequence of certain
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> oracles, he had been sent on a mission to Taenarum in charge
-of a sacrificial embassy. After we had welcomed him, and
-Periander had taken him to his arms and kissed him, he sat down
-by his brother on the couch and gave him a private account
-of some occurrence which appeared to cause Periander various
-emotions as he listened to it. At one part he was manifestly
-vexed, at another indignant; often he showed incredulity, and
-this was followed by amazement. Finally he laughed and said
-to us, ‘I should like to tell the company the news; but I have
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> scruples about it, because I heard Thales once say that when a
-thing is probable we should speak of it, but when it is impossible
-we should say nothing about it.’ At this Bias interposed, ‘Yes,
-but here is another wise saying of Thales, that “while we should
-disbelieve our enemies even in matters believable, we should
-believe our friends even when the thing is unbelievable”. By
-enemies I presume he meant the wicked and foolish, and by
-friends the good and wise.’ ‘Very well then,’ said Periander,
-‘you must let every one hear it; or rather you must pit the
-story you have brought us against those new-fangled dithyrambs
-and overcrow them.’</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Gorgos then told us his story.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>His sacrificial ceremony had occupied three days, and on the
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> last there was an all-night festival with dancing and frolic by
-the sea-shore. The sea was covered with the light of the moon,
-and, though there was no wind, but a dead calm, there appeared
-in the distance a ripple coming in past the promontory, accompanied
-by foam and a very appreciable noise of surge. At this
-they all ran in astonishment down to the place where it was
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>*<span class='hidev'>|</span></span> coming to land. This happened so quickly that, before they
-could guess what was approaching, dolphins were seen, some
-of them massed together and moving in a ring, some leading
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_57'>57</span>the way to the levellest part of the shore, and others as it were <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>161<span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-bringing up the rear. In the middle there stood out above
-the sea, dim and indistinct, the shape of a body being carried.
-So they came on, until, gathering together and coming to land
-at the same moment, they put ashore a human being, alive and
-moving; after which they themselves retired in the direction
-of the promontory, leaping out of the water more than ever
-and for some reason, apparently, frolicking and bounding for
-joy. ‘Many of our number,’ continued Gorgos, ‘fled from the
-sea in a panic, but a few found the courage to approach along
-with myself, and discovered that it was Arion, the harp-player.
-Not only did he utter his own name, but his dress spoke for itself, <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-for he was actually wearing the festal robes which he adopted
-when performing at the competitions. Well, we brought him
-to a tent, and, inasmuch as there was nothing the matter with
-him except that he was evidently tired and overstrained from
-the rushing motion, we heard him tell a story which no one
-would believe except us who actually saw the end of it.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>‘What Arion told us was this. He had for some time made
-up his mind to leave Italy, and had been made the more eager
-to do so by a letter from Periander. Accordingly, when a Corinthian
-merchant-vessel appeared on the scene, he at once went
-on board and put to sea. They had a moderate wind for three
-days, when he perceived that the sailors were forming a plot
-to make away with him, and was afterwards secretly informed <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-by the pilot that they had resolved to do the deed that night.
-At this, being helpless and at a loss what to do, he acted upon
-a kind of heaven-sent impulse. He decided that he would
-adorn his person and—while still alive—put on his own shroud
-in the shape of his festal attire. Then, in meeting his death,
-he would sing a <i>finale</i> to life, and in that respect show no less
-spirit than the swan does. Accordingly, having dressed himself
-and given notice that he felt moved to perform the Pythian
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_58'>58</span>hymn on behalf of the safety of himself and the ship and crew,
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> he took his stand on the poop by the bulwarks. After some
-prelude invoking the gods of the sea, he began to sing the piece.
-Just before he was half-way through, the sun began to set into
-the sea and the Peloponnese to come into sight. Thereupon
-the sailors no longer waited for night, but advanced to their
-murderous deed. Arion, seeing their knives unsheathed and
-the pilot beginning to cover his face from the sight, ran back
-and hurled himself as far as possible from the vessel. Before,
-however, his body had all sunk into the water, a number of
-dolphins ran under him and bore him up. At first he was filled
-with bewilderment, distress, and alarm; but when he found
-himself riding easily, and saw many of them gathering about
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> him in a friendly way, and taking turns at the work as if it were
-a necessary duty belonging to them all; and when the long
-distance at which the vessel was left behind showed how great
-was their speed; he said that what he felt was not so much
-fear of death or desire of life, as eagerness to be rescued, so that
-he might become recognized as the object of divine favour, and
-might have his reputation as a religious man assured.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>At the same time, observing that the sky was full of stars,
-and that the moon was rising bright and clear, while the sea
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> on all sides was waveless and a kind of path was being cut for his
-course, he was led to reflect that Justice has more eyes than one,
-and that God looks abroad with all those orbs upon whatever
-deeds are done by land or sea. By these reflections (he told us)
-he found relief from the weariness which was by this time
-beginning to weigh upon his body, and when at last, dexterously
-avoiding and rounding the lofty and precipitous headland which
-ran out to meet them, they swam close in by the shore and
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>162<span class='hidev'>|</span></span> brought him safely to land like a ship into harbour, he realized
-beyond doubt that he had been steered on his voyage by the
-hand of God. ‘When Arion had told us this story,’ continued
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_59'>59</span>Gorgos, ‘I asked him where he thought the ship would put in.
-He answered that it would certainly be at Corinth, but that
-it was left far behind; for, after throwing himself off it in the
-evening, he believed he had been carried over sixty miles and
-a calm had fallen immediately.’ Gorgos added, however, that
-after ascertaining the names of the captain and pilot, and also
-the ship’s flag, he had sent out vessels and soldiers to the various
-landing-places to keep a watch. Moreover, he had Arion with <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-him in hiding, so that they might not hear of his rescue beforehand
-and make their escape. ‘The event,’ he said, ‘has proved
-truly miraculous; for no sooner did we arrive here than we
-learned that the ship had been seized by the soldiers, and the
-traders and sailors arrested.’</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Thereupon Periander ordered Gorgos to get up and go out
-at once and place the men in custody where no one would
-approach them or tell them of Arion’s escape.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>‘Well now,’ said Aesop, ‘you gentlemen make fun of my
-jackdaws and crows for talking. Do dolphins behave in this
-outrageous way?’ To which I replied, ‘A different matter, <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-Aesop! A story to the same effect as this has been believed and
-written among us for more than a thousand years, ever since the
-times of Ino and Athamas.’</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Solon here interposed: ‘Well, Diodes; let us grant that
-these events are in the sphere of the divine and beyond us.
-But what happened to Hesiod is on our own human plane.
-You have probably heard the story.’ ‘For my part, no,’ I
-answered. ‘Well, it is worth hearing. Hesiod and a Milesian—I
-think it was—shared the same room as guests in a house at <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-Locri. The Milesian having been found out in a secret intrigue
-with the host’s daughter, Hesiod fell under suspicion of having
-all along known of the offence and helped in concealing it.
-Though in no way guilty, he fell a victim to cruel circumstance
-at a critical time of anger and misrepresentation. For the girl’s
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_60'>60</span>brothers lay in wait for him at the Nemeum in Locris and killed
-him, together with his servant, whose name was Troilus. Their
-bodies having been pushed into the sea, that of Troilus, which
-was carried out into the current of the river Daphnus, was
-caught by a low wave-washed rock projecting a little above
-the water. The rock still bears his name. Meanwhile the
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> dead body of Hesiod was picked up immediately off the shore
-by a shoal of dolphins, who proceeded to carry it to Rhium,
-close to Molycrea. It happened that the Locrians were engaged
-in the Rhian festival and fair, which is still a notable celebration
-in those parts. At sight of the body being borne towards them
-they were naturally amazed, and when, on running down to
-the shore, they recognized the corpse—for it was still fresh—they
-could think of nothing but tracking out the murder, so
-high was the renown of Hesiod. Their object was soon achieved.
-They discovered the murderers, threw them into the sea, and
-razed their house to the ground. Meanwhile Hesiod was
-buried near the Nemeum. Most strangers, however, are ignorant
-of his tomb, which has been concealed because the people of
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> Orchomenus are in quest of it, from a desire, it is said, to recover
-the remains and bury them in their own country in accordance
-with an oracle.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>‘If, then, dolphins show such affectionate interest in the
-dead, it is still more natural for them to render help to the living,
-especially if they have been charmed by the flute or the singing
-of tunes. For, of course, we are all aware that music is a thing
-which these animals enjoy and court, swimming and gambolling
-beside a ship as its oarsmen row to the tune of song and flute
-in calm weather. They take a delight also in children when
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>163<span class='hidev'>|</span></span> swimming, and they have diving matches with them. Hence
-there is an unwritten law that they shall not be harmed. No
-one hunts them or injures them; the only exception being that,
-when they get into the nets and do mischief to the catch, they
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_61'>61</span>are punished with a beating, like naughty children. I further
-remember hearing some Lesbians tell of a girl having been
-rescued from the sea by a dolphin. I am not, however, sure
-as to the exact details, and, since Pittacus knows them, he is
-the right person to tell us about them.’</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Pittacus thereupon assured us that the story had good warrant
-and was mentioned by many authorities. ‘An oracle was
-given to the colonizers of Lesbos that, when on the voyage they
-came across the reef known as Mesogeum, they should then and <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-there throw a bull into the water as an offering to Poseidon,
-and a live virgin to Amphitrite and the Nereids. There were
-seven chiefs, all of whom were kings, Echelaus—whom the
-Pythian oracle had assigned as leader of the colony—making
-an eighth. Echelaus was still a bachelor. When as many of the
-seven as had unmarried girls cast lots, the lot fell upon the
-daughter of Smintheus. Upon getting near the place, they
-decked her in fine clothes and gold ornaments, and, after
-offering prayer, were on the point of lowering her into the water.
-Now it happened that one of the party on the ship—assuredly
-a gallant young man—was in love with her. His name has been
-preserved to us as Enalus. This youth, in the passion of the <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-moment, seized by an eager but utterly hopeless desire to succour
-the girl, darted forward at the right instant and, throwing
-his arms about her, cast himself along with her into the sea.
-Now from the first there was spread among the contingent
-a rumour, lacking certainty, but nevertheless widely believed,
-that they were safe and had been rescued; and at a later date,
-it is said, Enalus appeared in Lesbos and told how they had
-been carried by dolphins through the sea and cast ashore
-without harm upon the mainland. He had other still more
-miraculous experiences to tell, which held the crowd spellbound
-with amazement, but for all of which he gave actual
-evidence. For when an enormous wave was rushing sheer round <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_62'>62</span>the island and people were terrified, he alone ventured to face it.
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>*<span class='hidev'>|</span></span> On its retiring, a number of polypi followed him to the temple
-of Poseidon. From the largest of these he took a stone which
-it was carrying, and offered it as a dedication. That stone we
-call Enalus.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>‘Speaking generally, the man who knows the difference
-between impossible and unfamiliar, between unreasonable and
-unexpected, will be most a man after your own heart, Chilon;
-he will neither believe nor disbelieve without discrimination,
-but will carefully observe your own rule of “<i>nothing in excess</i>”.’</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Anacharsis next made the remark that, as Thales believed
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> all the greatest and most important components of the universe
-to contain soul, there was no reason to wonder if the most
-splendid actions were brought to pass by the will of God.
-‘For the body is the instrument of the soul, and soul is the
-instrument of God. And as, though many of the motions of
-the body proceed from itself, the most and the finest are produced
-by the soul, so again is it with the soul. While it performs
-many actions on its own motion, in other cases it is but lending
-itself, as the aptest of all instruments, to the use of God, for Him
-to direct and apply it as He chooses. It would,’ said he, ‘be
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> a very strange thing if, while fire, wind, water, clouds, and
-rain are God’s instruments, by which He often preserves and
-nourishes and often kills and destroys, He has never on any
-occasion at all used animals as His agents. On the contrary,
-it is natural that, in their dependence upon the divine power,
-they should lend themselves more responsively to motions from
-God than does the bow to the Scythian or the lyre and flute
-to the Greek.’</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>After this the poet Chersias mentioned, among other cases
-of persons rescued in hopeless situations, that of Cypselus,
-Periander’s father. When he was a newborn babe, the men who
-had been sent to make away with him were turned from their
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_63'>63</span>purpose because he smiled at them. When they changed their
-minds and came back to look for him, he was not to be found,
-his mother having hidden him in a chest. ‘It is for this reason <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>164<span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-that Cypselus built the house at Delphi, believing that the
-god had then stopped him from crying so that he might
-elude the search.’</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>At this Pittacus, addressing Periander, observed, ‘I have to
-thank Chersias, Periander, for mentioning that house; for I have
-often wanted to ask you the meaning of those frogs which are
-carved in such large size at the base of the palm-tree. What
-reference have they to the god or to the dedication?’ Periander
-having bidden him ask Chersias, who knew the reason and was
-present when Cypselus consecrated the house, Chersias said with <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-a smile, ‘No: I will give no information until these gentlemen
-have told me the meaning of their <i>Nothing in excess</i> and <i>Know
-thyself</i>, and of those words which have kept many people from
-marrying, made many distrustful, and reduced some to positive
-dumbness—the words <i>Give a pledge, and Mischief is nigh.</i>’
-‘Why do you need us to tell you that,’ said Pittacus, ‘seeing
-that you have so long admired the stories in which Aesop
-practically deals with each of those maxims?’ ‘Nay,’ replied
-Aesop, ‘he does need it, when he is joking at me. But when
-he is in earnest, he proves that Homer was their inventor.
-He says that Hector “knew himself”, inasmuch as, though <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-he attacked the rest,</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Ajax, Telamon’s son, he would not fight, but he shunned him</i>,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>and that Odysseus recommends “nothing in excess” since he
-urges Diomede</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Nay, prithee, Tydeus’ son; nor praise me much nor reprove me</i>.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>As for a pledge, not only is it the general opinion that he is
-reprobating it as a misguided and futile thing when he says</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Sorry, I trow, to take are the pledges that sorry folk offer</i>,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_64'>64</span>but our friend Chersias here tells us how “Mischief” was hurled
-from heaven by Zeus because she was present when he was tripped
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> up through pledging his word in connexion with the birth of
-Heracles.’</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Here Solon interposed. ‘Well, Homer was a very wise man,
-and we should do well to take his advice:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Already the night is here; night bids, and ’tis good to obey her.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>Let us therefore pour an offering to the Muses and to Poseidon
-and Amphitrite, and then—with your permission—break up the
-party.’</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>This, Nicarchus, terminated the party on that occasion.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_65'>65</span>
- <h2 id='chap02' class='c003'>ON OLD MEN IN PUBLIC LIFE</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c004'>It is well known, Euphanes, that as an admirer of Pindar you <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>783 <span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-are fond of quoting his ‘fine and forcible words’:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>When struggle is afoot, excuses</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>Cast a deep cloud on valour.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>In connexion with the struggles of public life timidity and
-weakness can find plenty of excuses, but as a last and most
-desperate plea they urge ‘advancing years’. This is their
-pretext <i>par excellence</i> for blunting ambition and putting it out
-of countenance. They argue that there is a fitting close to
-a public, as much as to an athletic, career. For these reasons <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-I think it well to take my own ordinary reflections upon ‘old
-men in public life’ and lay them before yourself. They may
-prevent either of us from deserting that long companionship
-which has hitherto followed a common path, and from abandoning
-that public life which may be regarded as a familiar friend
-from youth up, in order to adopt another which is unfamiliar,
-and with which there is no time for us to become thoroughly
-intimate. I would have us abide by our original principle, and
-determine that life and the worthy life shall end together. It is
-not for us to convert the brief remainder into a confession that the
-bulk of our time has been wastefully applied to no good purpose. <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span></p>
-
-<p class='c005'>It is not, indeed, true—as some one told Dionysius—that
-‘despotism is a fine shroud’. In his case the combination of
-absolutism with injustice was only made all the more complete
-a calamity by the fact that it never ceased. It was therefore
-a shrewd remark of Diogenes, when at a later date he saw
-Dionysius’ son in a humble private station at Corinth. ‘Dionysius,’
-said he, ‘you are far from receiving your deserts. Instead
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_66'>66</span>of living a free and fearless life here with us, you ought to have
-been there, housed in the despot’s palace and made to live in it,
-like your father, till old age.’ It is different with constitutional
-and democratic statesmanship. When a man has learned to
-show himself a profitable subject as well as a profitable ruler, he
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> does indeed obtain at death a ‘fine shroud’, in the shape of the
-good name earned by his life. For this—to quote Simonides—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Is the last thing to sink beneath the ground</i>,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>except in cases where high human interests and noble zeal are
-earlier to fail and die than natural desires.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Are the active and divine elements of our being more evanescent
-than the passionate and corporeal? That were an unworthy
-view to hold; as unworthy as to accept the doctrine that the
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> only thing of which we never weary is making gain. On the
-contrary, we should improve upon Thucydides, and regard as
-‘<i>the only thing that never ages</i>’ not ‘<i>the love of honour</i>‘, but that
-public spirit and activity which even ants and bees maintain
-till the end. No one has ever seen old age convert a bee into
-a drone. Yet there are some who claim that public men who
-have passed their prime should sit and be fed in seclusion at
-home, allowing their practical abilities to rust away in idleness.
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>784<span class='hidev'>|</span></span> Cato used to say that, to the many plagues of its own from which
-old age suffers, there is no justification for deliberately adding
-the disgrace of vice. There are many vices, but none can do
-more than weak and cowardly inactivity to disgrace a man in
-years—a man who skulks away from the public offices to look
-after a houseful of women, or to supervise gleaners and reapers
-in the country.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in16'><i>Where now</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>Is Oedipus? Where the famed riddles now?</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>It is one thing to wait till old age before commencing public
-life, and to be like Epimenides, who—so they say—fell asleep
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_67'>67</span>a youth and fifty years afterwards awoke an old man. If, in <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-such a case, one were to divest himself of that quiet habit which
-has lasted all his life, and were to plunge into struggles and
-worries with which he was unfamiliar, and for which he was
-not trained by intercourse with public affairs or with mankind,
-there would be room for remonstrance. We might say, as the
-Pythian priestess said, ‘<i>You come too late</i>’ in your quest of office
-and leadership. You are past the time for knocking at the door
-of the Presidency. You are like some blundering reveller whose
-surprise visit is not made till night; or like some stranger who
-is in quest, not of a new district or country, but of a new life,
-about which you know nothing. If Simonides says</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><i>The State is a man’s teacher</i>,</p>
-
-<p class='c015'>it is true only of those who have the time to change their teacher
-and learn a new lesson—a lesson slowly and laboriously acquired
-by means of many a struggle and experience, and only when it <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-can take its hold sufficiently early on a natural genius for bearing
-toils and troubles with equanimity.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>To resume. We find that, on the contrary, it is striplings and
-youths whom sensible men do their best to keep out of public
-business. Witness our laws, under which the crier in the
-Assembly, when inviting speech and advice, calls upon the
-platform in the first instance not an Alcibiades or a Pytheas,
-but persons over fifty. Foolish audacity and lack of experience <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-are nowhere so out of place as in a deliberator or a judge.<a id='r34' /><a href='#f34' class='c009'><sup>[34]</sup></a> Cato,
-when past eighty and on his defence, said it was hard to have to
-defend himself before one set of people after having lived with
-another. It is agreed on all hands that the measures of Caesar—the
-conqueror of Antony—became considerably more regal and
-good for the public towards the end of his life. Once, when by
-stern application of custom and law he was correcting the rising
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_68'>68</span>generation, and they made an outcry, his own words were:
-‘Young men, listen to an old man to whom old men listened
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> when he was young.’ It was in old age, too, that the statesmanship
-of Pericles reached its greatest influence. This was the
-time when he induced the Athenians to enter upon the war,
-and when he successfully opposed their ill-timed eagerness to
-fight a battle against sixty thousand men-at-arms, by all but
-sealing up the public armouries and the locks of the gates.
-As for what Xenophon writes of Agesilaus, it is best to quote
-verbatim. <i>‘Is there any youth with whom this old man did not
-compare to advantage? Who in the prime of life was so formidable
-to an enemy as Agesilaus was at the most advanced age? Of whom
-was the foe so glad to be rid as of Agesilaus, though he was old
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> when his end came? Who inspired such courage in his own side
-as Agesilaus, although close upon the end of life? What young
-man was more regretted by his friends than Agesilaus, though he
-died when full of years?</i>’</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Well, if time was no hindrance to the great actions of men like
-these, what of us, who nowadays enjoy the luxury of a public
-life which admits of no despots, no fighting, no sieges, but only
-of warless contests and of ambitions which are for the most part
-settled by just means according to law and reason? Are we
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>785<span class='hidev'>|</span></span> to play the coward? Must we confess that we are the inferiors,
-not merely of the commanders and popular leaders of those
-days, but of the poets, leaders of thought, and actors? Take
-Simonides. He won choric victories in old age, as is evident
-from the last lines of the epigram:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>And withal to Simonides fell the glory and prize of the poet;</i></div>
- <div class='line in2'><i>Fell to Leoprepes’ son, come to his eightieth year.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>Take Sophocles. It is said that, when his sons charged him
-with being in his dotage, he read in his defence the entrance
-ode of the <i>Oedipus at Colonus</i>, beginning:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_69'>69</span><i>To this land of the steed, O stranger,</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>To the goodliest homes on earth,</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>Thou hast come—to the white Colonus,</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>Fond haunt of the nightingale,</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>Where her clear voice trills its sorrow</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>In the green of the leafy dell....</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>a lyric which won such admiration that he left the court, as it <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-might have been the theatre, amid the applause and cheers of
-the audience. A little epigram, admitted to be by Sophocles,
-contains the words:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Five years and fifty Sophocles had seen,</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>Ere for Herodotus he wrought a song.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>Take Philemon, the comic poet, and Alexis. They were still
-putting plays upon the stage, still winning crowns, when death
-overtook them. Take Polus, the tragedian. Eratosthenes and
-Philochorus inform us that, shortly before his end, and when <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-he was seventy, he acted eight tragedies in four days.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Is it, I say, creditable that old men of the platform should
-show a poorer spirit than old men of the stage? That they
-should retire from the sacred contests—for ‘sacred’ these veritably
-are—and give up the rôle of the public man in exchange
-for goodness knows what other part? From king, say, to farmer
-is a descent indeed. Demosthenes calls it cruel treatment of the
-<i>Paralus</i>, to make that sacred warship carry cargoes of timber,
-vine-stakes, and cattle for Meidias. But suppose a public man
-abandons the Presidentship of Games, his seat on the Federal
-Board, his high place in the Sacred League, and is found <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-measuring out barley-meal and olive-cake, or shearing sheep.
-It cannot but look as if he were needlessly courting the status
-of ‘old worn-out horse’. As for leaving a public career to
-engage in vulgar and petty trade, one might as well take
-some self-respecting lady, strip off her gown, give her an
-apron, and keep her in a tavern. Turn public ability to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_70'>70</span>mere business and money-making, and its rank and character
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> are lost.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Or if, as a last alternative, people choose to talk of ‘ease and
-enjoyment’, when they mean luxurious self-indulgence; if they
-recommend the public man to adopt that process of idle senile
-decay, I hardly know which of two ugly comparisons will best
-hit off such a life. Shall I say it is a case of sailors taking ‘Aphrodite-holiday’
-and keeping it up for ever, without waiting till
-their ship is berthed, but deserting it while still on the voyage?
-Or is it a case of ‘Heracles-chez-Omphale’—as some sorry
-humourists depict him—wearing a saffron gown and quietly
-allowing Lydian handmaids to fan him and braid his hair?
-Are we to treat our public man in that way? To strip off his
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> lion’s-skin, lay him on a couch, and feast him, with lute and flute
-lulling him all the while? Or should we not take warning by
-the retort of Pompey the Great to Lucullus? The latter, after
-his campaigns and public services, had given himself up to
-baths, dinners, social entertainments in the daytime, profound
-indolence, and new-fangled notions in the way of house-building.
-Meanwhile he accused Pompey of a fondness for place and power
-unsuited to his years. Pompey replied that for an old man
-effeminacy was more unseasonable than office. When he was
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>786<span class='hidev'>|</span></span> ill and the doctor ordered him fieldfares—the bird being then
-out of season and difficult to procure—and when some one told
-him that Lucullus had a large number in his preserves, he refused
-to send for or receive one, exclaiming, ‘What? Pompey could
-not live but for the luxury of Lucullus?’</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>It may be true that nature ordinarily seeks pleasure and
-delight. But, with an old man, the body has become incapable
-of all pleasures except a few which are essential. Not only
-is it the case that</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>The Queen of Love turns weary from the old</i>,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'><span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> as Euripides has it. Though they may retain the appetite for
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_71'>71</span>eating and drinking—generally in a dulled or toothless form—they
-find a difficulty in whetting the edge or sharpening the
-teeth even of that. It is in the mind that one must lay up
-a stock of pleasures, though not of the mean and ignoble kind
-indicated by Simonides, when he told those who reproached
-him with avarice that, though age had robbed him of other
-joys, he had still one left to support his declining years—the
-joy of money-making. In public activity there are pleasures
-of the greatest and noblest sort, such as we may believe to be
-the only, or the chief, enjoyment of the gods themselves—I
-mean those which result from a beneficent deed or a fine
-achievement.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Nicias the painter was so taken up with his artistic work that
-he was often obliged to ask his servants whether he had had his <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-bath or his breakfast. Archimedes stuck so closely to his drawing-board
-that, in order to anoint him, his attendants had to drag
-him away and strip him by force. He then went on drawing
-his diagrams in the ointment on his body. Carus the flutist
-(an acquaintance of your own) used to say that people did not
-know how much more pleasure he himself got from playing than
-he gave to others; otherwise an audience would be paid to
-listen instead of paying. Can we fail to perceive how great are
-the pleasures derived from fine actions and public-spirited
-achievements by those who put high qualities to use? Nor is
-it by means of those effeminate titillations which soft and agreeable
-movements exert upon the flesh. The ticklings of the flesh <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-are spasmodic, fickle, intermittent, whereas the pleasures of
-noble deeds—the creations of the true statesman’s art—will
-bear the soul aloft in grandeur and pride and joy, as if, I will
-not say upon the ‘<i>golden wings</i>’ of Euripides, but upon those
-‘<i>celestial pinions</i>’ described by Plato.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Remember the instances of which you have so often heard.
-Epaminondas, when asked what had been his most pleasurable
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_72'>72</span>experience, replied, ‘Having been victorious at Leuctra while
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> my father and mother were still alive.’ When Sulla first reached
-Rome after purging Italy of its civil wars, he could not sleep
-a wink that night. As he has written in his own <i>Notes and
-Recollections</i>, so elated was his mind with the greatness of his
-joy and happiness, that it seemed to walk on air. If we admit,
-with Xenophon, that ‘<i>no hearing is so agreeable as praise</i>‘, no
-sight, recollection, or reflection is so fraught with gratification
-as the contemplation of exploits of our own in the conspicuous
-public arena of office and statesmanship. Not but what, when
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> a grateful goodwill testifies to our achievements, and when
-there is a rivalry of commendation productive of well-earned
-popularity, our merit acquires a gloss and brilliance which adds
-to our sense of pleasure.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Therefore, instead of permitting our reputation to wither
-in our old age like an athlete’s crown, we must be constantly
-adopting new devices and making fresh efforts to enliven the
-sense of past obligation, to enhance it, and to make it permanent.
-We must act like the craftsmen who were required to provide for
-the security of the Delian ship. They used to replace unsound
-timbers by others, and, by means of insertions and repairs, were
-regarded as keeping the vessel immortal and indestructible from
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>787<span class='hidev'>|</span></span> the oldest times. Reputation is like flame. There is no difficulty
-in keeping it alive; it merely requires a little feeding with fuel.
-But let either of them become extinct and cold, and it will
-take some trouble to rekindle.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Lampis, the shipowner, was once asked how he made his
-fortune. ‘Making the big one,’ he answered, ‘was easy enough;
-but it was a long and hard business to make the little one.’
-So with political power and reputation. Though not easy to
-get in the first instance, anything will suffice to maintain and
-increase them when once they are great. It is as with a friend,
-when once he becomes such. He does not look for a large
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_73'>73</span>number of important services in order to retain his friendship; <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-small tokens, consistently shown, will keep his constant affection.
-Nor are the confidence and friendship of the people perpetually
-calling for you to open your purse, to play the champion, or to
-hold an office. They are retained by mere public spirit—by
-being in no haste to desert or shirk the burden of care and
-watchfulness.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Campaigns are not matters of everlastingly facing the enemy,
-fighting, and besieging. They have also their times of sacrifice,
-their occasional social gatherings, their periods of ample leisure,
-when jest and nonsense are toward. And why should one look
-upon public life with dread, as being laborious, wearisome, and
-devoid of consolations, seeing that the theatre, processions,
-awards, ‘<i>dances of the Muses and Gladsomeness</i>,’ and honour <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-after honour to the gods relax the stern brow of the Bureau
-or the Chamber, and yield a manifold return of inviting
-entertainment?</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>In the next place jealousy, the greatest bane of public life, is
-less severe upon old age. For, to quote Heracleitus, ‘<i>dogs bark
-at the man they do not know</i>.’ Though jealousy may fight with
-the beginner at the doors of the platform and refuse him access,
-no savageness or fierceness is shown to a man of familiar and
-established reputation, but he finds friendly admittance. For
-this reason some have compared jealousy to smoke. In the case
-of beginners, during the process of kindling, it pours forth
-in clouds; when they are in full blaze, it disappears. And while <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-people resist and dispute other forms of superiority—in merit,
-birth, or public spirit—through a belief that any acknowledgement
-to others means so much derogation to themselves, the
-primacy which is due to time—‘seniority’ in the proper sense—is
-conceded without a grudge. Respect paid to the aged has
-the unique quality of doing more honour to the giver than
-to the recipient.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_74'>74</span>Moreover it is not every one who expects to attain to the
-power derived from wealth, eloquence, or wisdom; whereas
-no public man despairs of winning the esteem and distinction
-to which age gradually leads.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Imagine a navigator, who has managed his ship safely in the
-face of contrary winds and waves, and then, when the weather
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> becomes fair and calm, wishes to lay her to. It is just as strange
-when a man has fought his ship in a long battle with jealousies,
-and then, after they are quietly laid, backs out of public life,
-and, in abandoning his activities, abandons his partners and
-associates. The more time there has been, the more friends
-and fellow-workers he has made; but he is neither in a position
-to lead them with him off the stage, as a poet does his chorus,
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> nor has he the right to leave them in the lurch. A long public
-life is like an old tree. To pull it up is no easy task, because
-of its many roots and its entanglement with many interests,
-which involve worse wrenching and disturbance when you leave
-them than when you stay.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>And if political conflict does leave you some remnant of
-jealousy or antagonism to face when you are old, it is better
-to quell it by means of your position than to turn your back
-and retire without armour or weapons of defence. People are
-not so ready to attack you out of jealousy when you are still
-in action as they are out of contempt when you give it up.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>788<span class='hidev'>|</span></span> We may also appeal to the great Epaminondas and his remark
-to the Thebans. It was winter at the time, and the Arcadians
-were inviting them to enter the city and live in the houses.
-This he refused to allow, observing: ‘At the present time they
-come to look at you and admire your wrestling and military
-exercises; but if they see you sitting by the fire and chewing
-your beans, they will regard you as no better than themselves.’
-So with an aged man. When making a speech, transacting
-business, or receiving honours, he is a dignified spectacle; but
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_75'>75</span>when he lies all day on a couch or sits in the corner of a public <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-resort talking drivel and wiping his nose, he is an object of
-contempt. This is precisely what Homer teaches, if you read
-him rightly. Nestor, who was campaigning at Troy, received
-high respect and honour; whereas Peleus and Laertes, the
-stay-at-homes, were despised, and counted for nothing.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Nay, even intellectual power begins to fail those who have
-let themselves relax. Idleness gradually renders it feeble and
-flaccid, in the absence of some necessary exercise of thought
-to keep the logical and practical faculty perpetually alive and
-in trim.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Like glossy bronze, ’tis use that makes it shine.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>Bodily weakness may be a drawback to public activity in the <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-case of those who, in spite of their years, make the platform
-or the Cabinet their goal. But it is more than compensated
-by the advantage of their caution and prudence. They do not
-dash into public affairs with the expression of opinions prompted
-by error or vanity as the case may be, and carrying the mob with
-them in as excited a condition as a stormy sea; but they deal
-in a mild and reasonable fashion with such matters as arise.
-It is for this reason that, in times of disaster or alarm, communities
-feel the need of a Board of Government consisting of
-senior men. Often they have fetched back from the country <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-an old man who neither asked nor wished it, and have compelled
-him to put his hand to the helm and steer the ship of State
-into safety, while they thrust aside generals and popular leaders,
-despite all their ability to shout, to talk without taking breath,
-and also, no doubt, to make ‘<i>sturdy stand and doughty fight</i>’
-against the enemy. When Chares, the son of Theochares—a
-man in the prime of bodily strength and condition—was
-brought into the ring in opposition to Timotheus and Iphicrates
-by the public speakers of Athens, with the claim that ‘this is
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_76'>76</span>the kind of general the Athenians should have’, Timotheus
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> replied: ‘By no manner of means. No doubt that is the sort
-needed to carry the general’s baggage; but the general should
-be one who “<i>sees before and after</i>”, and whose calculations as
-to policy no distractions can disturb.’ Sophocles said ‘he was
-glad that old age had enabled him to escape from sexual passion—a
-fierce and mad master.’ But in public life we have to escape,
-not from one master—the love of women—but from many
-madder still; from contentiousness, vanity, and the desire to be
-first and greatest—a malady most fertile in envy, jealousy, and
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> feud. Some of these feelings are abated or dulled, some are
-altogether chilled and quenched, by old age. And though old
-age may do something to diminish our zest for action, it does
-more to guard us from the intemperate heat of passion, so
-that we can bring a sober and steady reason to bear upon our
-thoughts.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>By all means, in dealing with one who begins to play the youth
-when his hair is grey, let it be—as it is considered—sound
-warning to say:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Misguided man, stay quiet in thy bed.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'><span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>789<span class='hidev'>|</span></span> Let us remonstrate with an old man when he rises from a long
-privacy, as from a bed of sickness, and bestirs himself to obtain
-a command or an official post. But suppose a man has lived
-a life of public action and thoroughly played the part. To
-prevent him from going on till ‘finis and the torch’, to call
-him back and bid him change the road he has long followed, is
-utterly unfeeling, and bears no resemblance to the case just
-given. If an old man has his wreath on and is scenting himself
-in readiness to marry, there is nothing unreasonable in trying
-to dissuade him by quoting the lines addressed to Philoctetes:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>But, pray, where is the bride, where the young maid,</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>Would welcome thee? Rare bridegroom thou, poor soul!</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_77'>77</span>Nay, they are fond of making jests of the kind at their own <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-expense:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>I’m marrying old, and for the neighbours’ good:</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>I know it.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>But when a man has been long married, and has lived with his
-wife for years without a fault to find, to tell him that he should
-divorce her because he is old, and that he should live by himself or
-get a wretched concubine in place of his lawful spouse, is the very
-extreme of absurdity. In the same way when an aged man seeks to
-enter politics—Chlidon the farmer, Lampon the ship’s captain,
-or some philosopher from the Garden<a id='r35' /><a href='#f35' class='c009'><sup>[35]</sup></a>—there is some reason in
-admonishing him, and keeping him to the state of inactivity to
-which he has been used. But it is urging a public man to act <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-with injustice and ingratitude, when we take hold of a Phocion,
-a Cato, or a Pericles, and say, ‘Sir Athenian—or Sir Roman—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Thine age is wither’d and thy head o’erfrosted</i>;</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>therefore sue for a divorce from statesmanship, have done with
-the worrying business of the platform and the Board of War,
-and make haste into the country, to live with farming “for
-a waiting-maid” or to occupy the rest of your days with thrift
-and the keeping of accounts.’</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Well, but (it may be asked) what of the soldier in the comedy
-with his</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Discharged! No pay! because of my white hair?</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>Quite true, my friend. The War-God’s servants must be in the
-prime of manly vigour. Their business is with</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>War and war’s baleful work</i>,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>in which, though an old man’s grey hair may be hidden by his <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-helmet,</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Yet in secret his thews are aweary</i>,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>and, though the spirit be willing, the strength can no longer
-respond.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_78'>78</span>But the ministers of Zeus—the God of Council, of Assembly,
-of the State—are not asked for deeds of hand and foot, but for
-counsel and foresight. We ask them for advice, not such as
-to evoke roars of mere noise in the Assembly, but full of sense
-and shrewdness, and safe to follow. In their case the despised
-white hair and wrinkles become the visible tokens of experience.
-They suggest moral force, and are therefore a help to persuasion.
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> It is the part of youth to obey; of old age to guide; and that
-state is safest where</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Best are the old men’s counsels,</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>And best the young man’s spear.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>Homer’s</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>And first he summon’d to council the old men mighty-hearted</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>By the side of the ship of Nestor</i>,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>is a touch greatly admired. For the same reason the Select
-Board associated with the kings at Sparta was called by the
-Pythian oracle ‘elder-born’, but by Lycurgus ‘old men’
-<i>sans phrase</i>, while the Roman Council is called <i>Senatus</i> down to
-the present time. The law crowns a man with the circlet and
-the wreath, Nature crowns him with grey hair, and both are
-the venerable emblems of sovereign rank. Moreover, the words
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> <i>geras</i>, ‘prerogative,’ and <i>gerairein</i>, ‘honour with prerogative’—derived
-from <i>geron</i>, ‘old man’—retain a dignified sense, not
-because the old man’s bath is warmed and his bed a softer one,
-but because he amounts to a king in the state by virtue of his
-wisdom; and wisdom is like a late-fruiting plant, it is only in old
-age that nature brings out its special excellence and perfect
-quality.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>When the king of kings prayed to the gods</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Would that among the Achaeans were ten such as he to advise me!</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'><span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>790<span class='hidev'>|</span></span> —meaning Nestor—not one of the ‘<i>valorous</i>’ and ‘<i>prowess-breathing</i>’
-Achaeans complained. They all admitted that not
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_79'>79</span>only in statesmanship, but in war also, age was of great moment,
-since</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>More worth is one sage thought than many a hand</i>,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>and one rational and cogent judgement achieves the finest and
-most important results in public affairs.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Now kingship, the most complete and comprehensive form
-of public activity, is full of cares, labours, and preoccupations.
-Seleucus, it was said, used to declare that if ordinary people
-knew what a business it was merely to write and read so many
-letters, they would not pick up the crown if they found it <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-lying in the street. And the story goes that, when Philip was
-proposing to encamp in an excellent position, but was told that
-there was no fodder for the pack-animals, he exclaimed: ‘Good
-Heavens! what is our life worth, when we are obliged to suit it
-to the convenience of our asses?’ Ought we then to give the
-same advice to a king when he has grown old? Bid him lay
-aside the crown and the purple, take to a cloak and a crutched
-stick, and live in the country, for fear people should think it
-officious and unseasonable of him to be reigning when he is
-grey?</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>But we have no right to talk in this way about an Agesilaus,
-or a Numa, or a Darius. Neither then should we compel a Solon <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-to leave the Council of the Areopagus, nor a Cato the Senate,
-nor yet urge a Pericles to leave popular government to look after
-itself. It is contrary to reason that in our youth we should
-bounce upon the platform, spend upon the public all the
-passionate licence of our ambition, and then, when age arrives
-and brings the wisdom of experience, desert and betray our
-public standing like a woman whom we have used at our
-pleasure.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>In Aesop, when the hedgehog wanted to pick off his ticks,
-the fox would not let him. ‘These are glutted,’ said he, ‘and <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-if you get rid of them, hungry ones will be at you in their place.’
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_80'>80</span>So with public life. If it is perpetually shedding the old men,
-it will necessarily be plagued with young ones, who are thirsting
-for notoriety and power but devoid of political sense. How
-can they be otherwise, if they are to have no elderly statesman
-to watch and learn from? A ship’s captain is not made by
-treatises on navigation. He must often have stood upon the
-quarter-deck and watched the struggle with wave and wind
-and stormy nights, when</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>The sailor on the brine longs sore</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>For Tyndareus’ twin sons.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>And can the handling of a State and the persuading of Assembly
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> or Council be rightly left to a young man because he has read
-a book or taken down a lecture on statesmanship in the Lyceum?
-Though he has not taken his stand many a time beside rudder-rope
-and tiller, leaned first to this side and then to that, while
-generals and public leaders were pitting their knowledge and
-experience against each other, and so learned his lesson in the
-midst of dangers and difficulties? Beyond question, No! For
-the education and training of the young, if for no other reason,
-old men should play a public part. A teacher of letters or of
-music himself reads or plays a passage over first by way of example
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> to his pupils. So the authority on statesmanship must guide
-a young man, not simply by talking or suggesting from outside,
-but by the practical administration of public business. It is
-by deeds as well as by words that he will mould him to the true
-shape, filled with the breath of life. It is training of this kind—not
-in the schools where you practise safe forms of wrestling
-under mannerly professors, but in contests truly Olympian and
-Pythian—that makes one, as Simonides puts it,</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Keep pace, as with the steed the wearied colt</i>;</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'><span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>791<span class='hidev'>|</span></span> —Aristeides with Cleisthenes, Cimon with Aristeides, Phocion
-with Chabrias, Cato with Fabius Maximus, Pompeius with
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_81'>81</span>Sulla, Polybius with Philopoemen. It was by attaching themselves
-when young to older men, by using them as supports to
-their own growth, by being raised to their standard of statesmanlike
-achievement, that they acquired the political experience
-which brought them fame and power.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>When certain professors declared that the claim of Aeschines,
-the Academic philosopher, to have been a pupil of Carneades
-was contrary to fact, he replied, ‘O yes: I was a disciple of
-Carneades at the time when age had taken all the fuss and noise <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-out of his teaching and reduced it to practical and serviceable
-shape.’ With the statesmanship of an old man, however, it is
-not merely the talking, but the deeds, that lose all ostentation
-and itch for notoriety. They tell us that, when the iris has
-grown old and exhausted all crude exuberance of perfume, its
-fragrance gains in sweetness. So with the views and suggestions
-of the old. There is no crudeness in them, but always a quality
-of quiet solidity. For this reason, as I have said, we must have
-elderly men in public life. Plato speaks of mixing water with
-neat wine as the bringing of a ‘frenzied god’ to sanity by the <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-‘chastening of another who is sober’. So when young spirits
-in the Assembly are a-boil with the intoxication of glory and
-ambition, we need the old men’s caution to qualify them and
-to eliminate their mad excess of fire.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>There is another consideration. It is an error to suppose that
-statesmanship is like a voyage or a campaign—carried on for
-an ulterior object and discontinued when that is attained.
-Statesmanship is not a public burden, to be borne only so long
-as needs must. It is the career of a civilized being with a gift
-for citizenship and society, and with a natural disposition to live
-a life of public influence, worthy aims, and social helpfulness
-for as long as occasion calls.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The right course therefore is to <i>be</i> a public man, not to
-<i>have</i> been one; just as it is right to speak the truth, not to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_82'>82</span><span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> <i>have</i> spoken it; to act honestly, not to <i>have</i> so acted; to love one’s
-country and fellow-citizens, not to <i>have</i> loved them. Those are
-Nature’s objects, and where men are not utterly demoralized by
-idleness and effeminacy, her promptings are such as these:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Thy sire begat thee for rich use to men</i>,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>and</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Ne’er let us cease from service to mankind.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>To urge the plea of ill-health or disablement is to blame
-disease and injury, not old age. Young men are often sickly,
-old men often vigorous. It is therefore not the old whom we
-should discourage, but the incapable. It is the capable whom
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> we should encourage, not the young. Aridaeus was young, and
-Antigonus old; but while Antigonus annexed nearly the whole
-of Asia, Aridaeus was like the ‘super’ upon the stage—a king
-with nothing to say, and a butt for whoever happened to be in
-power. To demand of the sophist Prodicus or the poet Philetas—who,
-young though they might be, were thin, sickly, and
-constantly taking to their beds through ill-health—that they
-should take up public life, were folly. But it were folly also to
-hinder old men like Phocion, or Masinissa the African, or the
-Roman Cato, from holding office or military command. The
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> Athenians being set upon an ill-timed war, Phocion ordered
-that every man under sixty should take up arms and serve.
-When this made them angry, he said, ‘There is no hardship.
-I, who am to be with you in command, am over eighty.’ And of
-Masinissa Polybius relates that he died when he was ninety,
-leaving a child of four, of whom he was the father. Shortly
-before his death he beat the Carthaginians in a great battle,
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>792<span class='hidev'>|</span></span> and the next day was seen in front of his tent eating a loaf of
-cheap coarse bread. To expressions of surprise he answered that
-he did so to keep himself in training.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>For like to goodly bronze, it shines in use,</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>While a house crumbles, if left idle long</i>,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_83'>83</span>says Sophocles. We may say the same of that glossy brightness
-of the mind, to which we owe calculation, memory, and sound
-judgement.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>For the same reason it is said that wars and campaigns
-make better kings than inactivity. Attalus, the brother of
-Eumenes, was so thoroughly enervated by long peace and <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-idleness that Philopoemen, one of his intimates, had simply
-to shepherd him and keep him fat. In fact, the Romans
-used to inquire of arrivals from Asia, whether ‘the king
-had any influence with Philopoemen’. It would be hard to
-find a Roman general more able than Lucullus, so long as he
-kept his intellect braced with action. But he surrendered
-himself to a life of inactivity, stayed at home, thought of
-nothing, and became as lifeless and shrunken as a sponge in
-a calm. Afterwards, in his old age, he so tamely accepted
-a certain freedman, Callisthenes, for his keeper, that the man <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-was thought to be bewitching him with spells and drugs,
-till at last his brother Marcus drove the fellow away and
-himself took to managing and tutoring him for the short
-remainder of his life. On the other hand, Darius, the father
-of Xerxes, used to say that he became his wisest in times of
-danger; and Ateas the Scythian declared that, when he had
-nothing to do, he could see nothing to distinguish him from his
-grooms. When some one asked the elder Dionysius if he had
-time to spare, he replied: ‘Heaven forbid I ever should!’
-Whereas a bow, they tell us, is broken by stringing it tight, a
-mind is broken by leaving it loose. If a musician gives up listening <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-for pitch, a geometrician the solving of problems, an arithmetician
-the constant habit of calculation, old age will enfeeble
-the ability along with the loss of its exercise, although the art
-in these cases is not a ‘practic’ one, but a ‘theoretic’. In the
-case of the special ability of the statesman—his caution, wisdom,
-and justice, together with an experienced knack of hitting the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_84'>84</span>right language at the right time; that is to say, a faculty
-for creating persuasion—it is kept in good condition by
-constant speech, action, calculation, and judicial decision.
-It would be a dire mistake for it to abandon such activities
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> and permit all those important virtues to leak away from
-the mind. For it naturally means a decline of kindly interest
-in man and society—a thing which should be without limit
-or end.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Suppose your father had been Tithonus. Suppose, though
-he was immortal, old age had made him require close and constant
-care. You would not, I imagine, have run away and
-repudiated the task of tending him, talking to him, and helping
-him, just because you had ‘borne the burden for a long time’.
-Well, your fatherland—or ‘motherland’ as it is called in Crete—has
-claims prior to those of parents, and greater. Your country’s
-life has been a long one, but she is not without old age. She is
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> not sufficient to herself, but is in perpetual need of watchful
-and considerate help. She therefore grasps at the statesman
-and holds him back:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Clutching his garment she stays him, though eager he be for departure.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>You are aware that I have performed my public duty at many
-a Pythian festival. But you would not say ‘Plutarch, you have
-done enough in the way of sacrifices, processions, and choruses.
-You are now in years; it is time to put off your wreath; age
-entitles you to leave the shrine alone’. Well, look at your own
-duty in the same way. In the sacred service of the State
-you are coryphaeus and prophet, and it is not for you to
-abandon that worship of Zeus, God of State and Assembly, in
-which you have been so long initiated and are so thoroughly
-versed.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>793<span class='hidev'>|</span></span> Permit me now to leave the arguments for quitting public
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_85'>85</span>life, and to examine another point. We must beware of inflicting
-upon our old age an unbecoming or exacting task, when so
-many portions of public work are so well suited to that time of
-life. If it had been proper for us to go on singing all our days,
-there are at our disposal many keys and modes, or, as the
-musicians call them, ‘systems.’ Our right course in our old
-age would have been to cultivate, not a mode both high and
-sharp, but one combining ease with appropriate character.
-And since Nature prompts mankind to act and speak—even more <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-than it prompts the swan to sing—until the end, our duty is
-not to lay action aside, like a lyre of too high a pitch, but to
-lower the key and adapt it to such forms of public effort as
-are light, unexacting, and within an old man’s compass. We
-do not leave our bodies entirely without muscular exercise
-because we cannot use the spade and the jumping-weights,
-or hurl the discus, or practise fencing, as we used to do.
-We swing or walk, and in some cases the breathing is exercised
-and warmth stimulated by playing a gentle game of ball, or
-by conversation.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>On the one hand, then, do not let us allow ourselves to become <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-stiff and torpid from inactivity. On the other, let us not undertake
-any and every official position, clutch at any and every kind
-of public work, and bring such an exposure upon old age that
-it is driven to exclaim in despair:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Right hand, how fain art thou to grasp the spear!</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>How vain thy longing, in thy strengthlessness!</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>Even in the prime of strength a man wins no credit if he tries to
-take on his shoulders the whole pack of public business, and <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-refuses—like Zeus, according to the Stoics—to leave anything
-to others; if he insinuates himself everywhere and has his
-finger in everything, through an insatiable greed for notoriety
-or through jealousy of any one who contrives to get a share
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_86'>86</span>of honour and power in the community. But when a man is
-quite old, then, apart from the discredit, wretchedly hard work
-is entailed by that itch for office which is always courting every
-ballot-box, that meddlesomeness which lies in wait for every
-opportunity of acting on a jury or a committee, that ambition
-which snaps up every appointment as delegate or proctor.
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> Such work is a heavy tax on an old man, even when people are
-well-disposed. But the opposite may very well be the case.
-For young men hate him because he leaves them no opportunities
-and prevents them from coming to the front; while
-the rest of the community looks upon his itch for office and
-precedence with the same disapproval as upon the itch of other
-old men for money and pleasure.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>When Bucephalus was growing old, Alexander, being unwilling
-to overwork him, used to ride some other horse while
-reviewing the phalanx and getting it into position before the
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> battle. Then, after giving the word for the day, he changed
-his mount to Bucephalus, and at once led the charge and tried
-the fortunes of war. In the same way a sensible public man—in
-this case handling his own reins—will, when in years, hold
-aloof from unnecessary effort, leaving more vigorous persons
-to deal with the minor matters of state, but himself playing
-a zealous part in great ones.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Athletes keep their bodies from all contact with necessary
-labours and in perfect trim for useless ones. We, on the
-contrary, will leave petty little details alone, and will keep
-ourselves in reserve for matters of moment. No doubt, as
-Homer says,</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>To the young all labours are seemly</i>,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>and the world gives consent and approval, calling them ‘public-spirited’
-and ‘energetic’ when they do a large number of little
-things, and ‘noble’ and ‘lofty-minded’ when they do brilliant
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_87'>87</span>and distinguished things. At that time of life there are <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>794<span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-occasions when a venturesome aggressiveness is more or less in
-season and wears a grace of its own. But what when an
-elderly man consents to perform routine services to the
-public, such as letting out taxes, or superintending harbours
-and markets? What when he seizes opportunities of being
-sent on a mission to some governor or other powerful personage—a
-position for which there is no necessity, which
-contains no dignity, and which necessitates time-serving and
-complaisance? To my mind, my friend, his case is one for
-regret and commiseration; some may even think it distressingly
-vulgar.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Not even positions of authority are any longer a suitable <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-sphere for him, unless they are of high rank and importance;
-such a position, for example, as you now hold in the Presidentship
-of the Areopagite Council, not to mention the distinguished
-rank of Amphictyon,<a id='r36' /><a href='#f36' class='c009'><sup>[36]</sup></a> which your country has imposed upon
-you all your life, with its</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Welcome toil and labour sweet to bear.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>Even these honours we should not seek, but should make from
-holding them. We should ask, not for them, but to be excused
-from them. It should seem, not that we are taking office to
-ourselves, but that we are surrendering ourselves to office. The
-Emperor Tiberius used to say that a man over sixty should be
-ashamed of holding out his wrist to a physician. But he should <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-be more ashamed of holding out his hand to the public in
-solicitation of its ‘vote and influence’. That situation is as
-humiliating and ignoble as the contrary is honourable and
-dignified—I mean when your country chooses you, calls you,
-and waits for you, and when you come down amidst respect
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_88'>88</span>and welcome, a ‘reverend signior’ indeed, to meet your distinction
-with gracious acceptance.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Similarly with speaking in the Assembly. A man of advanced
-age should not be perpetually springing upon the platform
-and crowing back to every cock that crows. Young men are
-like horses, and he should not, by constantly grappling with
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> them and irritating them, lose control of their respect, or
-encourage the practice and habit of resistance to the reins.
-He should sometimes leave them to make a restive plunge for
-distinction, keeping out of the way and not interfering, unless
-the matter at stake is vital to the public safety or to decency
-and honour. In that case he should not wait to be called, but
-should let some one take him by the hand, or carry him in his
-chair, and push his way at more than full speed, like Appius
-Claudius in Roman history. The Romans had been defeated
-by Pyrrhus in a great battle, and Appius heard that the Senate
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> was listening to proposals for a truce and a peace. This was
-more than he could bear, and, though blind of both eyes, along
-he came in his chair through the Forum to the Senate House.
-He went in, planted himself before them, and said: ‘Hitherto
-I have been distressed at the loss of my sight; now I could pray
-to be also unable to hear—that you are meditating so ignoble
-and disgraceful a transaction.’ Thereupon, partly by reproaches,
-partly by advice and encouragement, he persuaded them to have
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> immediate recourse to arms and to fight Pyrrhus to a finish
-for the prize of Italy.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Again, when it became manifest that, in acting the demagogue,
-Peisistratus was aiming at absolutism, and yet no one ventured
-to resist or prevent it, Solon brought out his weapons with
-his own hands, piled them in front of his house, and called upon
-the citizens to help. And when Peisistratus sent and asked
-him what gave him the confidence to do so, he replied, ‘My age.’</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Things so vital as these, it is true, are rousing enough to fire
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_89'>89</span>even the most worn-out of old men, so long as he possesses
-the breath of life at all. Otherwise he will sometimes, as I have
-said, be showing good taste if he declines to perform paltry
-and menial tasks which bring more worry to the doer than good <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>793<span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-to the persons for whom they are done. There are also occasions
-when he will wait for the citizens to call for him, feel the need
-of him, and come to his house to fetch him. He is wanted, and
-therefore his appearance on the scene will carry more weight.
-But for the most part, though present, he will be silent and will
-leave the younger generation to do the speaking, while he acts
-as umpire to the match of political ambition. And if it goes
-beyond bounds, he will offer a mild reproof and courteously
-put an end to outbreaks of self-assertion, recrimination, or
-ill-temper. When a motion is wrong, he will reason with and
-correct the mover, but without blaming him. When it is right,
-he will commend it without reserve and will cheerfully acquiesce,
-often surrendering an argumentative victory in order that <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-a young man may get on in the world and be in good heart.
-In some cases he will supply a deficiency while paying a compliment,
-like Nestor with his</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>No man, I trow, will find fault with thy words among all the Achaeans:</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>None say thee nay. Yet not to an end hast thou brought all the matter.</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>True ’tis, thou art yet but young, and myself might be thine own father.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>There is a practice still more statesmanlike. One may not
-merely teach a lesson openly in public by means of a reproval
-unaccompanied by any sting of humiliation or injury to prestige.
-Still more may be done in private for persons with good political
-abilities. We may offer them kindly suggestions and assistance <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-towards the bringing forward of useful arguments and public
-measures, encourage them to high aims, help them to acquire
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_90'>90</span>a distinguished tone of mind, and—as riding-masters do with
-their horses—see that at first the people shall be gentle and
-docile for them to mount. And if so be a young man should
-make a failure, instead of leaving him to despond, we may rouse
-and comfort him. It was in this way that the spirits and courage
-of Cimon were revived by Aristeides, and those of Themistocles
-by Mnesiphilus, when they began by incurring ill-odour and
-a bad name for forwardness and recklessness. It is also said
-of Demosthenes that, when he was in great distress at his failure
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> in the Assembly, he was taken to task by a very old man who had
-heard Pericles, and who told him that he had no right to despair
-of himself, seeing that he possessed gifts so much like those
-of that eminent person. So when Timotheus was hissed for
-his innovations and treated as guilty of an outrage on music,
-Euripides bade him keep up his courage, since he would soon
-be dictating to his audience.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>At Rome the term of the Vestal Virgins is divided into three
-stages—one for learning, one for the performance of the ceremonies,
-and the third for teaching. So with the votaries of
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> Artemis at Ephesus; each is called first a novice, next a priestess,
-and then a past-priestess. In the same way the complete
-statesman is during the first part of his public career still
-engaged in learning the mysteries; during the last part he is
-engaged in teaching and initiating.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Whereas to superintend the athletics of others is to take
-no part in them oneself, it is otherwise with those who train
-a youth in public business and the political arena, and who make
-sure that for the good of his country he shall</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Be speaker of words and eke doer of deeds.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>They perform good service, not in some petty inconsiderable
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> part of public life, but in one to which Lycurgus devoted his
-first and foremost attention—training the young to give to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_91'>91</span>every old man the same unfailing obedience as to a lawgiver.
-What had Lysander in his mind, when he declared that the
-finest form of old age is to be found at Lacedaemon? Did he
-mean that at Lacedaemon elderly people had the best opportunities
-of doing nothing, of lending money, of sitting together
-and playing dice, or of meeting together at an early hour to
-drink? Surely not. He meant that all persons at that time of
-life hold, as it were, a magisterial position; that they are, in
-a sense, public fathers or guardians, who not only look after
-matters of state, but take active cognisance of everything a young <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>796<span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-man may do in connexion with his training-school, his pastimes,
-or his style of living. Such a position makes them an object
-of fear to wrong-doers, and of respect and affection to the well-behaved.
-For young men make a point of cultivating their
-society, because of the way in which they encourage steadiness
-and nobility of character by sympathy and approbation and
-without jealousy.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The last-named feeling is not a becoming one at any time
-of life. But whereas in the case of a young man it finds plenty
-of respectable names—‘rivalry’, ‘emulation’, ‘ambition’—in
-an old man it is a coarse and vulgar sentiment altogether out
-of place. The aged statesman should therefore be entirely
-free from jealousy. He should be no malignant old tree, <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-unequivocally snubbing the shoots and checking the growth of
-plants which spring up beside or beneath it, but should give
-them a kindly welcome and every opportunity to cling to him
-and twine about him. He should hold young people upright,
-lead them by the hand, and foster them, not only by wise
-suggestion and advice, but by surrendering to them political
-tasks which bring honour and distinction, or which afford scope
-for services of an innocent nature and yet welcome and gratifying
-to the public.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>When a task is a stubborn and arduous one, or when it is
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_92'>92</span>like a medicine which stings and gives pain at the moment,
-while its beneficial effects are not produced till afterwards, he
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> should not prescribe it for young people. Instead of subjecting
-them in their inexperienced state to the uproars of an unreasonable
-mob, he should himself accept the unpopularity
-attaching to salutary measures. By this means he will render
-a youth both more well-disposed and also more zealous in other
-duties.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Meanwhile it must be remembered that statesmanship does
-not consist solely in holding office, acting as envoy, shouting
-loudly in the Assembly, and indulging in a fine frenzy of speeches
-and motions on the platform. The generality of people may
-think that these make a statesman, just as they think that talking
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> from a chair and delivering lectures based on books make a
-philosopher. But they fail to discern the sustained statesmanship
-or philosophy which is revealed consistently day after day
-in actions and conduct. As Dicaearchus used to say, the word
-<i>peripatein</i>, ‘walk’, has now come to be used of persons taking
-a turn in the colonnades rather than of those who are walking
-into the country or to see a friend. It is the same with acting
-the statesman as it is with acting the philosopher. For Socrates
-to play the philosopher there was no arranging of forms, seating
-himself in a chair, or observing a fixed time—arranged with
-his associates—for a discussion or discourse. He played the
-philosopher while joking with you, perhaps, or drinking with you,
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> or possibly campaigning with you, or at market with you, and
-finally when he was in prison and drinking the poison. He was
-thus the first to show that life affords scope for philosophy at
-every moment, in every detail, in every feeling and circumstance
-whatsoever. Statesmanship should be regarded in the same
-light. Foolish persons, even if they are Ministers of War, or
-Secretaries, or platform-speakers, should not be considered as
-acting the statesman, but as courting the mob, or making a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_93'>93</span>display, or creating dissension, or doing public service because
-they must. But when a man possesses public spirit and broad
-interests, and is a keen patriot and a ‘state’s man’ in the literal
-sense, even if he has never worn official garb, he is playing the
-statesman all the time. He does so by stimulating men of <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-ability, giving advice to those who need it, lending his help to
-deliberation, discouraging bunglers, and fortifying persons of
-sense. And this does not mean that he goes to the Assembly
-Theatre or Senate House out of pride of place when canvassed
-or pressed, and, when he gets there, merely puts in an appearance—if
-he does so—by way of pastime, as he might at a show or
-entertainment. It means that, even if not present in body, he <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>797<span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-is present in spirit; that he asks how the business goes, and is
-pleased or vexed as the case may be.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Aristeides at Athens and Cato at Rome held few public
-offices; but they made their whole life a perpetual service to
-their country. Though Epaminondas won many a distinguished
-success as commander-in-chief, he is no less famous for what
-he did in Thessaly at a time when he held no command or
-office. The generals had plunged the phalanx into a difficult
-situation. The enemy was attacking them with his missiles, <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-and they were in confusion. Epaminondas was therefore summoned
-from the ranks, and, after allaying the panic of the army
-by words of encouragement, he proceeded to make an orderly
-disposition of the phalanx—which was in a state of turmoil—extricated
-it with ease, posted it so as to confront the enemy,
-and compelled him to change his tactics and retire.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Once when King Agis was in Arcadia, and was in the act of
-leading his army into action in full order of battle, one of the
-elder Spartans shouted out that he was proposing to ‘mend one
-error by another’, meaning (as Thucydides says) that ‘his <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-present unseasonable ardour was intended to repair the discredit
-of his retreat’ from Argos. Agis listened, took the advice, and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_94'>94</span>retired. Menecrates actually had a seat placed for him every
-day at the doors of the Government Office, and the Ephors
-frequently rose and consulted him upon questions of the first
-importance; so great was his reputation for wisdom and shrewdness.
-The story goes that, when he had completely lost all
-physical strength and was for the most part confined all day to
-his bed, upon the Ephors sending for him to the Agora, he got
-up and set out to walk. As he was toiling slowly along, he met
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> some children on the way, and asked them: ‘Do you know
-anything more binding than to obey a master?’ Upon their
-replying, ‘Lack of the power,’ his reason told him that this
-brought his service to an end, and he turned back home. For
-though zeal should not fail so long as ability lasts, we must not
-put pressure upon it when left helpless.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Once more, Scipio, whether in the field or in politics, constantly
-sought the advice of Gaius Laelius to such an extent
-as to make some people say of his achievements that Scipio
-was the actor, but the author was Gaius. And Cicero himself
-acknowledges that the greatest and finest of the successful
-measures of his consulship were devised with the help of the
-philosopher Publius Nigidius.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> There is, then, nothing to prevent an aged man from advancing
-the public good in many a department of statesmanship.
-He has the best of means thereto: reason, judgement, plain-speaking,
-and ‘<i>thought discreet</i>‘, as the poets say. It is not
-merely our hands and feet or the strength of our bodies that
-are part and parcel of the possessions of the State. Most important
-are the mind and the beauties of the mind—temperance,
-justice, and wisdom. It is monstrous that, as these come late and
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> slowly to their own, our house and farm and other goods and
-chattels should get the benefit of them, while, in a public way,
-to our country and our fellow-citizens, we make ourselves of no
-further use because of ‘time’. For what time takes away from
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_95'>95</span>our powers of active effort is less than what it adds to those of
-guidance and statesmanship. It is for this reason that, when
-Hermes is represented in an elderly form, though he has no
-hands or feet, his virile parts are tense—an indirect way of saying
-that there is little need for old men’s bodies to be hard at work,
-so long as their power of reasoned speech is—as it ought to be—vigorous
-and generative.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_96'>96</span>
- <h2 id='chap03' class='c003'>ADVICE TO MARRIED COUPLES</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c004'><span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>138 <span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> <span class='sc'>To Pollianus and Eurydice with Plutarch’s best wishes.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c005'>When they were shutting you in your bridal chamber, the
-ancestral ritual was duly applied to you by the priestess of
-Demeter. I believe that now, if reason also were to take you
-in hand and join in the nuptial song, it would prove of some
-service, and would support the tune as prescribed.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>In the musical world they used to call one of the modes for
-the flute ‘the Horse-and-Mare’, because, apparently, the strains
-in that key were provocative of union between those animals.
-Well, philosophy has many excellent sermons to give, but none
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> more worthy of serious attention than that upon marriage. By
-it she exerts a spell upon those who come together as partners
-in life, and renders them gentle and tractable to each other.
-I have, therefore, taken the main points of the lessons which you
-have repeatedly heard, brought up as you have been in the company
-of Philosophy. I have arranged them in a series of brief
-comparisons to make them easier to remember, and am sending
-them as a present to you both. In doing so I pray that the
-Muses may graciously lend aid to Aphrodite, since, if it is their
-province to see that a lyre or a harp shall be in tune, it is no
-less so to provide that the music of the married home shall be
-harmonized by reason and philosophy. When people in olden
-times assigned a seat with Aphrodite to Hermes, it was because
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> the pleasure of marriage stands in special need of reason; when
-to Persuasion and the Graces, it was in order that the married
-pair might obtain their wishes from each other by means of
-persuasion, and not by contention and strife.</p>
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_97'>97</span>
- <h3 class='c016'><span class='sc'>The Rules</span>:</h3>
-</div>
-<p class='c004'>1. Solon bade the bride eat a piece of quince before coming
-to the bridegroom’s arms—apparently an enigmatical suggestion
-that, as a first requirement, a pleasant and inviting impression
-should be gathered from an agreeable mouth and speech.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>2. In Boeotia, after veiling the bride, they crown her with
-a wreath of thorny asparagus. As that plant yields the sweetest
-eating from among the roughest prickles, so a bride, if the
-groom does not run away in disgust because he finds her difficult
-and vexatious at first, will afford him a sweet and gentle companionship.
-One who shows no patience with the girl’s first <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-bickerings is as bad as those who let the ripe grapes go because
-once they were sour. Many a young bride is affected in the
-same way. First experiences disgust her with the bridegroom,
-and she makes as great a mistake as if, after enduring the sting
-of the bee, she were to abandon the honeycomb.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>3. It is especially at the beginning that married people should
-beware of quarrel and friction. Let them note how vessels
-which have been mended will at first easily pull to pieces on the
-slightest occasion, but as time goes on and they become solid
-at the seams, it is as much as fire and iron can do to separate <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-the parts.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>4. Fire is readily kindled in chaff, dry rushes, or hare’s fur,
-but quickly goes out unless it gets a further hold upon something
-capable both of keeping it in and feeding it. So with
-that fierce blaze of passion which is produced in the newly-married
-by physical enjoyment. You must not rely upon it
-nor expect it to last, unless it is built round the moral character,
-gets a hold upon your rational part, and so obtains a permanent
-vitality.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>5. Doctoring the water is no doubt a quick and easy way of <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>139<span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-catching fish, but it renders them bad and uneatable. So when
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_98'>98</span>women work artificially upon their husbands with philtres and
-spells, and control them by the agency of pleasure, they have
-but crazy simpletons and dotards for their partners. While
-Circe derived no good from the men she had bewitched, and
-made no use of them when turned into swine and asses, she
-found the greatest pleasure in the rational companionship of
-the wise Odysseus.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>6. A woman who is more desirous of ruling a foolish husband
-than of obeying a wise one, is like a traveller who would rather
-lead a blind man than follow one who possesses sight and
-knowledge.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> 7. Why should people disbelieve that Pasiphae, though
-consort to a king, fell in love with an ox, when they see that
-some women find a strict and continent husband wearisome, and
-prefer to live with one who is as much a mass of ungoverned
-sensuality as a dog or a goat?</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>8. When a rider is too weak or effeminate to vault upon a horse,
-he teaches the animal itself to bend its legs and crouch. In the
-same way some men who marry high-born or wealthy women,
-instead of improving themselves, put indignities upon their
-wives, in the belief that they will be more easily ruled when
-humbled. The proper course is, while using the rein, to maintain
-the dignity of the wife, as one would the full height of the
-horse.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> 9. When the moon is at a distance from the sun, we see it
-bright and luminous. When it comes near him, it fades and is
-lost to view. With a properly conducted woman it is the contrary.
-She should be most visible when with her husband;
-in his absence she should keep at home and out of sight.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>10. Herodotus was wrong in saying that when a woman lays
-aside her tunic she lays aside her modesty. On the contrary,
-a chaste wife puts on modesty in its place. Between married
-persons the token of greatest regard is greatest modesty.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_99'>99</span>11. If two notes are taken in accord, the lower of the two is <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-the dominant. So, though every action in a well-conducted
-house is performed by both parties in tune, it will reveal the
-husband’s leadership and priority of choice.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>12. The Sun vanquished the North Wind. When the wind
-endeavoured to take off the man’s cloak by violence and blowing
-a gale, he only tightened his mantle the more and held it the
-closer. But when, after the wind, the sun became hot, the man
-began to grow warm. When at last he sweltered, he took off
-not only his cloak but his tunic. The parable applies to the
-generality of women. When their husbands take violent
-measures to do away with extravagant indulgence, they show <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-fight and temper; but if you reason with them, they give it
-up peaceably and practise moderation.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>13. Cato expelled from the Senate a man who had kissed his
-own wife in the presence of his daughter. This, perhaps, was
-too severe a step. But if—as is the case—it is unseemly to be
-fondling and kissing and embracing each other in company, it
-is surely more unseemly to be scolding and quarrelling in company,
-and, while treating your love-passages as a sacred secret
-between you and your wife, to make an open display of fault-finding <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-and reproach.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>14. A mirror,<a id='r37' /><a href='#f37' class='c009'><sup>[37]</sup></a> though decorated with gold and precious
-stones, is of no use unless it shows you your form true to life.
-Similarly there is no advantage in a rich wife, if her conduct
-does not represent that of her husband and harmonize with
-it in character. If the reflection which it offers is glum when
-you are joyful, but wears a merry grin when you are gloomy and
-distressed, the mirror is faulty and bad. A wife is a poor thing
-and out of place if she is in the dumps when her husband is
-disposed for frolic or love-making, but is all fun and laughter
-when he is serious. In the former case she is disagreeable; in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_100'>100</span><span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>140<span class='hidev'>|</span></span> the latter, she slights you. Geometers tell us that lines and
-surfaces make no movement by themselves, but only in conjunction
-with the bodies to which they belong. In the same way
-a woman should be free from peculiar states of mind of her
-own, but should act as the husband’s partner in his earnestness
-and his jest, in his preoccupation and his laughter.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>15. A man who dislikes to see his wife eating with him,
-teaches her to satisfy her appetite when she gets by herself.
-Similarly one who is never a merry companion to her, nor
-shares in her sport and laughter, teaches her to look for private
-pleasures apart from him.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> 16. When the Persian kings are dining or feasting, their
-legitimate wives sit at their side. But when they wish to amuse
-themselves or get tipsy, they send those wives away and summon
-their minstrel-women and concubines. The practice is a right
-one, at least to the extent that they do not permit their wives
-to take part in wanton and licentious scenes. So, if a private
-man, who lacks self-control or good-breeding in his pleasures,
-is guilty of a lapse with a common woman or a menial, the wife
-should not be indignant and resentful, but should reflect that,
-out of respect for her, he finds some other woman to share his
-riot and lasciviousness.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> 17. When kings are fond of music, they make many musicians;
-when of learning, learned men; when of athletics, gymnasts.
-So when the love of a husband is for the person, his wife will
-be all for dress; when for pleasure, she becomes lewd and
-wanton; when for goodness and virtue, she shows herself
-discreet and chaste.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>18. When a Lacedaemonian girl was once asked whether she
-had already embraced a man, she answered, ‘No, indeed; but
-<i>he</i> has embraced <i>me</i>.’ Such, I believe, is the right attitude for
-a lady—not to shun or dislike caresses, when the husband
-begins them, nor yet to begin them of her own accord. The
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_101'>101</span>one course is bold and immodest, the other disdainful and <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-unaffectionate.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>19. The woman ought not to possess private friends, but to
-share those of the man. But first and greatest are the gods,
-and it is therefore right for the wife to reverence or acknowledge
-only those gods who are recognized by the husband. Her
-street-door should be kept shut to out-of-the-way forms of
-worship and alien superstitions. No deity finds gratification
-in ceremonies which a woman performs in secret and by stealth.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>20. Plato holds that a community is in a state of blissful
-well-being when the expressions ‘<i>mine</i>’ and ‘<i>not mine</i>’ are
-scarcely ever heard, inasmuch as the citizens enjoy, as far as <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-possible, the common use of everything worth considering.
-Much more ought such language to be abolished from the
-married state. In the same way, however, in which medical
-men tell us that a blow on the left side produces an answering
-sensation in the right, it is proper for a wife to sympathize with
-her husband’s concerns and the husband with the wife’s. In
-this way, just as ropes, when interwoven, lend each other
-strength, so, through each party reciprocating the other’s
-goodwill, the partnership will be maintained by both combined.
-Nature blends us through the body in such a way as to take <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-a portion from each, and by commingling produce an offspring
-common to both, so that neither can define or distinguish an
-‘own’ part from ‘another’s’. The same sort of partnership
-between married persons should assuredly exist in respect of
-money also. They should pour it all into a single fund, and
-blend it in such a way that they never think of one part as
-‘own’ and one as ‘another’s’, but treat it all as ‘own’ and
-none of it as ‘another’s’. And as we call a mixture ‘wine’,
-though it may contain a greater proportion of water, so the
-property of the house should be said to belong to the man,
-even though the wife may contribute the larger share.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_102'>102</span>21. Helen loved wealth, and Paris loved pleasure: Odysseus
-was wise, and Penelope discreet. Hence the union of the latter
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>141<span class='hidev'>|</span></span> pair was happy and enviable, while that of the former brought
-upon Greeks and Asiatics an ‘Iliad of Woes’.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>22. When the Roman was admonished by his friends for
-having divorced a wife who was chaste, rich, and beautiful, he
-stretched out his shoe and remarked: ‘Yes, and this looks
-fine and new, but no one knows where it chafes me.’ The wife
-must not rely upon her dowry, her birth, or her beauty. The
-matters in which she touches her husband most closely are
-conversation, character, and companionship. Instead of making
-these harsh and vexatious day after day, she must render them
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> compatible, soothing, and grateful. Physicians are more afraid
-of fevers which spring from vague causes gradually accumulating,
-than of those for which there is a great and manifest reason.
-So it is these little, continual, daily frictions between man and
-wife, which the world knows nothing of, that do most to create
-the rifts which ruin married life.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>23. King Philip was once enamoured of a Thessalian woman
-who was charged with bewitching him. Olympias thereupon
-became eager to get this person into her power. When, upon
-presenting herself, she not only turned out to be a handsome
-woman, but spoke with considerable nobility and good sense,
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> Olympias said: ‘Those calumnies are all nonsense! Your
-witchcraft lies in yourself.’ How irresistible a thing is a married
-and lawful wife, if, by treating everything—dowry, birth,
-philtres, the very girdle<a id='r38' /><a href='#f38' class='c009'><sup>[38]</sup></a> of Aphrodite—as lying in herself, she
-conquers affection by means of character and virtue!</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>24. On another occasion, when a youthful courtier had
-married a handsome woman of bad repute, Olympias remarked,
-‘The fellow has no judgement; otherwise he would not have
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_103'>103</span>married with his eyes.’ Marriage should not be made with
-the eyes; neither should it with the fingers, as it is in the case
-of some, who reckon up the amount of the dower, instead of
-calculating the companionable quality, of the wife they are <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-marrying.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>25. To young men who are fond of looking at themselves
-in the mirror Socrates recommended that the ugly should
-correct their defects by virtue, while the handsome should
-avoid spoiling their beauty by vice. It is a good thing for the
-married woman also, while she is holding the mirror, to talk
-to herself, and, if she is plain, to ask, ‘And what if I show
-myself indiscreet?’ if beautiful, ‘And what if I show myself
-discreet as well?’ The plain woman may pride herself on being
-loved for her character, and the handsome woman on being
-loved more for her character than her beauty.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>26. When the Sicilian despot sent Lysander’s daughters
-a set of costly mantles and chains, he refused to accept them.
-‘These bits of ornaments,’ said he, ‘will rather take from my <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-daughters’ beauty than set it off.’ Lysander, however, was
-anticipated by Sophocles in the lines:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Nay, ’twould not seem, poor fool, to beautify,</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>But to unbeautify, and prove thee wanton.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>As Crates used to say, ‘Adornment is that which adorns,’ and
-that which adorns is that which adds to a woman’s seemliness.
-This is not done by gold or jewels or scarlet, but by whatever
-invests her with the badges of dignity, decorum, and
-modesty.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>27. In sacrificing to Hera as goddess of marriage, the gall
-is not burned with the other portions of the sacrifice, but is <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-taken out and thrown down at the side of the altar—an indirect
-injunction of the legislator that gall and anger should have no
-place in the married state. The austerity of the lady of the house,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_104'>104</span>like the dryness of wine, should be wholesome and palatable,
-not bitter like aloes or unpleasant like a drug.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>28. Xenocrates being somewhat harsh in character, though
-otherwise a high type of man, Plato recommended him to
-<i>sacrifice to the Graces</i>. Now I take it that a woman of strict
-morals stands in special need of the graces in dealing with her
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>142<span class='hidev'>|</span></span> husband, so that—as Metrodorus used to say—she may live
-with him on pleasant terms and not ‘in a temper because she
-is chaste’. A woman should no more forget to be amiable
-because she is faithful, than to be neat because she is thrifty.
-Decorum in a woman is rendered as disagreeable by harshness
-as frugality is by sluttishness.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>29. A wife who is afraid to laugh and joke with her husband
-for fear of seeming bold and wanton, is as bad as the woman
-who, from fear of being thought to use ointments on her head,
-does not even oil it,<a id='r39' /><a href='#f39' class='c009'><sup>[39]</sup></a> and, to avoid seeming to rouge her face,
-does not even wash it. We find that when poets and orators
-avoid appealing to the vulgar by bad taste and affectation in
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> respect of their diction, they practise every art to attract and
-stir the hearer with their matter, their treatment, and their
-moral quality. So the lady of the house, because she avoids
-and deprecates—as she is quite right to do—extravagant or
-meretricious demonstration, ought all the more to bring the
-graces of character and conduct into play in dealing with her
-husband, thus habituating him to proper ways, but in a pleasurable
-manner. If, however, a wife shows herself strait-laced and
-rigidly austere, her husband must put the best face upon it.
-When Antipater required Phocion to perform an improper and
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> degrading action, he answered, ‘I cannot serve you both as your
-friend and your toady.’ In the same way, when a woman is
-staid and strait-laced, our reflection should be, ‘The same
-woman cannot behave to me as both a wife and a mistress.’</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_105'>105</span>30. By a national custom the Egyptian women wore no shoes,
-so that they might keep at home all day. In the case of most
-women, to deprive them of gold-worked shoes, bangles, anklets,
-purple, and pearls, is to make them stay indoors.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>31. Theano, in putting on her mantle, once showed a glimpse
-of her arm. Upon some one saying, ‘A beautiful forearm!’
-she retorted, ‘But not for the public!’ A well-conducted
-woman will keep, not only her forearm, but her speech, from <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-publicity. She will be as shy and cautious about her utterances
-to the outside world as if they were an exposure of her person,
-inasmuch as, when she talks, they are a revelation of feelings,
-character, and disposition.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>32. Pheidias, in representing the Elean Aphrodite with her
-foot upon a tortoise, meant women to take it as a symbol of
-home-keeping and silence. A woman should talk either to,
-or through the medium of, her husband; nor should she resent
-it if, like a player on the clarinet, she finds a more impressive
-utterance through another tongue than through her own.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>33. When rich or royal persons pay respect to a philosopher,
-they do honour both to themselves and to him. But when
-a philosopher pays court to rich people, he is not conferring <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-distinction upon them, but lowering his own. The same is the
-case with women. By submission to their husbands they win
-regard; by seeking to govern them they demean themselves
-worse than the men so governed. Meanwhile it is only right
-that the husband, in controlling the wife, should not be like
-an owner dealing with a chattel, but like the mind dealing with
-the body—sympathetic with the sympathy of organic union.
-It is possible to care for the body without being a slave to its
-pleasures and desires, and it is possible to rule a wife and yet
-do things to please and gratify her.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>34. Compound objects are classified by philosophers as
-follows. In some the parts are distinct, as in a fleet or army. <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_106'>106</span>In some they are conjoined, as in a house or ship. In others
-they form an organic unity, as in all living creatures. We may
-say much the same of marriage. The marriage of love is the
-‘organic unity’; the marriage for a dowry or for children
-is that of persons ‘conjoined’; marriage without sharing the
-same couch is that of persons ‘distinct’, who may be said to
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>143<span class='hidev'>|</span></span> dwell together, but not to live together. With persons marrying,
-there should be a mutual blending of bodies, means, friends,
-and relations, in the same way as, according to the scientists,
-when liquids are mixed, the mixture runs through the whole.
-When the Roman legislator forbade married couples to exchange
-presents, he did not mean that they should not impart to each
-other, but that they should look upon everything as joint
-property.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>35. At Leptis in Africa it is a traditional custom for the bride,
-on the day after marriage, to send to the bridegroom’s mother
-to borrow a pot. The latter refuses, saying she has none. The
-intention is that the bride may realize from the first the ‘step-mother’
-attitude of her mother-in-law, so that, if anything
-more disagreeable happens afterwards, she may not be vexed
-or irritated. The wife should understand this fact and apply
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> treatment to its cause, which is, that the mother is jealous of
-her son’s affections. There is but one treatment for this state
-of mind. While winning the special affection of her husband
-for herself, she must avoid detaching or lessening his affection
-for his mother.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>36. Mothers appear to be more fond of their sons, because
-those sons are able to help them, and fathers of their daughters,
-because daughters need their help. Maybe also it is out of
-compliment to each other that both parties desire to be seen
-making much of that which is more akin to the other. This,
-perhaps, is a trait of no importance, but there is another which
-is charming. I mean, when the wife’s respect is seen to incline
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_107'>107</span>rather to the husband’s parents than to her own, and when, <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-in case of anything troubling her, she refers it to them and
-conceals it from her own people. If you are thought to trust,
-you are trusted; if you are thought to love, you are loved.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>37. The Greeks who accompanied Cyrus received the following
-order from their commanders: ‘If the enemy come shouting
-to the attack, await them in silence; if they come in silence,
-charge to meet them with a shout.’ When a husband has his
-fits of anger, if he raises his voice, a sensible wife keeps quiet;
-if he is silent, she soothes him by talking to him in a coaxing way.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>38. Euripides is right in blaming those who have the lyre <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-played to them at their wine. Music is more properly called
-in to cure anger and grief than to encourage further abandonment
-on the part of those who are taking their pleasure. So
-I would have you believe that it is a wrong principle to share
-the same bed for the sake of pleasure, and yet, when you are
-angry or fall out, to sleep apart. That is exactly the time to
-call in the Goddess of Love, who is the best physician for such
-cases. This is practically the teaching of the poet, when he
-makes Hera say:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in18'><i>And their tangled strife will I loosen,</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>When to their couch I bring them, to meet in love and in union.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'><span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> 39. At all times and everywhere a wife should avoid offending
-the husband, and a husband the wife; but especially should they
-beware of doing so when together at night. In the story, the
-wife, in the vexation of her throes, used to say to those who were
-putting her to bed: ‘How can this couch cure a trouble which
-befell me upon it?’ So quarrels, recriminations, and tempers
-which are begotten in the chamber are not easily got over in
-another place or at another time.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>40. There appears to be a truth in Hermione’s plea: <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span></p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘<i>Tis wicked women’s visits have undone me.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_108'>108</span>This occurs in more than one way, but especially when connubial
-quarrels and jealousies offer to such women not only an open
-door, but an open ear. At such a time, therefore, should a
-sensible woman shut her ears, keep out of the way of slanderous
-whispers which add fuel to the fire, and be ready to apply the
-well-known saying of Philip. We are told that when his friends
-were trying to exasperate that monarch against the Greeks—on
-the ground that, though he treated them well, they abused
-him—he remarked, ‘Well, and what, pray, if we treat them
-badly?’ So, when the scandalizers say, ‘Your husband
-grieves you, in spite of all your affection and chastity,’ you
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>144<span class='hidev'>|</span></span> should retort, ‘And what, pray, if I begin to hate and wrong
-him?’</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>41. A man caught sight of a slave who had run away some time
-before, and gave chase. When the slave was too quick, and
-took refuge in a mill, he observed, ‘And in what better place
-could I have wished to find you than where you are?‘<a id='r40' /><a href='#f40' class='c009'><sup>[40]</sup></a> So
-let a woman who is declaring for a divorce through jealousy
-say to herself, ‘And where would my rival be more glad to see
-me? And what would she be more pleased to see me doing, than
-harbouring a grievance, at feud with my husband, and actually
-abandoning the house and the marriage-chamber?’</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> 42. The Athenians observe three sacred ploughings; the
-first at Sciron, in memory of the oldest sowing of crops; the
-second in the Rharian district; and the third—known as the
-Buzygian festival—close to the Acropolis. More sacred than
-all of these is the connubial ploughing and sowing for the procreation
-of children. It is a happy expression of Sophocles,
-when he calls Aphrodite ‘<i>fair-fruited Cytherea</i>‘. Man and
-wife should therefore be especially scrupulous in this connexion,
-keeping pure from unholy and unlawful intercourse with others,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_109'>109</span>and forbearing to sow where they desire no crop to grow, or,
-if it does, are ashamed of it and seek to conceal it.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>43. When Gorgias the rhetorician once read to the Greeks
-at Olympia a discourse upon peace and harmony, Melanthius
-exclaimed, ‘Here is a man giving us advice about peace and <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-harmony, when in private life he has failed to harmonize three
-people—himself, his wife, and his maidservant.’ For Gorgias,
-it appears, was enamoured, and his wife jealous, of the domestic.
-A man’s house ought to be in tune before he offers to set in tune
-a state, a public meeting, or friends. The public is more likely
-to hear of offences against a wife than of offences committed
-by her.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>44. They say that the cat is driven frantic by the smell of
-unguents. If it had been the case that women were provoked <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-out of their senses by the same means, it would have been a
-monstrous thing for men not to abstain from unguents, and to
-let their wives suffer so cruelly for the sake of a trifling gratification
-of their own. Now since, though the husband’s use of
-unguents does not so afflict them, his dealings with other women
-do, it is unjust to cause such vexation and distress to a wife
-for the sake of a little pleasure. On the contrary, husbands
-should come to their wives pure and untainted by other
-intercourse, just as they would approach bees, who are said
-to show disgust and hostility towards any one who has been so
-engaged.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>45. People never dress in bright clothes when approaching <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-an elephant, nor in red when approaching a bull, since the
-animals in question are particularly infuriated by those colours.
-Of tigers it is said that, if you beat drums all round them, they
-go mad and tear themselves to pieces. Surely, then, inasmuch
-as some men cannot bear to see scarlet or purple clothes, and
-some are irritated at cymbals and tambourines, it is not asking
-too much for women to leave such things alone, and not harass
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_110'>110</span>or exasperate their husbands, but practise quietude and consideration
-in their society.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> 46. When Philip was once seizing upon a woman against her
-will, she said, ‘Let me go. All women are the same when you
-take away the light.’ While this applies well enough to adulterers
-and sensualists, it is particularly when the light is taken away
-that a wife should <i>not</i> be the same as any ordinary female.
-Her person may not be visible, but her modesty, chastity,
-decorum, and natural affection should make themselves palpable.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>47. Plato used to recommend that respect should rather be
-paid by elderly men to the young, so that the latter might
-behave modestly to them in return. For, said he, ‘where old
-men are shameless,’ the young acquire no modesty or scruple.
-A husband should bear this in mind, and show more respect
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>145<span class='hidev'>|</span></span> to his wife than to any one else, since the nuptial chamber
-will prove to be her school of propriety or its opposite. The
-husband who indulges himself in certain pleasures, while
-warning her against the same, is as bad as the man who bids
-his wife fight on against an enemy to whom he has himself
-surrendered.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>48. As to love of display, do you, Eurydice, read and endeavour
-to remember what Timoxena wrote to Aristylla. And you,
-Pollianus, must not expect your wife to refrain from showy
-extravagance, if she sees that you do not despise it in other
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> matters, but that you take a pleasure in cups with gilding,
-rooms with painted walls, mules with decorated harness, and
-horses with neck-trappings. You cannot banish extravagance
-from the women’s quarters when it has the free run of the
-men’s. You are at the right age to cultivate philosophy.
-Adorn your character, therefore, by listening to careful reasoning
-and demonstration in improving company and conversation.
-Be like the bees. Gather valuable matter from every source.
-Carry it home in yourself, and share it with your wife by
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_111'>111</span>discussing it and making all the best principles agreeable and
-familiar to her. While <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span></p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Thou unto her art father, and honoured mother, and brother</i>,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>it is no less a matter of pride to hear a wife say, ‘Husband, thou
-unto me art guide, philosopher, and teacher of the noblest
-and divinest lessons.’ It is studies of this kind that tend to
-keep a woman from foolish practices. She will be ashamed
-to be dancing, when she is learning geometry. She will lend
-no ear to the incantations of sorcery, when she is listening
-to those of Plato and Xenophon. When any one promises to
-fetch down the moon,<a id='r41' /><a href='#f41' class='c009'><sup>[41]</sup></a> she will laugh at the ignorance and
-silliness of women who believe such things; for she will possess
-a knowledge of astronomy, and will have heard how Aglaonice,
-the daughter of Hegetor of Thessaly, thoroughly understood <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-eclipses of the full moon, how she knew beforehand the date
-at which it must be caught in the shadow, and how she
-thereby cheated the women into believing that she was fetching
-it down herself.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>We are told that no woman produces a child without the
-participation of the man, though there are shapeless and fleshlike
-growths—called ‘millstones’—which form themselves spontaneously
-from corrupted matter. We must beware of this
-occurring in women’s minds. If they are not impregnated
-with sound doctrines by sharing in the culture of their husbands, <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-they will of their own accord conceive many an ill-advised
-intention or irrational state of feeling.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>As for you, Eurydice, above all things do your best to keep
-touch with the sayings of wise and good men, and to have
-continually in your mouth those utterances which you learned
-by heart in my school when a girl. By so doing, you will not
-only be a joy to your husband, but the admiration of other
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_112'>112</span>women, when they see how, at no expense, you can adorn
-yourself with so much distinction and dignity.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>This rich woman’s pearls, that foreign lady’s silks, are not to
-be worn without paying a large price for them. But the ornaments
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> of Theano, of Cleobuline, of Gorgo the wife of Leonidas,
-of Timoclea the sister of Theagenes, of the Claudia of ancient
-history, and of Cornelia the daughter of Scipio, you may wear
-for nothing; and with this adornment your life may be as happy
-as it is distinguished.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>146<span class='hidev'>|</span></span> Sappho thought so much of her skill as a lyrist that she wrote—addressing
-a wealthy woman—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>When thou art dead, thou shalt lie with none to remember thy name:</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>For no portion hast thou in the roses Pierian....</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>You will assuredly have more occasion to think highly and
-proudly of yourself, if you have a portion, not only in the roses,
-but also in the fruits, which the Muses bring as free gifts to
-those who prize culture and philosophy.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_113'>113</span>
- <h2 id='chap04' class='c003'>CONCERNING BUSYBODIES</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c004'>If a house is stuffy, dark, chilly, or unhealthy, it is perhaps <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>515 <span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-best to get out of it. But if long association makes you fond
-of the place, you may alter the lights, shift the stairs, open
-a door here and close one there, and so make it brighter, fresher,
-and more wholesome. Even cities have sometimes been improved <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-by such rearrangement. For instance, it is said that
-my own native town, which used to face the west and receive
-the full force of the afternoon sun from Parnassus, was turned
-by Chairon so as to front the east. Empedocles, the natural
-philosopher, once blocked up a mountain gorge, which sent
-a destructive and pestilential south wind blowing down upon
-the plains. By this means, it was thought, he shut the plague
-out of the district.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Well, since there are certain injurious and unhealthy states
-of mind which chill and darken the soul, it would be best
-to get rid of them—to make a clean sweep to the foundations,
-and give ourselves the benefit of a clear sky, light, and pure air <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-to breathe. If not, we should reform and readjust them by
-turning them some other way about.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>We may take the vice of the busybody as an instance in point.
-It is a love of prying into other people’s troubles, a disease
-tainted—we may believe—with both envy and malice.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Why so sharp-eyed, my most malignant Sir,</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>For others’ faults, yet overlook your own?</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>Pray turn your pryingness the other way about, and make it
-face inwards. If you are so fond of the business of inquiring
-into defects, you will find plenty to occupy you at home.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_114'>114</span><span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>*<span class='hidev'>|</span></span> <i>Abundant as leaves on the oak or the water that rolls from Alizon</i>
-will you find the errors in your conduct, the disorders in your
-heart and mind, and the lapses in your duty.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> According to Xenophon, a good householder has a special
-place for the utensils of sacrifice, and a special place for those
-of the table; agricultural implements are stored in one room,
-weapons of war in another. In your own case you have one
-stock of faults arising from envy, another from jealousy,
-another from cowardice, another from meanness. These are the
-faults for you to inspect and examine. Block up the windows
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> and alleys of your inquisitiveness on the side towards your
-neighbours, and open others which look into your own house—the
-male quarters, the female quarters, the living-rooms of the
-servants. Our busy curiosity will find occupation of a profitable
-and salutary, instead of a useless and malicious, kind, if each
-one will say to himself:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>How have I err’d? What deed have I done? What duty neglected?</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>As it is, we are all of us like the Lamia in the fable, of whom
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>516<span class='hidev'>|</span></span> we are told that at home she is asleep and blind, with her eyes
-stowed away in a jar, but that when she comes abroad she puts
-them in and can see. Outside, and in dealing with others, we furnish
-our malice with an eye in the shape of our meddlesomeness,
-but we are continually being tripped up by our own misdeeds
-and vices, of which we are unaware, because we provide ourselves
-with no light or vision to perceive them. It follows that the
-busybody is a better friend to his enemies than to himself.
-While censoriously reproving their shortcomings and showing
-them what they ought to avoid or amend, he is so taken up with
-faults outside that he overlooks most of those at home.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> Odysseus refused even to talk to his mother, until he had got
-his answer from the seer concerning the business which had
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_115'>115</span>brought him to Hades. When he had received the information,
-he turned to her, and also began to put questions to the other
-women, asking who Tyro was, and the beautiful Chloris, and
-why Epicaste met her death by</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Tying a sheer-hung noose from the height of the lofty roof-tree</i>.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>Not so we. While treating our own concerns with the greatest
-indifference, ignorance, and neglect, we begin discussing other
-people’s pedigrees—how our neighbour’s grandfather was
-a Syrian and his grandmother a Thracian. ‘So-and-So owes
-more than seven hundred pounds, and cannot pay the interest.’
-We also make it our business to inquire about such matters as
-where So-and-So got his wife from, and what private talk was
-that between A and B in the corner. Socrates, on the other <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-hand, went about inquiring, ‘By what arguments did Pythagoras
-carry conviction?’ So Aristippus, when he met Ischomachus
-at Olympia, proceeded to ask by what kind of conversation
-Socrates affected the Athenians as he did. When he had
-gleaned a few seeds or samples of his talk, he was so moved
-that he suffered a physical collapse, and became quite pale and
-thin. In the end he set sail for Athens, and slaked his thirst
-with draughts from the fountain-head, studying the man, his
-discourses and his philosophy, of which the aim was to recognize
-one’s own vices and get rid of them.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>But there are some to whom their own life is a most distressing <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-spectacle, and who therefore cannot bear to look at it nor to reflect
-the light of reason upon themselves. Their soul is so fraught with
-all manner of vices, that, shuddering with horror at what lies
-within, it darts away from home, and goes prowling round other
-men’s concerns, where it lets its malice batten and grow fat.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>It often happens that a domestic fowl, though there is plenty
-of food lying at its disposal, will slink into a corner and scratch</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Where so appeareth, mayhap, one barley-grain in a dunghill.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_116'>116</span>It is much the same with the busybody. Ignoring the topics
-and questions which are open to all, and which no one prevents
-him from asking about or is annoyed with him if he does ask,
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> he goes picking out of every house the troubles which it is
-endeavouring to bury out of sight. But surely it was a neat
-answer which the Egyptian made to the man who asked him
-what he was carrying in that wrapper. ‘That,’ said he, ‘is why
-it <i>is</i> in a wrapper.’ And why, pray, are you so inquisitive about
-a thing which is being concealed? If it had not been something
-undesirable, there would have been no concealment. It is not
-usual to walk into another man’s house without knocking at
-the door. Nowadays there are doorkeepers—formerly knockers
-were beaten upon the doors in order to give warning—the intention
-being that the stranger shall not surprise the lady of the
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> house or her daughter in the open, or come upon a slave receiving
-punishment, or the handmaids screaming. But these are exactly
-the things which the busybody steals in to see. At a staid and
-quiet household he would have no pleasure in looking, even
-if he were invited. His object is to uncover and make public
-those things to which keys, bolts, and the street-door owe
-their existence. ‘The winds which vex us most,’ says Ariston,
-‘are those which pull up our cloaks.’ But the busybody strips
-off not only our mantles and tunics, but our walls; he spreads
-our doors wide open, and makes his way like a piercing wind
-through the ‘<i>maiden of tender skin</i>‘, prying and sneaking into
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>517<span class='hidev'>|</span></span> her bacchic revels, her dances, and her all-night festivals.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>As Cleon in the comedy had</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>His hands in Askthorpe and his thoughts in Thefton</i>,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>so the busybody’s thoughts are at one and the same time in the
-houses of the rich and the hovels of the poor, in the courts
-of kings and the chambers of the newly-wed. He searches into
-everybody’s business—business of strangers, and business of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_117'>117</span>potentates. Nor is his search without danger. If one were
-to take a taste of aconite because he was inquisitive as to its
-properties, he would find that he had killed the learner before
-he got his lesson. So those who pry into the troubles of the <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-great destroy themselves before discovering what they seek.
-If any one is not satisfied with the beams which the sun lavishes
-so abundantly upon all, but audaciously insists upon gazing
-unabashed at the orb itself and probing the light to its heart,
-the result is blindness. It was therefore wise of Philippides, the
-comic poet, when King Lysimachus once asked him, ‘What
-can I give you of mine?’ to reply, ‘Anything, Sire, but your
-secrets.’ The finest and most pleasant aspects of royalty are
-those displayed outwardly—its banquets, wealth, pomps and
-shows, graces and favours. But if a king has any secret, keep
-away from it and leave it alone. A king does not conceal his <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-joy when prosperous, nor his laughter when jocose, nor his
-intention to do a kindness or confer a boon. When he hides
-a thing, when he is glum, unsmiling, unapproachable, it is
-time for alarm. It means that he has been storing up anger,
-and that it is festering; or that he is sullenly meditating a severe
-punishment; or that he is jealous of his wife, or suspicious of
-his son, or distrustful of a friend. Run, run from that cloud
-which is gathering so black! You cannot possibly miss the
-thunder and lightning, when the matter which is now a secret
-bursts out in storm.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>How, then, are we to escape this vice? By turning our
-inquisitiveness—as we have said—the other way round, and,
-as far as possible, directing our minds to better and more
-interesting objects. If you are to pry, pry into questions <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-connected with sky, earth, air, or sea. You are by nature fond
-of looking either at little things or at big things. If at big
-things, apply your curiosity to the sun; ask where he sets and
-whence he rises. Inquire into the changes of the moon, as if
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_118'>118</span>she were a human being. Ask where she loses so much of her
-light, and whence she gets it back; how</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in2'><i>Once dim, she first comes forth and makes</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>Her young face beauteous, gathering to the full,</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>And, when her greatest splendours she hath shown,</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>Fades out, and passes into naught again.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>These, too, are secrets—the secrets of Nature; but Nature has
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> no grievance against those who find them out. Are the big
-things beyond you? Then pry into the smaller ones. Ask how
-it is that some plants are always flourishing and green, proudly
-displaying their wealth at every season, while others are at one
-moment as good as these, but at another have squandered their
-abundance all at once, like some human spendthrift, and are
-left bare and beggared. Why, again, do some plants produce
-elongated fruits, some angular, some round and globelike?</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>But perhaps you will have no curiosity for such concerns,
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> because there is nothing wrong about them. Well, if inquisitiveness
-absolutely must be always browsing and passing its time
-among things sordid, like a maggot among dead matter, let us
-introduce it to history and story, and supply it with bad things
-in abundance and without stint. For there it will find</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Fallings of men and spurnings-off of life</i>,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>seductions of women, assaults by slaves, slanderings of friends,
-concoctions of poisons, envies, jealousies, shipwrecks of homes,
-overthrows of rulers. Take your fill, enjoy yourself, and cause no
-annoyance or pain to any of those with whom you come in contact.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Apparently, however, inquisitiveness finds no pleasure in
-scandals which are stale; it wants them hot and fresh. And
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>518<span class='hidev'>|</span></span> while it enjoys the spectacle of a novel tragedy, it takes no sort
-of interest in the comedy or more cheerful side of life. Consequently
-the busybody lends but a careless and indifferent ear
-to the account of a wedding, a sacrifice, or a complimentary
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_119'>119</span>‘farewell’. He says he has already heard most of the details,
-and urges the narrator to cut them short or omit them. But
-if any one will sit by him and tell him the news about the corruption
-of a girl or the unfaithfulness of a wife or an impending
-action at law or a quarrel between brothers, there is no sleepiness
-or hurry about him, but</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>More words still doth he ask, and proffers his ears to receive them.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>As applied to the busybody, the words</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>How much more apt to reach the ear of man</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>An ill thing than a happy!</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>are a true saying. As a cupping-glass sucks from the flesh what <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-is worst in it, so the inquisitive ear draws to itself the most
-undesirable topics. To vary the figure: cities have certain
-‘Accursed’ or ‘Dismal’ gates, through which they take out
-criminals on their way to death and throw the refuse and
-offscourings of purification, while nothing sacred or undefiled
-goes in or out through them. So with the ears of the busybody.
-They give passage to nothing fine or useful, but serve only as
-the pathway of gruesome communications, with their load of
-foul and polluted gossip.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>No chance brings other minstrel to my roof,</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>But always Lamentation.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'><span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> That is the one Muse and Siren of the busybody, the most
-pleasant of all music to his ear. For his vice is a love of finding
-out whatever is secret and concealed, and no one conceals a good
-thing when he has one; on the contrary, he will pretend to
-one which has no existence. Since therefore it is troubles that
-the busybody is eager to discover, the disease from which he
-suffers is malignant gloating—own brother to envy and spite.
-For envy is pain at another’s good; malignity is pleasure at
-another’s harm; and the parent of both is ill-nature—the <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-feeling of a savage or a brute beast.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_120'>120</span>So painful do we all find it to have our troubles revealed, that
-there are many who would rather die than tell a physician of
-a secret disease. Imagine Herophilus or Erasistratus, or Asclepius
-himself—when he was a mortal man—calling from house to
-house with his drugs and his instruments, and asking whether
-a man had a fistula or a woman a cancer in the womb! Inquisitiveness
-in their profession may, it is true, save a life. None the
-less, I presume, every one would have scouted such a person,
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> for coming to investigate other people’s ailments without
-waiting till he was required and sent for. Yet our busybody
-searches out precisely these, or even worse, ailments; and, since
-he does so not by way of curing them, but merely of disclosing
-them, he deserves the hatred he gets.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>We are annoyed and indignant with the collector of customs,<a id='r42' /><a href='#f42' class='c009'><sup>[42]</sup></a>
-not when he picks out and levies on those articles which we
-import openly, but when, in the search for hidden goods, he
-ransacks among baggage and merchandise which are not in
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> question. Yet the law permits him to do so, and he is the
-loser if he does not. On the other hand, the busybody lets his
-own concerns go to ruin, while he is occupying himself with
-those of other people. He rarely takes a walk to the farm; it is
-too lonely, and he cannot bear the quiet and silence. And if,
-after a time, he does chance along, he has a keener eye for his
-neighbour’s vines than for his own. He proceeds to ask how
-many of his neighbour’s cattle have died, or how much of his
-wine turned sour. After a good meal of such news he is quickly
-off and away.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Your true and genuine type of farmer has no desire to hear
-even the news which finds its own way from the city. Says he:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in6'><i>Then, while he digs, he’ll tell</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>The terms o’the treaty. He must now, confound him,</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>Go round and poke his nose in things like that!</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_121'>121</span><span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>519<span class='hidev'>|</span></span> But to your busybody country life is a stale and uninteresting
-thing with nothing to fuss about. He therefore flees from it,
-and pushes into the Exchange, the Market, or the Harbour.
-‘Is there any news?’ ‘Why, weren’t you at market early this
-morning? Do you imagine there has been a revolution in three
-hours?’ If, however, any one has a piece of news to tell, down
-he gets from his horse, grasps the man’s hand, kisses him, and
-stands there listening. But if some one meets him and says
-there is nothing fresh, he exclaims, as if he were annoyed:
-‘What? Haven’t you been at market? Haven’t you been near
-the Board-Room? And haven’t you met the new arrivals from <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-Italy?’</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The Locrian magistrates therefore did right in fining any one
-who, after being out of town, came up and asked, ‘Is there any
-news?’ As the butchers pray for a good supply of animals, and
-fishermen for a good supply of fish, so busybodies pray for a good
-supply of calamities, for plenty of troubles, for novelties and
-changes. They must always have their fish to catch or carcass
-to cut up.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Another good rule was that of the legislator of Thurii, who
-forbade the lampooning of citizens on the stage, with the exception
-of adulterers and busybodies. The one class bears a resemblance
-to the other, adultery being a sort of inquisitiveness into <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-another’s pleasure, and a prying search into matters protected
-from the general eye, while inquisitiveness is the illicit denuding
-and corrupting of a secret. While a natural consequence of
-much learning is having much to say, and therefore Pythagoras
-enjoined upon the young a five years’ silence, which he called
-‘Truce to Speech’, the necessary concomitant of curiosity is
-speaking evil. What the curious delight to hear, they delight
-to talk about; what they take pains to gather from others, they
-joy in giving out to new hearers. It follows that, besides its <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-other drawbacks, their disease actually stands in the way of its
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_122'>122</span>own desires. For every one is on his guard to hide things from
-them, and is reluctant to do anything when the busybody is
-looking, or to say anything when he is listening. People put off
-a consultation and postpone the consideration of business until
-such persons are out of the way. If, when a secret matter is
-towards, or an important action is in the doing, a busybody
-appears upon the scene, they take it away and hide it, as they
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> would a piece of victuals when the cat comes past. Often,
-therefore, he is the only person not permitted to hear or see
-what others may see and hear.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>For the same reason the busybody can find no one to trust
-him. We would rather trust our letters, papers, or seals to
-a slave or a stranger than to an inquisitive relation or friend.
-Bellerophon, though the writing which he carried was about
-himself, would not broach it, but showed the same continence
-in keeping his hands off the king’s letter as in keeping them off
-his wife.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Yes, inquisitiveness is as incontinent as adultery, and not only
-incontinent, but terribly silly and foolish. To pass by so many
-women who are public property, and to struggle to get at one
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> who is kept under lock and key, who is expensive, and perhaps
-ugly to boot, is the very height of insanity. The busybody is just
-as bad. He passes by much that is admirable to see and hear,
-many an excellent discourse or discussion, to dig into another
-man’s poor little letter or clap his ear to his neighbour’s wall,
-listening to slaves and womenfolk whispering together, and
-incurring danger often, and discredit always.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>520<span class='hidev'>|</span></span> Well, if he wishes to get rid of his vice, the busybody will find
-nothing so helpful as to think over the discoveries he has hitherto
-made. Simonides used to say that, in opening his boxes after
-a lapse of time, he found the fee-box always full and the thanks-box
-always empty. So, if one were to open the store-room of
-inquisitiveness after an interval, and to contemplate all the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_123'>123</span>useless, futile, and uninviting things with which it is filled,
-he would probably become sick of the business, so nauseating
-and senseless would it appear.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Suppose a person to run over the works of our old writers
-and pick out their faultiest passages, compiling and keeping a
-book full of such things as ‘headless’ lines of Homer, solecisms <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-in the tragedians, the indecent and licentious language to
-women by which Archilochus makes a sorry show of himself.
-Does he not deserve the execration in the tragedy:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Perish, thou picker-up of miseries!</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>Execration apart, his treasury, filled with other men’s faults,
-possesses neither beauty nor use. It is like the town which
-Philip founded with the rudest riff-raff, and which he called
-Knaveborough.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>With the busybody, however, it is not from lines of poetry, but
-from lives, that he goes gleaning and gathering blunders and
-slips and solecisms, till the memory which he carries about is
-the dullest and dreariest record-box, crammed with ugly things. <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span></p>
-
-<p class='c005'>At Rome there are those who set no store by the paintings,
-the statues, or—failing these—the handsome children or women
-on sale, but who haunt the monster-market, examining specimens
-with no calves to their legs, or with weasel-elbows, three
-eyes, or ostrich-heads, and looking out for the appearance of any</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Commingled shape and misformed prodigy.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>Yet if you keep on showing them such sights, they will soon
-become surfeited and sick of it all. In the same way those who
-make it their business to pry into other people’s failures in their
-affairs, blots on their pedigree, disturbances and delinquencies
-in their homes, will do well to remind themselves how thankless <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-and unprofitable their previous discoveries have proved.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The most effective way, however, of preventing this weakness
-is to form a habit—to begin at an early stage and train ourselves
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_124'>124</span>systematically to acquire the necessary self-control. It is by
-habit that the vice increases, the advance of the disease being
-gradual. How this is, we shall see, in discussing the proper
-method of practice.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Let us make a beginning with comparatively trifling and
-insignificant matters.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>On the roads it can be no difficult matter to abstain from reading
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> the inscriptions on the tombs. Nor in the promenades can
-there be any hardship in refusing to let the eye linger upon
-the writings on the walls. You have only to tell yourself that
-they contain nothing useful or entertaining. There is A expressing
-his ‘kind sentiments’ towards B; So-and-So described
-as ‘the best of friends’; and much mere twaddle of the same
-kind. No doubt it seems as if the reading of them does you no
-harm; but harm you it does, without your knowing it, by inducing
-a habit of inquiring into things which do not concern
-you. Hunters do not permit young hounds to turn aside and
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> follow up every scent, but pull them sharply back with the leash,
-so as to keep their power of smell in perfectly clean condition for
-their proper work, and make it stick more keenly to the tracks:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>With nostril a-search for the trail that the beast gives forth from its body</i>.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>The same watchfulness must be shown in suppressing, or in
-diverting to useful ends, the tendency of an inquisitive person
-to run off the track and wander after everything that he can
-see or hear. An eagle or a lion gathers its talons in when it
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>521<span class='hidev'>|</span></span> walks, so as not to wear the sharp edge from their tips. Similarly
-let us treat the inquiring spirit as the keen edge to our love of
-learning, and refrain from wasting or blunting it upon objects
-of no value.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>In the next place let us train ourselves, when passing another’s
-door, to refrain from looking in, or from letting our inquisitive
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_125'>125</span>gaze clutch at what is passing inside. Xenocrates said—and we
-shall do well to keep the remark in mind—that whether we set
-foot or set eyes in another man’s house makes no difference.
-Not only is such prying unfair and improper; we get no pleasure
-from the spectacle.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Unsightly, stranger, are the sights within</i>,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>is a saying which is generally true of what we see inside—a litter
-of pots and pans, or servant-girls sitting about, but nothing of <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-any importance or interest. This furtive throwing of sidelong
-glances, which at the same time gives a kind of squint to the
-mind, is ugly, and the habit is demoralizing. When the Olympian
-victor Dioxippus was making a triumphal entry in a chariot,
-and could not drag his eyes from a beautiful woman among the
-spectators, but kept turning half round and throwing side
-glances in her direction, Diogenes—who saw it all—remarked,
-‘See how a bit of a girl gets the neck-grip on our great athlete!’
-Inquisitive people, however, are to be seen gripped by the neck
-and twisted about by any kind of sight, when they once develop
-a habit of squandering their glances in all directions.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>This is assuredly no right use of the faculty of vision. It should <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-not go gadding about like some ill-trained maidservant; but
-when the mind sends it upon an errand, it should make haste
-to reach its destination, deliver its message, and then come
-quietly home again to wait upon the commands of the reason.
-Instead of this, the case is as in Sophocles:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Thereon the Aenean driver’s hard-mouthed colts</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>Break from control.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>When the faculty of vision has not been tutored and trained
-in the proper manner as above described, it runs away, drags <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-the mind with it, and often brings it into disastrous collisions.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>There is a story that Democritus deliberately destroyed his sight
-by fixing his eyes upon a red-hot mirror and allowing its heat
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_126'>126</span>to be focussed upon them. His object, it is said, was to block
-up the windows toward the street, and thus prevent the disturbance
-of his intellect by repeated calls from outside, enabling
-it to stay at home and devote itself to pure thinking. Though
-the story is a fiction, nothing is more true than that those who
-make most use of their mind make few calls upon the senses.
-Note how our halls of learning are built far out from the towns,
-and how night has been styled the ‘<i>well-minded</i>‘, from a belief
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> that quiet and the absence of distraction are a powerful aid to
-intellectual discovery and research.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Suppose, again, that people are quarrelling and abusing each
-other in the market-place. It requires no great effort of self-denial
-to keep at a distance. When a crowd is running towards
-a certain spot, it is easy for you to remain seated, or else, if you
-lack the necessary strength of mind, to get up and go away.
-There is no advantage to be got from mixing yourself with
-busybodies, whereas you will derive great benefit from putting
-a forcible check upon your curiosity and training it to obey
-the commands of the reason.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> We may now go a step further, and tax ourselves more severely.
-It is good practice, when a successful entertainment is going
-on in a public hall, to pass it by; when our friends invite us
-to a performance by a dancer or comedian, to decline; when
-there is a roar in the race-ground or the circus, to take no notice.
-Socrates used to urge the avoidance of all foods and drinks
-which tempt one to eat when he is not hungry or to drink when
-he is not thirsty. In the same way we shall do well to shun
-carefully all appeals to eye or ear, when, though they are no
-business of ours, their attractions prove too much for us.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Cyrus refused to see Panthea, and when Araspes talked of her
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>522<span class='hidev'>|</span></span> remarkable beauty, his answer was: ‘All the more reason for
-keeping away from her. If I took your advice and went to see
-her, she might perhaps tempt me to be visiting her again when
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_127'>127</span>I could not spare the time, and to be sitting and looking at her
-to the neglect of much important business.’ In the same way
-Alexander refused to set eyes on Darius’ wife, who was said to
-be strikingly handsome. Though he visited the mother—an
-elderly woman—he would not bring himself to see her young
-and beautiful daughter. But what we do is to peep into women’s
-litters and hang about their windows, finding nothing improper
-in encouraging our curiosity and allowing it such dangerous <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-and unchecked play.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Note how you may train yourself for other virtues. To learn
-justice you should sometimes forgo an honest gain, and so
-accustom yourself to keep aloof from dishonest ones. Similarly, to
-learn continence, you should sometimes hold aloof from your own
-wife, and so secure yourself against temptation from another’s.
-Apply this habit to inquisitiveness. Endeavour occasionally to
-miss hearing or seeing things which concern yourself. When
-something happens at home, and a person wishes to tell you of
-it, put the matter off; and when things have been said which
-appear to affect yourself, refuse to hear them. Remember how
-Oedipus was brought into the direst disasters by over-curiosity.
-Finding he was no Corinthian, but an alien, he set to work <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-to discover who he was, and so he met with Laius. He killed
-him, married his own mother, with the throne for dowry, and
-then, while apparently blessed by fortune, began his search once
-more. The endeavours of his wife to prevent him only made
-him question still more closely, and in the most peremptory way,
-the old man who was in the secret. And at last, when circumstances
-are already bringing him to suspect, and the old man cries:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Alas! I stand on the dread brink of speech!</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>he is nevertheless in such a blaze or spasm of passion that he
-replies:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>And I of hearing; and yet hear I must.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_128'>128</span><span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> So bitter-sweet, so uncontrollable, is the excitement of curiosity—like
-the tickling of a wound, at which one tears till he makes it
-bleed. Meanwhile if we are free from that malady, and mild
-by nature, we shall ignore a disagreeable thing and say:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Sovran Oblivion, how wise art thou!</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>We must therefore train ourselves to this end. If a letter is
-brought to us, we must not show all that hurry and eagerness
-to open it which most people display, when they bite the
-fastenings through with their teeth, if their hands are too slow.
-When a messenger arrives from somewhere or other, we must
-not run to meet him, nor get up from our seats. If a friend
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> says, ‘I have something new to tell you,’ let us reply: ‘Better,
-if you have something useful or profitable.’ When I was once
-lecturing at Rome, the famous Rusticus—who was afterwards
-put to death by Domitian out of jealousy at his reputation—was
-among my hearers. A soldier came through the audience
-and handed him a note from the emperor. There was a hush,
-and I made a pause, to allow of his reading the letter. This,
-however, he refused to do, nor would he open it, until I had
-finished my discourse and the audience broke up. The incident
-caused universal admiration at his dignified behaviour.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>But when one feeds his inquisitiveness upon permissible
-material until he makes it robust and headstrong, he no longer
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> finds it easy to master, when force of habit urges it towards
-forbidden ground. Such persons will stealthily open their
-friends’ missives, will push their way into a confidential meeting,
-will get a view of rites which it is an impiety to see, will tread
-in hallowed places, and will pry into the doings and sayings of
-a king.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Now with a despot—who is compelled to know everything—there
-is nothing that makes him so detested as the crew known
-as his ‘ears’ and ‘jackals’. ‘Listeners’ were first instituted
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_129'>129</span>by Darius the Younger, who had no confidence in himself and
-looked upon every one with fear and suspicion. ‘Jackals’ were <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>523<span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-the creation of the Dionysii, who distributed them among the
-people of Syracuse. Naturally, when the revolution came,
-these were the first to be seized and cudgelled to death by the
-Syracusans.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Blackmailers and informers are a breed belonging to the Busybody
-clan; they are members of the family. But, whereas the
-informer looks to see if his neighbours have done or plotted any
-mischief, the busybody brings to book and drags into public
-even the misfortunes for which they are not responsible. It
-is said that the outcast derived his name of <i>aliterios</i> in the
-first instance from being a busybody. It appears that when
-a severe famine once occurred at Athens, and when those who
-were in possession of wheat, instead of bringing it in to the public <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-stock, used to grind it (<i>alein</i>) secretly by night in their houses,
-certain persons, who went round watching for the noise of the
-mills, were in consequence called <i>aliterioi</i>. It was in the same
-way, we are told, that the informer won his name of <i>sukophantes</i>.
-The export of figs (<i>suka</i>) being prohibited, those who gave
-information (<i>phainein</i>) and impeached the offenders were called
-<i>sukophantai</i>. Busybodies would do well to reflect upon this
-fact. It may make them ashamed of the family likeness between
-their own practices and those of a class which is a special object
-of loathing and anger.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_130'>130</span>
- <h2 id='chap05' class='c003'>ON GARRULOUSNESS</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c004'><span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>502 <span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> When philosophy undertakes to cure garrulity it has a difficult
-and intractable case in hand. The remedy is reason, which
-requires that the patient should listen. But the garrulous person
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> does not listen, for he is always talking. Herein lies the first
-trouble with an inability to keep silent; it means an inability
-to listen. It is the deliberate deafness of a person who appears
-to find fault with nature for giving him two ears and only one
-tongue. Euripides is, of course, right when he says of the
-unintelligent hearer:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>I cannot fill a man who cannot hold</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>My wise words, poured and poured in unwise ears.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>But there is more reason to say of the babbler:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>I cannot fill a man who takes not in</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>My wise words, poured and poured in unwise ears</i>,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>—or rather poured over them, since he talks though you do
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> not listen, and refuses to listen when you talk. For even if,
-thanks to some ebb in his loquacity, he does listen for a
-moment, he immediately makes up for it several times over.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>There is a colonnade at Olympia which reverberates a single
-utterance time after time, and is therefore known as the ‘Seven-Voiced’.
-Say but the least thing to set garrulity sounding, and
-it immediately dins you with its echoes:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Stirring the strings o’ the mind that none should stir.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>The passage through the babbler’s ears leads, apparently, not
-to his mind, but to his tongue. Consequently, while others
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> retain what is said, the loquacious person lets it all leak away,
-and goes about like a vessel full of noise but void of sense.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_131'>131</span>Nevertheless, if we are resolved to leave no stone unturned,
-let us say to the babbler:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Hush, boy: in silence many a virtue lies</i>,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>and, first and foremost, the two virtues of hearing and being
-heard. The garrulous person can get the benefit of neither, and
-makes a miserable failure of the very thing he is aiming at.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>In other mental maladies—love of money, love of glory, love
-of pleasure—there is at least a chance of gaining the object
-pursued. But with the babbler that result can hardly happen. <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-What he desires is listeners, and listeners he cannot get, for they
-all run headlong away. If, when they are sitting in a lounge
-or taking a walk together, they catch sight of him approaching,
-they promptly pass each other the word to shift camp.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>When a silence occurs at some meeting, it is said that <i>Hermes
-has appeared upon the scene</i>. Similarly, when a chatterer comes
-in to a wine-party or a social circle, everybody grows mum, for <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>503<span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-fear of giving him an opportunity. And if he begins of his own
-accord to open his lips, then</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>As ere the storm, when the North wind blows</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>By the headland that juts to the deep</i>,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>the prospect of being tossed and seasick is so distressing that
-up they get and out they go.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>For the same reason he finds no welcome from neighbours
-at a dinner or from messmates on a journey or a voyage. They
-merely tolerate him because they must. For he sticks to you
-anywhere and everywhere, seizing you by the clothes or the
-beard, and slapping you in the ribs.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Then are your feet most precious</i>,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>as Archilochus would say—and not only Archilochus, but that
-wise man Aristotle. When the latter was himself once worried <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-by a chatterer, who bored him with a number of silly stories
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_132'>132</span>and kept repeating, ‘Isn’t it wonderful, Aristotle?’ he retorted,
-‘The wonder is not at that, but at any one tolerating you, when
-he owns a pair of legs.’ To another person of the kind, who,
-after a great deal of talk, remarked, ‘Master, I have wearied
-you with my chatter,’ he replied, ‘Not at all; I was not
-listening.’ Precisely so. If a chatterer insists on talking, the
-mind surrenders the ears to him and lets the stream pour over
-them on the outside, while inwardly it goes its own way, opening
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> and reading to itself a book of quite different thoughts. It
-follows that he can get no hearer either to attend to him or to
-believe him. A babbler’s talk is as barren of effect as the seed
-of a person over-prone to sexualities is said to be.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>And yet there is no part of us which Nature has fenced with
-so excellent a barricade as the tongue. In front of that organ
-it has planted a guard in the shape of the teeth, so that, if it
-will not obey orders and pull itself together inside when reason
-tightens the ‘<i>silence-working reins</i>‘,<a id='r43' /><a href='#f43' class='c009'><sup>[43]</sup></a> we may check its rashness
-by biting it till it bleeds. The phrase of Euripides is that
-‘<i>disaster is the end</i>’ not of an ‘unchained’ treasury or storeroom,
-but of an ‘<i>unchained mouth</i>‘. To recognize that a storeroom
-without a door, or a purse without a fastening, is of no
-use to the owner, and yet to possess a mouth without lock or
-door, but with as perpetual an outflow as the mouth of the
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> Black Sea, is to set the lowest possible value on speech.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The result is that such a person meets with no belief, though
-all speech has that object, its final cause being to create precisely
-such credence in the hearer. A chatterer is disbelieved even
-when he tells the truth. For as wheat, when shut in a bin, is
-found to increase in bulk but to deteriorate in quality, so, when
-a story finds its way into a chatterer, it generates a large addition
-of falsehood and its credibility is thereby corrupted.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_133'>133</span>Again, any self-respecting and well-behaved person will
-beware of drunkenness. For while—as some put it—anger lives
-next door to madness, drunkenness lives in the same house. <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-Or rather it <i>is</i> madness, of shorter duration, it is true, but more
-culpable, as being in a measure voluntary. But the charge most
-seriously urged against drunkenness is its intemperate and irresponsible
-language:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>For though right shrewd be a man, wine eggs him on till he singeth;</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>It loosens him that he laughs with a feeble laughter, and danceth.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>Yet if this were the worst—singing, laughing, and dancing—there
-would be, so far, nothing very terrible.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>And he letteth slip some speech, the which were better unspoken</i>:—</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'><span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> that is where the mischief and danger begin.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>We may, indeed, believe that these lines of the poet give
-the solution of the question discussed in the philosophic schools
-as to the distinction between mellowness and intoxication:
-mellowness produces unbending, but drunkenness foolish twaddling.
-As the proverb-makers put it, ‘<i>What is in the sober
-man’s heart is on the drunken man’s tongue.</i>’ Hence when Bias
-once kept silent at a carousal, and a chatterer taunted him with
-stupidity, he retorted: ‘And, pray, who could keep silent over
-his wine, if he were a fool?’ A certain person at Athens was <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>504<span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-once entertaining envoys from a king, and, as they were eager
-for him to get together the philosophic teachers, he made
-every effort to gratify them. While the rest took part in general
-discussion, to which each contributed his quota, Zeno said
-nothing. At this the visitors, pledging him in friendly and
-courteous terms, asked him, ‘And what are we to say to the
-king about you, Zeno?’ ‘Merely,’ replied he, ‘that there is
-one old man at Athens who is capable of holding his tongue <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>*<span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-when drinking.’</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_134'>134</span>Silence, then, goes with depth, the capacity to keep a secret,
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> and sobriety. Drunkenness, on the other hand, will be talking,
-for it means folly and witlessness, and therefore loquacity. In
-fact, the philosophic definition of intoxication calls it ‘<i>silly
-talk in one’s cups</i>‘. The blame, therefore, is not for drinking,
-if one can drink and yet at the same time hold his tongue.
-It is the foolish talk that converts mellowness into drunkenness.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Well, while the drunken man talks nonsense at his wine, the
-babbler talks it everywhere—in the market-place, in the theatre,
-when walking, when tipsy, by day and by night. As your doctor,
-he is a greater infliction than the disease; as your shipmate,
-more disagreeable than the sea-sickness; his praises are more
-annoying than another person’s blame. A tactful rogue is more
-pleasant company than an honest chatterer. In Sophocles, when
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> Ajax is beginning to use rough language, Nestor, in endeavouring
-to soothe him, says politely:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>I blame thee not; for though thy words are wrong,</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>Thine acts are right.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>But those are not our feelings towards the twaddler. On the
-contrary, the tactlessness of his talk spoils and nullifies anything
-acceptable in what he may do.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Lysias once gave a litigant a speech which he had composed
-for him. After reading it several times the man came back.
-In a despondent tone he told Lysias that, when he first went
-through the speech, it appeared wonderfully good, but on taking
-it up a second and third time, he found it extremely weak and
-ineffective. ‘Well,’ said Lysias laughing, ‘isn’t it only once
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> that you have to speak it before the jury?’ And consider how
-persuasive and charming Lysias is! For he is another who</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Hath goodly portion, I trow,</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>Of the Muses violet-tress’d.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>Of all things that are said about the great bard the truest is
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_135'>135</span>this—that Homer alone manages never to cloy the appetite,
-since he is always new, and his charm always at its height.
-Nevertheless, exclaiming on his own account in the words of
-Odysseus: <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>*<span class='hidev'>|</span></span></p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in20'><i>But to me it is hateful</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>To tell o’er a story again, when once right plainly ’tis told you</i>,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>he is continually avoiding that tendency to surfeit which threatens
-talk of every kind, carrying his hearers from one story to another,
-and relieving their satiety by his constant freshness.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Our babblers, on the contrary, bore us to death with their
-repetitions, as if our ears were palimpsests for them to scrawl
-rubbish upon.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Let this, then, be the first thing of which we remind them. <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-It is with talking as it is with wine. The purpose of wine is to
-create pleasure and friendly feeling; but to insist upon our
-drinking it in great quantities and without qualifying it, is to
-lead us into offensive and wanton behaviour. So, while talk
-plays the most pleasant and human part in our intercourse,
-those who make a wrong and rash use of it render it inhuman
-and insufferable. The means by which they imagine they are
-ingratiating themselves and gaining admiration and friendship,
-only makes them a nuisance and wins them ridicule and dislike.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>How destitute of charm would be a person who alienated
-his company and drove them away with the very ‘girdle of
-charm’! And how destitute of culture and tact is the man <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-who arouses annoyance and hostility by means of speech!</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Other infirmities and disorders may be dangerous or detestable
-or ridiculous. Garrulity is all three at once. It is derided for
-relating what everybody knows; it is hated for bearing bad
-news; it is endangered through blabbing secrets. This is the <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>505<span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-reason why, when Anacharsis went to sleep after being entertained
-at dinner at Solon’s house, he was seen to be holding
-his right hand over his mouth. He believed—quite rightly—that
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_136'>136</span>the tongue requires a firmer control than any other member.
-It would be difficult, for instance, to count up as many persons
-who have been ruined by sensuality, as cities and dominions
-which have been brought to destruction by the divulgence of a
-secret. When Sulla was besieging Athens, he could not afford
-to spend much time upon it,</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Since other labour was urging</i>,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>Mithridates having seized upon Asia, and the Marian party
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> being again masters of Rome. It happened, however, that
-a number of old men were talking at a barber’s, to the effect
-that no watch was kept upon the Heptachalcon and that the
-town was in danger of capture at that point. They were overheard
-by spies, who gave information to Sulla; and he promptly
-brought up his forces at midnight, led in his army, and almost
-razed the city to the ground, filling it with carnage till the
-Cerameicus flowed with blood. His anger with the Athenians
-was, however, due more to their words than to their deeds.
-They would leap on to the walls, and abuse him and Metella,
-and by jeering at him with <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span></p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>A mulberry is Sulla, sprinkled o’er with barley-meal</i>,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>and a number of similar scurrilities, they brought upon themselves—to
-use a phrase of Plato—‘<i>a very heavy penalty</i>’ for
-that ‘<i>very light</i>’ thing, their words.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>It was, again, the talkativeness of one man that prevented
-Rome from obtaining its freedom by the removal of Nero.
-All preparations had been made, and only a single night was
-left before the despot was to perish. It happened, however,
-that the man who was to perform the assassination, when on
-his way to the theatre, saw a prisoner at the palace doors on the
-point of being brought before Nero. As he was bewailing his
-fate, our friend came up close and whispered to him, ‘My good
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> man, only pray that to-day may pass, and to-morrow you will
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_137'>137</span>be offering me thanks.’ The prisoner grasped the meaning of
-the hint, and reflecting, I suppose, that</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>’Tis a fool who forgoes what he holds, to pursue what is out of his keeping</i>,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>chose the surer rather than the more righteous way of saving
-himself. That is to say, he informed Nero of the expression
-used. The man was thereupon promptly seized, and underwent
-rack, fire, and lash while denying, in the face of constraint,
-what he had betrayed without any constraint.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The philosopher Zeno, for fear that bodily suffering might
-force him to reveal some secret in spite of himself, bit through
-his tongue and spat it out at the despot. Leaena, again, has
-been gloriously rewarded for her self-command. She was the <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-mistress of Harmodius and Aristogeiton, and she shared in their
-plot against the despots—to the best of her hopes, which was
-all a woman could do. For she also was inspired with the
-bacchic frenzy of that glorious ‘<i>bowl of love</i>‘, and the God had
-caused her also to be initiated into the secret. Well, after they
-had failed and met their death, she was put to the question and
-ordered to inform against those who still escaped detection.
-She refused, and the firmness with which she bore her sufferings <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-proved that, in the love of those heroes for such a woman,
-there was nothing unworthy of themselves. The Athenians
-therefore had a bronze lioness made without a tongue, and set
-it up in the gates of the Acropolis, that courageous animal
-representing her indomitable firmness, and the absence of a
-tongue her power of silence in keeping a solemn secret.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>No uttered word has ever done such service as many which
-have been unuttered. You may some day utter what you have
-kept silent, but you cannot unsay what has been said; it has
-been poured out, and has run abroad. Hence, I take it, we have
-mankind to teach us how to speak, but gods to teach us how to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_138'>138</span>keep silent, our lesson in that art being received at initiatory
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>506<span class='hidev'>|</span></span> rites and mysteries. Odysseus, who possessed most eloquence,
-the poet has made most reticent; he has done the same with
-his son, his wife, and his nurse. You hear how she says:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Like stubborn oak or like iron will I hold your secret and keep it.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>In the case of Odysseus himself, as he sat beside Penelope,</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Though in his heart he pitied his wife, and was sore at her weeping,</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>Steady within their lids stood his eyes as horn or as iron.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'><span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> So full of self-command was his body in every part, under such
-perfect discipline and control did reason hold it, that it forbade
-the eyes to shed a tear, the tongue to utter a sound, the heart
-to tremble or cry out with rage;</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>And his heart once more did obey, and endure with a patient enduring</i>,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>inasmuch as reason had extended even to his irrational movements
-and made his very breath and blood amenable to its
-authority. Most of his comrades also were of the same character.
-Self-command and loyalty could no further go than in their case.
-Though harried and dashed upon the ground by the Cyclops,
-they would not denounce Odysseus to him. They would not
-betray the plot against his eye and the implement which had
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> been sharpened in the fire for that purpose; but they chose
-to be eaten raw rather than tell a word of the secret.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Pittacus, therefore, was not far out, when, upon the King of
-Egypt sending him a sacrificial victim and bidding him pick
-out the ‘fairest and foulest’ part of the meat, he took out and
-sent him the tongue, as being the instrument of both the
-greatest good and the greatest evil.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Euripides’ Ino, making bold to speak for herself, says that she
-knows how to be</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Silent in season, speak where speech is safe.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_139'>139</span>Those, indeed, who are blessed with a noble and a truly royal
-education, know first how to be silent and then how to talk.
-The famous king Antigonus, when his son asked him at what <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-hour they were to break camp, replied, ‘What are you afraid of?
-That you may be the only one to miss hearing the trumpet?’
-Was it that he did not trust with a secret the man to whom he
-intended to bequeath his throne? Rather he meant to teach
-him self-mastery and caution in dealing with such matters.
-The aged Metellus, on being asked a similar question during
-a campaign, answered, ‘If I thought my shirt knew that secret,
-I would take it off and put it on the fire.’ When Eumenes
-heard that Craterus was advancing, he told the fact to none of
-his friends, but pretended that it was Neoptolemus, whom his <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-soldiers despised, whereas they entertained a great respect for
-the reputation of Craterus and a high esteem of his ability.
-As, however, no one else found out the truth, they joined battle,
-won the victory, killed Craterus without knowing him, and only
-discovered who he was from his corpse. So good a general was
-the silence of Eumenes in the battle, and so formidable the
-opponent whose presence it disguised, that his friends admired
-instead of blaming him for not forewarning them. Even if
-some one does find fault, it is better to be accused when mistrust
-has saved you than to be the accuser when trust proves your
-undoing.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>What excuse can one possibly find for himself when blaming
-another for not holding his tongue? If the matter ought not to <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-have been known, it was wrong to tell it to any one else. If you
-let the secret slip from yourself, and yet ask another person to
-keep it, you take refuge in the loyalty of some one else while
-abandoning loyalty to yourself. And if he turns out as bad as
-you, you are deservedly undone; if better, you are saved by
-a miracle, through finding another person more faithful to you
-than yourself. ‘But So-and-So is my friend.’ So is a second
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_140'>140</span>person <i>his</i> friend, whom <i>he</i> again will trust as <i>I</i> trust <i>him</i>.
-So with that person and a third, and thus the talk will go on
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>507<span class='hidev'>|</span></span> increasing and extending in link after link of weak betrayal. The
-Unit never goes beyond its own limit, but is, once and for all,
-‘oneness’—whence its name. But the number ‘two’ is the
-indefinite beginning of difference, for by the duplication it at
-once shifts in the direction of multitude. In the same way, so
-long as a piece of information is confined to the first possessor, it is
-really and truly a ‘secret’. But if it passes by him to a second,
-it must be classed as a ‘report’. ‘<i>Winged words</i>,’ says the poet.
-If you let go from your hand a thing with wings, it is not easy
-to get it back into your grasp; and if you let an observation
-slip from your lips, it is impossible to seize and secure it, but
-away it flies</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>on nimbly-whirling wing</i>,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>and circulates in all directions from one set of people to another.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>When a ship is caught by a wind, they put a check upon it
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> and deaden its speed with cables and anchors; but let a speech
-run—so to speak—out of port, and it finds no place to cast and
-ride at anchor. It is carried away with a roar, till he who has
-uttered it is dashed and sunk upon some great and terrible
-danger.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>From but a little torch-light Ida’s heights</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>May all be set ablaze; so, tell but one,</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>And all the town will know it.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>The Roman Senate had been engaged for a number of days
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> in debating a secret matter of policy. As it gave rise to much
-mystification and conjecture, a woman—otherwise irreproachable,
-but still a woman—kept pestering her husband and
-imploring him to tell her the secret. On her oath, she would
-be silent: if not, might a curse fall upon her. She wept and
-wailed because she was ‘not trusted’. From a desire to bring
-home her folly by a proof, the Roman said, ‘Have your way,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_141'>141</span>wife. But the news is terribly ominous. We have been informed
-by the priests that a lark has been seen flying about with a gold
-helmet and a spear. We are therefore discussing the portent,
-and are inquiring, with the help of the augurs, whether it is
-good or bad. But mind you tell nobody.’ With these words
-he went off to the Forum. The wife at once seized hold of <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-the first maid-servant to enter the room, and, beating her own
-breast and tearing her hair, exclaimed, ‘O my poor husband
-and country! What will become of us?‘, her wish being to
-give the maid the opportunity of asking ‘Why, what has happened?’
-At any rate she took the question as put, and told the
-tale, adding the invariable refrain of every babbler, ‘Tell no one
-about it, but hold your tongue.’ The girl no sooner left her
-than she looked for the fellow-servant who had least to do, and <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-imparted it to her. She in turn told it to her lover, who was
-paying her a visit. The story went rolling on so rapidly that it
-reached the Forum before the man who had invented it, and
-he was met by an acquaintance, who said, ‘Have you just
-come down from home?’ ‘This minute,’ he replied. ‘Then
-you haven’t heard anything?’ ‘No. Why? Is there any
-news?’ ‘A lark has been seen flying about with a gold helmet
-and a spear, and the magistrates are about to hold a Senate
-meeting on the matter.’ At this the man exclaimed with
-a laugh, ‘O wife, wife! What a speed! To think the story
-has got to the Forum ahead of me!’ First he interviewed the
-magistrates and relieved their anxiety; then, on going home, <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-he proceeded to punish his wife by saying, ‘Wife, you have been
-the ruin of me. The secret is public property, and the fault
-has been traced to my house. And so I am to be exiled, all
-because of your loose tongue.’ Upon her attempting to deny
-it by arguing ‘But there were three hundred who heard it as
-well as you’, he retorted ‘Pooh for your three hundred! I
-invented it to try you, all because of your persistence’.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_142'>142</span>In this case the man took safe precautions in putting his wife
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>508<span class='hidev'>|</span></span> to the test, by pouring into the leaky vessel not wine or oil, but
-water. It was otherwise with Fulvius, the close friend of
-Augustus. The emperor in his old age was lamenting to him
-over his desolate home and grieving because, two of his daughter’s
-children being dead, and Postumius, the only one left, being
-in exile on some calumnious charge, he was being driven to
-adopt his wife’s son as his successor, although he felt compassion
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> for his grandson and was considering the question of recalling
-him from abroad. Fulvius divulged what he had heard to his
-wife, and she to Livia; whereupon Livia took Caesar bitterly
-to task, asking why, if he had been so long of this mind, he did
-not send for his grandson, instead of putting her in a position
-of enmity and strife with the successor to the throne. Accordingly,
-when Fulvius came to him—as he regularly did—in the
-morning and said ‘Good morning, Caesar’, he replied ‘Good-bye,
-Fulvius’. Fulvius took the hint, went away home at once,
-sent for his wife, and said, ‘Caesar knows that I have betrayed
-his secret, and I propose therefore to put myself to death.’
-‘Rightly too,’ answered his wife, ‘seeing that, after living with
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> me so long, you failed to discover the looseness of my tongue
-and to guard against it. But after me, if you please’—and seizing
-the sword she despatched herself first.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The comic poet Philippides therefore acted rightly when, in
-answer to the friendly civilities of King Lysimachus and his
-question ‘What is there of mine that I can share with you?‘,
-he replied ‘What you choose, Sire, except your secrets.’</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>On the other hand garrulity goes with the equally objectionable
-vice of inquisitiveness. The babbler must find much to
-hear, so that he may have much to tell. Especially must he
-go round tracking and hunting out hidden secrets, so as to provide
-himself with a miscellaneous stock-in-trade for his foolish
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> talk. Then, like a child with a piece of ice, he neither likes to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_143'>143</span>keep hold nor wants to let go. Or rather, the secrets are reptiles,
-which he grasps and puts in his bosom, but which he cannot
-hold tight, and so is devoured by them. Garfish and vipers—so
-we are told—burst in giving birth to their young. So the escape
-of a secret is ruin and destruction to him who lets it out.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Seleucus the Victorious, having lost all his army and resources
-in his fight with the Gauls, tore off his royal circlet with his
-own hands, and fled away on horseback with three or four
-attendants. After a long and circuitous ride away from the
-highroads, he was at last so overcome by want that he approached
-a homestead, and being fortunate enough to find the owner in <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-person, asked him for bread and water. The man not only
-gave him these, but supplied him liberally and in the most
-friendly way with whatever else he had upon his farm. In doing
-so he recognized the king’s face. So overjoyed was he at his
-fortunate opportunity of rendering him service, that, instead of
-restraining himself and playing up to the king’s desire to be
-unknown, he accompanied him as far as the road, and, on taking
-his leave, said, ‘Good-bye, King Seleucus.’ At this the king,
-holding out his right hand and drawing the man towards him
-as if to kiss him, gave a sign to one of the attendants to cut off
-his head with a sword;</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>And so, with the word on his lips, his head in the dust lay mingled</i>,—</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>whereas, if he had then had the patience to hold his tongue <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-for a little while, he would in all probability, when the king
-subsequently won success and power, have earned a larger
-return for his silence than for his hospitality.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>In this case, it is true, the man’s hopes and kindly feeling
-formed some excuse for his lack of self-command. Most
-babblers, however, have no excuse at all for their own undoing.
-For example, people were once talking in a barber’s shop about
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_144'>144</span>the despotism of Dionysius, and saying how firmly established
-it was against all assault. At this the barber remarked laughingly,
-‘How can you say that, when every few days I have my
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>509<span class='hidev'>|</span></span> razor at his throat?’ No sooner did Dionysius hear of this
-speech than he impaled the barber.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Barbers, by the way, are generally a garrulous crew. Their
-chairs being the resort of the greatest chatterers, they catch
-the bad habit themselves. It was a neat quip that Archelaus
-once gave to a loquacious barber. After putting the towel
-round him, the man asked, ‘How shall I cut your hair, Sire?’
-‘In silence,’ he replied. It was a barber also who reported the
-great disaster of the Athenians in Sicily, he having been the
-first to hear it at the Peiraeus from a slave, who had run away
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> from the spot. Abandoning his shop, he hurried at full speed
-to town,</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Lest another the glory might win</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>by imparting the news to the capital,</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>while he might come but the second</i>.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>A panic naturally ensued, and the people were gathered to an
-assembly, where they set to work to trace the rumour to its
-source. When, however, the barber was brought forward and
-questioned, he did not even know the name of his informant,
-but could only give as his authority a person unnamed and unknown.
-Thereupon the audience shouted in anger: ‘To the
-rack and the wheel with the wretch! The thing is a pure concoction!
-Who else has heard it? Who believes it?’ The wheel
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> had been brought, and the man had been stretched upon it,
-when there appeared upon the scene the bearers of the disastrous
-news, who had escaped from the very midst of the action.
-At this they all dispersed, to occupy themselves with their private
-griefs, leaving the poor wretch bound upon the wheel. When
-at a late hour towards evening he was set free, he proceeded to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_145'>145</span>ask the executioner ‘whether they had also heard in what manner
-Nicias, the commander, had met his death’. Such a hopeless and
-incorrigible failing does garrulity become through force of habit.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>After drinking a bitter and evil-smelling medicine, we are
-disgusted with the cup as well. In the same way, if you are the
-bearer of bad news, you are regarded with disgust and hatred
-by those who hear it. Hence a pretty discussion in Sophocles: <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span></p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>A. <i>Is it in ear or heart that thou art stung?</i></div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>B. <i>Why seek thus to define where lies my pain?</i></div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>A. <i>’Tis the doer grieves thine heart, I but thine ears.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>Be that as it may, a speaker causes pain as well as a doer. Nevertheless
-there is no stopping or chastening a loose, glib tongue.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>On one occasion it was discovered that the temple of Athena
-‘Of the Bronze House’ at Sparta had been pillaged, and an
-empty flask was found lying inside. The crowd which had
-run together could make nothing of it, when one of their
-number said, ‘If you like, I will tell you my notion as to the
-flask. I fancy the robbers, realizing all the danger they were to
-run, first drank hemlock, and then brought wine with them.
-If they managed to escape detection, they were to neutralize <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-the effects of the poison by drinking the unmixed wine, and so
-get away in safety. If they were caught, they were to die an
-easy and painless death from the poison, before they could be
-put to torture.’ The theory was so ingenious and acute that it
-appeared to come of knowledge rather than conjecture. He was
-therefore surrounded and questioned on every side—‘Who are <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-you? Who knows you? How do you get to know all that?‘—till
-finally, under this searching examination, he confessed that
-he was one of the thieves.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Were not the murderers of Ibycus found out in the same way?
-As they were sitting in the theatre, a number of cranes happened
-to come in sight, and they whispered laughingly to one another,
-‘Here are the avengers of Ibycus!’ They were overheard by
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_146'>146</span>persons sitting near them, and as a search was being made for
-Ibycus, who had been missing for a considerable time, the
-words were seized upon and reported to the magistrates. By
-this means the matter was brought home, and the assassins
-carried off to prison, where their punishment was due, not to
-the cranes, but to their own garrulity, which played the part
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>510<span class='hidev'>|</span></span> of an Erinys or Spirit of Vengeance in compelling them to
-divulge the murder. For as in the body, when a part is diseased
-or in pain, the neighbouring matter gathers towards it by
-attraction; so is it with the babbler’s tongue. Perpetually
-throbbing and inflamed, it must keep drawing towards itself
-some secret or other which ought to be concealed.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>We must therefore make ourselves secure. Let Reason lie
-like a barrier in the way of the tongue, to restrain its flow or
-prevent its slipping. And let us show that we possess no less
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> sense than certain geese of which we are told. It is said that,
-when they cross from Cilicia over the Taurus Range—which is
-full of eagles—they clap a bolt or bit upon their utterance.
-That is to say, they take in their mouths a good-sized stone,
-and so fly over at night without being discovered.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Now if it were asked</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Who it is that is the vilest, who most unredeemed of men</i>,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>it is the traitor who would always be named before any one
-else. Well, Euthycrates (as Demosthenes puts it) ‘<i>roofed his
-house with the timber got from Macedon</i>‘. Philocrates received
-a large sum of gold and proceeded to buy ‘<i>strumpets and fish</i>‘.
-Euphorbus and Philagrus, who betrayed Eretria, received lands
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> from the Persian king. But the babbler is a traitor who volunteers
-his services without pay, not in the way of betraying
-horses or fortresses, but of divulging secrets connected with
-lawsuits, party feuds, or political manœuvres. Instead of
-any one thanking him, he actually has to thank people for
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_147'>147</span>listening to him. The line addressed to a man who was recklessly
-squandering his money by giving indiscriminate presents—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Not generous, you: ’tis your disease; you love to be a-giving</i>—</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>fits the prater also. ‘You do not give this information out of
-friendliness and goodwill. ’Tis your disease; you love to be
-a-talking and a-babbling.’</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>These remarks are not to be regarded as simply an indictment
-of garrulity. They are an attempt to cure it. An ailment is <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-overcome by diagnosis and treatment, but diagnosis comes first.
-No one can be trained to avoid or to rid his mental constitution
-of a thing which causes him no distress. That distress we learn
-to feel at our disorders, when reason leads us to perceive the
-injury and shame which result from them. Thus in the present
-instance we perceive that the babbler is hated where he desires
-to be liked, annoys where he wishes to ingratiate himself, is
-derided where he thinks he is admired, and spends without
-gaining anything by it. He wrongs his friends, assists his <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-enemies, and ruins himself. The first step, therefore, in physicing
-this disorder, is to reflect upon the disgrace and pain which
-it causes. The second is to consider the advantages of the
-contrary behaviour, constantly hearing, remembering, and
-keeping at our call the praises of reticence, the solemn and
-sacramental associations of silence, and the fact that it is not
-by your unbridled talker at large that admiration, regard, and
-reputation for wisdom are won, but by the man of short and
-pithy speech, who can pack much sense into few words.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>We find Plato commending such persons, and saying that, in <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-their deliverance of crisp, terse, and compact utterances, they
-resemble a skilful javelineer. Lycurgus, again, forced his fellow-citizens
-to acquire this gift of compression and solidity by
-applying the pressure of silence from their earliest childhood.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The Celtiberians produce steel from iron by first burying
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_148'>148</span>it in the ground and then clearing away the earthy surplusage.
-So is it with Lacedaemonian speech. It has no surplusage, but
-is steadily hardened down to absolute effectiveness by the
-removal of everything unessential. And this knack of theirs of
-saying a pithy thing, or making a keen and nimble retort, is the
-result of a great habit of silence.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>511<span class='hidev'>|</span></span> We must not omit to give our chatterer examples of such
-brevities, in order to show how pretty and effective they are.
-For instance:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>The Lacedaemonians to Philip</i>: <i>Dionysius at Corinth</i>;</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>and, again, when Philip wrote to them ‘<i>If I enter Laconia,
-I will turn you out</i>‘, they wrote back, ‘<i>If.</i>’ When King Demetrius
-shouted in his indignation, ‘Have the Lacedaemonians
-sent only one envoy to <i>me</i>?‘, the envoy replied undismayed,
-‘One to one.’ Among our ancient worthies also we admire
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> the men of few words. It was not the <i>Iliad</i> or the <i>Odyssey</i>
-or the paeans of Pindar that the Amphictyons inscribed upon
-the temple of the Pythian Apollo, but the maxims <i>Know
-Thyself</i>: <i>Nothing in Excess</i>: <i>Give pledge, and Mischief is nigh</i>,
-which they admired for their simple and compact expression,
-with its closely-hammered thought in small compass. And does
-not the god himself show a love of conciseness and brevity in
-his oracles, deriving his name of ‘Loxias’ from the fact that he
-would rather be obscure than garrulous?</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Do we not also particularly praise and admire those who can
-say, by means of a symbol and without speaking a word, all that
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> is necessary? For instance, when his fellow-citizens insisted
-upon Heracleitus proposing some measure for the promotion
-of concord, he mounted the platform, took a cup of cold water,
-sprinkled it with barley-meal, stirred it with a slip of pennyroyal,
-drank it off, and went home. This was his way of intimating
-that to be satisfied with the commonest things, and to have no
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_149'>149</span>expensive wants, is the way to maintain a community in peace
-and concord. Another case is that of Scilurus, the Scythian
-king, who left behind him eighty sons. When he was dying,
-he called for a bundle of small spears, and bade them take and
-break it in pieces, tied together as it was, and in the mass.
-When they gave up the task, he himself drew the spears out one
-by one and snapped them all with ease, thereby demonstrating <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-how invincible was their strength if harmoniously united, how
-weak and short-lived if they did not hold together.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Any one, I believe, who constantly recalls these and the like
-examples, will cease to take a pleasure in chattering. But—speaking
-for myself—there is a story of a certain slave which
-greatly discourages me, when I reflect how hard it is to be so
-careful of our words as to make sure of our purpose. The orator
-Pupius Piso, not wishing to be troubled, ordered his slaves to
-talk only in answer to questions, and not a word more. Subsequently,
-being anxious to welcome Clodius in his official
-position, he gave orders for him to be invited to dinner, and
-prepared what was, of course, a splendid banquet. When the
-hour arrived, the other guests were all present and waiting for <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-Clodius. The slave who regularly carried the invitations was
-repeatedly sent out to see whether he was on his way. When
-evening came and he was given up in despair, Piso said to the
-slave, ‘Of course you took him the invitation?’ ‘I did,’ he
-answered. ‘Then why has he not appeared?’ ‘Because he
-refused.’ ‘Then why did you not tell me so at once?’ ‘Because
-you did not ask me that question.’</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>So much for the slave at Rome, whereas at Athens he will tell
-his master while digging</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>What terms are named i’ the treaty</i>,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>so great in all things is the force of habituation. To habituation
-let us now turn.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_150'>150</span><span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> We cannot check the babbler by taking, as it were, a grip
-on the reins. The malady can only be overcome by habit.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>In the first place, therefore, when questions are asked of your
-neighbours, train yourself to keep silent until they have all
-failed to answer.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Counsel hath other ends than running hath</i>,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>says Sophocles, and so has speech or answer. In running, the
-victor is the man who comes in first, but here the case is different.
-If another makes a satisfactory reply, the proper course is to
-lend approval and a word of support, and so win credit for good
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>512<span class='hidev'>|</span></span> feeling. If he fails, there is nothing invidious or inopportune in
-giving the information which he does not possess, or in supplementing
-his deficiencies. But above all things let us be on our
-guard, when a question is put to another person, that we do
-not anticipate him and take the answer out of his mouth.
-In any case in which a request is made of another it is, of course,
-improper for us to push him aside and offer our own services.
-By doing so we shall appear to be casting a slur on both parties;
-as if the one were incapable of performing what is asked, and as
-if the other did not know the right quarter from which to get
-what he asks for. But it is especially in connexion with answers
-to questions that such impudent forwardness is an outrage on
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>B<span class='hidev'>|</span></span> manners. To give the answer before the person questioned has
-time, implies the remark, ‘What do you want <i>him</i> for?‘, or
-‘What does <i>he</i> know?‘, or, ‘When <i>I</i> am present, nobody else
-should be asked that question.’</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Yet we often put a question to a person, not because we need
-the information, but by way of eliciting from him a few words
-of a friendly nature, or from a wish to lead him on to converse,
-as Socrates did with Theaetetus and Charmides. To take the
-answer out of another’s mouth, to divert attention to yourself
-and wrest it from another, is as bad as if, when a person desired
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_151'>151</span>to be kissed by some one else, you ran forward and kissed him
-yourself, or as if, when he was looking at another, you twisted
-him round in your own direction. The right and proper <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-course, even if the person who is asked for information cannot
-give it, is to wait, to take your cue to answer from the wish
-of the questioner—his invitation not having been addressed
-to you—and then to meet the situation in a modest and
-mannerly way. If a person of whom a question is asked makes
-a mistake in answering it, he meets with a due measure of
-indulgence; but one who pushes himself forward and insists
-on answering first, receives no welcome if he is right, while,
-if he is wrong, he becomes an object of positive exultation and
-derision.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The second item of our regimen concerns the answering of
-questions put to ourselves. Our garrulous friend must be particularly
-careful with these. In the first place he must not be
-deceived into giving serious replies to those who merely provoke
-him into a discussion in order to make a laughing-stock of him. <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-Sometimes persons who require no information simply concoct
-a question for the amusement and fun of the thing, and submit
-it to a character of this kind in order to set his foolish tongue
-wagging. Against this trick he must be on his guard. Instead
-of promptly jumping at the subject as if he were grateful, he
-should consider both the character of the questioner and the
-necessity for the question. And when it is clear that information
-is really desired, he must make a habit of waiting and
-leaving some interval between question and answer. There
-will then be time for the inquirer to add anything he
-wishes, and for himself to reflect upon his reply, instead of
-overrunning and muddling the question, hurriedly giving <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-first one answer and then another while the question is still
-going on.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The Pythian priestess, of course, is accustomed to deliver
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_152'>152</span>oracles on the instant, even before the question is asked, inasmuch
-as the God whom she serves</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Understandeth the dumb, and heareth a man though he speak not.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>But if you wish your answer to be to the purpose, you must
-wait for the questioner’s thought to be expressed, and discover
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> precisely what he is aiming at. Otherwise it will be a case of
-the old saying:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Asked for a bucket, they refused a tub.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>In any case that ravenous greed to be talking must be checked.
-Otherwise it will seem as if a stream, which has long been banked
-up at the tongue, is taking joyful advantage of the question to
-disgorge itself. Socrates used to control his thirst on the same
-principle. He would not permit himself to drink after exercise
-without pouring away the first jugful drawn from the well,
-thereby training his irrational part to wait until reason named
-the time.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>513<span class='hidev'>|</span></span> There are three possible kinds of answer to a question—the
-barely necessary, the polite, and the superfluous. For instance,
-to the inquiry, ‘Is Socrates at home?‘, one person may reply,
-in an offhand and apparently grudging way, ‘Not at home;’
-or, if he is disposed to adopt the Laconian style, he will omit
-the ‘at home’ and merely utter the negative. Thus the
-Lacedaemonians, when Philip had written to ask, ‘Do you
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>*<span class='hidev'>|</span></span> receive me into your city?‘, wrote a large <i>No</i> on a piece of paper
-and sent it back. Another, with more politeness, answers,
-‘No, but you will find him at the bankers’ tables’—going so
-far, perhaps, as to add, ‘waiting for some strangers.’ But,
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> third, our inordinate chatterbox—at any rate, if he happens also
-to have read Antimachus of Colophon—will say, ‘No; but you
-will find him at the bankers’ tables, waiting for some strangers
-from Ionia, concerning whom he has had a letter from Alcibiades,
-who is near Miletus, staying with Tissaphernes, the Great
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_153'>153</span>King’s Satrap, the same who used formerly to help the Lacedaemonians,
-but who is now attaching himself to the Athenians,
-thanks to Alcibiades; for Alcibiades is anxious to be recalled
-from exile, and is therefore working upon Tissaphernes to change
-sides.’ In fact he will talk the whole eighth book of Thucydides
-and will deluge the questioner with it, until, before he has done,
-there is war with Miletus and Alcibiades has been exiled for <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-the second time.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Here especially should loquacity be repressed. It should be
-forced to follow in the footsteps of the question, and to confine
-the answer within the circle of which the questioner’s requirement
-gives the centre and radius. When Carneades, before he
-became famous, was once discoursing in the gymnasium, the
-superintendent sent and requested him to lower his voice, which
-was a very loud one. Upon his replying ‘Give me my limit for
-reach of voice’, the officer aptly rejoined ‘The person who is
-speaking with you’. So, in making an answer, let the limit <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-be the wishes of the questioner.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>In the next place remember how Socrates used to urge the
-avoidance of those foods and drinks which induce you to eat
-when you are not hungry and to drink when you are not thirsty.
-So those subjects in which he most delights, and in which he
-indulges most immoderately, are the subjects which the babbler
-should shun, and whose advances he should resist. For example,
-military men are given to prosing about wars. Homer introduces
-Nestor in that character, making him relate his own deeds
-of prowess time after time. Take, again, those who have
-scored a victory in the law-courts, or who have met with
-surprising success at the courts of governors or kings. Generally <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-speaking, they are chronic sufferers from an itch to talk about it,
-and to describe over and over again how they came in, how they
-were introduced, how they played their parts, how they talked,
-how they confuted some opponent or accuser, and what eulogies
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_154'>154</span>they won. Their delight is more loquacious than that ‘sleepless
-night’ in the comedy, and is perpetually fanning itself into new
-flame and keeping itself fresh by telling over the tale. They are
-therefore prone to slip into such subjects at every pretext.
-For not only</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Where the pain is, there also goes the hand</i>;</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'><span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> no less does the part which feels pleasure draw the voice and
-twist the tongue in its own direction, from a desire to dwell
-perpetually on the theme. It is the same also with amorous
-persons, who chiefly occupy themselves with such conversation
-as brings up some mention of the object of their passion. If
-they cannot talk to human beings about it, they do so to
-inanimate things:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>O bed most dear!</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>or</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Bacchis thought thee a god, thou blessed lamp;</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>And greatest god thou art, methinks, through her.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>No doubt it makes not a pin’s difference to the chatterer
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>514<span class='hidev'>|</span></span> what subject of conversation may arise. Nevertheless, if he
-has a greater predilection for one class of subjects than for
-another, he ought to be on his guard against that class and
-force himself to hold aloof from it, since those are the subjects
-which can always tempt him furthest into prolixity for the
-pleasure of the thing. It is the same with those matters in
-which the talker thinks that his experience or ability gives him
-a superiority over other people. Through egotism and vanity
-such a person</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Giveth the most part of the day to that</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>Wherein he showeth to the most advantage.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>With the much-read man it is general information; with the
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> expert in letters, the rules of literary art; with the much-travelled
-man, accounts of foreign parts. These subjects also
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_155'>155</span>must therefore be shunned. They are an enticement to
-loquacity, which is led on to them like an animal towards its
-wonted fodder. One admirable feature in the conduct of Cyrus
-was that, in his matches with his mates, he challenged them to
-compete at something in which he was not more, but less,
-expert than they. Thus, while he caused no pain by eclipsing
-them, he also derived advantage from a lesson. With the
-chatterer it is the other way about. If any subject is mooted
-which gives him the opportunity of asking and learning something
-he does not know, he cannot even pay so small a fee <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-for it as merely holding his tongue, but he blocks the topic
-and elbows it aside, working steadily round till he drives the
-conversation into the well-worn track of stale old twaddle.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>We have had an example of this among ourselves, where a
-person who happened to have read two or three books of Ephorus
-used to weary every one to death, and put any convivial party
-to rout, by everlastingly describing the battle of Leuctra and its
-sequel, until he earned the nickname of ‘Epaminondas’. If,
-however, we are to choose between evils, this is the least, and we
-must divert loquacity into this channel. Talkativeness will be <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-less disagreeable when its excess is in an expert connexion.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>In the next place such persons should habituate themselves
-to putting things in a written or conversational form when alone.
-The case is not as with Antipater the Stoic. He gained his
-sobriquet of ‘Pen-Valiant’ because, being—as it would appear—unable
-and unwilling to come out and meet the vehement
-attacks made by Carneades upon the Porch, he kept filling his
-books with written disputations against him. But if the babbler
-turns to writing and valiantly fights shadows with his pen, the
-occupation will keep him from attacking people at large and
-will render him daily more bearable to his company. It will
-be as with dogs. Let them vent their anger on sticks and stones,
-and they are less ferocious to human beings. <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span></p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_156'>156</span>Another extremely beneficial course for talkers to adopt is
-to associate continually with their superiors and elders, out of
-respect for whose standing they will develop a habit of holding
-their tongues.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>As part and parcel of this training we should always vigilantly
-apply the following reflection, when we are on the point of
-talking and the words begin running to our mouths: ‘What
-<i>is</i> this remark that is so pressing and importunate? With what
-object is my tongue so impatient? What honour do I get by
-speaking, or what harm by keeping quiet?’ If the thought were
-an oppressive weight to be got rid of, the matter would be
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> different; but it remains with you just as much, even if it is
-spoken. When men talk, it is either for their own sake, because
-they want something, or it is to help the hearer; or else they
-seek to ingratiate themselves with each other by seasoning with
-the salt of rational conversation the pastime or business in which
-they happen to be engaged. But if a remark is neither of
-advantage to the speaker nor of importance to the hearer, if it
-contains nothing pleasant or interesting, why is it made? The
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>*<span class='hidev'>|</span></span> meaningless and futile is as much to be avoided in words as it is
-in deeds.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Over and above all this, we should keep in lively recollection
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>515<span class='hidev'>|</span></span> the saying of Simonides that he ‘had often repented of talking,
-but never of holding his tongue’. We should remember also
-that practice is a potent thing and overcomes all difficulties.
-People get rid even of the hiccoughs or a cough by resolutely
-resisting them. Yet this involves trouble and pain, whereas
-silence not only, as Hippocrates says, ‘prevents thirst;’ it also
-prevents pain and suffering.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_157'>157</span>
- <h2 id='chap06' class='c003'>ON THE STUDENT AT LECTURES</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c004'><span class='sc'>My dear Nicander</span>, <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>37 <span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span></p>
-
-<p class='c005'>This is an article upon ‘The Attitude of the Student’,
-which I have written and am sending to you. Its purpose is to
-teach you the right attitude towards your philosophic teacher,
-now that you are a grown-up man and are no longer obliged
-merely to obey orders.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Some young men are so ill-informed as to suppose that absence
-of restraint is the same thing as freedom, whereas, by unchaining <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-the passions, it makes them slaves to a set of masters more
-tyrannical than all the teachers and mentors of childhood.
-Herodotus says that when women take off the tunic they also
-take off shame. It is the same with some young men. In laying
-aside the garb of childhood they also lay aside shame and fear.
-No sooner do they unloose the cloak which controlled their
-conduct than they indulge in the utmost misbehaviour. With
-you it should be otherwise. You have been told over and over
-again that to ‘follow God’ and to ‘obey reason’ are the same
-thing. Understand, therefore, that with right-minded persons
-a coming of age does not mean rejection of rule, but change
-of ruler. For the hired or purchased<a id='r44' /><a href='#f44' class='c009'><sup>[44]</sup></a> director of conduct they <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-substitute one that is divine—namely, reason. Only those who
-follow reason deserve to be considered free; for they alone live
-as they choose, because they alone have learned to make the
-right choice, whereas ignorant and irrational desires and actions
-give small and paltry scope to the will, but great scope to
-repentance.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_158'>158</span>Note what happens in the case of naturalized citizens. Entire
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> foreigners from another country will often grumble irritably
-at their experiences, whereas those who have previously been
-denizens of the state, and have therefore lived in intimate touch
-with the laws, will accept their obligations with cheerful
-readiness. So with yourself. For a long time you have been
-growing up in the company of philosophy. From the first you
-have been accustomed to a taste of philosophic reason in everything
-that you have been taught or told as a child. It should
-therefore be in a well-disposed and congenial spirit that you come
-to Philosophy, who alone can adorn a youth with that finish
-of manhood which genuinely and rationally deserves the name.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>You will not, I believe, object to a prefatory remark upon
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>38<span class='hidev'>|</span></span> the sense of hearing. Theophrastus asserts that it is the most
-susceptible of all the senses, inasmuch as nothing that can be
-seen, tasted, or touched, is the cause of such strong emotional
-disturbance and excitement as takes hold upon the mind when
-certain sounds of beating, clashing, or ringing fall upon the ear.
-It is, however, more rational, rather than more emotional,
-than the other senses. Vice can find many places and parts
-of the body open for it to enter and seize upon the soul. But
-the only hold that virtue can take is upon pure young ears
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> which have at all times been protected from the corruptions
-of flattery or the touch of low communications. Hence the
-advice of Xenocrates, that ear-guards should be worn by boys
-more than by athletes, inasmuch as the latter merely have their
-ears disfigured by blows, while the former have their characters
-disfigured by words. Not that he would wed us to inattention
-or deafness. It is but a warning to beware of wrong communications,
-and to see that others of the right nature have first
-been fostered in our character by philosophy and have mounted
-guard in that quarter which is most open to influence and
-persuasion.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_159'>159</span>Bias, the ancient sage, was once bidden by Amasis to send him
-that piece of meat from a sacrificial victim which was at the
-same time the best and the worst. He replied by taking out and
-sending the tongue, on the ground that speech can do both the
-greatest harm and the greatest good. It is a general practice
-in fondling little children to take them by the ears, and to bid <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-them do the same to us—an indirect and playful way of suggesting
-that we should be especially fond of those who make our
-ears the instruments to our advantage.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>It is, of course, obvious that a youth cannot be debarred from
-any or every kind of hearing, or from tasting any discourse at
-all. Otherwise not only will he remain entirely without fruit
-or growth in the way of virtue; he will actually be perverted
-in the direction of vice, his mind being an idle and uncultivated
-patch producing a plentiful crop of weeds. Propensity to
-pleasure and dislike of labour—the springs of innumerable forms
-of trouble and disease—are not of external origin, nor imported <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-from teaching, but they well up naturally from the soil. If
-therefore they are left free to take their natural course; if they
-are not done away with, or turned aside, by sound instruction;
-if nature is not thus brought under control, man will prove
-more unreclaimed than any brute beast.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The hearing of lectures, then, may be of great profit, but at
-the same time of great danger, to a young man. This being so,
-I believe it a good thing to make the matter one of constant
-discussion, both with oneself and with others. In most cases <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-we may notice a false procedure—that of cultivating the art of
-speaking before being trained to the art of listening. It is
-thought that, while speaking requires instruction and practice,
-any kind of listening is attended with profit. But not so.
-Whereas in ball-play one learns simultaneously how to throw
-and how to catch, in the business of speech the right taking in is
-prior to the giving out, just as conception is prior to parturition.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_160'>160</span>We are told that in the case of a hen laying a wind-egg her
-labour and travail end in nothing but an abortive and lifeless
-piece of refuse. So when a young man lacks the ability to listen,
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> or the training to gather profit through the ear, the speech
-which he lets fall is wind-begotten indeed:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Sans all regard and sans note it is lost in the clouds and dispersèd.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>He will take a vessel and tilt it in the right direction for receiving
-anything to be poured into it, and so ensure a real ‘in-pouring’
-instead of a pouring to waste. But he does not learn to lend his
-own attention to a speaker and meet the lecture half-way, so as
-to miss no valuable point. On the contrary, his behaviour is
-in the last degree ridiculous. If he happens upon a person
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>39<span class='hidev'>|</span></span> describing a dinner, a procession, a dream, or a brawling-match
-in which he has been engaged, he listens in silence and is eager
-for more. But if a teacher to whom he has attached himself
-tries to impart something useful, or to urge him to some duty,
-to admonish him when wrong, or to soothe him when angry,
-he is out of all patience. If possible, he shows fight, and is
-ambitious to get the best of the argument. Otherwise he is
-off and away to discourses of a different and a rubbishy kind,
-filling his ears—the poor leaky vessels—with anything rather than
-the thing they need.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> From the right kind of breeder a horse obtains a good mouth
-for the bit, and a lad a good ear for reason. He is taught to
-do much listening, but to avoid much speaking. We may quote
-the remark of Spintharus in praise of Epaminondas, that he had
-scarcely ever met with any man either of greater judgement or
-of fewer words. Moreover, we are told, the reason why nature
-gave each of us two ears, but only one tongue, was that we should
-do less speaking than hearing.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>A youth is at all times sure to find silence a credit to him;
-but in one case it is especially so—when he can listen to another
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_161'>161</span>without becoming excited and continually yelping; when, even <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-if what is being said is little to his liking, he waits patiently
-for the speaker to finish; when, at the close, he does not
-immediately come to the attack with his contradiction, but
-(to quote Aeschines) waits a while, in case the speaker might
-wish to supplement his remarks, or perhaps to adjust or qualify
-his position. To take instant objection, neither party listening
-to the other but both talking at once, is an unseemly performance.
-On the other hand, those who have been trained to
-listen with modest self-control will accept a valuable argument
-and make it their own, while they will be in a better position
-to see through a worthless or false one and to expose it, thereby <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-showing that they are lovers of truth, and not merely contentious,
-headstrong, or quarrelsome persons. It is therefore not
-a bad remark of some, that there is more need to expel the wind
-of vanity and self-conceit from the young, than to expel the air
-from a skin, when you wish to pour in anything of value: otherwise
-they are too swollen and flatulent to receive it.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The presence of envious and malicious jealousy is, of course,
-never to good purpose, but always an impediment to proper
-action. In the case of a student at lectures it is the most
-perverse of prompters. Words which ought to do him good are
-rendered vexing, distasteful, and unwelcome by the fact that
-there is nothing which an envious man likes so little as an <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-excellent piece of reasoning. And note that, when a man is
-piqued by fame or beauty belonging to others, he is envious
-and nothing more; what annoys him is another’s good fortune.
-But when he is irritated by admirable argument, his vexation
-is at his own good, since reason—if he has a mind to accept it—is
-as much to the good of one who hears as light is to the good
-of one who sees.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Envy in other matters is the result of various coarse or low
-attitudes of mind; envy of a speaker is born of inordinate love
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_162'>162</span>of glory and unfair ambition. A person so disposed is prevented
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> from listening to reason. His mind is perturbed and distracted.
-At one and the same time it is looking at its own endowments,
-to see if they are inferior to those of the speaker, and at
-the rest of the company, to see if they are wondering and
-admiring. It is disgusted at their applause, and exasperated
-at their approval. The previous portions of the speech it forgets
-and ignores, because the recollection is irksome. The parts yet
-to come it awaits with trembling anxiety, for fear they may
-prove better still. When the speaker is at his best, it is most
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>40<span class='hidev'>|</span></span> eager for him to stop. When the lecture is over, it thinks of
-nothing that was said, but takes count of the expressions and
-attitudes of the audience. From those who give praise it dances
-away in a frenzy; and to those who carp and distort it runs
-to form one of the herd. If there is nothing to distort, it makes
-comparisons with others who have spoken ‘better and more
-eloquently to the same purpose’. In the end our friend has
-so cruelly mishandled the lecture that he has made it of no use
-or profit to himself.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> Let the love of glory, then, be brought to terms with the love
-of learning. Let us listen to a speaker with friendly courtesy,
-regarding ourselves as guests at a sacred banquet or sacrificial
-offering. Let us praise his ability when he makes a hit, or be
-satisfied with the mere goodwill of a man who is making the
-public a present of his views and endeavouring to convince
-others by means of the arguments which have convinced himself.
-When he goes right, let us consider that his rightness is
-due not to chance or accident, but to painstaking effort and
-learning. Let us take a pattern by it, and not only admire it,
-but emulate it. When he is at fault, let us stop and think for
-what reasons he is so, and at what point he began to go astray.
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> Xenophon observes that good managers derive profit from their
-enemies as well as from their friends. In the same way those
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_163'>163</span>who are attentive and alert derive benefit from a speaker not
-only when he is in the right, but also when he is in the wrong.
-Paltry thought, empty phrase, affected bearing, vulgar delight
-and excitement at applause, and the like, are more palpable
-to a listener in another’s case than to a speaker in his own. It is
-well, therefore, to take the criticism which we apply to him,
-and apply it to ourselves, asking whether we commit any mistake
-of the kind without being aware of it. It is the easiest thing in <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-the world to find fault with our neighbour, but it is a futile
-and meaningless proceeding, unless made to bear in some way
-upon the correction or prevention of similar faults. When
-lapses are committed, let us always be prompt to exclaim to
-ourselves in the phrase of Plato, ‘Am I, perhaps, as bad?’
-As in the eyes of our neighbour we see the reflection of our
-own, so we should find a picture of our own speech in that of
-another. In that way we shall avoid treating others with over-confident
-contempt, and shall also look more carefully to our
-own deliverances.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>There is another way in which comparison serves this useful <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-purpose. I mean if, when we get by ourselves after the lecture,
-we take some point which appears to have been wrongly or
-unsatisfactorily treated, and attack the same theme, doing our
-best to fill in, to correct, to re-word, or to attempt an entirely
-original contribution to the subject, as the case may be—doing,
-in fact, as Plato did<a id='r45' /><a href='#f45' class='c009'><sup>[45]</sup></a> with the speech of Lysias. While
-to argue against a certain deliverance is not difficult, but, on
-the contrary, very easy, to set up a better in its stead is an
-extremely hard matter. As the Lacedaemonian said on hearing
-that Philip had razed Olynthus to the ground: ‘Yes, but to
-create a city as good is beyond the man’s power’. Accordingly, <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-when we find that in dealing with the same subject we can do
-but little better than the speaker in the case, we make a large
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_164'>164</span>reduction in our contempt and speedily prune down that self-satisfied
-conceit which has been exposed during such process of
-comparison.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Nevertheless, though admiration, as opposed to contempt,
-certainly betokens a fairer and gentler nature, it is a thing which,
-in its own turn, requires no little—perhaps greater—caution.
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>41<span class='hidev'>|</span></span> For while a contemptuous and over-confident person derives
-too little benefit from a speaker, an enthusiastic and guileless
-admirer derives too much injury. He forms no exception to
-the rule of Heracleitus that ‘<i>Any dictum will flutter a fool</i>‘.
-One should be frank in yielding praise to the speaker, but
-cautious in yielding belief to the assertion; a kindly and candid
-observer of the diction and delivery of the arguer, but a sharp
-and exacting critic of the truth and value of his argument.
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> While we thus escape dislike from the speaker, we escape harm
-from the speech. How many false and pernicious doctrines we
-unawares accept through esteeming and trusting their exponent!
-The Lacedaemonian authorities, after examining a measure
-suggested by a man of evil life, instructed another person,
-famous for his conduct and character, to move it—a very proper
-and statesmanlike encouragement to the people to be led more by
-the character of an adviser than by his speech. But in philosophy
-we must put aside the reputation of the speaker and examine
-the speech in and by itself. In lecturing, as in war, there is
-much that is mere show. The speaker’s grey hairs, his vocal
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> affectations, his supercilious airs, his self-glorification; above
-all, the shouting, applauding, and dancing of the audience
-overwhelm the young and inexperienced student and sweep
-him along with the current. There is deception in the language
-also, when it streams upon the question in a delightful flood,
-and when it contains a measure of studied art and the grandiose.
-As, in singing to the accompaniment of the flageolet, mistakes
-are generally undetected by an audience, so an elaborate and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_165'>165</span>pretentious diction dazzles the hearer and blinds him to the
-sense. I believe it was Melanthius who, when asked about <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-Diogenes’ tragedy, replied: ‘I could not get a sight of it;
-it was hidden behind the words.’ But with the discourses and
-declamations of the majority of our professors it is not merely
-a case of using the words to screen the thoughts. They also
-dulcify the voice—modulating, smoothing, and intoning—till the
-hearer is carried away with a perfect intoxication. They give
-an empty pleasure, and are paid with an emptier fame. Their
-case, in fact, is one for the quip given by Dionysius. It was he,
-I think, who, during the performance of a distinguished harp-player,
-promised him a liberal reward, but subsequently gave <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-him nothing, on the ground that he had made a sufficient
-return. ‘For as long a time as I was enjoying your singing’,
-said he, ‘you were enjoying your expectations.’ The deliverer
-of the lectures in question finds that they represent a joint
-contribution of the same kind. He receives admiration as long
-as his entertainment lasts. As soon as no more pleasure is
-forthcoming for the ear, there is no more glory left for him.
-The one party has wasted his time, the other his professional life.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Let us, then, strip aside all this empty show of language, and
-make for the actual fruit. It is better to imitate the bee than <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-the garland-maker. The latter looks for the bright-coloured
-fragrant petals, and, by twining and plaiting them together,
-produces an object which is pleasant enough, but short-lived
-and fruitless. Bees, on the contrary, frequently skim through
-meadows of violets, roses, or hyacinths, to settle upon the
-coarsest and bitterest thyme. To this they devote themselves</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Contriving yellow honey</i>,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>and then fly home to their proper business with something
-worth the getting. So a student who takes his work in real
-earnest will pay no regard to dainty flowery words nor to showy
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_166'>166</span><span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>42<span class='hidev'>|</span></span> theatrical matter. These he will consider as fodder for drones
-who play the sophist. For his own part he will probe with keen
-attention into the sense of a speech and the quality of the
-speaker. Therefrom he will suck such part as will be of service
-and profit. He will remember that he has not come to a theatre
-or concert-hall, but to a classroom in the schools, and that his
-object is to get his life corrected by means of reason. Hence
-he should form a critical judgement of the lecture from his
-own case, that is to say, from a calculation of its effect upon
-himself. Has it been the chastening of a passion, the lightening
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> of a grief? Has it been courage, firmness of spirit, enthusiasm
-for excellence and virtue? Upon rising from the barber’s chair
-he will stand at the glass and put his hands to his head, inspecting
-the trim and arrangement of the hair. No less should he,
-immediately on leaving a lecture in the philosophic school,
-look at himself and examine his own mind, to see if it has got
-rid of any useless and uncomfortable growth and become lighter
-and more at ease. ‘There is no use’, says Aristo, ‘in either
-a bath or a speech, unless it cleanses.’</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> By all means let a young man, while profiting from a discourse,
-find pleasure in the process. But he must not treat the
-pleasure of the lecture as its end, nor expect to come out of the
-philosopher’s school with a beaming face and humming a tune.
-He must not ask for scented unguents when what he needs
-is a lotion or a poultice. On the contrary, he should be grateful
-if a pungent argument acts upon his mind like smoke upon a hive,
-and clears out all the darkness and mistiness that fill it. Though
-it is quite right for a speaker not to be altogether without
-concern for an attractive and persuasive style of language, that
-should be a matter least regarded by the young student, at any
-rate in the first instance. Later, no doubt, the case may be
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> different. It is when they are no longer thirsty that persons
-engaged in drinking will turn a cup about and inspect the chasing
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_167'>167</span>upon it. Similarly during a breathing-time, after taking
-our fill of the lesson, we may be permitted to examine any
-uncommon elegance in the language. But if from the very first,
-instead of taking a grip upon the substance, you insist upon
-‘good pure Attic’ expression, you are like a person who refuses
-to take an antidote unless the vessel is made of the best Attic
-earthenware; or who declines to put on a thick cloak in winter
-unless the wool is from Attic sheep, preferring to sit, stubborn
-and impracticable, in the thin napless mantle of the ‘style of
-Lysias’. Perversities of this kind are responsible for a plentiful <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-lack of good sense and an abundance of loquacious claptrap in
-the schools. Young fellows keep no watch upon the life, the
-practical action, or the public services of a philosopher, but
-make a great merit of diction, phrase, and fine method of statement,
-while they possess neither the ability nor the desire to
-find out whether the statement is valuable or worthless, whether
-it is vital or a mere futility.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The next rule concerns the propounding of difficulties.
-A guest at a dinner is bound to accept what is put upon the <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-table, and neither to ask for anything else nor to find fault.
-When the feast consists of a discourse, any one who comes to
-it should listen and say nothing, if there is an understanding
-to that effect. Persons who cannot listen in a pleasant and
-sociable manner, but keep drawing the speaker off to other
-topics, interposing questions and mooting side-issues, get no
-benefit themselves and confuse both the speaker and the speech.
-When, however, he invites the audience to ask questions and
-advance difficulties, any that are proposed should prove to be
-useful and important. Odysseus, when in the suitors’ company,
-incurs ridicule through</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Begging for morsels and scraps, and not for a sword or a cauldron.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'><span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>43<span class='hidev'>|</span></span> regard it as a sign of lofty-mindedness not only to give, but
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_168'>168</span>to ask for, something of value. It is, however, more a case for
-ridicule when a hearer poses a speaker with petty little problems
-of the kind often propounded by young men, when they
-are talking claptrap in order to make a show of attainments in
-logic or mathematics—for example, concerning ‘division of the
-indeterminate’ and the nature of ‘lateral’ or ‘diagonal’
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> motion. The proper answer to such persons is the remark of
-Philotimus to a man who was suffering with abscesses and
-consumption, but who had been talking to him for some time
-about requiring ‘some little thing to cure a whitlow’. Perceiving
-the man’s condition from his complexion and breathing,
-Philotimus observed: ‘My good sir, a whitlow is not the question
-with you.’ Nor in your case, young sir, is it worth while
-to be discussing such questions as yours, but how you are to
-get rid of conceit, swaggering about love-affairs, and such-like
-nonsense, and how you are to plant your feet on the way to
-a healthy and sober-minded life.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Especially are you bound, in putting your questions, to accommodate
-yourself to a speaker’s range of knowledge or natural
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> ability—to his special <i>forte</i>. A philosopher who is more concerned
-with ethics should not be attacked with difficulties in
-natural science or mathematics, nor should one who prides
-himself upon his scientific knowledge be dragged into determining
-hypothetical syllogisms or solving fallacies. If you
-attempted to chop your wood with the key and to open your
-door with the axe, it would not be thought that you were
-making sport of these implements, but that you were depriving
-yourself of their respective powers and uses. In the same way,
-if you ask of a speaker a thing for which he has no gift or training,
-while you make no harvest of what he possesses and offers,
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> you not only do yourself harm to that extent, but you incur
-condemnation for malicious ill-nature.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Be careful also not to propound difficulties yourself in too
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_169'>169</span>great numbers or too frequently. This is, in a sense, another
-way of showing off. Meanwhile, to listen equably when some one
-else is mooting them, shows that you are a clubbable person
-and a student. This is assuming you have no harassing and
-urgent trouble of your own, no mental disturbance to be controlled
-or malady to be comforted. It may not, after all, be
-(as Heracleitus says) ‘better to conceal ignorance’, but to bring
-it into the open and cure it. If your mind is upset by a fit of
-anger, an attack of superstition, a violent quarrel with your
-friends, or a mad amorous passion which</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Stirreth the heart-strings that should rest unstirred</i>,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'><span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> you must not run away from a discourse which searches it home,
-and fly to others of a different nature. On the contrary, these
-are the very topics to which you should listen, both at lectures
-and also by privately approaching the lecturer afterwards and
-asking for further light.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The opposite course is the one too generally followed. So
-long as the philosopher is dealing with other persons, his hearers
-are all delight and admiration. But when he leaves those others
-alone and frankly administers some important reminder to
-themselves personally, they are disgusted with him for not
-minding his own business. Generally speaking, they think <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-a philosopher is entitled to a hearing inside his school, as the
-tragedian is in the theatre; but in matters beyond it they do
-not consider him in any way superior to themselves. Towards
-a sophist their attitude is natural enough; for when he rises
-from his chair, lays aside his books and his introductory manuals,
-and makes his appearance in the practical departments of life,
-he ranks in the popular mind as an unimportant and inferior
-person. But towards a philosopher in the real sense their
-attitude is wrong. They do not recognize that a tone of earnestness
-or jest, a sign of approval or disapproval, a smile or a frown,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_170'>170</span><span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>44<span class='hidev'>|</span></span> on his part—and, above all, his direct handling of their individual
-cases—are fruitful in good to those who have learned the art of
-listening with submission.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Applause, again, has its duties, which call for a certain
-caution and moderation. A gentleman bestows neither too
-little nor too much of it. A hearer shows churlishly bad taste
-when nothing whatever in a lecture will make him thaw or
-unbend; when he is diseased with festering conceit and chronic
-self-complacency, and is all the time thinking he could improve
-upon the deliverance; when he neither makes any appropriate
-movement of the brow nor utters any sound to prove that he is
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>B<span class='hidev'>|</span></span> a considerate and willing listener; when he is seeking a reputation
-for solidity and depth by means of silence, an affected
-gravity, and attitudes of pose, under the notion that applause
-is like money, and that whatever amount you give to another
-you take from yourself. The fact is that there are many who
-take up the well-known saying of Pythagoras and sing it to a false
-tune. His own gain from philosophy, he said, was to ‘<i>wonder at
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>*<span class='hidev'>|</span></span> nothing</i>‘; whereas theirs is to ‘praise nothing’ or to ‘honour
-nothing’. With them wisdom lies in contempt, and the way to
-be dignified is to be disdainful. While, by means of knowledge
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> and the ascertainment of the cause in a given case, philosophic
-reason does away with the wonder and awe due to unenlightenment
-and ignorance, it does not destroy a generous appreciation.
-Those whose excellence is genuine and firmly seated find it the
-highest honour to bestow honour, the highest distinction to
-bestow distinction, where honour and distinction are due.
-Such conduct implies that they have fame enough and to spare,
-and are free from jealousy, whereas those who are niggards of
-praise to others are in all probability pinched and hungry for
-praise of their own.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>On the other hand, the opposite type of hearer is the fluttering
-feather-head who uses no discrimination, but punctuates with
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_171'>171</span>loud cheers at every word and syllable. While he is frequently
-obnoxious to the disputant himself, he is invariably a nuisance <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-to the hearers. He worries them on to their feet against their
-judgement, and drags them willy-nilly to join in the chorus
-because they are ashamed to refuse. Thanks to his applause
-deranging the lecture and making an imbroglio of it, he gets no
-good from it, but goes home with one of three descriptions
-to his credit—fleerer, sycophant, or ignoramus.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>It is true that, when hearing a case in court, we must lean <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-neither towards hostility nor towards favour, but towards
-justice as we best understand it. But at a lecture on a subject
-of learning there is neither law nor oath to debar us from
-granting the speaker an indulgent reception. The reason why
-the ancients placed the statue of Hermes in the company of the
-Graces was that speaking has a special claim to a gracious
-friendliness. It is impossible for any one to be so complete
-a failure or so utterly astray as to offer us nothing deserving of
-a cheer, in the shape of a thought, a reference to others, the mere
-choice of theme or purpose, or, possibly, in the wording or
-arrangement of the matter,</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>As among urchin-foot or mid coarse broom</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>The tender snowflake springeth into bloom.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'><span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> There are persons who, for exhibition purposes, can lend a fair
-measure of plausibility to a panegyric upon vomiting or fever,
-or even a pot; and surely a deliverance by a man who has some
-sort of claim to be thought, or to call himself, a philosopher
-cannot absolutely fail to afford a well-disposed or courteous
-audience some opportunity of finding relief in applause.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>According to Plato young persons in the bloom of life can
-always manage somehow to excite a lover’s passion. If they
-are white he calls them ‘saint-like’; if swarthy, ‘virile’. <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>45<span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-A hook-nose is ‘regal’, a snub nose ‘piquant’; a sallow skin
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_172'>172</span>is a ‘complexion of honey’. He uses these pretty names, and
-is pleased and satisfied. Love has, indeed, an ivy-like gift for
-clinging to any pretext. Much less will an eager and earnest
-student of letters ever fail in inventiveness. In every speaker
-he will discover some grounds for reasonable applause. In the
-speech of Lysias, though Plato objects to its want of arrangement,
-and though he has no praise for its inventiveness, he nevertheless
-commends him for his manner of statement, and because
-there is ‘a clear round finish in the chiselling of every word’.
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> We might find fault with Archilochus for his subject-matter,
-Parmenides for his versification, Phocylides for his commonplaceness,
-Euripides for his garrulity, Sophocles for his inequality.
-Similarly one of the orators has no characterization, another
-exerts no passion, a third is lacking in grace and charm. Nevertheless
-each wins praise for a power to move and sway us in his
-own peculiar way.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The hearer, then, has ample scope for showing good feeling
-to a speaker. In some instances it is sufficient if, without further
-declaration by word of mouth, we contribute a kindly eye,
-a genial expression, a friendly and agreeable mood. There are
-certain things for which even the man who is a total failure may
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> look, and which are but ordinary items of common etiquette
-for any and every audience. I mean an upright posture in
-our chairs, with no lolling or lounging; eyes kept directly upon
-the speaker; an air of businesslike attention; composure of
-countenance, with no sign, I need not say of insolence or
-peevishness, but of being taken up with other thoughts.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>If in every exacting task beauty is made up of a number of
-factors happily combined in a due proportion and harmony,
-ugliness is the prompt and immediate outcome of the faulty
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> omission or addition of this or that one element. And in this
-particular matter of listening, not only is there impropriety
-in a scowling brow, a disagreeable expression, a roving glance,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_173'>173</span>a twisting of the body, and a crossing of the legs; but nodding
-or whispering to a neighbour, smiling, yawning sleepily, looking
-at the ground, and actions of a similar nature, are censurable
-and should be studiously avoided.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>There are some who think that, though the speaker has a duty,
-the hearer has none. They expect the former to present
-himself with his thoughts studiously prepared; yet, without
-a thought or care for their own obligations, they drop casually
-in and take their seats, for all the world as if they had come
-to a dinner to enjoy themselves while others are doing the work.
-Yet even a polite table-companion has his part to play, much <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-more a polite hearer. He is a partner in the speech and a coadjutor
-of the speaker; and he has no right to be sharply criticizing the
-mistakes, and taking every phrase and fact to task, while himself
-free from responsibility for the impropriety and the frequent
-solecisms which he commits as a hearer. In ball-play the catcher
-has to regulate his movements according to those of the thrower.
-So, in the case of a speech, there is a certain consonance of action
-in which both speaker and listener are concerned, if each is to
-sustain his proper part. <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span></p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Our expressions in applauding must not, however, be used
-without discrimination. It is an unpleasing phrase of Epicurus
-when, in speaking of the little epistles from his friends, he says,
-‘We give them a rattling clapping.’ But what of those who
-nowadays introduce such <i>outré</i> expressions into our lecture-rooms?
-The <i>Capital!</i> <i>Well said!</i> and <i>Very true!</i> which were
-the terms of commendation used by the hearers of Plato,
-Socrates, and Hypereides, are not enough for these persons.
-With their exclamations <i>Divine!</i> <i>An inspiration!</i> or <i>Unapproachable!</i>
-they commit a gross impropriety, libellously
-making out that the speaker requires far-fetched eulogies of an <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>46<span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-outrageous kind. Highly obnoxious also are those who accompany
-their attestations with an oath, as if they were in a court
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_174'>174</span>of law. And equally so those who blunder in their descriptive
-terms; for instance, when the lecturer is a philosopher and they
-call out, <i>A shrewd hit!</i>, or an old man and they exclaim <i>Cleverly
-put!</i> or <i>Brilliant!</i>, thus misapplying to a philosopher the
-expressions used at academic exercises, where the speaking is
-not serious but merely an exhibition of adroitness. To offer
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> to a sober discourse such meretricious praise is like crowning an
-athlete with a wreath of lilies or roses instead of laurel or wild
-olive. Once when the poet Euripides was going over a song
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>*<span class='hidev'>|</span></span> with an original setting for the benefit of the members of his
-chorus, and one of them happened to laugh, he observed:
-‘If you had not been an ignorant dolt, you could not have
-laughed while I was teaching you a mixolydian<a id='r46' /><a href='#f46' class='c009'><sup>[46]</sup></a> piece.’ So,
-I take it, a serious and practical philosopher might very well
-make short work of the airs and affectations of a hearer by saying,
-‘I presume your case is one of foolishness or ill breeding;
-otherwise you would not have been piping out and jigging
-about at my remarks, when I was teaching, or admonishing, or
-arguing concerning religion, statesmanship, or the duties of
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> office.’ Just frankly consider what it means, when a philosopher
-is speaking, and the shouting and hurrahing inside the building
-make people outside wonder whether it is a flute-player, a
-harpist, or a dancer who is being applauded.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Meanwhile, in listening to admonition and reproof, the pupil
-must be neither insensible nor unmanly. There are some who
-bear the philosopher’s reproaches with an easy-going indifference,
-laughing under the correction and applauding the corrector,
-just as parasites applaud in sheer impudence and recklessness
-when they are abused by those who keep them. The shamelessness
-which such persons display is no proper or genuine proof
-of courage. When a jibe containing no insult, and uttered in
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> a playful and tactful way, is borne cheerfully and without
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_175'>175</span>annoyance, it shows neither a want of spirit nor a want of
-breeding. On the contrary, it is exactly what a gentleman
-of the true Spartan style would do. But it is different when
-admonition takes in hand the correction of character by means
-of a stinging remedy in the shape of rational reproof. If a young
-man does not cower under the lesson and feel his soul burning
-with shame, till he breaks into a sweat and is ready to faint;
-if, on the contrary, he is unperturbed, gives a broad grin of
-self-depreciation, and refuses to take the matter seriously, then
-he is an extremely vulgar creature beyond all sense of shame,
-a constant habituation to misconduct having made his soul no
-more capable of a bruise than a thick callus in the flesh.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>These form the one class. Youths of the opposite disposition, <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-if a single hard word is said to them, turn deserters from philosophy
-and run away without a glance behind them. While
-nature has given them, in the shape of modesty, an excellent
-start towards moral salvation, they are so squeamish and timid
-that they throw their chance away. Unable to put up with
-reproof or to accept correction with spirit, they turn away to
-listen to the soft and agreeable utterances of some time-server
-or sophist, who charms them with melodious phrases as useless
-and futile as they are pleasing. If a man runs away from the
-surgeon after the operation and objects to be bandaged, he is
-submitting to the pain of the treatment but refusing to put up
-with its benefit. So when a lesson has lanced and probed his <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-folly, if he will not permit it to close and dress the wound, he
-is abandoning philosophy after feeling the sting and the pain
-but before deriving any advantage therefrom.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Euripides says that the wound of Telephus was</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Soothed by the filings ground from the same spear.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>It is no less true that the sting implanted by philosophy in <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>47<span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-a youth of parts is cured by the same reasoning that caused the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_176'>176</span>wound. While, therefore, it is right that the subject of reproof
-should feel some pain from the sting, he must not be crushed
-or dispirited, but, after undergoing the first discomposing rites
-of purification, he should look for some sweet and splendid
-revelation to follow the distress and confusion of the moment.
-For though the reproof may appear to be unjust, the proper
-course is to endure it with all patience until the speaker concludes.
-Then he may be met by a plea in self-defence, and by
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> a request to reserve for some real fault all the vigorous candour
-which he has shown in the present instance.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>To proceed to the next consideration. In reading and writing,
-playing the lyre, or wrestling, the first lessons are very harassing,
-laborious, and unsure; but, as we advance step by step, it is
-much as in dealing with mankind. By dint of frequent and
-familiar acquaintance we find that it all becomes pleasant and
-manageable, and every word or action easy. It is the same with
-philosophy. No doubt the language and matter, as first met
-with, contain something both hard and strange. But we must
-not take fright at the rudiments and prove so timid and spiritless
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> as to abandon the study. On the contrary, our duty is to grapple
-with every question, to persevere, to be resolved on making
-progress, and then to wait for that familiarity which converts
-all right action into a pleasure. It will not be long before it
-arrives, casting upon the study a flood of light, and inspiring
-an ardent passion for excellence. To be without such passion
-and to put up with the ordinary type of life because one is
-driven from philosophy by a lack of mettle, is to be a miserable
-or cowardly creature.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>We may also expect that at first the argumentation will prove
-somewhat difficult for young and inexperienced students to
-understand. For the most part, however, the obscurity and want
-of comprehension are due to themselves. Opposite dispositions
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> lead to the same mistake. Thus one class, through bashfulness
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_177'>177</span>and a desire to spare the teacher, will shrink from putting
-questions and making sure of the argument, and will ostensibly
-assent as if they quite understood. The others, led by misplaced
-ambition and meaningless rivalry to make a show of cleverness
-and quickness, pretend to have mastered a thing before they take
-it in, and so will not take it in at all. The consequence is that
-when the former—the modest and silent kind—go home, they
-will worry themselves with their perplexities, and in the end
-they will be driven perforce to trouble the speaker by harking
-back with their questions at a later date, when they will feel
-still more ashamed. Meanwhile the bold and ambitious kind
-will be perpetually cloaking their ignorance and hiding the fact
-that it haunts them.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Let us then thrust aside all this pretentious silliness, and march <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-on towards learning. Let our business be to get an intelligent
-grasp upon valuable instruction. And let us put up with the
-laughter of those who are thought to be clever. Remember
-how Cleanthes and Xenocrates, though to all appearance slower
-than their fellow-pupils, refused to give up or run away from
-their studies. On the contrary, they were the first to joke at
-their own expense, comparing themselves to a narrow-necked
-bottle or a brass tablet, inasmuch as, though slow at taking their
-instruction in, they were safe and sure at retaining it. Not only
-must we, as Phocylides puts it,</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Oft-times be baulked of our hope while seeking to come unto goodness</i>;</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>we must also ‘oft-times’ be laughed at, and bear with scoffing <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-and jeering, meanwhile putting all our heart and energy into
-winning the struggle against our ignorance.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>We must, however, be quite as careful not to err in the opposite
-direction. Some do so from sloth, which makes them a
-wearisome infliction. Unwilling to trouble themselves when <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>48<span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_178'>178</span>alone, they keep troubling the teacher by repeatedly asking for
-information on the same questions. Like unfledged birds in
-the nest, they are perpetually agape to be fed from another’s
-mouth, and expect to receive everything ready masticated by
-someone else.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Another kind, in the misplaced quest of a reputation for
-alertness and acumen, worry the lecturer with their fussy
-garrulity, perpetually mooting some unimportant difficulty or
-demanding some unnecessary demonstration,</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Till a short journey so becometh long</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'><span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> —as Sophocles says—not only to themselves but to every one
-else. By continually arresting the teacher with superfluous
-and futile questions, as if they were merely chatting with a companion,
-they interfere with the continuity of the lesson by a
-series of checks and delays. Persons of this class are (to quote
-Hieronymus) like wretched cowardly puppies, who bite the skins
-and tear the odds and ends of wild animals at home, but who
-never touch the animals themselves.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>As for the former and lazy class, let us give them this advice.
-When they have managed to comprehend the main points,
-let them piece the rest together for themselves, using their
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> memory as a guide to independent thought. And let them
-take the reasoning they hear from another as a beginning—a
-seed which they are to make grow and thrive.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The mind is not a vessel which calls for filling. It is a pile,
-which simply requires kindling-wood to start the flame of
-eagerness for original thought and ardour for truth. Suppose
-someone goes to borrow from his neighbour’s fire, and then,
-on finding a large bright blaze, persists in staying and basking
-on the spot. It is the same when a man comes to another to
-borrow reason, and does not realize that he must kindle a light
-of his own in the shape of thinking for himself, but sits enchanted
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_179'>179</span>with enjoyment of the lecture. He derives from the lesson <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-a ruddy glow or outward brilliance, but he fails to drive out
-the mould and darkness from within by the warming power of
-philosophy.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>If therefore any advice is needed for the hearing of lectures,
-it is to remember the rule just given—to practise independent
-thought along with learning. We shall thus attain, not to the
-ability of a sophist or the ‘well-informed’ man, but to a deep-seated
-philosophic power. Right listening will be for us the
-introduction to right living.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_180'>180</span>
- <h2 id='chap07' class='c003'>ON MORAL IGNORANCE IN HIGH PLACES</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c004'><span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>779 <span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> When Plato was invited by the Cyrenaeans to draw up a code
-of laws for their use and to organize their constitution, he begged
-to be excused, on the ground that it was difficult to legislate
-for so prosperous a people:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>For nought so arrogant</i>—</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>nor so impracticable and headstrong—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in20'><i>as human kind</i>,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>when prosperity—or what is so considered—lies within its
-grasp.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>E<span class='hidev'>|</span></span> No less difficult is the task of advising a ruler how to rule.
-To admit reason, he fears, is to admit a ruler, whose law of duty
-will make a slave of him and curtail the advantage he derives
-from power. He has yet to learn a lesson from Theopompus,
-the Spartan king, who was the first to modify the powers of the
-throne by means of that of the Ephors. When his wife reproached
-him for proposing to leave to his children less authority
-than he had inherited, he replied: ‘Nay, greater, because more
-assured.’ By relaxing its excessive absolutism he escaped the
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> consequent ill-feeling, and therewith its dangers. But note.
-Theopompus, in diverting into other channels a portion of the
-full stream of power, deprived himself of just so much as he
-gave away. But when philosophic reason becomes the established
-colleague and protector of a ruler, it merely removes the perilous
-element and leaves the healthy—a process as necessary to power
-as to sound health.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_181'>181</span>In most cases, however, monarchs or rulers show as little
-wisdom as a tasteless sculptor, who fancies that to represent
-a figure with a huge stride, strained muscles, and gaping mouth,
-is to make it appear massive and imposing. They imagine that <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>780<span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-an arrogant tone, harsh looks, short temper, and exclusiveness
-give them the true regal air of awe and majesty. In reality
-they are not a bit better than a colossal statue with the outward
-shape and form of a god or demigod, while the inside is a mass
-of earth, stone, or lead. Indeed, in the case of the statue, these
-heavy materials serve to keep it erect and prevent it from
-warping; whereas, with an unschooled governor or chief, the
-unreason within is often the cause of instability and collapse. <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-His foundation being out of plumb, the lofty power which
-he builds upon it is correspondingly unstable. Now it is only
-when the builder’s square is itself faultless in line and angle,
-that it can make other things true to line by adjustment to,
-and comparison with, itself. So a ruler must begin by acquiring
-rule within himself. Let him set his own soul straight, and make
-his own character firm, and then begin adjusting his subjects
-thereto. You cannot set upright, when you are falling; teach,
-when you are ignorant; discipline, when unruly; command,
-when disobedient; govern, when ungoverned. And yet it is
-a common error to suppose that the chief blessing of authority <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-is to be above authority. To the King of Persia every one was
-a slave except his own wife, the very person whose master he
-ought to have been.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>By whom, then, is the ruler to be ruled? By the</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in26'><i>Law,</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>Sovereign of mortals and immortals all</i>,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>as Pindar says; not a law written outwardly in books or on
-wooden tables, but a living law of reason in himself, abiding
-with him, watching him, and never leaving his soul destitute
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_182'>182</span>of guidance. The King of Persia kept one chamberlain whose
-special function was to enter in the morning and say to him:
-‘Rise, Sire, and attend to matters which Great Oromazdes
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> meant for your concern.’ The ruler who has learned wisdom
-and self-control hears the same voice of exhortation from within.
-It was a saying of Polemo that love is ‘<i>serving the Gods in the
-care and protection of the young</i>‘. With more truth it might
-be said that a ruler serves God in the care and protection of
-men, by dispensing, or safeguarding, the blessings which God
-gives to mankind.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>See’st thou yon boundless sky and air aloft,</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>How in soft arms it clasps the world about?</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>From it descend the first principles of seeds in due kind; earth
-brings them forth; their growth is fostered by rains or winds
-or the warmth of moon and stars; while the sun brings everything
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> to beauty and tinctures all creation with that peculiar
-love-spell which is his. But though the Gods may lavish these
-great boons and blessings, who can enjoy or use them rightly,
-if there be no law, justice, or ruler? Justice is the end of law;
-law is the work of the ruler; and a ruler is an image of the God
-who orders all things. He needs no Pheidias or Polycleitus or
-Myro to fashion him, but brings himself into likeness with deity
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> by means of virtue, and so creates the fairest and most divine
-of effigies. In the heavens the sun and moon were set by God
-as His own beauteous image; and, in a state, the same shining
-embodiment is to be found in the ruler</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Godfearing, who justice upholdeth</i>,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>—that is to say, when he holds, not a sceptre, but a mind which
-is the reason of God; not when he holds the thunderbolt or
-trident with which some represent themselves in statue or
-picture, rendering their folly odious to Heaven by such impossible
-assertion. For God visits with righteous wrath him who
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_183'>183</span>makes pretence of thunder or thunderbolt or darting sun-ray;
-but when a man studies to emulate His goodness, and to take <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>781<span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-a pattern by His virtue and benevolence, He delights in furthering
-him and bestowing a portion of His own righteousness,
-justice, truth, and mercy. Not fire or light, not the course of
-the sun, the risings and settings of the stars, everlastingness
-and immortality, are more divine that these attributes. For it
-is not by reason of length of life that God is happy, but by
-reason of the virtue which rules. This is ‘divine’. ‘Noble’,
-however, is the virtue whose part it is only to obey.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>When Alexander was in sore distress at killing Cleitus, Anaxarchus
-told him, by way of comfort, that Right and Justice were <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-but the ‘assessors’ of Zeus—making out that any act was right
-and lawful for a king. A false and pernicious salve for his repentance
-at his sin, this encouragement to repeat it! If we are to
-use such figures of speech, Right is no ‘assessor’ of Zeus, but
-He himself is Right and Justice, the oldest and most consummate
-Law. What the ancients tell and write and teach is that,
-without Justice, not even Zeus can properly rule. According
-to Hesiod</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>A virgin is she</i>,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>the incorruptible partner of feeling, self-control, and beneficence. <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-Hence are kings called ‘merciful’, for mercy best becomes those
-who are least afraid. A ruler’s fear should be of doing harm
-rather than of suffering it; for the former action is the cause
-of the latter, and this kind of fear on the part of a ruler is creditable
-to humanity. There is nothing ignoble in a fear for his
-subjects and of possible injury to them. Such rulers are like</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Dogs that keep ward o’er the sheep in the farmstead, anxiously watching</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>At sound of a fierce wild beast</i>—</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>their anxiety being not for themselves, but for their charges.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_184'>184</span>Once when the Thebans had recklessly abandoned themselves
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> to feasting and carousal, Epaminondas went the round of the
-walls and the military posts all by himself, remarking that he
-was keeping sober and wakeful so that the rest might be drunk
-and asleep. When Cato, after the defeat at Utica, gave orders
-that every one else should be sent to sea, saw them on board,
-prayed that they might have a prosperous voyage, and then
-went back home and stabbed himself, it was a lesson on the text,
-‘For whose sake should a ruler feel fear, and for what should
-he feel contempt?’ On the other hand, Clearchus, despot of
-Pontus, used at bedtime to crawl like a snake into a chest.
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> Similarly, Aristodemus of Argos crept into an upper room entered
-by a trap-door. Over this he would put the couch upon which
-he passed the night with his mistress. Meanwhile her mother
-dragged away the ladder from below, bringing it back and
-putting it in place in the morning. How, think you, must he
-have shuddered at the theatre, at the Government offices, at
-the Senate-House, at the banquet, when he turned his own
-bedchamber into a prison? Yes, kings are afraid <i>for</i> their subjects,
-despots are afraid <i>of</i> them. It follows that, as they add
-to their power, they add to their alarms; the more people
-they rule, the more people they fear.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> It is an improbable and unworthy view to hold of God—as
-some philosophers do—that He exists as an element in matter
-to which all sorts of things may happen, and in entities which are
-subject to innumerable accidents, chances and changes. In
-reality He is stablished somewhere aloft ‘<i>on holy pedestal</i>’ (as
-Plato puts it) in the realm of nature uniform and constant, and
-there ‘<i>moves according to Nature in a straight line towards the
-accomplishment of His end</i>‘. And as in heaven the sun, His
-beauteous counterfeit, shows itself as His reflection in a mirror
-to those who have the power to see Him through it, so, in the
-justice and reason which shine in a state, He sets up a likeness
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_185'>185</span>of that which is in Himself, and, by copying that likeness, men <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>782<span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-whom philosophy has gifted and chastened model themselves
-after the highest pattern.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>This condition of mind nothing can implant except reason
-acquired from philosophy. Otherwise we are in the position
-of Alexander, when he went to see Diogenes at Corinth. In
-delight at his talent, and in admiration of his proud and lofty
-spirit, he exclaimed: ‘If I had not been Alexander, I would
-have been Diogenes.’ And what did this virtually mean?
-That he was vexed at his own high fortune, splendour, and <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-power, because they were an obstacle to the virtue for which
-he could find no time, and that he envied the cloak and the wallet,
-which made Diogenes as invincible and unassailable as he himself
-was made by armour and horses and spears. And yet by the
-practice of philosophy he might have secured the moral character
-of a Diogenes while retaining the position of an Alexander.
-Nay, he should have become all the more a Diogenes for being
-an Alexander, since his high fortune, so liable to be tossed by
-stormy winds, required ample ballast and a master hand at the
-helm.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>In the case of private men without strength or standing, folly
-is so qualified by impotence that in the end no mischief is done.
-It is as with a bad dream, in which, though the mind is excited
-with passion, no harm results, inasmuch as it is unable to rise
-and act in accordance with the desires. When, on the other <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-hand, vice is adopted by power, the passions acquire sinew and
-strength. Dionysius spoke truly when he said that the highest
-advantage of power was to give speedy effect to a wish. A most
-parlous thing, if you can give effect to a wish, and yet wish what
-is wrong!</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>No sooner the word had been utter’d, than straightway the deed was accomplish’d.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>Vice, when enabled by power to run rapid course, forces every
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_186'>186</span>passion into action, converting anger into murder, love into
-adultery, greed into confiscation.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>No sooner the word hath been utter’d</i>,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>than your opponent has met his doom. No sooner a suspicion,
-than the victim of slander is a dead man.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> Scientists tell us that, whereas lightning really follows and
-issues from thunder like blood from a wound, it is perceived first
-because, while the hearing waits for the sound, the vision goes
-out to meet the light. So with rulers. The punishment outstrips
-the charge; the condemnation does not wait for the proof.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>For forthwith anger slips and loses hold,</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>Like anchor’s tooth in sand when seas swell high</i>,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>unless reason with all its weight puts a heavy drag on power;
-unless, that is, the ruler acts like the sun, whose motion is least
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> when its height is greatest, namely, at the time of its northern
-altitude, its course being steadied by the diminished speed.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Vice in high places cannot be hid. When an epileptic is
-placed upon a height and made to turn round, he is seized with
-giddiness and begins to totter, his malady being betrayed thereby.
-So with an unschooled and ignorant person. After a brief
-uplifting by wealth or fame or place, the same fortune which
-raised him up immediately reveals how ready he is to fall. To
-put it another way; when a vessel is empty, you cannot detect
-the crack or flaw, but when you begin to fill it, the leak appears.
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> So with a mind which is too unsound to hold power and
-authority; its leaks are to be seen in its exhibitions of lust,
-anger, pretentiousness, and ignorance. Yet why speak of this,
-when holes are picked in eminent and distinguished men for
-the merest peccadilloes? Cimon was reproached for his addiction
-to wine, Scipio for his addiction to sleep, and Lucullus for his
-extravagance at table<a id='r47' /><a href='#f47' class='c009'><sup>[47]</sup></a>....</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_187'>187</span>
- <h2 id='chap08' class='c003'>FAWNER AND FRIEND <br /> (WITH AN EXCURSUS ON CANDOUR)</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c004'><span class='sc'>My dear Antiochus Philopappus</span>, <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>48 <span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span></p>
-
-<p class='c005'>‘Every one,’ says Plato, ‘will pardon a man for admitting
-that he has a strong affection for himself,’ but—not to mention <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-numerous other defects to which he is subject—there is one
-chief weakness which precludes him from giving a just and
-incorruptible verdict in his own case. ‘The lover is blind where
-the beloved object is concerned,’ unless he has learned the habit
-of prizing things, not because they are his own or related to
-himself, but because they are beautiful. Hence, there is ample
-opportunity for the flatterer to obtain a place among our friends.
-He delivers his attack from an excellent point of vantage in
-the shape of that self-love which makes every man his own <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>49<span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-first and greatest flatterer, ready and willing to welcome such
-external testimony as will endorse his own conceits and desires.
-For the man who is reprobated as a lover of toadies is an ardent
-lover of himself. Out of fondness for himself he not only entertains
-the wish to possess, but also the conceit that he possesses,
-all manner of qualities; and though the desire may be natural
-enough, the conceit is fallacious and calls for the greatest
-watchfulness.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>And if truth is divine, and—as Plato asserts—the first principle <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-of ‘all good things both with Gods and men’, the toady must
-be an enemy of the Gods, and especially of the Pythian. For, in
-perpetual antagonism to the doctrine of <i>Know Thyself</i>, he produces
-self-deception in a man, self-ignorance, and error as to his
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_188'>188</span>virtues and vices. The virtues he renders defective and abortive;
-the vices he renders incorrigible.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Now if the flatterer had been like most other mischievous
-things, and had solely or chiefly attacked mean and petty
-victims, the harm would have been neither so great nor so
-difficult to prevent. But it is into soft and sweet kinds of wood
-that worms prefer to bore, and it is estimable and capable
-characters—characters with a love of approbation—that give
-access and supply nourishment to the flatterer who fastens upon
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> them. ‘<i>The breeding of the steed</i>,’ says Simonides, ‘<i>sorts not with
-Zacynthus,<a id='r48' /><a href='#f48' class='c009'><sup>[48]</sup></a> but with wheat-bearing plains</i>.’ Similarly we do not
-find toadyism in attendance upon the poor, the insignificant,
-or the uninfluential, but sapping and debilitating great houses
-and great fortunes, and frequently subverting rulers and thrones.
-Consequently no slight effort or common precaution is required
-in considering how it can be most readily detected and so prevented
-from doing injury and discredit to friendship.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> Vermin quit a dying man and desert the body when the blood
-which feeds them becomes exhausted. So with the time-server.
-You will never find him approaching a person whose fortune is
-destitute of sap and warmth. It is the famous and influential
-whom he attacks; it is out of them that he makes capital; and
-when their circumstances change he promptly beats a retreat.
-We should not, however, wait for that test; it is then not
-merely useless but fraught with injury and danger. It is a grievous
-thing to find out who is not your friend only at the moment
-when a friend is needed, since the discovery does not enable you
-to exchange the uncertain and counterfeit for the genuine and
-certain. You should possess friends as you possess coin—tested
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> before the occasion, not waiting to be proved by the occasion.
-Discovery should not come through injury, but injury should
-be prevented by our acquiring a scientific insight into the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_189'>189</span>nature of the toady. Otherwise we shall be in the position of
-those who distinguish a deadly poison by tasting it; we shall
-meet our death in the effort of judging.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>One can neither approve of such a course, nor yet of those who,
-because they regard a ‘friend’ as implying a high and wholesome
-influence, imagine that an agreeable associate is immediately
-and manifestly proved to be a time-server. For there is nothing
-disagreeable or uncompromisingly severe about a friend, nor
-does the high respect we pay to friendship depend upon harshness
-or austerity. Nay, its high influence and claim to respect are
-actually an agreeable and desirable thing in themselves, <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span></p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>And close at its side do the Graces and Longing Desire set their dwellings.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>Not only may the unfortunate man say, with Euripides,</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>’Tis sweet to look into a friend’s fond eyes</i>,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>but friendship is a comrade who adds as much pleasure and
-gratification to our blessings as it brings relief to the pains and
-perplexities of our mishaps. According to Euenus ‘<i>the best of <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>50<span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-seasonings is fire</i>‘. So, by making friendship an ingredient of
-life, God has rendered all things bright and sweet and enjoyable
-through its presence and participation. How, indeed, could
-the fawner have wormed himself into our pleasures, if he had
-seen that friendship refuses all admittance to what is pleasant?
-The thing is absurd. No; the toady is like the mock-gilt and
-tinsel which merely mimic the sheen and lustre of gold. It is
-in order to imitate the attractiveness and charm of a friend
-that he makes a constant show of agreeableness and amiability,
-and never opposes or contradicts you. It is therefore wrong, <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-when a person praises you, to suspect at once that he is simply
-a flatterer. Friendship is quite as much called upon to praise
-in season as it is to blame. In fact, perpetual peevishness and
-fault-finding is the negation of friendship and sociability;
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_190'>190</span>whereas, when affection bestows zealous and ungrudging praise
-upon our good deeds, we also submit readily and cheerfully
-to its candid remonstrances, being satisfied with the belief that
-the man who is glad to praise will only blame because he must.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> ‘It is a hard matter then,’ we may be told, ‘to distinguish
-between flatterer and friend, if they are equally pleasant and
-equally laudatory, especially when we find that toadyism is
-often more than a match for friendship in the tendering of
-services.’ Naturally so, we reply, if the object of our search
-is the genuine toady, with a past-master’s skill at the business;
-if, that is, we do not adopt the common view and mean by
-‘toady’ your poverty-stricken trencherman, who ‘begins’—as
-some one has said—‘to declare himself with the first course,’ and
-whose lickspittle character betrays itself by gross and vulgar
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> buffoonery at the first dish and the first glass. It needed no test
-to expose Melanthius, the parasite of Pherae. It was enough
-that, when asked ‘how Alexander was stabbed,’ he replied,
-‘Through the ribs, into my belly.’ Nor is there any such need
-with those who besiege ‘an opulent table’, and whom</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Not fire, nor steel, nor bronze can keep</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>from making their way to a dinner. Nor yet with those female
-toadies of Cyprus, who, after their transference to Syria, were
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> called ‘pair o’ steps’ from the fact that they used to allow the
-king’s wife to mount her carriage over their bent backs.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Against whom, then, are we to be on our guard? Against
-the man who is not confessedly or apparently a toady; one who
-is not to be found hanging about the kitchen, nor to be caught
-watching the dial with a dinner in prospect; one who is not
-to be made tipsy and then pitched into any corner; but one
-who for the most part keeps sober and bustling, thinking it
-his business to take part in all your doings, and to be privy to
-your confidential talk—the man, in short, who acts the rôle of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_191'>191</span>friend, not in the satyric<a id='r49' /><a href='#f49' class='c009'><sup>[49]</sup></a> or comic style, but in the high
-tragic. According to Plato, ‘the extreme of dishonesty is to
-appear honest when you are not.’ So with time-serving. It is <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-to be regarded as dangerous, not when confessed, but when
-undetected; when it wears a serious, not an amusing, air.
-In this form, unless we are careful, it casts a slur of discredit
-even upon genuine friendship, the points of coincidence being
-numerous. When the Mage was trying to escape and Gobryes
-had plunged with him into a dark room and was grappling
-with him, Darius stood at a loss what to do. ‘Stab,’ said
-Gobryes, ‘though you stab both.’ With us it is not so easy,
-inasmuch as we can by no means give any sanction to the maxim:
-‘<i>Perish friend, if so perish foe.</i>’ There are so many points of
-similarity to complicate the fawner with the friend that we must
-find it a most parlous business to tear the one from the other.
-We may either be casting out the good thing along with the bad, <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>51<span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-or, in trying to spare the right thing, we may let the wrong one
-bring us to grief. There are wild plants of which the seeds
-are similar in shape and size to those of wheat. When the two
-are mixed it is difficult to sift these out; they will not fall
-through smaller holes, and, if the holes are wider, one falls
-through as much as the other. No less difficult is it to separate
-time-serving from friendship, when it blends itself with every
-feeling, every movement, need, and habit.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Friendship being the most pleasant and delightful thing in
-the world, it follows that the toady also uses pleasure for his <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-bait. To give pleasure is his main concern. And since agreeableness
-and usefulness are concomitants of friendship—whence
-the saying that ‘<i>a friend is more indispensable than fire and water</i>‘—it
-follows that the toady insists on rendering services, and is
-all eagerness to show unfaltering promptitude and zeal. But
-the surest foundation of friendship is similarity of pursuits and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_192'>192</span>character. The foremost agent in mutual attraction is similarity
-of temperament—the liking and disliking of the same things.
-This the time-server perceives, and therefore he adapts himself
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> like wax to the proper shape and form, endeavouring by imitation
-to mould himself so as exactly to fit his victim. His supple
-versatility, his genius for mimicry, is so great that it is a case of</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in24'><i>Thou art</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>Achilles’ self, and not Achilles’ son.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>And note his craftiest device. He observes that candour is
-called (what it appears to be) ‘the characteristic note of friendship’,
-while lack of candour is the negation of friendship and
-spirit. He does not fail, therefore, to imitate this quality also.
-As a skilful <i>chef</i> will use some bitter or piquant juice for a sauce
-in order to prevent sweets from cloying, so with the candour
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> of the toady. It is not genuine, nor is it useful; it is given,
-as it were, with a wink, and serves simply as an excitant. The
-result is that he is as hard to detect as one of those creatures which
-possess the natural power of altering their colour so as to match
-the spot on which they happen to lie. Since, therefore, it is under
-cover of resemblances that he deceives us, our proper course is to
-find in the non-resemblances a means of stripping off his disguise
-and showing that—as Plato puts it—he is ‘beautifying himself
-with borrowed forms and colours through lack of any of his own’.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Let us begin at the very beginning. In most instances, we
-remarked, friendship commences with similarity of temperament
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> and disposition, a taste for very much the same habits and
-principles, and a delight in the same pursuits, occupations, and
-pastimes. Such a similarity is implied in the lines:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Most welcome to the old is old men’s speech;</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>Child pleaseth child, and woman pleaseth woman,</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>Sick men the sick, and one who meets disaste</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>Brings solace to another suffering it.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_193'>193</span>The toady knows that it is natural to find pleasure in one’s like
-and to be fond of his society. This, therefore, is his first device <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-for approaching you and getting neighbours with you. He acts
-like herdsmen on a pasture. He works gently up to you and rubs
-shoulders with you in the same pursuits, amusements, tastes,
-and way of life, until you give him his chance and let yourself
-grow tame and accustomed to his touch. He condemns such
-circumstances, such conduct, and such persons as he notices
-you dislike; while of those that please you he cannot say too
-much in praise, exhibiting boundless delight and admiration <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>52<span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-for them. He thus confirms you in your loves and hatreds, as
-being the results, not of feelings, but of judgement.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>How, then, is he to be exposed? By what points of difference
-are we to prove that he is not, nor is on the way to be, our like,
-but only a pretender thereto? In the first place we must look
-for consistency and permanence in his principles. We must
-see whether he takes pleasure in, and gives praise to, the same
-things at all times; whether he directs and establishes his own
-life after one pattern, as a frank and free lover of single-minded
-friendship and fellowship ought to do. A friend does act in this
-manner. On the other hand, the time-server possesses no one
-fixed hearthstone to his character. He does not live a life <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-chosen for himself, but a life chosen for another. Moulding
-and adapting himself to suit others, he possesses no singleness
-or unity, but adopts all manner of varying shapes. Like water
-poured from one vessel into another, he is perpetually flowing
-hither and thither and accommodating himself to the form of the
-receptacle.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The ape, we are told, is captured through endeavouring to
-imitate man by copying his motions in dancing. The time-server,
-on the contrary, is one who allures and decoys others.
-Nor does his mimicry take the same form in all cases. One person
-he will help to dance and sing: with another he will share a taste
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_194'>194</span>for wrestling and athletics. If he gets hold of a sportsman
-devoted to hunting, he follows his lead, and all but shouts, in the
-words of Phaedra, <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span></p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>I long, ye Gods, to cheer the hounds</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>Close-pressing on the dappled deer</i>,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>whereas he feels no interest whatever in the animal, but is
-setting his toils to catch the huntsman himself. If his next
-quarry is a young man with a taste for study and intellectual
-improvement, he is all for books, and grows a beard down to
-his feet; it is a case of wearing the philosopher’s cloak
-and his air of ‘indifference’,<a id='r50' /><a href='#f50' class='c009'><sup>[50]</sup></a> and of prating about Plato’s
-‘numbers’ and ‘right-angled triangles’. If, next, there
-happens along some easy-going bibulous person with plenty
-of money,</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Then forthwith are his rags cast off by the wily Odysseus.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'><span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> Away goes the cloak; shorn off is the beard—’tis a crop
-that bears no corn: to the fore are wine-coolers and wine-cups,
-laughter in the streets and mockery of the philosophic
-student.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>We are told, for instance, that at Syracuse, when Plato
-visited the place and Dionysius was seized with a mania for
-philosophy, the host of geometricians turned the palace into
-a perfect whirl of dust.<a id='r51' /><a href='#f51' class='c009'><sup>[51]</sup></a> But when Dionysius came to logger-heads
-with Plato, had had enough of philosophy, and abandoned
-himself to drink and women and to silly talk and wanton
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> behaviour, in a moment it was as if Circe had transformed them
-every one, and there came a reign of vulgarity, oblivion, and
-folly. Examples are also to be found in the conduct of time-servers
-on a large scale, such as demagogues. Greatest was
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_195'>195</span>Alcibiades. At Athens he joked, kept horses, and lived like
-a wit and a man of the world. At Lacedaemon he cropped his
-hair close, wore a short cloak, and bathed in cold water. In
-Thrace he fought and drank. But when he attached himself
-to Tissaphernes, he indulged in luxury, effeminacy, and ostentation,
-and sought to win the good graces of his company by
-adapting himself in all cases to their likeness and becoming
-one of them. Not so Epaminondas or Agesilaus. Despite <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-all their intercourse with so many persons, communities, and
-standards of conduct, they everywhere maintained—in dress,
-way of life, speech, and behaviour—their own proper character.
-So with Plato. He was the same at Syracuse as at Athens, the
-same to Dionysius as to Dion.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Our easiest method of exposing the polypus-like changes of
-the time-server is to make a show of frequent changes on our
-own part, finding fault with conduct of which we formerly
-approved, and all of a sudden countenancing actions, conduct, <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>53<span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-or talk which used to fill us with disgust. We shall then perceive
-that he has no sort of settled and specific character; that his
-loves, hatreds, pleasures, and pains are not matters of his own
-feeling; that he is merely a mirror reflecting extraneous moods,
-principles, and emotions. For observe the man’s ways. Should
-you speak disparagingly to him of one of your friends, he will
-remark: ‘You have been slow in finding the fellow out; <i>I</i> never
-did like him.’ If, on the contrary, you change your tone and
-speak in his praise, he will declare that he is ‘right glad and
-thankful on the man’s behalf’, because he ‘believes in him’.
-If you propose to adopt a different mode of life—if, for example, <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-you are converted from a political career to a life of quiet
-inactivity—he will say, ‘We ought to have got quit of brawlings
-and jealousies long before this.’ If, on the other hand, you
-appear eager for office and the platform, he seconds you with,
-‘A very proper spirit! A quiet life is pleasant, no doubt, but
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_196'>196</span>it lacks honour and distinction.’ We ought immediately to
-answer that kind of man with the words:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘<i>Different, sir, dost thou show thyself now from the man thou wert erstwhile.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>I do not want a friend who shifts his ground when I do and who
-nods when I nod—my shadow can do that better—but one who
-helps me to truth and sound judgement.’</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> Such is one way of applying a test. There is a second point
-of difference to be watched, as against the points of resemblance.
-It is not in all matters that a genuine friend is prompt to copy
-or commend us, but only in the best.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Not his to share our hates, but share our loves</i>,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>as Sophocles has it. Yes, and to share our right conduct and high
-principles, not our wrong and wanton deeds, unless perhaps—as
-a result of familiar association—some contaminating effluence,
-like that of ophthalmia, affects him to some extent with a
-blemish or a fault against his will. For instance, it is said that
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> Plato’s stoop, Aristotle’s lisp, King Alexander’s crook of the
-neck and harshness of voice in conversation, were tricks borrowed
-by their respective intimates. There are persons who, without
-knowing it, pick up from both the temperament and conduct
-of their friends most of what is characteristic of them. The
-time-server, however, is exactly like the chameleon. As the
-latter assimilates himself to every colour but white, so the time-server,
-though utterly unable to arrive at a likeness to your
-valuable qualities, leaves no discreditable one uncopied. He is
-like a bad painter, who, because beauty lies beyond the reach
-of his weak capacity, makes the strikingness of his portraiture
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> a matter of wrinkles, moles, and scars. So the toady becomes
-an imitator of dissoluteness, superstition, irascibility, harshness
-to servants, and distrust of friends and relatives. Not only is
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_197'>197</span>he by nature and of his own accord prone to the lower course;
-it is by imitating a baseness that he appears to be farthest from
-blaming it. A man who takes the higher line, and shows distress
-and vexation at his friends’ misdeeds, is dubiously regarded—a
-fact which accounts for the ruin of Dion with Dionysius, of
-Samius with Philip, and of Cleomenes with Ptolemy. But when
-a man desires to be, and to be thought, agreeable and to be
-depended upon, the worse the thing is, the more display he
-makes of liking it, as if the strength of his affection will not
-permit him to dislike even your vices, but makes him your <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-natural sympathizer in all circumstances. Such persons therefore
-insist upon sharing even involuntary and accidental shortcomings.
-When toadying an invalid, they pretend to suffer
-with the same complaint. In company with a person who is
-somewhat blind or deaf, they pretend to be dim-sighted and
-hard of hearing, like the flatterers of Dionysius, whose sight was
-so dull that they stumbled against each other and knocked over
-the dishes at dinner.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Sometimes they work themselves into closer and more
-intimate touch with a trouble or a malady, till they come to
-participate in afflictions of the most secret kind. If they see <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>54<span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-that the patron is unhappy in his marriage or on bad terms
-with his sons or his relatives, they do not spare themselves,
-but make lamentations about their own children, or wife, or
-relatives, or friends, on certain alleged grounds which they
-divulge as a miserable secret. Such similarity creates a closer
-understanding with their patron. He has received a sort of
-hostage, thereupon betrays to them some secret or other, and,
-because of that betrayal, keeps friends with them and is afraid
-to leave his confidence to its fate. I know of one time-server
-who, when the patron divorced his wife, turned his own wife
-also out of doors. It was, however, found out—through a discovery <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-of the patron’s wife—that he was visiting and sending
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_198'>198</span>messages to her in secret. The toady must have been but
-little known to the man who thought that the lines:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Body all belly, and an eye that looks</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>All round; a thing that crawls upon its teeth</i>,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>were as apt a description for a crab as they are for the flatterer.
-The picture is that of the parasite:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>The friend of saucepan-time and dinner-hour</i>,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>as Eupolis expresses it.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>This point, however, we will reserve till its proper place.
-Meanwhile we must not omit to mention another shrewd
-trick played by the time-server when he imitates you. If he
-goes so far as to copy some good quality in the person whom he
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> toadies, he is careful to leave the advantage with him. Friends
-in the true sense are neither jealous nor envious of each other,
-and, whether they reach or fail to reach the same degree of
-excellence, they accept the situation fairly and without a grudge.
-But the toady—who never forgets to play second rôle—lets his
-resemblance fall short of equality, and owns to being distanced
-at everything but vices. In vices, however, he insists on first
-prize. If the patron is irritable, he says, ‘<i>I</i> am all bile;’ if
-superstitious, ‘<i>I</i> am a mass of fears;’ if love-sick, ‘<i>I</i> am frantic.’
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> ‘It was wrong of you to laugh,’ he will say, ‘but <i>I</i> was absolutely
-dying with laughter.’ But where virtues are concerned it is
-the other way about. ‘I am a fast runner, but <i>you</i> positively
-fly.’ ‘I am a tolerable horseman, but nothing to a centaur like
-our friend here.’ ‘I have a neat turn for poetry, and can write
-a line better than some, but</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Thunder is not for me, ’tis work for Zeus.</i>’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>He thus appears to do two things at once—to give an air of
-merit to his patron’s tastes by imitating them, and of unapproachableness
-to his ability by failing to match it.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_199'>199</span>So much for the differences between fawner and friend in the
-midst of their resemblances.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Since, as we have observed, pleasure is another point in
-common—a good type of man taking as much delight in his
-friends as a weak man does in his flatterers—we may proceed
-to make a distinction here also. The distinction lies in the relation
-between the pleasure and its end. Thus, not only unguents <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-have an agreeable smell; a medicine may have it also. But
-there is the difference that the object of the former is pleasure
-and nothing else, while in the other case the purgative, warming,
-or flesh-making quality happens to be combined with fragrance.
-Again, a painter mixes engaging colours and dyes, and there
-are also certain medical preparations with a taking appearance
-and an attractive colour. Where is the difference? Clearly
-our distinction will lie in the end for which they are used.
-Just so with the case before us. In the agreeable relations of <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-friend with friend the pleasant-giving element is a kind of gloss
-upon a substance of high value and utility. Sometimes sportiveness,
-the table, wine, and even mockery and nonsense are used
-by them as a seasoning to high and serious purposes. Hence
-such expressions as:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Then had they joyance in talk and in speaking the one to the other</i>;</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>or:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Nor should aught else have parted us twain in our love and our joyance.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>But, with the time-server, it is his function and end to be <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>55<span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-perpetually dishing up in a spicy form something amusing,
-something done or something said which pleases and is meant
-to please.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>To put it briefly, the toady thinks the purpose of his every
-action should be to make himself agreeable, whereas the friend
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_200'>200</span>will only do what is right, and therefore, though often agreeable,
-he is often the contrary, not because he wishes it, but because,
-when it is the proper course, he does not avoid it. It is as with
-the physician. When it helps matters he will throw in a pinch
-of saffron or spikenard, and will frequently order a pleasant
-bath and an inviting diet. But there are times when he will
-have none of these, but will shake in a dash of castor</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Or polium foul of odor, that men e’en shudder to smell it.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'><span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> Or he will pound a dose of hellebore and make you drink it off.
-Neither the unpleasantness in the one case nor the pleasantness
-in the other is the end in his mind, but in both cases he has only
-one object in view for the patient, and that object is his good.
-In the same way there are times when a friend will lead you in
-the path of duty by inspiriting you with praise or gratifying
-you with courtesies, as the speaker does in</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Teucer, Telamon’s son, dear prince of a warrior people,</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>Shoot as now thou dost</i>,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>or in:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>How then should I, if ’tis so, be forgetful of godlike Odysseus?</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>But when, on the contrary, you need calling to attention, he
-will upbraid you in biting terms and with the plain-speaking
-of a guardian: <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span></p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Foolish art thou, Menelaus Zeus-foster’d: no time is this present</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>For folly like thine.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>There are also times when he makes the deed accompany the
-word, like Menedemus, when he taught the prodigal and
-dissolute son of his friend Asclepiades a wholesome lesson by
-shutting the door in his face and refusing to speak to him.
-Similarly Arcesilaus forbade Bato the lecture-room for having
-attacked Cleanthes in a verse of a comedy. He was reconciled
-to him, however, when he repented and made his peace with
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_201'>201</span>Cleanthes. For though one must give a friend pain when it does
-him good, one must not, while giving the pain, make an end
-of the friendship. The sting should be used only as a medicine,
-for the care and salvation of the patient. A friend is therefore <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-like a musician. In converting us to right and salutary courses
-he will sometimes loosen and sometimes tighten the strings.
-Pleasure you will get from him often, profit always. On the
-other hand, the time-server, who harps in a single key and is
-accustomed to strike no note but that of your pleasure and gratification,
-has no notion of any action to check you or word to pain
-you. He merely plays the accompaniment to your wishes, with
-which both his time and his words are invariably in accord.
-Xenophon says of Agesilaus that he welcomed praise from those
-who were no less ready to blame. So we should regard that
-which gives pleasure and gratification as in the category of
-‘friend’, if it can also on occasion oppose us and give us pain.
-But a companionship which is uniformly pleasurable and maintains <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-a perpetual graciousness unqualified by any sting, calls
-for suspicion. We ought, in fact, to be ready to ask, like the
-Laconian on hearing praise of King Charillus, ‘How can a man
-be honest, when he cannot be angry even with a rascal?’</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>It is close to the ear, we are told, that the gadfly gets into
-a bull and the tick into a dog. In the case of a man of ambition,
-the time-server with his flatteries takes hold of his ears and sticks
-so fast that it is hard to rub him off. Particularly, therefore,
-in such circumstances must we keep our judgement vigilant.
-It must be on the alert to see whether the praise is given to the <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-thing or to the man. It is given to the thing when men praise
-us in our absence more than in our presence; when they wish
-and strive for the same objects themselves, and praise not only
-us but every one else who does the like; when we do not find
-them doing and saying first one thing and then the opposite;
-and—most important of all—when our sense does not tell us
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_202'>202</span>that we are repenting or ashamed of the things for which we
-are praised, or wishing that we had rather done and said the
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>56<span class='hidev'>|</span></span> contrary. This inward judgement, which testifies against a
-flattery and refuses to accept it, is immune from contamination,
-and proof against the time-server.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>It is a strange thing that most men, when they meet with
-a misfortune, cannot bear to be consoled, but are better pleased
-with those who will join in the lamentations; but when they
-are guilty of a blunder or a fault, if you make them feel the sting
-of repentance by means of a reproof or a reprimand, they think
-you an enemy and an accuser; whereas, if you eulogize their
-conduct, they regard you as a loyal friend and receive you with
-open arms.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Now when people give you praise and applause for something
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> you do or say, whether in sober earnest or in careless jest, the
-harm they do is only for the moment, and only affects the
-matter in hand. But when their praises go so far as to influence
-your moral being, and their flatteries to affect your character,
-they are as bad as servants who pilfer ‘<i>not from the stack, but
-from the seed</i>‘. For the moral disposition and the moral character—first
-principle and fountain-head of conduct—are the seed of
-actions, and these they corrupt by clothing vice in the titles of
-virtue. Thucydides tells us that in the midst of war and faction
-‘<i>the customary acceptation of words was arbitrarily changed to suit
-an end. Reckless daring came to be thought devoted courage;
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> cautious hesitation, an excuse for cowardice; moderation, weakness
-in disguise; complete insight, complete inertia</i>‘. So, when
-flattery is at work, we should warily note how prodigality is
-called ‘generosity’; cowardice, ‘caution’; light-headed caprice,
-‘life and vigour’; meanness, ‘moderation’; the amorous man,
-‘amiable and affectionate’; the arrogant and irascible person,
-‘a man of spirit’; a poor meek creature, ‘civil and obliging’.
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> Remember, how Plato tells us that the lover—the flatterer of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_203'>203</span>the beloved—calls a snub nose ‘piquant’, a hook-nose ‘regal’,
-a swarthy face ‘virile’, a white face ‘saint-like’, while ‘honey-colour’
-is simply the coinage of a lover who indulgently invents
-a pretty name for pallor. Yet when an ugly man is persuaded
-that he is beautiful, or a little man that he is tall, his deception
-is short-lived, and the harm which he sustains is slight and easily
-repaired. But flattery may teach him to treat vices as if they <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-were virtues, and to rejoice in them instead of sorrowing. It
-may remove all sense of shame at misconduct. Such flattery
-spelled destruction to the Siceliots, when it called the cruelty
-of Dionysius and Phalaris a ‘hatred of wickedness’. It spelled
-ruin to Egypt, when it gave to Ptolemy’s effeminacy, to his
-hysterical superstition, to his shriekings and bangings of tambourines,
-the name of piety and worship. It came once within
-an ace of utterly subverting Roman morals, when it glossed over
-Antony’s dissolute and ostentatious self-indulgence with pretty
-terms as a ‘festive and genial appreciation of the boons of unstinted <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-power and fortune’. What made Ptolemy tie on the
-mouth-strap and its pair of flutes? What made Nero cultivate
-the tragic stage and don the mask and buskin? What else but
-praise from flatterers? Is not a king regularly called an Apollo
-if he warbles, a Dionysius if he gets drunk, a Hercules if he
-wrestles? And is he not so pleased with it, that there is no
-way of disgracing himself to which flattery will not lead him?
-It is therefore in the matter of praise that we should chiefly
-beware of the time-server. He is himself alive to the fact, and <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>57<span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-is deft at avoiding suspicion. If therefore he gets hold of some
-dull-witted and thick-skinned grandee, he fools him to the top of
-his bent. Remember how Strouthias makes a hobby-horse of Bias
-and dances his fling upon the man’s stupidity by praising him with:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>You have drunk more than royal Alexander</i>,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>or:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>I laugh to think o’ the quip you gave the Cyprian.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_204'>204</span>But with persons of more discernment he perceives that in this
-direction they are particularly on the alert, that in this quarter
-they keep a special watch. He does not therefore adopt a direct
-line of attack with his flattery, but fetches a circuitous course
-from a distance, and</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Advances noiselessly, as when a beast</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'><span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> is tentatively approached and fingered. At one moment he
-will describe how you have been praised by some one else, using
-the public speaker’s device of putting the words in another
-person’s mouth. He will say, for instance, that he had the great
-pleasure of being present in the market-place when some
-‘visitors’—or some ‘elderly people’—were relating a good
-many admiring and complimentary stories about you. At
-another time he will concoct a number of trivial and fictitious
-charges against you, which he purports to have heard from
-others, and he will say that he has hastened to find you and
-desires to know where you said such-and-such a thing or did
-so-and-so. If you deny them—as you naturally will—he at
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> once has you in the trap for his compliments: ‘It did surprise
-me that you should speak ill of a friend, seeing that it is not
-your nature to do so even of an enemy;’ or ‘that you should
-have designs on other people’s property, when you are so liberal
-with your own’.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Others, again, are like a painter who brings the light and bright
-parts into relief by the juxtaposition of dark and shaded portions.
-By blaming, abusing, belittling, and ridiculing the opposite
-qualities, they give a concealed praise and encouragement
-to the defects of the person flattered. To a spendthrift they
-disparage economy and call it stinginess. To a grasping knave
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> who makes money by mean and shabby practices they depreciate
-honest self-support and call it want of enterprise and business
-capacity. When they associate with some careless idler who shuns
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_205'>205</span>the busy centres of affairs, they are not ashamed to style public
-life a ‘meddling with other people’s business’, and public spirit
-a ‘sterile vanity’. Sometimes, in order to flatter a public
-speaker, a philosopher is belittled, or the favour of profligate
-women is won by miscalling faithful and loving wives ‘provincial
-and unattractive’. Most pitiful in its baseness is the
-fact that the toady does not even spare himself. As a wrestler
-crouches his body in order to throw another, so he insidiously
-contrives to compliment his neighbour by disparaging himself. <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-‘I am a nervous wretch at sea,’ says he. ‘I cannot face trouble.
-Hard words make me frantically angry. But our friend here
-has no nerves; nothing troubles him. He is a peculiar person,
-always good-tempered, never ruffled.’ But if a man thinks
-himself particularly sensible, and is so desirous of being severely
-matter-of-fact that—out of what he calls straightforwardness—he
-is always on the defensive with</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Tydeus’ son, bepraise me not much, nor, prithee, upbraid me</i>,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>the artist in flattery will not adopt this manner of approaching <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-him. Such cases are met by another device. He will come and
-consult him, as a person of superior wisdom, about affairs of
-his own. ‘Though,’ he will say, ‘there are others with
-whom I am more intimate, I am compelled to trouble you.
-For where are we to take refuge when we need advice? In
-whom are we to put confidence?’ Then, after listening
-to what he has to say, he will take his leave with the
-remark that what he has received is ‘not an opinion; it
-is an oracle’. And if he sees that you make pretensions to
-being a judge of literature, he gives you something he has <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>58<span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-written himself, and asks you to read and correct it. When
-King Mithridates had a fancy for doctoring, some of his
-courtiers actually put themselves in his hands to be lanced
-and cauterized. This was flattery by deeds in place of words,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_206'>206</span>since he accepted their confidence as a sufficient voucher for
-his skill.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Of many shapes are means divine</i>,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>and this negative class of praise requires to be countered with
-some craftiness. The way to confute it is by deliberately offering
-counsel and suggestion which are nonsensical, and making corrections
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> which are absurd. If your man objects to nothing,
-says ‘Yes’ to everything, and exclaims ‘Good!’ ‘Capital!’
-at every item, he exposes himself as one who</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>The watchword asks, while other are his aims</i>,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>—those aims being to encourage your self-conceit with his
-laudations.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Take another case. Painting has been styled ‘silent poetry’.
-So there is a way of praising by silent flattery. The sportsman’s
-purpose is better concealed from the game when he pretends
-to be upon other business—walking, tending cattle, or tilling
-the soil. In the same way a toady drives home his eulogies most
-effectively when the eulogy is disguised under some different
-form of action. It may be by giving up his seat, or his place
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> at table, when you appear upon the scene. Or if he is addressing
-the Assembly or Council, and notices that some wealthy man
-desires to speak, he may stop his speech and yield him the
-platform. His silence indicates more clearly than the loudest
-acclamation that he regards the person in question as a better
-man and his intellectual superior. Such persons may therefore
-be seen taking possession of the front seats at an entertainment
-or in the meeting-hall, not because they claim any right to
-them, but in order that they may play the toady by giving up
-their places to rich people. Or you may see them begin the
-discussion at a congress or a board-meeting, and subsequently
-give way to ‘superior argument’ and shift round with the
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> greatest readiness to the opposite view, if their opponent is
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_207'>207</span>a person of influence, wealth, or note. The clearest exposure of
-such complaisances and concessions is to be sought in the fact
-that it is not to knowledge or high abilities or age that the
-deference is paid, but to riches and reputations. When Megabyzus
-took a seat at Apelles’ side and wanted to prate to him
-about ‘line’ and ‘shading’, the painter remarked, ‘Do you
-see those boys yonder grinding my mixing-earth? When you
-were silent, they were all eyes of admiration for your purple and
-your jewels. But now that you have begun to talk about things <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-you do not understand, they are laughing at you.’ Similarly
-Solon, when Croesus questioned him about ‘happiness’,
-declared that Tellus, an Athenian of humble rank, as well as
-Cleobis and Biton, were more favoured by fortune. A flatterer,
-on the contrary, not only avers that a king, a rich man, or a man
-in power, is prosperous and fortunate; he also declares that
-he is pre-eminent in wisdom, art, and every form of excellence.
-Hence while there are persons who have no patience to listen
-when the Stoics describe the sage as at the same time ‘rich,
-beautiful, noble, and king’, a toady will make out that the rich
-man is at the same time an orator, a poet, and—if he so wishes—a
-painter and a musician. He makes him out swift of foot and <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-strong of thew by letting himself be thrown in wrestling and
-outstripped in running, as Criso of Himera did in a race against
-Alexander—much to Alexander’s disgust when he detected it.
-Carneades used to say that the only thing that kings’ and rich
-men’s sons understand is how to ride; they receive no proper
-instruction in anything else. For their teacher flatters them in
-school with his praises, and their antagonists in the wrestling-ring
-by courting defeat; whereas a horse, who neither knows
-nor cares whether you are in or out of office, poor or rich,
-pitches you head first if you cannot keep your seat. It was
-therefore a silly and stupid thing for Bion to say: ‘If by <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>59<span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-eulogizing a field we could make it bear a prolific crop, would
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_208'>208</span>it not be a mistake for a man to go digging and moiling instead?
-Neither, then, is it irrational for you to praise a human being,
-if your praise is productive of good fruit.’ A field suffers no
-injury from being praised, whereas insincere and undeserved
-compliment puffs a man up and ruins him.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>On this point we have said enough. The next consideration
-is that of candour.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> When Patroclus, on going out to fight, dressed himself in
-Achilles’ armour and drove his team, the one thing he let alone
-and did not venture to touch was the Pelian spear. So it might
-have been expected of the flatterer that, when dressing himself
-up carefully for the part of ‘friend’, with its proper tokens
-and badges, the one thing he would leave untouched and
-uncopied would be plain-speaking—a special attribute,</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Heavy and huge and stubborn</i>,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>to be wielded only by friendship. But in his fear that laughter,
-strong drink, jest, and fun may mean his betrayal, we find him
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> putting a solemn face on the business, flattering with a frown
-and administering dashes of blame and admonition. Here
-again, therefore, we must apply our tests. In a comedy of
-Menander, the Mock-Hercules comes in carrying a club which
-has no strength or solidity, but is merely a hollow sham. So,
-I take it, with the flatterer’s plain-speaking. On trial you will
-find that it is soft and without weight or vigour; that it behaves
-like a woman’s cushion, which, while seeming to offer a firm
-support to the head, actually yields it more of its own way.
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> This spurious candour, with its hollow fullness, its false and
-superficial puffiness, is merely meant to shrink and collapse, so
-as to induce the person who leans upon it to make himself more
-comfortable. The genuine candour of a friend attacks only our
-misdeeds; it hurts only out of care and protection; like honey,
-it merely stings our sores in cleansing them, its general uses
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_209'>209</span>being grateful and sweet. This, however, is a theme for special
-discussion.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>With the flatterer it is different. In the first place, when he
-displays sharpness or heat or inflexibility, it is in dealing with
-others than yourself. He is severe upon his own servants;
-he is terribly hard upon the misdeeds of his own relations;
-he shows no admiration or respect for a stranger, but treats <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-him with contempt; his scandalizing is merciless when exacerbating
-other people. His object is to make it appear that he
-detests low practices, and that he would not consent to abate
-a jot of his candour in your behalf, or to do or say anything
-to curry favour. In the next place, when there is something
-really and seriously wrong, he pretends to be completely
-ignorant and unconscious of it, while he will pounce upon some
-little immaterial shortcoming and take it rigorously and vehemently
-to task—if, for instance, he sees an implement carelessly
-placed, or a fault of domestic management, or negligence in
-the cut of your hair or the wearing of your clothes, or lack of <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-proper attention to a dog or a horse. But should you slight
-your parents, neglect your children, humiliate your wife, despise
-your relatives, and waste your money, it becomes no business
-of his. In such circumstances not a word does he venture to
-utter, but he is like a trainer who permits an athlete to get drunk
-and dissipated, while he is severe upon him in the matter of an
-oil-flask or a scraping-iron; or like a grammar-master who scolds
-a boy for the state of his slate and pencil, but pretends not to
-hear his slips of grammar and expression. The toady is the kind
-of man who, in dealing with a ridiculously incompetent public
-speaker, has nothing to say about his matter, but finds fault
-with his voice-production, and blames him severely for spoiling <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>60<span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-his larynx by drinking cold drinks; or who, when requested
-to peruse some miserable composition, finds fault with the roughness
-of the paper and calls the copyist a slovenly wretch. It
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_210'>210</span>was so in the case of Ptolemy, when he made pretence to literary
-tastes. They would fight with him about some out-of-the-way
-word or bit of a verse or point of information, and would keep
-it up till midnight. But to his indulgence in cruelty and
-outrage, to his tambourine-playing and initiating, not one of
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> all their number offered any opposition. Imagine a man suffering
-with tumours and abscesses, and some one taking a surgeon’s
-knife and cutting—his hair or his nails! That is what the
-flatterer does. He employs his candour upon those parts which
-feel no pain or soreness.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>There is a still craftier species, who make their plain-speaking
-and fault-finding an actual means of pleasing. When Alexander
-was once making large gifts to a jester, envy and vexation
-drove Agis, the Argive, to bawl out, ‘How utterly absurd!’
-The king turned upon him angrily and asked, ‘<i>What</i> is that
-you say?’ ‘I confess,’ was the reply, ‘to being annoyed and
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> indignant when I see how much alike all you sons of Zeus are
-in your fondness for flatterers and ridiculous persons. Heracles
-found pleasure in his Cercopes, Dionysus in Sileni, and we can
-see what a high regard you have yourself for people of the kind.’
-One day when the emperor Tiberius entered the Senate, one
-of his flatterers got up and said that, as free men, they were
-bound to speak frankly and to treat important interests without
-reticence or reservation. When he had thus aroused every one’s
-interest and had secured silence and the attention of Tiberius,
-he said, ‘Listen, Caesar, to the charge which we all make
-against you, but which no one dares to utter openly. You are
-neglecting yourself, sacrificing your health and wearing it out
-by perpetually working and thinking for us, and giving yourself
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> no rest day or night.’ As he continued with a good deal more
-in the same strain, the orator Cassius Severus is said to have
-exclaimed, ‘Such plain-speaking will be the man’s death!’</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>These devices, however, are of minor moment. The matter
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_211'>211</span>becomes grave—as meaning ruin to foolish people—when a man
-is accused of the opposite disorders to those with which he is
-afflicted; as when the parasite Himerius used to scold the
-meanest and most avaricious plutocrat in Athens by calling him
-a reckless prodigal, bent on bringing himself and his children
-to starvation; or when, on the contrary, a toady reproaches <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-a prodigal spendthrift with sordid parsimony, as Titus Petronius
-did Nero; or when he urges a ruler who behaves with savage
-cruelty towards his subjects to divests himself of ‘all that gentleness
-and ill-timed and mistaken clemency’.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>To the same class belongs the man who pretends to look upon
-some silly nincompoop as a clever rogue of whom he is afraid
-and wary. Or if an ill-conditioned person who delights in
-perpetual fault-finding and scandalizing does happen to be led
-into praising some distinguished man, he may take him to task
-and raise objections, for ‘it is a weakness of yours, this praising <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-of even quite insignificant people. What remarkable thing has
-he ever said or done?’</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Love-affairs are favourite ground for the flatterer to play
-upon his victim by further inflaming his passion. If he sees
-you at variance with your brothers, or neglecting your parents,
-or contemptuous towards your wife, he offers neither remonstrance
-nor reproach, but actually intensifies the bad feeling.
-‘No: you don’t appreciate yourself,’ or, ‘It is you that are
-to blame, for always playing the humble servant.’ But if anger <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>61<span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-and jealousy provoke a tiff with a mistress of whom you are
-enamoured, in comes flattery at once with a fine blaze of frankness,
-and adds fuel to the fire by pleading cause and accusing
-the lover of all sorts of unloverlike, unfeeling, and unforgivable
-conduct:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>O ingrate! after all that rain of kisses!</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>Thus, when Antony was becoming passionately enamoured of
-the Egyptian queen, his friends did their best to persuade him
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_212'>212</span>that the love was on her side, and they upbraided him with
-being ‘cold and supercilious’. ‘The lady has forsaken all that
-royal state and that life of delightful enjoyments to go wandering
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> about on the march with you, like any concubine.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>But, for thee, the heart in thy breast is past all moving or charming</i>,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>and you leave her to suffer as she will.’ It gratified Antony
-to be thus put in the wrong; no praise could please him like
-these accusations; and unconsciously he became perverted to
-the standard of the man who pretended to be reproving him.
-For candour of this kind is like the bite of a lascivious woman;
-while pretending to give pain, it arouses a provoking sensation of
-pleasure.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Though unmixed wine is, generally speaking, a corrective of
-hemlock, yet, if you add it to that drug in the form of a mixture,
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> you make it impossible to counteract the power of the poison,
-the heat driving it rapidly to the heart. So, while aware that
-candour is a potent corrective of flattery, your rogue actually
-uses ‘candour’ as his instrument for flattering you. Bias was
-therefore wrong in his answer to the question: ‘What animal
-is the most dangerous?’ when he replied, ‘Among wild animals,
-the despot, among tame animals, the toady.’ It would have been
-truer to say that, among toadies, those who merely frequent
-your bath and your table are tame, while those who thrust the
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> tentacles of their slanderous and malicious meddling into bedchamber
-and boudoir are savage and unmanageable beasts.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The one method of protecting ourselves appears to lie in
-recognizing and never forgetting that our mental being is made
-up of two parts—one high-principled and rational, the other
-irrational, mendacious and passionate—and that a friend is the
-unfailing supporter and champion of the better part—a physician
-who promotes and watches over good health—while a flatterer
-acts as prompter to the passionate and irrational part, exciting,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_213'>213</span>titillating, coaxing, and divorcing it from reason by inventing <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-low forms of self-indulgence on its behalf. There are some kinds
-of food which yield no benefit to blood or breath, and put no
-vigour into muscle or marrow, but simply excite the sensual
-appetites and make the flesh flabby and unsound. So with the
-advice of a fawner. If does nothing to help sane thought and
-judgement; but watch it, and you will find it cosseting an
-amorous pleasure, aggravating a foolish fit of anger or provoking
-an attack of envy, puffing you up with vulgar and empty pride,
-encouraging your doleful dumps, or, where there is a tendency
-to be ill-natured or mean-spirited or mistrustful, making the <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-feeling more bitter or shy or suspicious by constantly suggesting
-and anticipating evil. For he is perpetually in wait for some
-passion or other, which he proceeds to feed up; and whenever
-there is a festering or inflammation of your mental state, you
-will always find him a kind of bubo, bringing it to a head. Are
-you angry? ‘Then punish.’ Do you crave a thing? ‘Then buy
-it.’ Are you afraid? ‘Then let us run away.’ Are you suspicious?
-‘Then trust the feeling.’</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>If it is hard to catch him in connexion with such affections
-as these—their strength being so overpowering as to baffle the
-reason—he will give you a better opening in smaller matters;
-for he will be just the same with them. If you are apprehensive <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>62<span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-of a headache or a surfeit, and are doubtful as to bathing or
-taking food, a friend will try to check you and will urge you to
-be cautious, whereas the toady will drag you to the bath, or
-ask them to put some novel dish on the table, begging you not
-‘to keep so tight a hand upon your body as to be cruel to it’.
-If he sees you inclined to shirk a journey, a voyage, or a piece
-of work, he will say that there is no immediate hurry, and that
-it will do just as well if you postpone the matter or send someone
-else. If, after promising a friend to make him a loan or a present
-of a sum of money, you repent, but have your scruples, the toady <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_214'>214</span>throws his weight into the less honourable scale; he corroborates
-‘the argument of the purse’, and makes short work of your
-sense of shame by urging you to be economical, ‘seeing that
-you have so many expenses and so many persons to support.’</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>If, therefore, we are able to perceive our own covetousness,
-shamelessness, or cowardice, we shall also be able to see when
-a man is a toady. Such he is when he is always playing the
-advocate to those passions and ‘speaking his mind’ when we
-deviate from them.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Enough having been said upon this topic, we may next proceed
-to the question of the practical services rendered. In this
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> respect the flatterer makes his distinction from the friend a very
-obscure and perplexing matter; he always appears so prompt
-and indefatigable in his zeal. While a friend’s way, like the
-‘speech of truth’ as described by Euripides, is ‘single’, open,
-and unaffected, that of the flatterer</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Sick in itself, needs antidotes full shrewd</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>—uncommonly so, indeed, and plenty of them. When you meet
-a friend, he sometimes passes on without uttering or receiving
-a word, and with no more than a glance or a smile; he simply
-manifests by his expression, and gathers from yours, the kindly
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> understanding within. But the toady is on the run to overtake
-you, greets you from a long way off, and, if you catch sight of
-him and speak to him first, he excuses himself over and over
-again, calling his witnesses and taking his oath. So in the
-matter of actions. A friend will neglect many a trifle; he is
-no precisian and makes no fuss; he does not insist upon serving
-you at every turn. But the other is persistent, unremitting,
-unwearied; he leaves no opportunity or room for any one else
-to serve you; he is eager to receive your orders, and, if he does
-not get them, he is piqued, nay, absolutely heart-broken with
-disappointment. A sensible man, then, may take these as some
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_215'>215</span>indications that a friendship is not sincere and single-minded, <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-but is like a harlot who forces her embraces upon you before
-they are asked for.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The first place, however, in which to look for the difference
-is in promises. It has already been well said by previous writers
-that a friend will put his promise in the form familiar in</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>If I have power to achieve it, and if ’tis a thing for achievement</i>,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>while a time-server will put it in this:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Voice me the thought in thy mind.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>The comedians present us with such characters:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Nicomachus, pit me against the soldier.</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>I’ll make ripe pulp of him; I’ll make his face</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>Softer than sponge: if not, then flog me soundly.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>In the next place no friend will be a party to your actions <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-unless he has first been a party to planning them. He must
-first have looked into the business and helped to put it on a right
-and proper footing. Not so the flatterer. Even if you do grant
-him a share in weighing the matter and expressing an opinion
-about it, he is not only so anxious to gratify you with his complaisance,
-but is in such dread of leading you to suspect him of
-unreadiness to face the action, that he leaves you to take your
-course, or only lends spurs to your desire. It is not easy to find
-a rich man or a grandee who is ready to say: <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>63<span class='hidev'>|</span></span></p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Give me a man, a beggar—nay, no matter,</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>Lower than beggar, if he means me well—</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>To put fear by, and speak his heart to me.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>Like the tragedian, he must have the support of a chorus of
-friends who keep his tune, or of an audience who give applause.
-Merope in the tragedy advises:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Get thee for friends such men as, when they speak,</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>Yield not; but when a man will for thy pleasure</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>Make himself knave, lock thou thy door against him.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_216'>216</span><span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> But such persons do the opposite. If, ‘when you speak’ you
-‘yield not’, but oppose them for their good, they abominate
-you; but if ‘for their pleasure’ you are a ‘knave’ and a servile
-charlatan, they receive you not merely inside their locked doors
-but inside their most secret passions and concerns. The simple
-kind of flatterer, it is true, does not aim at so much. What he
-asks in such important matters is not to be your adviser, but
-your minister and servant. But the more crafty person will
-stand still—puzzling over the question with puckered brow and
-appropriate changes of countenance—but will say nothing.
-And if you give your own idea, he will exclaim, ‘How strange!
-You just managed to anticipate me. I was about to make
-exactly your suggestion.’</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> Mathematicians tell us that lines and surfaces, being mental
-perceptions and incorporeal, have in themselves no such thing
-as bending, stretching, or motion, but that they are bent,
-stretched, and changed in position along with the bodies of
-which they are the boundaries. So you will discover that, with
-the time-server, his assent, his opinion, even his pleasure and
-anger, are always dependent. Here, therefore, it is perfectly
-easy to detect the difference. It is still more apparent in the
-manner in which a service is rendered. With the good feeling
-of a friend, as with a living creature, its most vital functions lie
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> deep. It is marked by no ostentatious display; but very often,
-like a physician who conceals the fact that he is doctoring you,
-a friend does you a good turn by a word of intercession or by
-bringing about an understanding, and so consults your interests
-without your knowing it. Arcesilaus was a man of this type.
-Not to mention other instances, when Apelles the Chian was ill
-and Arcesilaus had discovered how poor he was, he came back later
-with twenty drachmae. Taking a seat close to him, he exclaimed,
-‘There is nothing here beyond Empedocles’ four elements:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Fire and water and earth and the gentle air of the heavens.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_217'>217</span>Why, even your bed is made all askew.’ With that he moved
-his pillow and meanwhile slipped the coins under it. When the <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-old woman in attendance found them and told Apelles in amazement,
-he laughed and said, ‘It is that thief Arcesilaus.’<a id='r52' /><a href='#f52' class='c009'><sup>[52]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c005'>And here we may note how philosophy produces ‘<i>children
-like unto their sires</i>‘. Cephisocrates, who had been impeached,
-was on his trial, and beside him, with the rest of his friends,
-stood Lacudes, one of the coterie of Arcesilaus. The accuser
-having asked for his ring, Cephisocrates quietly dropped it at
-his side, and Lacudes, who noticed the action, put his foot upon
-it and hid it. On that ring depended the proof of the charge.
-When Cephisocrates, after his acquittal, went shaking hands
-with members of the jury, one of them, who had apparently <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-seen what occurred, bade him thank Lacudes, and gave an
-account of the affair, which Lacudes had mentioned to no one.
-We may believe that it is the same with the Gods, and that for
-the most part they confer their benefits unperceived, it being
-their nature to find pleasure in the mere act of bestowing favours
-and doing good. But in a deed done by a flatterer there is
-nothing honest, sincere, single-minded, or generous. It is a case
-of sweating, bawling, bustling, and of a tense look upon the
-face, intended to convey the impression of arduous and urgent
-business. The thing resembles, in fact, an overdone painting, <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>64<span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-which strives to secure realistic effect by the use of blatant
-colours and affected folds, wrinkles, and angles.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>He is also offensive enough to relate how the business has
-meant running about and anxiety, and he goes on to describe
-how he has got into trouble with other people and had no end
-of worry and some terrible experiences, until you declare that
-the thing was not worth it all. Any obligation thrown in your
-teeth will cause an unbearable and distressing sense of annoyance,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_218'>218</span>but with an obligation from a time-server your sense of reproach
-and shame is felt at once, from the very moment that the service
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> is being rendered. A friend, on the other hand, if he has occasion
-to speak of the matter, qualifies his account of it, and about
-himself he says nothing. For example, the Lacedaemonians
-once sent the people of Smyrna some corn at a time of need,
-and, to their expressions of admiration of the kindness, they
-replied, ‘Not at all! To scrape this together we had only to
-vote the forgoing of one day’s dinner for ourselves and our
-beasts.’ A favour so rendered is not only a generous one; it is
-made the more welcome to the recipients by the thought that
-no great harm is done to the benefactor.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>It is not, however, by the flatterer’s offensive way of rendering
-his services nor by the recklessness of his promises that one
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> can best recognize the breed; an easier criterion consists in
-the creditable or discreditable nature of the service, and in the
-different character of the pleasure or benefit. A friend will not,
-as Gorgias asserted, expect his friend to render him honest
-services and yet himself oblige that friend in many ways which
-are not honest:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>’Tis his to share the wisdom, not the folly.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>Rather, therefore, he will dissuade him also from improper
-courses. And, if he fails, there is virtue in Phocion’s answer
-to Antipater, ‘You cannot use me both as friend and toady’—that
-is to say, both as friend and not friend. We must help a
-friend in his need, not in his knavery; in his planning, not in
-his plotting; with testimony, not conspiracy. Yes, and we must
-share in his misfortunes, though not in his misdeeds. We
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> should not choose even to be privy to the baseness of our friends;
-how then to be a party to their misbehaviour? When the
-Lacedaemonians, after their defeat by Antipater, were making
-terms, they stipulated that, though he might impose any penalty
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_219'>219</span>he liked, he should impose no disgrace. It is the same with
-a friend. Should occasion call for expense or danger or hard
-work, he is foremost in his claim to be summoned and take a
-prompt and zealous part; but when disgrace attaches to it, he
-will as promptly beg to be spared and left alone. But with the
-fawner it is the reverse. In services of difficulty and danger
-he cries off, and, if you give him a tap to sound him, his excuse—whatever <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-it may be—rings false and mean. But in vile and
-degrading little jobs, do as you like with him; trample on him;
-nothing shocks or insults him.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Look at the ape. He cannot watch the house like a dog,
-nor carry like a horse, nor plough the ground like an ox. He is
-therefore the bearer of scurrilous insult and buffoonery and the
-butt of sport, his function being to serve as a tool for laughter.
-Precisely so with the toady. He is unequal to any form of
-labour and serious effort, and incapable of helping you by
-a speech, with a contribution, or in a fight; but in business
-which shuns the light he is promptitude itself—a most competent <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-agent in an amour, an adept at ransoming a strumpet, alert
-at checking the bill for a drinking-bout, no sloven in the ordering
-of your dinner, deft at attentions to your mistress, and, if you
-bid him show insolence to your wife’s relations or bundle her
-out of doors, he is beyond all pity or shame.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>This, therefore, is another easy means of finding him out.
-Order him to do any disreputable and discreditable thing you <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>65<span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-choose, and he is ready to spare no pains in gratifying you
-accordingly.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>A very good indication of the wide difference between our
-fawner and a friend may be found in his attitude towards your
-other friends. The one is delighted to have many others giving
-and receiving affection with him, and his constant aim is to
-make his friend widely loved and honoured. He holds that
-‘<i>friends have all things in common</i>‘, and their friends, he thinks,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_220'>220</span><span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> should be more ‘in common’ than anything else. But the
-other—the false, bastard, and spurious article—realizes, better
-than any one, how he is himself sinning against friendship by—so
-to speak—debasing its coinage. While, therefore, he is
-jealous by nature, it is only against his like that he gives his
-jealousy play, by striving to surpass them in grovelling and
-lickspittle tricks. Of his betters he stands in fear and dread,
-we cannot say because he is</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Plodding on foot against a Lydian car</i>,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>but because, as Simonides has it, he</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in8'><i>Hath not e’en lead</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>To match the pure refinèd gold.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>If, therefore, light in weight, surface-gilt and counterfeit, he
-finds himself put in close comparison with genuine friendship,
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> full-carat and mint-made, he cannot bear the test, and must
-be detected. Consequently he acts like the painter whose cocks
-in a picture were wretchedly done, and who therefore ordered
-his slave to drive any real cocks as far from his canvas as possible.
-In the same way the flatterer drives away real friends and
-prevents them coming near. If he fails, while openly he will
-fawn upon them and pay them court and deference as being
-his betters, in secret he will throw out calumnious hints and
-suggestions. And if the word in secret has given a scratch
-without at once absolutely producing a wound, he never forgets
-Medius’s maxim. This Medius was what may be called the
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> fugleman or expert conductor of the chorus of toadies who
-surrounded Alexander, and was at daggers drawn with the highest
-characters. His maxim was, ‘Be bold in laying on and biting
-with your slanders, for even if the man who is bitten salves the
-wound, the slander will leave its scar.’ It was through these
-scars, or rather because he was eaten up with gangrenes and
-ulcers, that Alexander put Callisthenes, Parmenio, and Philotas
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_221'>221</span>to death. Meanwhile he surrendered himself unreservedly to
-a Hagnon, a Bagoas, an Agesias, or a Demetrius, and allowed
-them to give him a fall by salaaming to him and dressing him
-up after the fashion of an oriental idol. So powerful an effect <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-has complaisance, and apparently most of all with those who think
-most of themselves. Their wish for the finest qualities goes
-with the belief that they possess them, and so the flatterer
-acquires both credit and confidence. For while lofty places
-are difficult of approach or assault for all who have designs upon
-them, the lofty conceit produced in a foolish mind by the gifts
-of fortune or talent offers the readiest footing to those who are
-small and petty.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>As therefore we urged at the beginning of this treatise, so we
-urge again here; ‘Let us make a clearance of self-love and self-conceit.’
-These, by flattering us in advance, render us more <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-amenable to flattery from outside: we come prepared. But
-if, in obedience to the God, we recognize how all-important
-the maxim <i>Know Thyself</i> is to each of us; if we therefore
-examine our own nature, training, and education, and observe
-how all alike fall short of excellence in countless ways, and how
-they all contain a large admixture of weakness in the things
-we do or say or feel, we shall be very slow in allowing the flatterer
-to abuse us at his pleasure. Alexander remarked that what
-made him give least credence to those who called him a God
-was his sleep and his sexualities, his excesses in those things
-falling below his own standard. On our own part we shall <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>66<span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-always discover that at many a point and in many a way our
-qualities are ugly or a source of pain, defective or misdirected.
-We shall see ourselves in our true light, and find that what we
-need is not a friend who will pay us compliments and eulogies,
-but one who will bring us to book when we are really doing
-wrong. But only then. There are in any case very few
-with the courage to treat a friend with candour rather than
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_222'>222</span>complaisance; yet among these few it will be hard to find such
-as understand their business. It will be easier to find persons
-who imagine that they are using candour because they abuse and
-scold. Yet it is with plain-speaking as with any other medicine.
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> When it is given at the wrong time the effect is to upset and pain
-you to no purpose. In a certain sense it does painfully what
-flattery does pleasantly, inasmuch as unseasonable blame works
-as much harm as unseasonable praise. More than anything
-else it is a thing which drives a man headlong into the arms
-of the flatterer. Like water, he turns from the steep unyielding
-surface and glides away into the receptive shallows. Candour,
-therefore, must be tempered by rational courtesy, which will
-divest it of excess and over-severity. The light must not be
-so strong that in our pain and distress at the invariable reproving
-and fault-finding we turn away to escape discomfort and fly
-to find shade with the flatterer.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> In shunning a vice, Philopappus, our object should always
-be virtue, not the contrary vice. Some people think they
-escape being shamefaced by being shameless; that they escape
-being rustic by being ribald; that their behaviour becomes
-furthest from timidity and cowardice when they appear nearest
-to impudence and insolence. Some plead to themselves that
-they would rather be irreligious than superstitious, rather
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> knaves than simpletons. Their character may be likened to
-a piece of wood, which, through lack of the skill to straighten
-it, they crook to the opposite side. The ugliest way of
-refusing to flatter is to give useless pain. Our social intercourse
-must be boorishly ignorant of all the rules of good
-feeling when it is by being harsh and disagreeable that we
-avoid any creeping humbleness in our friendship, just as
-if we were the freedman in the comedy, who thinks that, to
-be properly enjoyed, ‘speech on equal terms’ means abusive
-speech.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_223'>223</span>Since, therefore, it as an ugly thing when our striving to be
-agreeable lands us in flattery, and an ugly thing when, in the
-avoidance of flattery, all the spirit of friendly sympathy is ruined
-by immoderate plain-speaking; and since we ought to commit
-neither mistake, but—in candour as in other things—draw
-‘success from moderation’, mere logical sequence seems to <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-dictate the conclusion to our treatise.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Plain-speaking, we find, is liable to be, as it were, tainted in
-various ways. The first thing is to divest it of its selfish aspect, by
-taking the greatest care not to let it appear as if your reproaches
-were due to a kind of injury or grievance of your own. When
-the speaker is concerned about himself, we regard his words
-as the outcome of anger, not of goodwill; as grumbling, not as
-reproof. For whereas candour is a mark of friendliness which
-compels respect, grumbling is petty and selfish. We therefore
-respect and admire the person who is frank, while a fault-finder
-provokes recrimination and contempt. Though Achilles <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-imagined he was speaking with but reasonable frankness,
-Agamemnon lost his temper; but when Odysseus attacked
-him bitterly in the words</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Madman, thou shouldst have commanded some other, some pitiful army</i>,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>he patiently gave way, the friendly purpose and good sense of
-the speech causing him to draw in his horns. The reason was
-that, while the plain-speaking of Odysseus, who had no private <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>67<span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-grounds for anger, was only for the sake of Greece, the vexation
-of Achilles was thought to be chiefly on his own account. Nay,
-Achilles himself, though possessed of no sweet or gentle temper,
-but</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>A terrible man, who must blame, e’en though it be blaming the blameless</i>,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_224'>224</span>silently permitted Patroclus to give him many such hard blows:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Man of no pity, no father of thine was Peleus the horseman,</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>Thetis no mother of thine; from the green-grey sea wert thou gotten</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>By beetling crags; so comes it thy heart is void of all mercy.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'><span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> The orator Hypereides used to urge the Athenians to consider
-not merely whether he was angry, but whether his anger was
-gratuitous. So with the admonition of a friend. When pure
-from any private feeling, it is a thing of awe, which we cannot
-face unabashed. And if, when a man is speaking his mind, it is
-manifest that he is casting aside any wrongs his friend may have
-done to himself; that it is other misdemeanours on his part
-which he is bringing home—other reasons for which he does
-not shrink from giving him pain—such candour produces an
-irresistible effect, the sharpness and severity of the admonition
-being intensified by the kindliness of the admonisher. Doubtless,
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> as has been well said, ‘it is most of all when we are angry or
-at variance with our friends that we should do or devise something
-to their advantage or credit’; but we show no less true
-a friendliness if, when we think ourselves slighted or neglected,
-it is on behalf of other victims of neglect that we give them a
-plain-spoken reminder. Plato, at a time when his relations
-with Dionysius were strained and dubious, asked for an interview.
-Dionysius granted it, in the belief that Plato was coming
-with a tale of grievance of his own. The conversation, however,
-took the following shape. ‘Suppose, Dionysius, you discovered
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> that some ill-disposed person had made a voyage to Sicily with
-the intention of doing you an injury, but that he could find no
-opportunity. Would you allow him to leave the country and
-get away scot-free?’ ‘Certainly not, Plato,’ said Dionysius:
-‘enemies must be hated and punished not only for what they
-do, but for what they propose to do.’ ‘Then suppose,’ said
-Plato, ‘some one comes here in a friendly spirit, with the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_225'>225</span>intention of rendering you a service, but that you afford him
-no chance. Is it a proper thing to cast him aside with ingratitude
-and contempt?’ Upon Dionysius asking who it was, he
-answered, ‘Aeschines, a man who, in rightness of character,
-will compare with any of Socrates’ associates, and whose teaching
-cannot fail to set any hearer firmly on his feet. Though he has <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-made a long voyage for the sake of philosophic intercourse
-with you, he has been left in neglect.’ These words stirred
-Dionysius so deeply that, in admiration of his kindliness and
-magnanimity, he promptly embraced Plato with effusion and
-proceeded to pay to Aeschines the most distinguished attentions.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>In the second place, our candour must be cleared of all excrescences,
-so to speak. We must allow it no coarse flavourings in
-the shape of insulting ridicule or buffoonish mockery. When
-a surgeon is performing an operation, a certain ease and neatness <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-should be incidentally apparent in his work, but there should
-be no supple juggleries of the hand in the way of fantastic and
-risky <i>fioriture</i>. In the same way candour admits of a dexterous
-touch of wit, so long as it is so prettily put as to maintain our
-respect; but impertinent and insolent buffoonery utterly
-destroys that feeling. Hence the harpist chose a polite as well
-as a forcible way of stopping Philip’s mouth, when that monarch
-attempted to argue with him on a question of musical note.
-‘Sire,’ said he, ‘Heaven forbid you should ever become so
-badly off as to know more about these things than I do!’ <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>68<span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-Epicharmus, on the other hand, chose the wrong way, when
-Hiero, a few days after putting some of his familiars to death,
-invited him to dinner. ‘Nay, but,’ said he, ‘the other day
-there was no invitation to your sacrifice of your friends.’<a id='r53' /><a href='#f53' class='c009'><sup>[53]</sup></a> It
-was also a mistake for Antiphon, when the question: ‘What
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_226'>226</span>sort of bronze is the best?’ was under discussion in the presence
-of Dionysius, to say, ‘That kind out of which they made the
-statues of Harmodius and Aristogeiton at Athens.’ No good
-is done by the stinging bitterness of such speeches, nor is any
-pleasure given by their scurrilous pleasantry. Language of the
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> kind comes only from a want of self-command—which is partly
-insolent ill-nature—combined with enmity. Those who use it
-are courting their own destruction as well; they are veritably
-dancing a ‘dance at the well’s edge’. Antiphon was put to
-death by Dionysius; Timagenes was banished from Caesar’s
-friendship, not because of any free word he ever uttered, but
-because, at dinner-parties or when walking, he would perpetually
-and with no serious purpose whatever, but</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>For whatsoever him thought might move the Argives to laughter</i>,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>advance some charge against his conduct as a friend, merely
-by way of pretext for upbraiding him.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>It is the same with the comic poets. Their work contained
-many serious and statesmanlike appeals to the audience; but
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> these were so much mixed up with farce and ribaldry—like good
-food in a hotch-potch of greenstuff—that their plain-speaking
-lost all nutritive power and use, with the result that the speaker
-was looked upon as an ill-natured buffoon, and the hearer
-derived no benefit from the speech.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>In other cases by all means have your fun and laugh with your
-friends, but when you give them a piece of your mind, let it
-be done with earnestness and with courtesy. And if the matter
-is one of importance, impart a cogent and moving effect to your
-words by your emotions, gestures, and tone of voice.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>There is also the question of the right moment. To disregard
-it is in all cases a serious mistake, but is particularly ruinous to
-good results when you are ‘speaking your mind’. That we
-should beware of doing anything of the kind when wine and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_227'>227</span>inebriation are to the fore, is obvious. It is to bring a cloud <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-over the bright sky, if, in the midst of fun and gaiety, you moot
-a topic which puckers the brow and stiffens the face, as if to
-defeat the ‘Relaxing God’, who—to quote Pindar—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Unbends the harassed brow of care.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>Nay, there is actually great danger in such unseasonableness.
-Wine renders the mind perilously testy, and tipsiness often takes
-command of candour and converts it into enmity. Moreover,
-instead of showing spirit and courage, it shows a want of manliness
-for a person who dare not speak his mind when sober to become
-bold at table, like a cowardly dog.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>There is, however, no need to dwell further upon this theme.
-Let us proceed.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>There are many who, when affairs are going well with their <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-friends, neither make any claim nor possess the courage to put
-restraint upon them. Prosperity, they think, lies quite beyond
-the reach of admonition. But should one stumble and come to
-grief, they set upon him. He is tame and humbled, and they
-trample upon him. The stream of their candour has been
-unnaturally dammed up, and now they let the whole flood
-loose upon him. He was once so disdainful, and they so feeble,
-that they thoroughly enjoy his change of fortune and make
-the most of it. It is as well, therefore, to discuss this class also.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>If Euripides asks:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>When fortune blesses, what the need of friends?</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>the answer must be that it is the prosperous man who has most <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-need of friends to speak their minds and take down any excess
-of pride. There are few who can be both prosperous and wise
-at the same time. Most men require to import wisdom from
-abroad; they require that reasoning from outside should put
-compression upon them when fortune puffs them up and sets
-them swaying in the wind. But when fortune reduces their
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_228'>228</span>inflated bulk, the situation itself carries its own lesson and brings
-repentance home. There is consequently no occasion for
-friendly candour or for language which bites and distresses.
-When such reverses happen, verily <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>69<span class='hidev'>|</span></span></p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>’Tis sweet to look into a friend’s fond eyes</i>,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>while he gives us solace and encouragement. Xenophon says
-of Clearchus that in battle and danger there appeared upon his
-face a look of geniality which put greater heart into those who
-were in peril. But to employ your mordant candour upon a man
-who is in trouble, is like administering ‘sharp-sight drops’
-to an eye suffering with inflammation. It does nothing to cure
-or relieve the pain, but only adds anger to it by exasperating
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> the sufferer. For instance, when a man is in health he is not
-in the least angry or furious with a friend for blaming his
-looseness with the other sex, his drinking, his shirking of work
-and exercise, his continual bathings and ill-timed gorgings.
-But when he is sick, the thing is intolerable. It is more sickening
-than the disease to be told, ‘This is the result of your reckless
-self-indulgence, your laziness, your rich dishes, and your
-women.’ ‘What an unseasonable man you are! I am writing
-my will; the doctors are getting castor and scammony ready
-for me; and you come preaching and philosophizing!’ So,
-when a man is in trouble, the situation is not one for speaking
-your mind and moralizing. What it requires is sweet reasonableness
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> and help. When a little child has a fall, the nurse does not
-rush up in order to scold it. She picks it up, washes off the dirt,
-and straightens its dress. It is afterwards that she proceeds
-to reprimand and punish.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>An apposite story is told of Demetrius Phalereus, when he
-was in banishment and was living at Thebes in mean and obscure
-circumstances. It was with no pleasure that he saw Crates
-coming towards him, inasmuch as he expected to hear some
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_229'>229</span>plain-spoken cynic abuse. Crates, however, accosted him gently,
-and then spoke upon the subject of exile—how there was no
-calamity in it, and how little need there was to be distressed, <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-since it meant getting rid of cares, with their dangers and
-uncertainties. At the same time he urged him to have confidence
-in himself and his inner man. Cheered and heartened
-by such language, Demetrius exclaimed to his friends: ‘Alas,
-for all that engrossing business which prevented me from getting
-to know a man like this!’</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>To one in grief a friend should speak kind words,</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>But to great folly words of admonition.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>Such is the way of a noble friend. But the mean and ignoble
-flatterer of the prosperous man is like those ‘ruptures and <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-sprains’ of which Demosthenes tells us that ‘when the body
-meets with an injury, then you begin to feel them’. He seizes
-upon your change of fortune with every appearance of delight
-and enjoyment. If you do require any reminder when your
-own ill-advised conduct has brought you to the ground, it
-should suffice to say:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>’Twas not with approval of mine: full oft did I seek to dissuade thee.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>In what cases, then, ought a friend to be uncompromising?
-When should he exert his candour to the full? It is when the
-proper moment calls for him to stem the vehement course of
-pleasure, anger, or insolence; to put the curb on avarice; to <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-restrain a reckless folly. It was in this way that, when the
-precarious favours of fortune had corrupted Croesus with the
-pride of luxury, Solon spoke his mind to him, bidding him
-wait and see the end. It was in this way that Socrates was
-wont to put control on Alcibiades, to wrench his heart and draw
-genuine tears from him by bringing his errors home. Such was
-the method of Cyrus with Cyaxares. Such too, when Dion’s
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_230'>230</span>splendour was at its height and he was drawing all men’s eyes
-upon him by the brilliance and greatness of his exploits, was
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>70<span class='hidev'>|</span></span> the method of Plato, who bade him keep anxious watch against</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Self-will, house-mate of Solitude.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>Speusippus also urged Dion in his letters not to be proud
-because he had a great name among children and women-folk,
-but to take care and ‘make glorious’ the Academy by adorning
-Sicily with piety and justice and the best of laws. But not so
-Euctus and Eulaeus, the associates of Perseus. In his prosperity
-they followed him like the rest, always assenting, always complaisant.
-But when he met the Romans at Pydna, was defeated,
-and fled, they attacked him with bitter censure, reminding him
-of his errors and oversights and throwing them one after the
-other in his teeth, until the man became so utterly sore and
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> angry that he made an end of both by stabbing them with his
-dagger.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>This, then, may serve for the general rule as to place and time.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>But opportunities are often offered by a man himself, and
-no one who cares for his friend should let these occasions slip
-or omit to use them. Sometimes a question asked, a story told,
-blame or praise of a similar action in the case of other people,
-gives you the cue for a piece of plain-speaking. For instance, the
-story goes that Demaratus visited Macedonia at a time when
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> Philip was at variance with his wife and son. Upon Philip
-welcoming him and inquiring how far the Greeks were in
-harmony with each other, Demaratus—who was his well-wisher
-and intimate friend—remarked, ‘It becomes you excellently,
-Philip, to be asking about the harmonious relations of Athens
-and the Peloponnese, while you allow your own house to be so
-full of feud and discord.’ A good hit was also made by Diogenes.
-Philip was on his way to fight the Greeks, and Diogenes, who
-had entered the camp, was brought before him. Philip, being
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_231'>231</span>unacquainted with him, asked him if he was a spy. ‘Certainly
-I am,’ he replied. ‘I am a spy upon the short-sighted foolishness
-which induces you to come, without any compulsion, and risk <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-your throne and person upon the cast of a single hour.’ This,
-however, was perhaps somewhat too forcible.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Another good opportunity for admonition occurs when a man
-has been abused for his mistakes by some one else and is feeling
-small and humbled. A person of discretion will make a happy
-use of the occasion by sending the abusive parties to the right
-about and himself taking his friend in hand, reminding him
-that, if there is no other reason for being careful, he should at
-least give his enemies no encouragement. ‘How can they open
-their mouths or say another word, if you cast aside once for <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-all these faults for which they abuse you?’ By this means the
-abuser gets the credit of the pain, and the admonisher that of
-the benefit.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Some are more subtle. They convert their familiar friends
-by blaming some one else, accusing others of the things they
-know that those friends do. Once at a lecture in the afternoon
-our professor, Ammonius, aware that some of his class had not
-lunched as simply as they might, ordered his freedman to give
-his own boy a whipping, on the charge that ‘he must have
-vinegar with his lunch’. Meanwhile the glance he threw at us
-brought the reproach home to the guilty parties.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>In the next place, we should be cautious of speaking plainly
-to a friend before company. Remember the case of Plato. <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-Socrates having handled one of his associates somewhat vigorously
-in conversation at table, Plato remarked, ‘Would it not have
-been better if this had been said in private?’ ‘And,’ retorted
-Socrates, ‘would you not have done better if you had said that
-to <i>me</i> in private?’ The story goes that, when Pythagoras once
-dealt rather roughly with a pupil before a number of persons,
-the youth hanged himself, and from that time Pythagoras never
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_232'>232</span>again reproved anyone in another’s presence. A fault should
-be treated like a humiliating complaint. The uncovering and
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>71<span class='hidev'>|</span></span> prescribing should be secret, not an ostentatious display to
-a gathering of witnesses or spectators. It is not the act of a
-friend, but of a sophist, to use another’s slips to glorify oneself,
-showing off before the company like those medical men who
-perform surgical operations in the theatre in order to advertise
-themselves. And apart from the insult—which has no right to
-accompany any curative treatment—we have to consider the
-contentiousness and obstinacy of a man in the wrong. Not
-merely is it the case that—as Euripides has it—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in12'><i>Love, when reproved,</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>Is but more tyrannous</i>,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'><span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> but if you make no scruple about offering reproof in public,
-you drive any moral disease or passion into becoming shameless.
-Plato insists that, if old men are to inculcate reverence in the
-young, they must themselves first show reverence towards the
-young. In the same way the friendly candour which most
-abashes is that which itself feels abashed. Let it be gently
-and considerately that you approach and handle the offender;
-then you undermine and destroy his vice, since regard is contagiously
-felt where regard is shown. Excellent, therefore, is
-the notion:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Putting his head close down, to the end that the rest should not hear it.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'><span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> Least propriety of all is there in exposing a husband in the
-hearing of the wife, a father before the eyes of his children,
-a lover in the presence of the beloved, or a teacher in that of
-his pupils. He becomes frantic; so sore and angry is he at
-being set right before persons in whose eyes he is all anxiety
-to shine. When Cleitus enraged Alexander, it was, I imagine,
-not so much the fault of the wine as that he appeared to be
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_233'>233</span>humbling him before a large company. Another case is that
-of Aristomenes, the tutor<a id='r54' /><a href='#f54' class='c009'><sup>[54]</sup></a> of Ptolemy. Once, when an embassy
-was in the room, Ptolemy fell asleep and Aristomenes gave him
-a hit to wake him up. The flatterers seized the opportunity,
-and affected to be indignant on the king’s behalf. ‘If,’ said <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-they, ‘you did drop off, thanks to hard work and want of sleep,
-we ought to set you right privately, not lay hands on you before
-so many people.’ As the result, he sent Aristomenes a cup of
-poison and ordered him to drink it off. Aristophanes also tells
-us how Cleon tried to exasperate the Athenians against him by
-making it a charge that he</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Abused the country before foreigners.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>This, then, is another of the mistakes to be avoided, if your
-desire is not so much to make a self-advertising display as to make
-your candour produce helpful and healing results.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>In the next place, your plain-speaker ought to bear in mind <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-the principle which Thucydides makes the Corinthians so
-properly express, in saying that they ‘had a right to find fault’
-with others. It was Lysander, I believe, who said to the man
-from Megara, when he was delivering himself at the Federal
-Council concerning the interests of Greece, ‘You need a country
-to back your talk.’ In any case, doubtless, you need character
-for plain-speaking, but in no case is this so true as when you
-are admonishing and lecturing other people. Plato used to
-say that it was by his life he admonished Speusippus, and the
-mere sight of Xenocrates at lecture, and a glance from him, <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-sufficed to convert Polemon to better ways. When we lack
-weight and strength of character the result of any attempt at
-plain-speaking on our part is to draw upon ourselves the words:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Why physic us, thyself one mass of sores?</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>Nevertheless it often happens that, though a man’s own
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_234'>234</span>character is as weak as that of his neighbour, circumstances
-drive him to administer reproof. In that case the civillest
-behaviour is to contrive somehow to imply that the speaker
-is included in the reproach. In this tone are the words:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Tydeus’ son, what ails us, forgetting our prowess and valour?</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'><span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>72<span class='hidev'>|</span></span> and:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>But no match are we now for Hector alone....</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>Socrates’ way of quietly setting young men right was of the same
-kind. He would not be taken as being himself free from
-ignorance, but as feeling it a duty to share with them in the
-cultivation of virtue and the quest of truth. We inspire affection
-and confidence when it is thought that, being equally to blame,
-we are applying to our friends the same correction as to ourselves.
-But if, when rebuking your neighbour, you put on the
-superior air of a flawless and passionless being, unless you are
-much the senior or possess an acknowledged eminence of
-character and reputation, you do no good and only make yourself
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> offensive and a nuisance. For this reason, when Phoenix
-introduced the story of his own misfortunes—how in anger he
-set to work to kill his father, but speedily repented:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Lest the Achaeans should name me ‘the man who murdered his father’</i>—</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>it was of set purpose, that it might not seem as if, in reproving
-Achilles, he claimed to be an impeccable person whom anger
-had no power to corrupt. In such cases the moral effect sinks
-in, since we yield more readily to a show of fellow-feeling than
-to one of contempt.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Another point. Since a mind diseased can no more bear
-unqualified candour and reproof than an inflamed eye can
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> be submitted to a brilliant light, one most useful resource
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_235'>235</span>among our remedies is to add a slight tincture of praise. For
-example:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Ugly is this that ye do, to cease from your valour and prowess,</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>All ye best of the host! I would not move me to quarrel,</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>If ’twere some other who thus might hold his hand from the fighting,</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>Some craven man; but with you is my heart exceedingly anger’d</i>:</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>or:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Pandarus, where is thy bow, and where thy feathery arrows?</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>Where thy glory, the which no man among us doth challenge?</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>If a man is giving way, there is also a vigorous rallying power
-in such language as</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in24'><i>Where now</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>Is Oedipus and all his far-famed rede?</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>or:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in26'><i>Is ‘t Heracles,</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>He who hath borne so many a brunt, speaks thus?</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>Not only does it temper the harshness of the punishment <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-inflicted by the reproach; it sets a man at rivalry with himself.
-When reminded of the things which stand to his credit, he is
-ashamed of those which degrade him, and he finds an elevating
-example in his own person. But when we make comparisons
-with others—with mates, fellow citizens, or kinsmen—the contentiousness
-which belongs to his failings is piqued and exacerbated.
-It has a habit of retorting angrily, ‘Then why don’t
-you go to my betters, instead of harassing <i>me</i>?’ We must
-therefore beware of belauding one person while we are speaking
-our minds to another—always, of course, with the exception
-of his parents. Thus Agamemnon can say:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Truly, a son little like to himself hath Tydeus begotten</i>;</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'><span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> or Odysseus, when in Scyrus:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>But thou o’ersham’st the brilliance of thy race,</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>Wool-spinner! thou, whose sire was Greece’s hero!</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_236'>236</span>By no means should we use reproof to answer reproof, or
-plain-speaking in counter-attack to plain-speaking. Otherwise
-we quickly produce heat and create a quarrel. Moreover, such
-disputatiousness is naturally regarded, not as a return of candour,
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> but as intolerance of it. It is better, therefore, to listen with
-a good grace when a friend believes he is reproving you. For
-this, if at a later time some offence of his own calls for reprobation,
-is the very thing which gives your plain-speaking its
-right—as it were—to speak. When, without bearing any
-grudge, you remind him that it has not been his own habit to
-let his friends go wrong, but to teach them better and set them
-right, he will be the more ready to give in and accept the
-proffered correction; for he will believe that it is good feeling
-and good intention, not anger and fault-finding, which prompt
-this payment in return.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>73<span class='hidev'>|</span></span> In the next place, remember the saying of Thucydides: ‘Well
-advised is he who accepts unpopularity in a great cause.’ It is
-the duty of a friend to accept the odium of reproof when
-questions of great moment are at stake. But if he is everywhere
-and always being displeased; if he behaves to his intimates
-as if he were their tutor and not their friend, his reproofs will
-possess no edge and produce no effect when it comes to matters
-of importance. He will have frittered away his candour, after
-the manner of a physician who takes a pungent or bitter drug
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> of a sovereign and costly character, and parcels it out in a large
-number of petty doses for which there is no necessity. No!
-while a friend will, for his own part, carefully avoid such
-unremitting censoriousness, the incessant niggling and pettifogging
-of some other person will afford him an opening to
-attack those faults which are more serious. Once when a man
-with an ulcerated liver showed the physician Philotimus a sore
-on his finger, the doctor observed, ‘My good sir, your case is
-not a matter of a whitlow!’ So when some one is finding fault
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_237'>237</span>with a number of insignificant peccadilloes, the real friend will
-be offered the opportunity of saying to him, ‘What have his
-tippling and foolery to do with us? My good sir, let our friend
-here dismiss his mistress or stop dicing, and he is otherwise
-an admirable fellow.’ If a man finds that allowance is made <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-for his trifling errors, he will take it in good part when a friend
-speaks his mind against those which are of more moment. But
-to be everlastingly girding, to be bitter and harsh on all occasions,
-to be continually meddling and taking cognisance of
-every action, is intolerable even to a child or a brother, nay,
-unendurable even to a slave.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Again, it is no more true of the folly of our friends than it is—despite
-Euripides—of old age, that</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>All things are wrong with it.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>Our friends have their right actions, and we should keep an
-eye upon these no less than upon their errors. We should,
-in fact, begin by zealously praising them. In dealing with iron
-we have first to soften it with heat before the chilling process <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-can impart to it the consistency and hardness of steel. So with
-our friends. First we warm and fuse them with praise; then
-a quiet application of candour serves as a tempering douche.
-We have, for instance, the opportunity of saying, ‘Is there any
-comparison between the other conduct and this? Do you see
-what good fruit comes of doing the right thing? This is what
-your friends expect of you; it is like you, and what nature
-meant you for. The other conduct is abominable; away
-with it</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>To the mountain or to the wave of the surging tumultuous ocean!</i>‘</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>A sensible physician will always rather cure a sick man with
-sleep and feeding than with castor and scammony; and a right-minded
-friend, or a kind father or teacher, prefers to use praise <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-rather than blame as his means of moral correction. For a candid
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_238'>238</span>friend to cause least pain and work most benefit, there is nothing
-like showing the least possible anger and treating the offender
-with polite good feeling. We must not, therefore, sharply
-confute him if he denies a thing, nor try to stop him if he defends
-himself. On the contrary, we must help him to contrive some
-kind of plausible excuse; and, when he refuses to own to the
-more discreditable motive, we must ourselves concede him a less
-heinous one. Thus Hector says to his brother:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Not well is this wrath, foolish man, that thus thou hast stored in thy bosom</i>,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'><span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> as if his retirement from the battle, instead of being a dastardly
-running away, was an exhibition of temper. So Nestor to
-Agamemnon:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Thou didst yield to the pride of thy spirit.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>It is manifestly more courteous to say, ‘You did not stop to
-think,’ or, ‘You failed to perceive,’ than ‘You behaved badly’,
-or ‘You behaved unfairly’; to say, ‘Do not be hard upon
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>74<span class='hidev'>|</span></span> your brother,’ than ‘Do not be jealous of your brother’; to
-say, ‘Flee from the woman’s seductions,’ than ‘Stop trying to
-seduce the woman’. This is the manner cultivated by curative
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>*<span class='hidev'>|</span></span> candour; the other belongs to vexatious candour.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Suppose a person is about to do wrong and that we are called
-upon to check him—to stem the current of some vehement
-impulse. Or suppose that he is inclined to be unready in the
-performance of duty, and we wish to brace him up and stimulate
-him. We should do so by making charges which put the matter
-in an outrageously unbecoming light. For instance, in Sophocles,
-when Odysseus is working upon Achilles, he makes out, not that
-Achilles is angry at the affair of the banquet, but <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span></p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Now that thou hast the Trojan burghs in sight,</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>Thou art afraid.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_239'>239</span>And when, in answer to this, Achilles is so enraged that he
-declares he is off home:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>I know what ’tis thou flyest—not reproach:</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>Hector is nigh, and ’tis not well to stay.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>In inciting to high courses and dissuading from low ones, we
-may frighten a man with the reputation he will win: a man
-of courage and spirit with that of coward; a man of temperance
-and self-control with that of profligate; a man of magnificent
-generosity with that of miser and cheeseparer. Where a thing
-is past cure, we must show ourselves reasonable; our candour <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-must display more sorrow and sympathy than blame. But when
-we are preventing a misdeed or fighting against a passion, we
-must be vigorous, inflexible, and insistent. Then is the right
-moment for incorruptible affection and genuine frankness.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>To blame an action when it is done is no more than we find
-enemies doing to each other. Diogenes used to say that, if
-you are to be kept right, you must possess either good friends
-or red-hot enemies. The one will warn you, the other will
-expose you. But it is better to avoid errors by taking advice
-than to repent of an error because of abuse. For this reason <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-we must study tact even in the matter of candour. As it is
-the most effective drug that can be employed in friendship,
-so it stands in most need of unfailing discretion as to time and
-moderation as to strength.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>And, finally, since, as I have said, it is in the nature of plain-speaking
-that it should often cause pain to the person under
-treatment, we must take a pattern by the medical man. He
-does not use his lancet and then leave the part to suffer; he eases
-it with gentle lotions and fomentations. Similarly, if our
-admonitions are to be tactful, we do not administer a sharp
-sting and then run away. We adopt a different strain, and soothe <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-and calm the patient with courteous language, much as sculptors
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_240'>240</span>put smoothness and gloss upon a statue where they have chipped
-it with hammer and chisel. If we strike and gash a man with
-plain-speaking and then leave him in the rough—lumpy and
-uneven with anger—it is a hard matter afterwards to call him
-back and smooth him over. This, therefore, is a result against
-which the admonisher must be especially on his guard. He must
-not leave the patient too soon, nor allow the last words of his
-conversation to be such as pain and exasperate his intimate
-friend.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_241'>241</span>
- <h2 id='chap09' class='c003'>ON BRINGING UP A BOY<a id='r55' /><a href='#f55' class='c009'><sup>[55]</sup></a></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c004'>I propose to offer some remarks upon the bringing-up of <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>1<span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-free-born children, as a means of securing soundness of character.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Perhaps the best starting-point is that at which they are
-brought into existence.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Upon one who desires to become the father of reputable <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-children I would urge that he should be careful as to his consort.
-She must be no mistress or concubine. Base birth, whether on
-mother’s or father’s side, is an indelible reproach. It sticks to
-a man all the days of his life; it offers a handle to those who are
-minded to discredit or vilify him; and it is a wise saying of
-the poet that</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>When the foundation of a stock is laid</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>Amiss, needs must the issue be unhappy</i>.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>A sure fund of confidence for facing the world lies therefore in
-honourable birth, and this must be a first consideration with all
-who are anxious for a right and proper procreation of children.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>It is quite natural that those whose birth is of base metal
-which will not bear scrutiny should tend to be weak-spirited
-and abject. The poet is quite right in saying: <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span></p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>It slaves a man, stout-hearted though he be,</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>To know his mother or his father base.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>It is no doubt equally the case that persons of distinguished
-parentage become full of pride and self-assertion. Thus
-Themistocles’ son, Diophantus, is reported to have said on many
-occasions and to many persons that he had only to wish for
-a thing and the Athenian people voted for it. ‘What he liked,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_242'>242</span><span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> his mother liked; what his mother liked, Themistocles liked;
-and what Themistocles liked, all Athens liked.’</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>A most praiseworthy pride was that exhibited by the Lacedaemonians,
-when they mulcted their own king Archidamus for
-condescending to marry a woman of small stature, their plea
-being that he intended to provide them with kinglets instead
-of kings.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>In this connexion there is one observation which my predecessors
-also have duly made. It is that those who approach their
-wives with a view to offspring should do so either while wholly
-abstaining from wine or at least after tasting it in moderation.
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>2<span class='hidev'>|</span></span> This explains the remark of Diogenes on seeing a youth in a state
-of mad excitement: ‘Young fellow, your father begat you when
-he was drunk.’</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>So much for the question of birth. We will now turn to that
-of upbringing.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Speaking generally, we must say of virtue what it is customary
-to say of the arts and sciences—that for right action three
-things must go together, namely, nature, reason, and habit.
-By reason I mean instruction; by habit I mean exercise. The
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> first elements come from nature; progress, from instruction;
-the actual use, from practice; the consummation, from all
-combined. In so far as any of these is defective, character must
-necessarily be maimed. Nature without instruction is blind;
-instruction without nature is futile; practice without both is
-abortive. In farming, the soil must first be good; next, the farmer
-must know his business; third, the seeds must be sound. Similarly
-with education. Nature is the soil, the teacher is the farmer,
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> the lessons and precepts are the seed. It may be confidently
-asserted that all three were harmoniously blended in the souls
-of those men whose renown is universal—Pythagoras, Socrates,
-Plato, and others who have won imperishable glory.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Blest indeed, and divinely favoured, is the man on whom
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_243'>243</span>Heaven has bestowed each and all. Yet it would be a great,
-or rather a total, mistake to suppose that, when natural gift
-is defective, no right moral instruction and practice will lead
-one to improve his faulty nature in some attainable degree.
-For while neglect will ruin an excellent natural gift, teaching
-will correct an inferior one. Be careless, and you miss a thing,
-however easy: take pains, and you secure it, however difficult.
-You have only to glance at a number of everyday facts in order <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-to perceive how complete is the success of persistent effort.
-Drops of water will hollow a rock; iron and bronze are worn
-away by the touch of the hands; wood bent by pressure into
-a carriage-wheel can never recover its original straightness.
-To straighten the curved sticks used by actors is impossible, the
-unnatural form having become, by dint of straining, stronger
-than the natural.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Nor are these the only examples to prove the efficacy of
-painstaking. Instances are countless. Soil may be naturally <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-good; but neglect it, and it becomes a waste. Indeed, the better
-it is by nature, the more hopeless a wilderness will your neglect
-make of it. On the other hand, it may be too hard and rugged;
-yet cultivation will speedily cause it to produce excellent crops.
-Is there any tree which will not grow crooked and cease to bear
-fruit if left untended, whereas, when properly trained, it bears
-well and brings its fruit to perfection? Does not bodily strength
-invariably become effete when you take your ease and neglect
-to keep in good condition, whereas a feeble physique gains
-immensely in strength through gymnastic and athletic exercise?
-Is there any horse which a rider cannot render obedient by <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-a thorough breaking-in, whereas, if left unbroken, it will prove
-stiff-necked and full of temper?</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>But why dwell longer on such cases, when there are so many
-examples of the most savage creatures being tamed and made
-amenable to hard work?</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_244'>244</span>When a Thessalian was asked which of his countrymen were
-the gentlest in manner, his answer was a good one: <i>Those who
-are giving up war.</i> But it is useless to multiply instances.
-Character is long-standing habit, and it would scarcely be beside
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>3<span class='hidev'>|</span></span> the mark to speak of the virtues of the mind as the virtues
-‘of minding’.<a id='r56' /><a href='#f56' class='c009'><sup>[56]</sup></a> One more illustration, and we will dispense
-with further elaboration of the subject. The Spartan legislator
-Lycurgus once took two puppies belonging to the same parents
-and brought them up in entirely different ways. The one he
-turned into a gluttonous good-for-nothing, the other into
-a keen and capable hunting-dog. Subsequently he got the
-Lacedaemonians together and said to them: ‘A great factor
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> in engendering virtue consists of habit and education—of
-instruction in the conduct of life—as I am about to prove to
-you here and now.’ He then brought forward the two young
-dogs, put down directly in front of them a plate of food and a
-hare, and let the dogs loose; whereupon the one darted after
-the hare, while the other made for the plate. The Lacedaemonians,
-who were not yet in the secret, failed to perceive the
-meaning of his demonstration, until he told them: ‘Both these
-dogs come from the same parents, but the difference in their
-education has turned the one into a glutton and the other into
-a hunter.’</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>No more need be said of habit and conduct of life. We may
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> proceed to the question of nurture.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>In my opinion mothers should nurse their own children and
-offer them the breast; for their nursing will be of a more
-sympathetic and painstaking kind, since their love is from the
-heart, or, as the saying goes, ‘down to the finger-tips,’ whereas
-the affection of professional nurses and foster-mothers—who
-are paid for it—can only be spurious and factitious. That
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_245'>245</span>it is the duty of the mother herself to suckle and nurse her
-offspring is evident from the arrangement of nature, which has
-supplied every animal after parturition with the necessary
-provision of milk. Here Providence further shows its wisdom,
-inasmuch as it has furnished a woman with a pair of breasts, <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-so that, even if she bears twins, there may be a double source for
-them to draw upon. Moreover she will by so acting become more
-tender and affectionate to her child. It can, indeed, scarcely be
-otherwise; the connexion of nurse and nursling is the means
-of raising affection to its highest pitch. One can see how even
-a brute beast will yearn for its nursling, if you tear them apart.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>If possible, then, the mother should endeavour to nurse the
-child herself. But if—as may sometimes happen—she is prevented
-by physical weakness, or if other children are speedily
-on the way, it is at least desirable not to accept as foster-mother
-or nurse the first that offers, but to choose the best possible. <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-To begin with, her character should be Greek. It is as with
-the treatment of the body. As soon as children are born, we
-have to mould their limbs in order that they may grow straight
-and shapely. Similarly their characters ought to be regulated
-from the first. For youth is supple and plastic, and it is while
-the mind is still soft and yielding that it acts as a mould for
-instruction, whereas it is always difficult to knead into shape <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-anything hard. As it is in soft wax that we make the impression
-of a seal, so it is in the minds of those who are still little children
-that we imprint a lesson.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>That great thinker Plato is right, it seems to me, in exhorting
-a nurse to use discretion in the tales she tells to young children;
-otherwise their minds may become infected from the first with
-folly and corruption. It is also sound advice which the poet
-Phocylides gives in the words:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in10'><i>While yet but a child, it behoveth</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>To learn such deeds as are good.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_246'>246</span>Another point which we cannot afford to omit concerns the
-slave children who are to serve the young master and to be
-brought up with him. Pains must be taken, first, of course, that
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>4<span class='hidev'>|</span></span> they shall be well-behaved, but also that they shall talk Greek,
-and talk it with good articulation. Otherwise, through rubbing
-against barbarians and bad characters, he will pick up something
-of their vices. The proverb-makers have good reason
-for saying: <i>If you have a lame man for a neighbour, you will
-learn to limp.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c005'>When children reach the age to be put under a mentor, it
-becomes especially necessary to take pains in the appointment
-of such a person. Otherwise we shall have them entrusted to
-some uncivilized or rascally fellow. What actually happens
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> is often in the highest degree absurd. Respectable slaves are
-made into farmers, skippers, traders, stewards, or money-lenders,
-while any low specimen who is found to be a glutton and a tippler
-and of no use in any kind of business is taken and put in charge
-of the sons. A fit and proper attendant should possess the same
-qualities of mind as Phoenix, the attendant of Achilles.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>We now reach a topic more important and vital than any
-yet treated—that of the right teachers for our children. The
-kind to be sought for are those whose lives are irreproachable,
-whose characters are unimpugned, and whose skill and experience
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> are of the best. The root or fountain-head of character as
-a man and a gentleman lies in receiving the proper education.
-As farmers put stakes beside their plants, so the right kind of
-teacher provides firm support for the young in the shape of
-lessons and admonitions, carefully chosen so as to produce an
-upright growth of character.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>As things are, the behaviour of some fathers is contemptible.
-Before making inquiry as to the proposed teachers, they put
-their children into the hands of frauds and charlatans, without
-knowing what they are about, or, maybe, because they are not
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_247'>247</span>competent to judge. In the latter case their behaviour is not
-so ridiculous, but there is another case in which it is in the last
-degree absurd. I mean, when they know, either from their own <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-observation or from the accounts of others, how ignorant and <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>*<span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-bad certain educators are, and yet entrust their children to
-them. Sometimes this is because they cannot resist the fawning
-of some obsequious flatterer; sometimes it is done to gratify
-the whim of a friend. It would be just as reasonable for a sick
-man to gratify a friend by rejecting the doctor whose science
-could save him, and preferring the ignoramus who will kill
-him; or for a man to dismiss the best ship’s-captain and appoint
-the worst, because a friend asked for it. In the name of all
-that is sacred, can any one called a ‘father’ set the pleasing of <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-somebody who asks a favour above the education of his children?
-There was good sense in a frequent saying of famous old Socrates,
-‘If it could be done, one ought to mount the loftiest part of the
-city and shout: <i>Good people, what are you after? Why in such
-deadly earnest about making money, while troubling so little about
-the sons to whom you are to leave it?</i>’ We may add that the conduct
-of such fathers is like that of a man who is anxious as to
-his shoe, while his foot may look after itself. Many fathers
-go to such lengths in the way of fondness for their money and <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-want of fondness for their children, that, to avoid paying
-a larger fee, they choose utterly worthless persons to educate
-their sons, their object being an inexpensive ignorance. This
-reminds one of Aristippus and his neat and witty repartee to
-a foolish father. Questioned as to what fee he asked for educating
-the child, he replied, ‘Forty pounds.’ ‘Good heavens!’ said
-the father: ‘What an extravagant demand! For forty pounds
-I can buy a slave.’ ‘Very well,’ was the answer: ‘then you <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>5<span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-will have two slaves—your son, and the one you buy.’</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>To put it shortly, it is surely absurd to train little children
-to receive their food with the right hand, and to scold them
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_248'>248</span>if they put out the left, and yet to take no precautions that they
-shall be taught moral lessons of a sound and proper kind.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>What the consequence is to these admirable fathers, when they
-bring up their sons badly and educate them badly, is soon told.
-On coming of age and taking rank as men, the sons show an
-utter disregard of a wholesome and orderly life, and throw
-themselves headlong into low and irregular pleasures. Then
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> at last, when it is of no use, and when their wrongdoing has
-brought him to his wits’ end, the father repents of having
-sacrificed his children’s education. Some of them take up with
-toadies and parasites, wretched nondescripts who are the ruin
-and bane of youth; others with haughty and expensive mistresses
-and strumpets, whom they ransom from their employers.
-Some spend recklessly on gormandizing; some are wrecked upon
-dice and carousals; some go so far as to venture on the more daring
-vices—they commit adultery, and think death not too much
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> to pay for a single pleasure. Had these last studied philosophy,
-they would in all probability not have succumbed to temptation
-of this kind. They would have been told of the advice of
-Diogenes—who, however coarse in his language, is right in his
-facts—‘Go to a brothel, my boy, and you will find that the
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>*<span class='hidev'>|</span></span> expensive article is not a bit better than the cheap one.’</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>In brief, then, I assert—and it would be fairer to regard me
-as repeating an oracle than as giving advice—that in these
-matters the one and essential thing, the first, middle, and last,
-is a sound upbringing and right education. It is this, I say,
-which leads to virtue and happiness.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> Other blessings are on the human plane; they are slight and
-not worth serious pursuit. Good birth is a distinction, but
-the boon depends on one’s ancestors. Wealth is a prize, but its
-possession depends on fortune, which often carries it off from
-those who have it and bestows it on those who never hoped
-for it. Moreover, great wealth is a target exposed to any rogue
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_249'>249</span>of a servant or blackmailer who is minded to ‘aim a purse’ at it.
-And, worst of all, even the basest of men have their share
-of it. Fame, again, is imposing, but uncertain. Beauty, though
-greatly courted, is short-lived; health, though highly prized,
-is unstable; strength is a thing to be envied, but it falls an easy
-prey to disease and age. Let us tell any one who prides himself <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-on his bodily strength that he is manifestly under a delusion.
-How small a fraction is human strength of the might of other
-animals, such as the elephant, the bull, and the lion!</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Meanwhile culture is the only thing in us that is immortal
-and divine. In the nature of man there are two sovereign
-elements—understanding and reason. It is the place of the
-understanding to direct the reason and of the reason to serve
-the understanding. Fortune cannot overcome them, calumny
-cannot rob us of them, disease cannot corrupt them, old age
-cannot impair them. The understanding is the only thing
-that renews its youth as it grows old, and, while time carries
-off everything else, it brings old age one gift—that of knowledge.
-When, again, war comes like a torrent, tearing and sweeping
-everything away, it is of our mental culture alone that it cannot
-rob us. Stilpo, the Megarian philosopher, made what seems
-a memorable answer when Demetrius, after enslaving the city
-and razing it to the ground, asked him if he had lost anything.
-‘O no!’ said he, ‘for virtue is not made spoil of war.’ The
-reply of Socrates is evidently to the same tune and purpose. <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>6<span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-It was Gorgias, I believe, who asked him his opinion of the Great
-King, and whether he considered him happy. ‘I have no
-knowledge,’ said Socrates, ‘as to the state of his character and
-culture.’ He assumed that happiness depended upon these, and
-not upon the gifts of fortune.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Not only should the education of our children be treated
-as of the very first importance, but I once more urge that
-we should insist upon its being of the sound and genuine kind.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_250'>250</span>From pretentious nonsense our sons should be kept as far aloof
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> as possible. To please the many is to displease the wise, an
-assertion in which I have the support of Euripides:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>I am not deft of words before the crowd,</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>More skilled when with my compeers and the few.</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>’Tis compensation: they who ‘mid the wise</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>Are naught, surpass in gift of speech to mobs.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>My own observation tells me that persons who make a business
-of speaking in a way to please and curry favour with the rabble,
-generally prove correspondingly dissolute and pleasure-loving
-in their lives. Nor, indeed, should we expect anything else;
-for if they have no regard to propriety when catering for the
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> gratification of other people, it is not likely that they will permit
-right and sound principles to have the upper hand of their
-own voluptuous self-indulgence, nor that they will cultivate
-self-control rather than enjoyment.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>*<span class='hidev'>|</span></span> And how can children learn from them anything admirable?
-Among admirable things is the practice of neither saying nor
-doing anything at random; and, as the proverb goes, ‘admirable
-things are difficult.’ Meanwhile, speeches made offhand are
-a mass of reckless slovenliness, without a notion where to begin
-or where to end.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Apart from other faults, extempore speakers drop into a
-terrible prolixity and verbiage, whereas premeditation keeps
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> a speech safe within the lines of due proportion. When Pericles,
-‘as tradition informs us,’ was called upon by the assembly, he
-frequently refused the call, on the ground that his thoughts
-were ‘not arranged’. Demosthenes, who took him for his own
-political model, acted in the same way. If the Athenians
-called upon him to address them, he would resist, with the words,
-‘I have not arranged my thoughts.’ This, it is true, may be
-unauthentic and a fabrication; but in the speech against
-Meidias we have an explicit statement as to the advantage of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_251'>251</span>preparation. His words are: ‘<i>I admit, gentlemen, that I come
-prepared; and I have no wish to deny it. I have even conned
-over my speech to the best of my poor ability. It would have been
-insane conduct, if, after and amid such harsh treatment, I had
-paid no regard to what I meant to say to you on the subject.</i>’</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>That impromptu speaking should be rejected altogether, or, <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-failing this, that it should be practised only on unimportant
-subjects, I do not say. I am recommending a tonic regimen.
-Before manhood, I claim that there should be no speaking on the
-spur of the moment. But when the ability has taken firm root,
-it is only right for speech to enjoy free play as occasion invites.
-Though persons who have been in prison for a long time may
-subsequently be liberated, they are unsteady on their feet, <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-a protracted habit of wearing chains making them unable to
-step out. Similarly if those who have for a long time kept their
-speaking under close constraint some day find it necessary to
-speak offhand, they nevertheless retain the same style of expression.
-But to let mere children make extempore speeches is
-to become responsible for the worst of twaddle and futility.
-There is a story of a wretched painter who showed Apelles
-a picture, with the remark, ‘I have just painted this at one <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>7<span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-sitting.’ ‘I can see,’ said Apelles, ‘without your telling me,
-that it has been quick work. But my wonder is that you haven’t
-painted more than one as good.’</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>While (to return to the original matter in hand) we must
-be careful to avoid a style which is theatrical and bombastic,
-we must be equally on our guard against one which is low and
-trivial. If the turgid style is unbusinesslike, too thin a style is
-ineffective. Just as the body should be not only healthy but
-also in good condition, so language must be full of strength <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-and not simply free from disease. Keep on the safe side, and you
-are merely commended: face some risk, and you are admired.
-I take the same view of the mental disposition also. One should
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_252'>252</span>neither be over-bold, and so become brazen, nor yet timid and
-bashful, and so become mean-spirited. The rule of art and taste
-is <i>The middle course in all things</i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>*<span class='hidev'>|</span></span> While I am still upon the subject of this part of education
-there is an opinion which I desire to express. A style consisting
-of single clauses I regard in the first instance as no slight evidence
-of poor taste, and, in the next, as too finical a thing ever to
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> be maintained in practice. Here, as in everything else that
-caters for ear or eye, monotony is as cloying and irksome as
-variety is delightful.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>There is no subject in the ‘regular curriculum’ of which
-the eye or ear of a freeborn boy should be permitted to remain
-uninformed. But while he receives a cursory education in those
-subjects in order to taste their quality, the most important
-place—complete all-round proficiency being impossible—must
-belong to philosophy. We may explain by a comparison with
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> travel, in which it is an excellent thing to visit a large number
-of cities, but good policy to settle in the best. As the philosopher
-Bion wittily remarked, when the suitors could obtain no access
-to Penelope they satisfied themselves with her handmaids, and
-when a man is unable to get hold of philosophy he makes dry
-bones of himself upon the remaining subjects, which are of no
-account.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Philosophy, then, should be put at the head of all mental
-culture. The services which have been invented for the care
-of the body are two—medicine and gymnastics—the one
-imparting health, the other good condition. But for the
-weaknesses and ailments of the soul philosophy is the only thing
-to be prescribed. It is from and with philosophy that we can
-tell what is becoming or disgraceful, what is just or unjust,
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> what course, in short, is to be chosen or shunned. It teaches
-us how to behave towards the Gods, our parents, our elders,
-the laws, our rulers, friends, wives, children, and servants: that
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_253'>253</span>we should worship the Gods, honour our parents, respect our
-elders, obey the laws, give way to our rulers, love our friends,
-be continent towards our wives, show affection to our children,
-and abstain from cruelty to our slaves. Above all, it warns us
-against excess of joy when prosperous and excess of grief when
-unfortunate; against dissoluteness in our pleasures, or fury
-and brutality in our anger. These I judge to be chief among <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-the blessings conferred by philosophy. To bear adversity nobly
-is to act the brave man,<a id='r57' /><a href='#f57' class='c009'><sup>[57]</sup></a> to bear prosperity unassumingly, the <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>*<span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-modest mortal. To get the better of pleasures by reason needs
-wisdom; to master anger requires no ordinary character.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Perfect men I take to be those who can blend practical ability <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>8<span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-with philosophy, and who can achieve both of two best and
-greatest ends—the life of public utility as men of affairs, and
-the calm and tranquil life as students of philosophy. For there
-are three kinds of life: the life of action, the life of thought,
-and the life of enjoyment. When life is dissolute and enslaved
-to pleasure, it is mean and animal; when it is all thought and
-fails to act, it is futile; when it is all action and destitute of
-philosophy, it is crude and blundering. We should therefore
-do our best to engage both in public business and in the pursuit <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-of philosophy, as occasion offers. Of this kind was the public
-career of Pericles, of Archytas of Tarentum, of Dion of Syracuse,
-and of Epaminondas of Thebes. Of these Dion actually attached
-himself to Plato as his pupil.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>There is no need, I think, to deal at any greater length with
-mental cultivation. It is, however, further desirable—or rather
-it is essential—that we should not neglect to possess the standard
-treatises, but should collect a stock of them, with the result
-of keeping our knowledge from starvation.<a id='r58' /><a href='#f58' class='c009'><sup>[58]</sup></a> Farmers stock <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>*<span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_254'>254</span>[their fertilizers], and the employment of books is instrumental
-to culture in the same way.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> Meanwhile we must not omit to exercise the body also. Our
-boys must be sent to the teacher of gymnastics and receive
-a sufficient amount of physical training, both to secure a good
-carriage and also to develop strength. Good condition is the
-foundation laid in childhood for a hale old age, and, just as our
-preparations for wintry weather should be made while it is
-fine, so we should store up provision for age in the shape of
-regular and temperate behaviour in youth. Physical exertion
-should, however, be so regulated that a boy does not become
-too exhausted to devote himself sufficiently to mental culture.
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> As Plato observes, sleep and weariness are the enemies of
-study.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Upon this topic I need not dwell, but will pass on at once
-to the most important consideration of all—the necessity of
-training a boy for service as a fighting-man. For this he must
-go through hard drill in hurling the javelin, in shooting with the
-bow, and in hunting. ‘The goods of the vanquished,’ it has
-been said, ‘are prizes offered to the victor.’ There is no place
-in war for the physical condition of the cloister, and a lean
-soldier accustomed to warlike exercises will break through
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>*<span class='hidev'>|</span></span> a phalanx of fleshy prize-fighters.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> ‘Well but,’ some one may urge, ‘while you promised us a set
-of rules for the upbringing of free men, it turns out that you
-have nothing to say concerning that of poor and common people,
-but are satisfied to confine your suggestions to the rich.’ There
-is a ready reply to the objection. If possible, I should desire
-the proposed education to be applicable to all alike. But if
-there are cases in which limited private circumstances make it
-impossible to carry my rules into practice, the blame should
-be laid upon fortune, not upon him who offers the advice.
-Though a man is poor, he should make every possible effort
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_255'>255</span>to bring up his children in the ideal way. Failing this, he must
-come as near to it as he can.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>After thus encumbering our discussion with this side-issue, <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-I will now proceed with the connected account of such other <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>*<span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-matters as contribute to the right upbringing of the young.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>And first, children should be led into right practices of
-persuasion and reasoning: flogging and bodily injury should
-be out of the question. Such treatment is surely more fit for
-slaves than for the free, whom the smart, or even the humiliation,
-of a beating deprives of all life and spirit, making their tasks
-a horror to them. The freeborn find praise a more effective <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>9<span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-stimulus to the right conduct, and blame a more effective
-deterrent from the wrong, than any kind of bodily assault. In
-the use of such praise and reprimand there should be a subtle
-alternation. When a child is too bold, it should first be shamed
-by reproof and then encouraged by a word of praise. We may
-take a pattern by nurses, who may have to make an infant cry,
-but who afterwards comfort it by offering it the breast. We
-must, however, avoid puffing children up with eulogies, the
-consequence of excessive praise being vanity and conceit.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>I have noticed more than one instance in which the over-fondness <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-of a father has proved to be a lack of fondness. To
-make my meaning clear, I will use an illustration. Being in too
-great haste for their children to take first place in everything,
-they impose extravagant tasks, which prove too great for their
-strength and end in failure, besides causing them such weariness
-and distress that they refuse to submit patiently to instruction.
-Water in moderation will make a plant grow, while a flood of
-water will choke it. In the same way the mind will thrive under <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-reasonably hard work, but will drown if the work is excessive.
-We must therefore allow children breathing-time from perpetual
-tasks, and remember that all our life there is a division of
-relaxation and effort. Hence the existence of sleep as well as
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_256'>256</span>waking, of peace as well as war, of fine weather as well as bad,
-of holidays as well as business. In a word, it is rest that seasons
-toil. The fact is obvious, not merely in the case of living things,
-but in that of the inanimate world. We loosen a bow or a lyre,
-so that we may be able to tighten it. In fine, the body is kept
-sound by want and its satisfaction, the mind by relaxation and
-labour.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> There are some fathers who have a culpable way of entrusting
-their sons to attendants and teachers, and then entirely omitting
-to keep the instruction of such persons under their own eye or
-ear. This is a most serious failure in their duty. Every few days
-they should personally examine their children, instead of confiding
-in the character of a hireling, whose attention to his
-pupils will be more conscientious if he is to be brought continually
-to book. In this connexion there is aptness in the
-groom’s dictum that <i>nothing is so fattening to a horse as the eye
-of the king</i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> Above all things one should train and exercise a child’s
-memory. Memory serves as the storehouse of culture, and hence
-the fable that Recollection is the mother of the Muses—an
-indirect way of saying that memory is the best thing in the world
-to beget and foster wisdom. Whether children are naturally
-gifted with a good memory, or, on the contrary, are naturally
-forgetful, the memory should be trained in either case. The
-natural advantage will be strengthened, or the natural shortcoming
-made up. The former class will excel others, the latter
-will excel themselves. As Hesiod well puts it: <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span></p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>If to the thing that is little you further add but a little,</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>And do the same oft and again, full soon it becometh a great thing.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>This, then, is another fact for fathers to recognize—that the
-mnemonic element in education plays a most important part,
-not only in culture, but also in the business of life, inasmuch
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_257'>257</span>as the recollection of past experience serves as a guide to wise
-policy for the future.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Our sons must also be kept from the use of foul language.
-‘The word,’ says Democritus, ‘is the shadow of the deed.’
-More than that, we must render them polite and courteous, <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>10<span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-for there is nothing so detestable as a boorish character. One
-way in which children may avoid becoming disagreeable to their
-company is by refraining from absolute stubbornness in discussion.
-Credit is to be gained not merely by victory, but
-also by knowing how to accept defeat where victory is harmful.
-There is unquestionably such a thing as a ‘Cadmean
-victory’. <i>À propos</i> I may quote the testimony of that wise
-poet Euripides: <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span></p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>When two men speak, and one is full of anger,</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>Wiser the one who strives not to reply.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>This is the time to remember certain other habits quite as
-necessary—and more so—for the young to cultivate as any yet
-mentioned. These are modesty of behaviour, restraint of the
-tongue, mastery of the temper, and control of the hands. Let
-us see how important each of them is. We may take an illustration
-to bring home the notion more clearly. And we will begin
-with the last. There have been those who, by lowering their
-hands to ill-gotten gains, have thrown away all the reputation
-won by their previous career. This was the case with the
-Lacedaemonian, Gylippus, who was driven into exile from Sparta <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-for secretly broaching the money-bags. Absence of anger, again,
-is a quality of wisdom. Socrates once received a kick from a very
-impudent and gross young buffoon, but on seeing that his own
-friends were in such a violent state of indignation that they
-wanted to prosecute him, he remarked: ‘If a donkey had kicked
-me, would you have condescended to kick him back?’ The
-fellow did not, however, get off scot-free, but finding himself
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_258'>258</span>universally reproached and nicknamed ‘Kicker’, he hanged
-himself. When Aristophanes brought out the <i>Clouds</i>, and poured
-all manner of abuse upon Socrates, one of those present asked:
-‘Pray, are you not indignant at his ridiculing you in this manner?’
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> ‘Not I, indeed,’ replied Socrates; ‘this banter in the theatre
-is only in a big convivial party.’ A close counterpart of this
-attitude will be found in the behaviour of Plato and of Archytas
-of Tarentum. When the latter, on his return from the war in
-which he had held command, found that his land had gone
-out of cultivation, he summoned his manager and remarked:
-‘You would have suffered for this, if I had not been too angry.’
-When Plato, again, was once worked into a passion with a greedy
-and impudent slave, he called his sister’s son Speusippus and
-said, ‘Go and give this fellow a thrashing: I am myself in a great
-passion.’</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>But, it may be argued, it is difficult to reach so high a standard
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> as this. I am well aware of it. We can therefore only do our
-best to take a pattern by such conduct, and minimize any
-tendency to ungovernable rage. As in other matters, we are
-no match for either the moral mastery or the finished character
-of those great models. Nevertheless we may act towards them
-as we might towards the Gods, serving as hierophants and torch-bearers
-of their wisdom and endeavouring to imitate in our
-nibbling way as much as lies in our power.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>As for the control of the tongue—the remaining point to be
-considered according to our promise—any one who regards it
-as of trivial moment is very much in the wrong. In a timely
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> silence there is a wisdom superior to any speech. It is apparently
-for this reason that men in old times invented our mystic rites
-and ceremonies. The notion was that, through being trained
-to silence in connexion with these, we should secure the keeping
-of human secrets by carrying into them the same religious fear.
-Moreover, though multitudes have repented of talking, no man
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_259'>259</span>has repented of silence, and while it is easy to utter what
-has been kept back, it is impossible to recall what has been
-uttered.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>My own reading affords countless instances of the greatest
-disasters resulting from an ungoverned tongue. I will content <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>11<span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-myself with mentioning one or two typical examples. When,
-upon the marriage of Philadelphus with his sister, Sotades composed
-a scurrilous verse, he paid ample atonement for talking
-out of season by rotting for a long time in prison. He thus
-purchased a laugh in others by long weeping of his own. The <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>*<span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-story is closely matched by that of the sophist Theocritus, who
-endured similar, but much more terrible, consequences for a
-similar remark. Alexander had ordered the Greeks to provide
-a stock of purple garments, with a view to the thanksgiving <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-sacrifice on his return from his Persian victories, and the various
-peoples were contributing at so much per head. Hereupon
-Theocritus observed: ‘I have now become clear upon a point
-which used to puzzle me. This is what is meant by Homer’s
-“purple death”‘—words which earned him the enmity of Alexander.
-Antigonus, the Macedonian king, had but one eye, and
-Theocritus made him excessively angry by a taunt at this disfigurement.
-Eutropion, the chief cook, who had become a
-person of importance, was sent to him by the king with a request
-that he would come to court and engage him in argument. On
-receiving repeated visits from Eutropion with this message, he <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-remarked, ‘I am well aware that you want to dish me up raw
-to the Cyclops,’ thus twitting the one with being disfigured,
-the other with being a cook. ‘Then,’ replied Eutropion, ‘it will
-be without your head, for you shall be punished for such mad
-and reckless language.’ Thereupon he reported the words to
-the king, who sent and put Theocritus to death.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The last and most sacred requirement is that children should
-be trained to speak the truth. Lying is a servile habit; it
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_260'>260</span>deserves universal detestation and is unpardonable even in
-a decent slave.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> So far I have had no doubt or hesitation in what I have said
-of the modesty and good behaviour of children. But upon the
-matter which now calls for mention I am dubious and undecided,
-my judgement swaying in the balance first one way and then the
-other, without finding it possible to turn the scale in either
-direction. It concerns a practice which I can neither recommend
-nor discountenance without great reluctance. Nevertheless one
-must venture a word upon it. The question is whether a man
-who is enamoured of a boy is to be allowed to keep intimate
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> company with him, or whether, on the contrary, association
-with such a person is to be tabooed. When I look at fathers
-whose disposition is uncompromisingly harsh and austere, and
-who regard such association as an intolerable insult to their
-children, I have many scruples in recommending it or speaking
-in its favour. When, on the other hand, I think of Socrates,
-Plato, Xenophon, Aeschines, Cebes, and all those great men
-who have with one accord approved of love between males, while
-they have led youths on to culture, to public leadership, and to
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> a virtuous character, I change my mind and am inclined to
-copy those great exemplars. Euripides is on their side, when he
-says:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Nay, men may feel passion of other sort,</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>Love of a just, chaste, virtuous mind and soul.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>Nor must we omit the saying of Plato, partly serious and partly
-humorous, that those who have shown special excellence should
-have the right to kiss any beautiful person they choose. The
-proper course is to drive away those who are enamoured of the
-person, but, generally speaking, give a sanction to those who are
-in love with the mind and soul. While we must have nothing
-to say to the connexions in vogue at Thebes or in Elis, or to the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_261'>261</span>so-called ‘abduction’ of Crete, we may well imitate that kind <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>12<span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-which is usual at Athens or in Lacedaemon.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>On this matter it is for every man to hold such convictions
-as he has formed for himself. I will now leave it, and, having
-spoken of the discipline and good behaviour of the boy, will
-pass on to deal with the age of adolescence. I shall do so in very
-few words, for I have often expressed my disapproval of those
-who encourage vicious habits by proposing to put a boy under
-the charge of tutors and teachers, whereas, with a stripling, they
-would permit his inclinations to range at will. As a matter of <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-fact, there is need of more anxious precautions in the case of
-the stripling than in that of the boy. Every one is aware that
-the faults committed by a boy are small matters, which can be
-cured without difficulty—such as paying no heed to his tutor,
-or trickery and inattention in school. But the sins of adolescence
-often reach a flagrant and shocking pitch—stealing the father’s
-money, gormandizing, dicing, roistering, drinking, loose passion
-for young girls, or corruption of married women. The propensities
-of young manhood ought therefore to be carefully
-watched and kept closely under the chain. When capacity for <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-pleasure is at its prime, it rejects control, kicks over the traces,
-and requires the curb. If therefore we do not take a firm hold
-upon this time of life, we are giving folly a licence to sin. This
-is the moment when wise fathers should be most watchful and
-alert; when they should bring their lads within bounds by
-warnings, threats, or entreaties, and by pointing out instances
-of disaster caused by devotion to pleasure, and of praise and
-good repute won by continence. These two things form what
-may be called first principles of virtue, namely, hope of honour
-and fear of punishment, the one producing a greater eagerness <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-for the noblest pursuits, the other a shrinking from bad actions.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>One general rule of duty is to keep boys from associating with
-vicious persons; otherwise they will pick up something of their
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_262'>262</span>vice. This has been urged by Pythagoras among a number
-of dark sayings. Since these also possess great value as aids to
-the attainment of virtue, I will proceed to quote them, adding
-their explanation. <i>Do not taste black-tails</i><a id='r59' /><a href='#f59' class='c009'><sup>[59]</sup></a>—keep no company
-with persons who are malignant and therefore ‘black’. <i>Do not
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> step over a beam</i>—justice must be scrupulously respected and
-not ‘overstepped’. <i>Do not sit on a quart-measure</i>—beware of
-idleness, and see to the providing of daily bread. <i>Do not clasp
-hands with every man</i>—we should form no sudden connexions.
-<i>Do not wear a tight ring</i>—one should carry out the practice of
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>*<span class='hidev'>|</span></span> life, and not fasten it to any chain. <i>Do not poke a fire with iron</i>—do
-not irritate a wrathful man (the right course being to let
-angry men go their own way). <i>Do not eat the heart</i>—do not injure
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> the mind with worry and brooding. <i>Abstain from beans</i>—avoid
-public life (office in former times being determined by voting
-with beans). <i>Do not put victuals in a chamber-vessel</i>—clever
-speech ought not to be put into a wicked mind, since speech,
-which is the food of thought, is polluted by the wickedness in
-a man. <i>Do not turn back on coming to the border</i>—when about to
-die, and with the end of life close in sight, behave calmly and
-without losing heart.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>To return to the topic with which we were dealing before
-this digression. While, as I observed, boys should be kept from
-every kind of vicious company, especially should they be kept
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>13<span class='hidev'>|</span></span> from parasites. I venture to repeat here what I am continually
-urging upon fathers. There is no set of creatures so pernicious—none
-which so quickly and completely brings youth to headlong
-destruction—as parasites. They are utter ruin to both father
-and son, filling the old age of the one and the youth of the other
-with vexation. To gain their purpose they offer an irresistible
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_263'>263</span>bait in the shape of pleasure. In the case of rich men’s sons,
-the father preaches sobriety, the parasite drunkenness. The
-father urges temperance and economy, the parasite profligacy
-and extravagance. The father says: ‘Be industrious’; the
-parasite says: ‘Be idle; for life is only a moment altogether. <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-One ought to live, not merely exist. Why trouble about your
-father’s threats? He is an old driveller with one foot in the
-coffin, and we will promptly pick him up on our shoulders and
-carry him off to his grave.’ One person tempts him with a drab,
-or with the seduction of a married woman, plundering and
-stripping the father of all the provision for his old age. They
-are an abominable crew; their friendship is a sham; of candour
-they have no idea; they toady the rich and despise the poor.
-They are drawn to young men like puppets on a string; they <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>*<span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-grin, when those who feed them laugh; they counterfeit the
-possession of a mind, and give a spurious imitation of details
-of real life. They live at the rich man’s beck, and though fortune <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-has made them free, their own choice makes them slaves. If
-they are not insulted, they regard it as an insult, their maintenance
-in that case being without a motive. If, therefore,
-a father is concerned for the obedient conduct of his children,
-he must keep these abominable creatures at a distance. And
-he must by all means do the same with vicious fellow-pupils,
-who are capable of corrupting the most moral of natures.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>While these principles are right and expedient, I have a word
-to say upon a human aspect of the matter. I have no desire,
-all this time, that a father’s disposition should be altogether <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>D</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-harsh and unyielding. I would have him frequently condone
-a fault in his junior and recollect that he was once young himself.
-The physician mixes his bitter drugs with syrup, and so
-finds a way to work benefit through the medium of enjoyment.
-In the same way a father should blend his severe reprimande
-with kindliness, at one time giving the boy’s desires a loose or
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_264'>264</span>easy rein, at another time tightening it. If possible, he should
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>E</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> take misdeeds calmly; failing that, his anger should be seasonable
-and should quickly cool down. It is better for a father to
-be sharp-tempered than sullen-tempered; to sulk and bear
-malice goes far to prove a lack of parental affection. Sometimes,
-when a fault is committed, it is a good thing to pretend ignorance,
-turning to advantage the dim sight and defective hearing
-of old age, and refusing to see or hear certain occurrences which
-one hears and sees. We put up with the lapses of a friend. Is it
-strange to do so with those of a child? A slave is often heavy-headed
-from a debauch, without our taking him to task. The
-other day you refused the boy money; there are times to meet
-his requests. The other day you were indignant; there are times
-to be lenient. Perhaps he has cozened you through a servant;
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>F</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span> restrain your anger. Has he borrowed the team from the farm?
-Does he come reeking of yesterday’s bout? Do not notice it.
-Smelling of perfumes? Say nothing. Such is the way to
-manage the restiveness of youth.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>A son who cannot resist pleasure and is deaf to remonstrance
-should be put into matrimonial harness, that being the surest
-way of tying a young man down. The woman who becomes
-his wife should not, however, be to any great extent his superior
-either in birth or means. <i>Keep to your own level</i> is a sound
-maxim, and a man who marries much above him finds himself,
-<span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>14<span class='hidev'>|</span></span> not the husband of the woman, but the slave of the dowry.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>A few words more, and I will conclude my list of principles.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Above all things a father should set an example to his children
-in his own person, by avoiding all faults of commission or
-omission. His life should be the glass by which they form
-themselves and are put out of conceit with all ugliness of act
-or speech. For him to rebuke his erring sons when guilty of the
-same errors himself, is to become his own accuser while ostensibly
-theirs. Indeed, if his life is bad, he is disqualified from reproving
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_265'>265</span>even a slave, much more his son. Moreover, he will naturally <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>B</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-become their guide and teacher in wrongdoing. Where there
-are old men without shame, inevitably there are quite shameless
-young ones also. To obtain good behaviour from our children
-we should therefore strive to carry out every moral duty. An
-example to follow is that of Eurydice, who, though belonging
-to a thoroughly barbarous country like Illyria, nevertheless took
-to study and self-improvement late in life for the sake of her
-children’s education. Her maternal affection finds apt expression
-in the lines inscribed upon her offering to the Muses: <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span><span class='fss'>C</span><span class='hidev'>|</span></span></p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>In that, when mother to grown boys, she won</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>Her soul’s well-known desire—the skill to use</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>The lore of letters—this Eurydice</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>From Hierapolis sends to each Muse.</i><a id='r60' /><a href='#f60' class='c009'><sup>[60]</sup></a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>To compass the whole of the foregoing elements of success is <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>*<span class='hidev'>|</span></span>
-perhaps visionary—a counsel of perfection. But to cultivate
-the majority of them, though itself requiring good fortune as
-well as much care, is at any rate a thing within the reach of
-a human being.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_267'>267</span>
- <h2 id='chap10' class='c003'>NOTES ON PERSONS AND PLACES</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c004'>The following brief notes are intended to supply the bare amount
-of information necessary for an understanding of the text. The
-pronunciation marks are, of course, added only for the sake of those
-who have no Greek. An accent marks the syllable which should bear
-the stress in the English pronunciation, and the signs [ă ĕ ĭ ŏ ŭ] and
-[ā ē ī ō ū], imply
-that the vowels are short or long respectively. q.v. = see the note
-on that name.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Ábaris</b>: a legendary Scythian or ‘Hyperborean’ priest of Apollo,
-to whom miraculous powers were attributed in the way of cures and
-prophecy.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Aeolians</b>: inhabitants of Aeolis, the NE. coast of the Aegean,
-with the island of Lesbos.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Aeschĭnes</b>: (1) a philosopher, pupil of Socrates (hence Aeschines
-Socraticus). In the eyes of Plato he was a sophist, for the reason
-that he took fees. His character was not of the highest. Like Plato,
-he visited Syracuse during the philosophic pose of the elder Dionysius.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>(2) Athenian orator, constant opponent of Demosthenes, who
-charged him with being bribed by Philip. Died in exile 314 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Aeschylus</b>: the first in date and most severe in style of the three
-great Attic tragedians, 525-466 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span> A master of condensed and
-sonorous language and of powerful situations.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Aesop</b>: the famous writer (or promulgator) of fables, <i>c.</i> 620-564
-<span class='fss'>B.C.</span> Said to have been an emancipated slave, who spent some time
-at the court of Croesus and was sent by him on a mission to Delphi
-to distribute largess. Practically nothing definite is known of him.
-His fables were most probably of Indo-Persian origin. Those which
-now pass under his name are a comparatively late compilation from
-various sources.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Agésilāus</b>: Agesilaus II, king of Sparta, 398-361 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span>; the most
-important man in the Greek world of his day. His wars were numerous,
-the most important being with the Thebans. His character was
-noble, his ability great, but his physique and appearance poor.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_268'>268</span><b>Agis</b>: (1) Agis II, king of Sparta, 427-399 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span>; commander
-against the Athenians in the Peloponnesian War, his greatest exploit
-being the victory of Mantinea.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>(2) Base and toadying poet of Argos, who accompanied Alexander
-into Asia. The histories of the expedition agree with Plutarch as
-to his character.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Alcibíades</b>: a handsome noble of Athens; a type of ostentatious,
-ambitious, and unscrupulous brilliancy. After a measure of military
-and political prominence he was banished from Athens for sacrilege
-(415 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span>). Becoming hostile to his country he first found a home at
-Sparta, thence migrated to Asia Minor and joined the Persian satrap,
-Tissaphernes, whom he endeavoured to bring over to the Athenian
-side as a means to his own recall. He returned to Athens for a brief
-space in 407 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span>, then removed to Thrace, and thence again to the
-Persian satrap.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Alcméōn</b>: son of Amphiaraus (q.v.), who avenged his father by
-putting to death his mother Eriphyle.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Alexander</b>: (1) the Great, of Macedon.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>(2) of Pherae, a despot who dominated Thessaly from 369 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span> A
-cruel tyrant, assassinated through the agency of his wife.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Alexis</b>: poet of the ‘Middle Comedy’, who had migrated from
-South Italy to Athens. Plutarch says that he lived to the age of 106,
-and Suidas that his plays numbered 245.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Alyáttes</b>: king of Lydia and father of Croesus, carried on wars
-with the Greeks of the Aegean coast of Asia Minor and had apparently
-some designs upon the islands.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Amásis</b>: an insurgent Egyptian general who secured the throne
-(569 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span>). His rule was beneficent and prosperous, and he cultivated
-the friendship of the Greeks, handing over to them the town of
-Naucratis (q. v.). When reproached with his humble origin he converted
-his bronze foot-pan into the effigy of a deity by way of instructive
-parable. He was visited by Solon and had amicable relations
-with Croesus.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Ammónius</b>: Peripatetic philosopher from Attica, teacher of
-Plutarch, who speaks elsewhere of his great erudition.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Amphiaráus</b>: legendary seer of Argos, who accompanied the
-‘Seven’ in their expedition against Thebes. A pious and just man,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_269'>269</span>who was led into this false step by the persuasions of his wife, who
-had been bribed.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Amphíctyons</b>: members of a religious Council meeting at Delphi
-and representing the older Greek communities.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Amphídămas</b>: ‘hero’ (i. e. demigod) of Chalcis in Euboea,
-conceived as a historical personage.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Amphitrítë</b>: wife of Poseidon and queen-goddess of the sea.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Anacharsis</b>: Scythian prince (of N. Thrace). To Greek literature
-he is the type of the observant and critical visitor from abroad. A
-pattern of the simple life and direct thinking. Said to have visited
-Athens about 600 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Anaxarchus</b>: an easy-going and witty philosopher of the school
-of Democritus (q. v.); in the suite of Alexander on his Asiatic
-expedition.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Antígŏnus</b>: a general of Alexander. On the partition of the
-empire he received Phrygia, Lycia, and Pamphylia, but afterwards
-extended his rule over all the Asiatic portion. He fell before a combination
-of the other Diadochi in 301 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Antímăchus</b>: epic poet of Colophon, who wrote at great length
-on the story of Thebes. He also composed a voluminous elegy on
-‘Lyde’. Both pieces were crammed with mythological and other
-learning, and Plutarch appears to treat him as a type of the diffuse.
-He was a contemporary of Plato.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Antípăter</b>: (1) regent of Macedonia during the Asiatic expedition
-of Alexander and after his death (334-320 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span>). A war with a Greek
-league headed by Athens ended in the submission of the latter.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>(2) A Stoic philosopher of Tyre; a friend of Cato the younger,
-about the middle of the first century <span class='fss'>B.C.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Antiphōn</b>: several persons were so named, e. g.:</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>(1) an orator of the fifth century <span class='fss'>B.C.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c005'>(2) An Athenian tragic poet, put to death by the elder Dionysius
-at Syracuse.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>(3) A sophist, epic poet, and antagonist of Socrates.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Apéllēs</b>: (1) of Colophon or Cos, <i>fl.</i> <i>c.</i> 335-305 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span> The greatest
-painter of antiquity, especially favoured by Alexander the Great.
-His maxim for draughtsmen <i>nulla dies sine linea</i> is famous.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>(2) Of Chios, apparently unknown beyond Plutarch.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_270'>270</span><b>Appius Claudius</b> (<b>Caecus</b>): Roman censor 312 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span>, originator
-of the Appian Way.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Aráspēs</b>: a Mede, friend of Cyrus, who became enamoured of
-Panthea (q. v.).</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Arcĕsiláus</b>: latter part of third century <span class='fss'>B.C.</span>; first a disciple of
-Theophrastus (q. v.), but took an independent line in philosophy as
-founder of the sceptical New Academy. A man of amiable character
-and a wit.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Archeláus</b>: king of Macedonia 413-399 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span>; a lover of art and
-literature and a patron of Euripides and other Athenian men of
-letters.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Archidámus</b>: Archidamus II, king of Sparta, 469-427 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span>
-There were several other kings of the name.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Archílŏchus</b>: of Paros, <i>fl.</i> <i>c.</i> 710-675 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span> A lyrist of whom
-only fragments are extant; particularly famous for his iambic
-lampoons.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Archimédes</b>: the Newton of antiquity; an eminent scientist of
-Syracuse 287-212 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span>; student of astronomy, applied mathematics,
-and engineering. He served as mechanical engineer in defending
-his city from the Romans, by whose soldiers he was killed in ignorance.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Archytas</b>: of Tarentum, in the early part of the fourth century <span class='fss'>B.C.</span>,
-noted as a mathematician and philosophic statesman of the Pythagorean
-order. Both in generalship and civil business of state he was
-eminently successful and was trusted with extraordinary powers.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Arēs</b>: the Greek War-God, answering generally to the Roman
-Mars.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Arȋdaeus</b> (<b>Arrhidaeus</b>): (1) feeble half-witted king of Macedonia
-after his brother Alexander’s death.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>(2) A general of Alexander, joint regent in 321 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span>, afterwards
-governor on the Hellespont.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Aríōn</b>: <i>c.</i> 600 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span>; the famous bard and harp-player of Lesbos,
-and supposed inventor of the dithyramb. His favourite abode was
-at the court of Periander.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Aristarchus</b>: the prince of Greek grammarians and critics;
-flourished at Alexandria 181-146 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span> Chiefly known for his commentaries
-on the language and matter of Homer, and his recension
-of the divergent manuscripts.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_271'>271</span><b>Aristeides</b> (<b>Aristídes</b>): with the sobriquet of ‘the Just’; a
-noble of Athens, statesman and general, who figures in the stirring
-times of the war with Persia. Died <i>c.</i> 470 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Aristíppus</b>: of Cyrene, disciple, but not imitator, of Socrates.
-A student and teacher of ethics, and founder of the Cyrenaic philosophy
-and its cult of pleasure: <i>fl.</i> <i>c.</i> 380-366 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span> For a time he was
-at the court of Dionysius (q. v.) of Syracuse.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Arísto</b>: (1) the chief bearer of the name was a philosopher who
-became head of the Peripatetic school about 230 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span> Anciently
-considered a writer of more elegance than weight.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>(2) A son of Sophocles, and probably himself a tragedian.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Aristómĕnes</b>: practically regent of Egypt from 202 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span>; a sound
-adviser of the young Ptolemy Epiphanes (q. v.), who put him to
-death for his frankness in 192 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Aristóphănes</b>: of Athens, 444-380 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span>; by far the greatest comic
-poet of antiquity. His comedy was of the ‘Old’, or personal-political
-type. Eleven of his plays are extant.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Arístŏphōn</b>: painter, brother of Polygnotus (who <i>fl.</i> <i>c.</i> 420 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span>).</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Aristotle</b>: of Stageira, but commonly domiciled in Athens or in
-Macedonia. Pupil of Plato and subsequently tutor of Alexander.
-Founder of the Peripatetic school, with its head-quarters in the
-Lyceum (q. v.). His whole tone of mind is strikingly unlike that of
-his teacher, being eminently precise, logical, and scientific. His
-writing is without literary charm. He aimed at sound and comprehensive
-knowledge as the basis of right principles in society,
-conduct, and the arts (384-322 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span>).</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Asclépius</b>: (= Aesculapius), the Greek ‘hero’ of medicine,
-converted by legend into a son of Apollo and ultimately into
-a god.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Atreides</b> (<b>Atrídes</b>): = ‘son of Atreus’, a title of Agamemnon
-and Menelaus.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Áttălus</b> (brother of Eumenes): Attalus Philadelphus, king of
-Pergamus, allied with the Romans in the middle of the second
-century <span class='fss'>B.C.</span> Philopoemen was his controlling minister.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Bacchýlȋdes</b>: lyric poet of Ceos, <i>fl.</i> <i>c.</i> 470 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span>, principally at the
-court of Hiero of Syracuse. In general he may be called a smoother
-and weaker Pindar.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_272'>272</span><b>Bagóas</b>: a handsome young eunuch of Darius, afterwards taken
-into the service and affections of Alexander.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Báthycles</b>: an artist in metal-work, of uncertain date, but
-probably to be placed in the early part of the age of the Seven Sages.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Bato</b>: comic poet of Athens, <i>fl.</i> <i>c.</i> 280 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span>; satirized philosophers.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Bias</b>: of Priene; precise date unknown, but <i>fl.</i> <i>c.</i> 550 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span> He is
-invariably included in the list of the Seven Sages.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Biōn</b>: <i>fl.</i> <i>c.</i> 250 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span>, a philosopher from Olbia on the Black Sea,
-who settled at Athens, tried various systems, and ended by being
-a Peripatetic. He was noted for his keen sententious sayings, but
-was of dissolute character. Has been called ‘the Greek Voltaire’.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Brīséïs</b>: captive woman assigned to Achilles, but taken from
-him by Agamemnon when he surrendered Chryseis.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Busírites</b>: the people of Busiris (modern Abousir), about the
-middle of the Delta; one of the traditional birthplaces of Osiris.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Calchas</b>: the seer of the Achaean army before Troy.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Callísthĕnes</b>: philosopher and rhetorician; accompanied Alexander
-into Asia, where he used over-bold language in reproving
-him. Put to death 328 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span> He wrote an account of the expedition
-and other historical works.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Calýpso</b>: nymph, on whose island the shipwrecked Odysseus was
-detained for seven years.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Carnĕădes</b>: of Cyrene, 213(?)-129 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span>; a student of Stoicism,
-but leader of the Academics. He was ambassador on behalf of Athens
-(155 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span>) to Rome, where he delivered striking discourses on ethics.
-His cardinal doctrine was the ‘withholding of assent’ to doctrines.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Cato</b>: (1) the elder (or ‘the Censor’), 234-149 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span> The type
-of severe old-fashioned Roman morality; soldier, statesman, orator,
-and writer.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>(2) The younger (or ‘Uticensis’), 95-46 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span>; modelled himself
-on his great-grandfather in respect of the moral and simple life, but
-was much inferior in gifts. Committed suicide 46 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span>, when the
-struggle against the domination of Julius Caesar had become
-hopeless.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Cĕbēs</b>: of Thebes, a pupil of Socrates and a <i>persona</i> in Plato’s
-<i>Phaedo</i>. He is chiefly known for his (if it is his) symbolic picture
-or ‘table’ of human life.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_273'>273</span><b>Cĕrămeicus (-í-)</b>: a suburb without, and a broad street within,
-the west walls of Athens.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Cercópes</b>: mythical gnomes, mischievous and thievish, who
-annoyed Heracles by their monkey-like tricks.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Chábrȋas</b>: Athenian commander at various times between 392 and
-357 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span>, gaining some successes by land and sea against the Spartans.
-An able tactician, adventurous, but of somewhat dissolute life.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Chalcis</b>: chief town of Euboea (Negropont), once a most important
-commercial centre.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Charēs</b>: Athenian general, of whose various operations we have
-records for 367-333 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span> A man of little principle. He effected little
-against the Macedonians, and often followed independent and useless
-lines of action.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Chármȋdes</b>: uncle of Plato, who names one of his Socratic
-dialogues after him. At the supposed date he was a beautiful and
-charming youth, and the discussion is upon ‘self-control’.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Chīlōn</b>: of Lacedaemon: <i>fl.</i> <i>c.</i> 600-570 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span> Poet and coiner
-of maxims, and shrewd man of affairs.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Chryséïs</b>: captive woman assigned to Agamemnon; surrendered
-by him at the bidding of Apollo, in order to check a pestilence.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Cimōn</b>: son of Miltiades, became prominent as a commander
-against the Persians in 477 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span> His chief exploit was the victory
-of Eurymedon, 466 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span> A handsome, liberal, affable, but somewhat
-self-indulgent person.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Cīnésias</b>: Athenian dithyrambic poet, much satirized by Aristophanes
-and others. His verse, music, and character appear all to
-have been of an inferior order.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Claudia</b>: Roman maiden, who, in full vindication of her chastity,
-was enabled to move the vessel containing the image of Cybele when
-it stuck fast in the Tiber.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Cleánthes</b>: Stoic philosopher, pupil and successor of Zeno (q. v.)
-263 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span> The only fragment of his writing still extant is from a Hymn
-to Zeus.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Cleárchus</b>: (1) of Heraclea on the Black Sea; availed himself
-of faction to make himself despot and tyrant (365 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span>). Despite
-the precautions described by Plutarch he was assassinated in 353 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c005'>(2) Of Sparta, leader of the 10,000 Greeks in the expedition of Cyrus
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_274'>274</span>the Younger against Babylon; decoyed and put to death by the
-Persians, 401 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span> The retreat was led by Xenophon (q.v.).</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Cleisthĕnes</b>: Athenian noble, who adopted the popular cause
-and made important democratic changes in the constitution; <i>fl.</i> from
-510 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Cleitus</b> (<b>Clītus</b>): a Macedonian commander under Alexander,
-whose life he saved at the battle of Granícus (334 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span>). He was killed
-(328 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span>) by Alexander with a spear-thrust, after a quarrel at a carousal,
-in which he had spoken with excessive freedom to his chief.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Cleobulínë</b>: daughter (as the name implies) of Cleobulus (q.v.).
-Though her father is said to have named her Eumetis (‘sagacious’),
-the word may be suspected of being an afterthought.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Cleobúlus</b>: <i>c.</i> 610-560 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span> A citizen of Lindus in Rhodes, who
-became its despot. His position may have been similar to that of
-Pittacus (q.v.).</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Cleómĕnes</b>: Cleomenes III, high-minded king of Sparta, 240-222
-<span class='fss'>B.C.</span> On his defeat by the Achaeans he fled to Ptolemy
-Euergetes, with whom he was in alliance. The next Ptolemy
-(Philopator) suspected and imprisoned him.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Cleōn</b>: a tanner of Athens; an able but coarse-grained leader
-of the popular party 428-422 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span> A special enemy of Aristophanes
-(q.v.), whose fiercest political attacks are delivered against him.
-A self-sufficient amateur in military operations, in one of which he
-was slain.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Clódius</b>: P. Clodius Pulcher; a daring and unscrupulous person,
-who became quaestor in 61 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span> and tribune of the plebs in 59 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span>
-The notorious and relentless enemy of Cicero. Killed by Milo on
-the high road 52 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Colónus</b>: a suburb of Athens outside the north wall, with a small
-hill, grove, and sanctuary.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Cólophōn</b>: Greek town of Asia Minor, near the Aegean coast,
-about ten miles north of Ephesus.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Cornelia</b>: daughter of Scipio Africanus; the famous ‘mother of
-the Gracchi’; the type of matronly virtue, dignity, cultivation, and
-high example.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Crátĕrus</b>: a noble type of Macedonian; one of Alexander’s
-generals. After the death of his chief (323 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span>) he became colleague
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_275'>275</span>with Antipater in the Graeco-Macedonian portion of the empire.
-See also under Eumenes.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Cratēs</b>: of Thebes; pupil of Diogenes (q.v.) at Athens; <i>fl.</i> <i>c.</i>
-320 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span> A Cynic philosopher in practice as well as theory, he
-renounced his wealth and led the simple life in a cheerful manner.
-A philosophic writer and a tragic poet.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Croesus</b>: king of Lydia 560-546 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span> A wealthy and powerful
-ruler, who made war upon the Persians when their empire was
-growing rapidly under Cyrus. Was defeated and carried off in the
-train of the conqueror. While in power he was in friendly or hostile
-relations with various Greek states, and was particularly noted for
-his liberality to the Delphian oracle. Whether Solon ever actually
-had the famous interview with Croesus is chronologically doubtful,
-but it is not impossible.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Cyáxares</b>: king of Media, appears in Xenophon’s <i>Cyropaedia</i>
-as uncle of Cyrus the Great, but the whole book is something of
-a romance.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Cýpsĕlus</b>: father of Periander, established himself as despot of
-Corinth <i>c.</i> 656 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span> His name was commonly associated with
-<i>cypsele</i> (‘chest’). The designs upon him in his infancy were those
-of a Corinthian noble house, and were made in consequence of an
-oracle foretelling danger from the child.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Cyrus</b>: (1) the elder: the famous Persian monarch, founder of
-the empire, and subjugator of Babylon. The stories told of him in
-the <i>Cyropaedia</i> of Xenophon are largely romance.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>(2) the younger: satrap of Lydia, Phrygia, &amp;c., who sought, but
-failed, to dispossess his brother Artaxerxes with the assistance
-of a Greek force (401 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span>). This was the expedition related in
-Xenophon’s <i>Anabasis</i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Daphnūs</b>: a river running into the Corinthian Gulf on the north
-side not far from the entrance.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Dāríus</b>: (1) Darius I; strong and able king of Persia (521-485
-<span class='fss'>B.C.</span>), previously satrap under Cyrus the Great. This is the Darius
-mentioned in connexion with Gobryas.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>(2) Darius II (Ochus or Nothus), or Darius the Younger, a weak
-monarch endangered by perpetual rebellions, 424-405 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c005'>(3) Darius Codomannus, overthrown by Alexander. Died 330 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_276'>276</span><b>Délos</b>: central island of the south half of the Aegean, with a temple
-of Apollo, the gathering-place of a great religious confederacy of
-Ionians.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Dēmarátus</b>: of Corinth, in friendly relations with Philip and a
-mediator between him and Alexander after their quarrel in 337 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Dēmétrius</b>: (1) Demetrius I (or Poliorcetes), king of Macedonia.
-His father Antigonus, king of Asia, sent him in 307 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span> to annex
-Greece, then under Cassander and Ptolemy. It was at this time
-that he took Megara and met with Stilpo (q. v.).</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>(2) Demetrius Phaléreus: Athenian orator and writer (345-283
-<span class='fss'>B.C.</span>); an able and cultivated man, put in charge of Athens by the
-Macedonians, 317 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span> First highly honoured, then expelled, he
-made his way to Thebes and subsequently to Alexandria.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>(3) The name of several Macedonian officers in the army of
-Alexander.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Dēmócrȋtus</b>: <i>c.</i> 460-360 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span> Of Abdēra in Thrace. A great
-traveller and student, who developed (though he did not invent)
-the ‘Atomic Theory’. Ethically his aim was cheerfulness of mind
-(hence ‘the laughing philosopher’). His character was of the highest
-for truth and simplicity.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Dicaeárchus</b>: philosopher from Massana in Sicily; writer on
-history and geography. A follower of Aristotle, <i>fl.</i> <i>c.</i> 300 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Díŏcles</b>: the narrator of the Dinner of the Seven Sages: professional
-seer, and interpreter and expiator of omens and dreams.
-Nothing is known of such a person outside Plutarch.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Diógĕnes</b>: (1) the Cynic philosopher of Sinope, who migrated to
-Athens, and after being captured by pirates was sold as a slave to
-a Corinthian. Whether or not he ever lived in the famous (earthenware)
-‘tub’ is doubtful. He was distinguished for his plainness of
-life, his shrewd good sense, his independence, and his caustic tongue.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>(2) Tragic poet of Athens, <i>c.</i> 404 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Diōn</b>: of Syracuse, brother-in-law of the elder Dionysius (q. v.).
-On the visit of Plato to Sicily he became a disciple of that philosopher.
-The younger Dionysius resented his reputation and his harshness.
-Dion therefore removed to Athens and other parts of Greece, whence
-he returned with a force, expelled Dionysius, and was himself
-appointed practically dictator. Assassinated 353 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_277'>277</span><b>Dionysius</b>: (i) the elder: despot of Syracuse (‘sole general’)
-405-367 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span> He extended its power over a great part of Sicily, and
-strongly fortified the city itself. In the end he became a veritable
-tyrant. Like many other despots he affected literature and philosophy,
-and himself wrote bad verses. After inviting Plato to Syracuse
-he quarrelled with and dismissed that philosopher.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>(2) the younger, who succeeded his father. For a time he was
-under the influence of Dion (q.v.) assisted by Plato. Of weaker
-character and more licentious than his father, he was compelled to
-abandon Syracuse after a rule of eleven years. Insecurely restored
-ten years later he was again driven out by Timoleon (343 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span>).
-The remainder of his life was spent in poverty at Corinth, where he
-is said to have taught an elementary school.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Dōdóna</b>: in Epirus, near the modern Janina; a very ancient
-seat of the worship of Zeus.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Dolōn</b>: a Trojan in the <i>Iliad</i>, who undertakes to penetrate the
-Achaean camp as a spy, but is slain in the attempt.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Dryópians</b>: a people of Central Greece.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Elephantínë</b> = Djesiret-el-Sag; a garrisoned island in the Nile
-(First Cataract) opposite the modern Assouan; the frontier town of
-Egypt towards Ethiopia.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Empédŏcles</b>: Sicilian physical and practical philosopher of
-Acragas (= Girgenti); <i>fl.</i> <i>c.</i> 450 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span> His studies of nature specially
-qualified him for the cure or ‘purification’ of epidemics due to
-insanitary conditions. His travels took him to Athens and other
-parts of Greece. The legend went that he threw himself into the
-crater of Etna.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Eōs</b>: = Aurora, dawn-goddess; wife of Tithonus; mother of
-Memnon, the opponent of Achilles.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Epáminōndas</b>: a type of patriotism, particularly to his compatriot
-Plutarch. The greatest of Theban commanders and statesmen,
-especially famous for his victory over the Spartans at Leuctra
-(371 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span>). So far as he applied any philosophy to life, it was that of
-Pythagoras.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Éphŏrus</b>: historian of Cumae, <i>fl.</i> <i>c.</i> 340 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span> His history,
-once very famous and much discussed, covered a period of 750
-years.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_278'>278</span><b>Epichármus</b>: <i>c.</i> 540-450 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span>; the great comic poet of Sicily,
-chiefly associated with the court of Hiero I (q.v.) at Syracuse.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Epicúrus</b>: 342-270 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span> Athenian philosopher and founder of
-the Epicurean school, of which the aim was ‘peace of mind’ or
-‘freedom from emotional disturbance’. His own life (as his tenets required)
-was simple and wholesome, and the self-indulgence of the sect
-in later days was either a parody or a misconception of his teachings.
-A voluminous writer on physics and ethics, but with a bad style.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Epiménȋdes</b>: priest-prophet and bard of Crete, with peculiar
-knowledge of medicine and methods of purification. Many fables
-were current concerning him (e.g. of his sleep of fifty-seven years).
-He was called in by the Athenians (<i>c.</i> 596 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span>) to cleanse their city
-of a plague.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Epimétheus</b>: brother of Prometheus (q.v.). The name was taken
-to mean ‘After-thinker’, and hence arose a notion that he ‘thought
-too late’.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Erasístrătus</b>: a very distinguished physician in the earlier part
-of the third century <span class='fss'>B.C.</span> He practised and taught in Syria and
-Alexandria. An eminent student of anatomy.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Eratósthĕnes</b>: librarian of Alexandria under the Ptolemies;
-a writer on mathematical geography, history, and grammar. Died
-about 196 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Érĕsus</b>: a town on the south-west coast of Lesbos (Mytilene);
-birthplace of Theophrastus.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Erétria</b>: the second town of Euboea, a little south of Chalcis.
-See Lelantum.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Erínys</b>: a spirit of vengeance sent up from the underworld to
-punish unnatural crimes and offences.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Éteŏcles</b>: (legendary): son of Oedipus, joint king of Thebes with
-Polyneices, whom he expelled through a selfish desire to rule alone.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Euénus</b>: two poets of Paros are so named, one of the date of
-Socrates and one earlier. It is, and was anciently, difficult to distinguish
-between the two.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Eúmĕnes</b>: an eminent and very able general (and also secretary) of
-Alexander, after whose death he obtained (322 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span>) the chief command
-in Asia. His subordinate Neoptolemus, governor of Armenia,
-made head against him with the help of Craterus. Their defeat,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_279'>279</span>mentioned in the article on Garrulity, took place in Cappadocia in
-321 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Eúpŏlis</b>: one of the three chief poets of the ‘old’ comedy of
-Athens, a contemporary of Aristophanes (q.v.).</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Eurípides</b>: 480-406 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span>; third in date of the three great Athenian
-tragedians. His works were numerous and uneven. His poetical
-merits were (and are) variously estimated.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Fabius Maximus</b>: the best known person of the name was
-Q. Fabius Maximus Cunctator, who saved Rome by his waiting
-tactics against Hannibal; but the one who was associated with
-Polybius, as pupil and patron, was Q. F. M. Aemilianus, consul in
-145 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span>, who served against Macedonia and in Spain.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Góbryes</b>: one of the seven Persian nobles (Darius being another)
-who conspired against the usurper Smerdis the Mage. Darius was
-raised to the throne and Gobryes became one of his lieutenants.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Górgȋas</b>: of Leontini in Sicily: orator, rhetorical teacher, and
-sophist, who visited Athens 427 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span> and subsequently. His style,
-which was highly artificial, was widely imitated. He is the Gorgias
-of Plato’s dialogue.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Gorgo</b>: of Sparta; wife of Leonidas and daughter of Cleomenes I.
-Stories of her wisdom and sagacity are told by Herodotus (6. 49,
-7. 239).</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Gylippus</b>: Spartan general who came to the rescue of Syracuse
-and chiefly caused the utter collapse of the Athenian attack upon
-that city. After the fall of Athens (404 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span>) it was his business to
-convey to Sparta the 1,500 talents of booty. He opened the seams
-of the sacks, filched about one-fifth of the amount, but was betrayed
-by the inventories enclosed.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Harmódius</b>: a handsome youth of Athens associated with Aristogeiton
-(the older man) in the assassination of Hipparchus, brother
-of the despot Hippias in 514 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span> Though Athens was not liberated
-till four years later, these tyrannicides were canonized as saviours
-of their country.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Hecuba</b>: the aged wife of Priam, and mother of Hector.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Hephaestus</b>: practically the Greek equivalent of the Latin
-Vulcan or Fire-God. He is represented as a lame, but sturdy and
-somewhat humorous deity, a master of smithcraft.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_280'>280</span><b>Hēracleides</b> (<b>Héraclides</b>): It is not clear to which person of
-the name Plutarch refers. The best known was Heracleides Ponticus,
-a pupil of Plato and a miscellaneous writer.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Hēracleitus</b> (<b>Hēraclítus</b>): physical philosopher of Ephesus,
-<i>fl.</i> <i>c.</i> 515 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span> Famous for the compression of his style, which
-became so cryptic that he earned the title of the ‘Obscure’. He was
-something of a hermit and favoured the simple vegetarian life. The
-‘weeping philosopher’.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Hermíŏne</b>: daughter of Menelaus and Helen; married to Neoptolemus
-(son of Achilles) and jealous of Andromache, whom she tried
-to put to death.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Hēródŏtus</b>: <i>c.</i> 484-400 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span>; the so-called ‘Father of History’.
-He travelled widely in the East and in the Grecian world, and wrote
-on Lydia, Babylonia, Egypt, Persia, and the great Persian war.
-His desire is to get at the facts, but he displays a naïve fondness for
-story-telling and for wonders and miracles.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Hēróphȋlus</b>: of Chalcedon; a most eminent physician and a
-discoverer in anatomy and physiology; <i>fl.</i> <i>c.</i> 300 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Hiero I</b>: or the Magnificent, despot of Gelon and Syracuse
-(478-467 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span>), and most powerful Sicilian of his day. Poets at one
-time or other associated with his court were Epicharmus, Xenophanes,
-Simonides, Aeschylus, Pindar, and Bacchylides.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Hierónymus</b>: tragic and dithyrambic poet of Athens and
-apparently a writer on poets.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Hippócrătes</b>: of Cos; the ‘father of medicine’; the most
-renowned physician and medical teacher and writer of antiquity:
-<i>c.</i> 460-357 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Hypereides</b> (<b>Hyperídes</b>): Attic orator; patriot, contemporary
-and, for the most part, supporter of Demosthenes in his anti-Macedonian
-policy. Put to death by Antipater (q.v.), 322 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span> An elegant
-speaker, of dubious private life.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Íbycus</b>: of Rhegium, <i>fl.</i> <i>c.</i> 540 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span> at the court of the despot of
-Samos; a lyric poet of the erotic type. The proverb, ‘the cranes of
-Ibycus’, arose from the story that, when being murdered by brigands
-near Corinth, he invoked a flock of cranes, then flying past, to avenge
-his death. Plutarch tells the sequel (<i>Garrulity</i>).</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>īno</b>: or Leucóthea; a mythological personage, daughter of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_281'>281</span>Cadmus and wife of Athamas. One story went that, when she leapt
-into the sea, she was carried to Corinth by a dolphin. Hence the
-allusion in the story of Arion.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>īphícrătes</b>: Athenian general in early part of the fourth century
-<span class='fss'>B.C.</span> An innovator in tactics and military equipment, noted for his
-prudence and foresight.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Ischómăchus</b>: a character of the name appears in Xenophon’s
-<i>Oeconomicus</i> as lecturing his wife upon the principles of domestic
-management. Such a philosophically disposed person may be the
-associate of Socrates mentioned by Plutarch.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Ithacans</b>: the people of Odysseus, king of Ithaca, one of the
-Ionian islands, south of Corfu.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Ixíon</b>: mythical Thessalian king, who made illicit love to Hera,
-wife of Zeus, and was punished by being fastened to a perpetually
-revolving wheel in Hades.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Laelius</b>: C. Laelius Sapiens, friend of Scipio Africanus Minor.
-Consul 140 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span> Cicero’s <i>De Amicitia</i> is otherwise named his <i>Laelius</i>.
-Philosopher, orator, and scholar.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Laértes</b>: aged father of Odysseus; superannuated king of
-Ithaca.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Lĕchaeum</b>: the port of Old Corinth, with which it was connected
-by walls one and a half miles in length.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Lēlántum</b>: a river of Euboea, flowing through the fertile Lelantine
-plain (between Chalcis and Eretria), which was long a bone of
-contention between the two cities.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Leónȋdas</b>: the famous Spartan king, who so stubbornly held the
-pass of Thermopylae against the Persians with his ‘Three Hundred’,
-480 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Leptis</b>: a town in Africa near the modern Tripoli; a Phoenician
-settlement and afterwards a Roman colony.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Lesches</b>: one of the post-Homeric (‘Cyclic’) poets, and writer
-of the <i>Little Iliad</i>; a native of Lesbos, <i>fl.</i> <i>c.</i> 705 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Leuctra</b>: Boeotian village; the scene of the great defeat of the
-Spartans by Epaminondas, 371 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Livia</b>: Livia Drusilla, 56 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span>-<span class='fss'>A.D.</span> 29. Her first husband was
-Tiberius Claudius Nero, by whom she was the mother of Tiberius,
-the future emperor. Married to Augustus (then Octavianus) in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_282'>282</span>38 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span>, and having no children by him, she was anxious to keep the
-succession in her own family. A woman of strong character, she
-exerted a tactful control over Augustus and attempted one more
-imperious over Tiberius, but failed.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Locri</b>: Locri Epizephyrii, an important Greek town of South
-Italy, about the modern Gerace. Its constitutional code was often
-regarded as a model.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Locris</b>: a Greek community lying along the north side of the
-middle of the Corinthian Gulf.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Loxias</b>: Apollo as God of Oracles. The name was commonly
-interpreted as ‘Riddling’ or ‘Indirect’.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Lucullus</b>: Roman conqueror of Mithridates, succeeded in his
-command by Pompey, 66 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span> Famous for his wealth and luxury,
-and particularly for his lavish feasts. A byword for self-indulgence.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Lycéum</b>: an exercise ground with terraces (‘walks’) and colonnades
-just outside the wall to the east of Athens. It was here that
-Aristotle discoursed on the ‘Walk’ (<i>peripatos</i>), whence the name
-‘Peripatetic’ became applied to his school.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Lycurgus</b>: (1) the more or less legendary lawgiver and constitution-maker
-of Sparta. His date and personality are quite uncertain,
-and he is not improbably as mythical as Heracles.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>(2) son of Dryas, a legendary Thracian king who resisted the worship
-of Dionysius and hacked down his sacred plant, the vine. Dionysius
-punished him with madness, during which he killed his own son,
-thinking him a vine. The story is much varied in particulars.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Lysander</b>: Spartan admiral, who won the battle of Aegospotami
-against the Athenians and concluded the reduction of Athens in
-404 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span> He was afterwards distinguished for his ostentation and
-arrogance.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Lysias</b>: orator and professional rhetorician of Athens, distinguished
-for the purity and lucidity of his diction and his grace of
-style: <i>fl.</i> <i>c.</i> 403 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span> The majority of his 230 speeches were written
-for litigants.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Lysímăchus</b>: of Macedonia; became king of Thrace on the
-partition of Alexander’s empire. A man of powerful physique and
-an able soldier. Later his territory included the western half of Asia
-Minor. Killed in battle 281 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_283'>283</span><b>Masinissa</b>: king of Numidia; first a supporter, then an enemy, of
-Carthage, he lent great assistance to the Romans from 204 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span> to 148.
-His reign was long and he died at ninety.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Meidias</b> (<b>Mídias</b>): an Athenian citizen and bitter enemy of
-Demosthenes, one of whose best known speeches is a violent, and
-possibly a rather scurrilous, attack upon him.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Melánthius</b>: of Athens: an inferior tragic and elegiac poet of
-worthless character: a contemporary of Aristophanes and Plato.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Meleáger</b>: legendary prince of Calydon. Having slain his mother’s
-brothers, he was cursed by her, and thereupon refused to take further
-part in the war against the Curetes. No offers could induce him to
-leave his chamber and rout the enemy, until he yielded to the prayers
-of his wife Cleopatra.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Menander</b>: chief poet of the Athenian New Comedy (or comedy
-of manners), 342-291 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span>; a polished and easy-tempered man of
-the world. His sententious writings lent themselves to quotation
-and were much read in schools. To moralizing critics of a later age
-he was to comedy what Homer was to epic.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Mĕnedémus</b>: philosopher and statesman of Euboea, of the
-‘Megarian’ school. Died <i>c.</i> 277 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Méropë</b>: the name of several mythological semi-goddesses, mostly
-connected with the heavenly bodies.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Metellus</b>: Q. Caecilius Metellus, who successfully conducted the
-Numidian War against Jugurtha (109 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span>) until superseded by
-Marius. A man of high character, military ability, and intellectual
-culture.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Mētrodórus</b>: favourite pupil of Epicurus (q.v.) and almost
-co-master of his school. Died 277 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Mithridátes</b>: Mithridates VI, or the Great, king of Pontus
-120-63 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span>, a Hellenized oriental famed for his physical and
-intellectual ability, his ambition and daring; of importance in history
-for his wars with the Romans under Lucullus and Pompey. He made
-a special study of poisons and their antidotes.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Mnēsíphȋlus</b>: Athenian statesman of sound practical ability, taken
-by Themistocles as his model. It was he who urged Themistocles
-to force on the battle of Salamis (480 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span>). In the <i>Dinner-Party</i>
-Plutarch borrows the name for an imaginary friend of Solon.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_284'>284</span><b>Molycréa</b>: a town just inside the entrance to the Corinthian
-Gulf on the north side.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Myrōn</b>: Boeotian sculptor; <i>fl.</i> 430 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span> Best known by his
-Discobolus and his ‘Cow’. His work included animal forms, and
-human figures in a state of muscular activity or tension.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Mýrsȋlus</b>: see Pittacus.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Naucrătis</b>: a Greek town in the Delta of Egypt, thirty miles
-from the sea. At first only a trading-station, it was granted privileges
-of internal self-government by Amasis (q.v.).</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Neoptólĕmus</b>: see Eumenes.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Nestor</b>: the typical wise old man of the <i>Iliad</i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Nicander</b>: poet and physician of Colophon; <i>fl.</i> in earlier half of
-second century <span class='fss'>B.C.</span> Two of his poems are extant: the <i>Theriaca</i> on
-venomous animals, and the <i>Alexipharmaca</i> (or ‘<i>Antidotes</i>‘) on poisons
-and their remedies. The verse in itself is poor.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Nícias</b>: (1) Athenian general in the calamitous expedition against
-Syracuse (415-413 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span>). A man of wealth, but religious to the point
-of disastrous superstition; a commander of experience, though
-wanting in promptitude and self-reliance. He was put to death by
-the victors.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>(2) painter of Athens, <i>fl.</i> <i>c.</i> 310 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span>, particularly noted for his
-chiaroscuro and for improvements in encaustic painting.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Nilóxĕnus</b>: a character probably invented by Plutarch, with
-a name geographically suitable.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Numa</b>: Numa Pompilius, second king of Rome, famed for his piety
-and the excellence of his legislation. Much of his history is legendary.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Olympias</b>: wife of Philip (q.v.) and mother of Alexander. An
-imperious and vindictive woman, with good reasons for jealousy,
-who often figures in Macedonian feuds.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Olynthus</b>: a Greek town on the Chalcidic peninsula, south of
-Thessalonica.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Ómphălë</b>: queen of Lydia, to whom Heracles was for a time
-enslaved and for whom he played an effeminate part. In a sense
-she played the Delilah to his Samson.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Orchómĕnus</b>: a very ancient town in Boeotia.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Oromazdes</b>: = Ahuramazda, the great God of the Zoroastrians;
-deity of light and good, as opposed to Ahrimanes.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_285'>285</span><b>Pándărus</b>: a Lycian warrior on the Trojan side, famous for his
-skill as an archer.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Panthéa</b>: beautiful wife of Abradatas, king of Susa. Cyrus, who
-had captured her, showed her such respect that Abradatas came over
-to his side.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Parménȋdes</b>: philosopher and legislator of Elea, <i>fl.</i> <i>c.</i> 476 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span>
-His writings were in the hexameter verse then usual as the vehicle
-of literary philosophy.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Parménio</b>: general under Philip and Alexander, and right-hand
-lieutenant of the latter. Accused of taking part in a conspiracy against
-his chief, he was assassinated at the age of seventy in 330 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Parrhásius</b>: painter of Ephesus, domiciled at Athens, <i>c.</i> 400 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span>;
-famed for his accurate drawing and proportion. As a man he was
-arrogant and luxurious.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Pāsíphaë</b>: (legendary): wife of Minos of Crete; enamoured of
-a bull and mother of the Minotaur.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Patróclus</b>: the ‘squire’ and beloved friend of Achilles. Killed
-by Hector in battle, and avenged by Achilles.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Peísistrătus</b>: a younger relative of Solon; intrigued himself into
-the position of despot of Athens 560 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span> He was twice expelled,
-but re-established himself. A highly capable ruler, beautifier of
-Athens, and a lover of literature.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Pēleides</b> (-<b>ī</b>-): (i.e. ‘son of Peleus’) = Achilles.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Péleus</b>: aged father of Achilles; superannuated king in Thessaly.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Periander</b>: despot of Corinth, <i>c.</i> 625-585 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span> An able and powerful
-ruler, patron of literature and art, generally (but not invariably)
-included among the Seven Sages. His early mildness is commonly
-reported to have passed into tyranny (see Thrasybulus). His wife
-was Melissa.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Pericles: the highest name among what may be called ‘Prime
-Ministers’ of Athens. His career may be dated 470-429 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span>, but his
-leadership became most pronounced about 444 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span> A man of large
-conceptions, brilliant oratorical powers, and philosophic tastes, but
-of an aristocratic and exclusive temperament.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Perséphŏnë</b>: daughter of Demeter, wife of Pluto, and therefore,
-in one of her aspects, Queen of the Dead.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Perseus</b>: king of Macedonia, on whom the Romans made war
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_286'>286</span>in 171 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span> At first victorious or equal, he was defeated at Pydna by
-L. Aemilius Paulus 168 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span> He was carried to Rome and lived for
-some years at Alba. A weak, vacillating and parsimonious monarch.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Petrónius</b>: Titus (or Gaius) Petronius, the famous ‘arbiter of
-taste’ under Nero and director of his pleasures. Whether he was
-the author of the famous <i>Satyricon</i> is doubtful.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Phaeácians</b>: seafaring inhabitants of the rich and fertile island
-of Phaeacia, traditionally identified with Corfu, but possibly Crete.
-When Odysseus arrived at the island on his raft he was hospitably
-entertained by King Alcinous and sent home to Ithaca by him on
-a ship.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Phaedra</b>: wife of Theseus and step-mother of Hippolytus, of
-whom she became enamoured. The allusion in Plutarch refers to
-the fondness of Hippolytus for hunting.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Phálăris</b>: despot of Agrigentum in Sicily <i>c.</i> 570 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span> His name
-was in some legends proverbial for cruelty, and with him is associated
-the legend of roasting his victims in a brazen bull. Put he is sometimes
-represented otherwise and as a student of letters and philosophy.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Pheidias</b> (<b>Phíd</b>-) of Athens, the most eminent sculptor of
-antiquity: died 432 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span> He is best known for his work upon the
-Parthenon and his colossal statue of Zeus at Olympia.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Phérae</b>: a town in Thessaly, somewhat west of the modern Volo,
-which became dominant under the despots Jason and Alexander (q.v.).</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Philadolphus</b>: see Ptolemy (1).</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Philémōn</b>: Athenian poet of the New Comedy, reckoned second
-only to Menander. Lived <i>c.</i> 360-262 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span>, and wrote ninety-seven
-plays.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Philétas</b>: of Cos, <i>c.</i> 300 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span>; elegiac poet and critic, tutor of
-Ptolemy II. His thinness was a matter of jest for the comedians.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Philip</b>: 382-336 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span> king of Macedon, father of Alexander, and,
-in a large measure, conqueror of Greece. Demosthenes’ <i>Philippics</i>
-and other speeches were directed against him. An able, hard-working,
-ambitious, and rather unscrupulous man; a hard drinker and a
-sensualist, especially fond of rude jest, but with intellectual tastes.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Philíppȋdes</b>: one of the better Athenian poets of the New
-Comedy; <i>fl.</i> <i>c.</i> 335 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span> At first he attacked the Macedonian rulers,
-but later became a friend of Lysimachus (q.v.).</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_287'>287</span><b>Philóchŏrus</b>: Athenian writer on the history, antiquities, and
-legends of his country, and on miscellaneous subjects: <i>fl.</i> <i>c.</i> 300-260
-<span class='fss'>B.C.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Philócrătes</b>: Athenian orator, first a supporter, then an opponent,
-of Demosthenes. His policy was consistently to abet the pretensions of
-Philip of Macedon, who had bribed him lavishly, to the detriment
-of Athens. He was ultimately impeached and compelled to go into
-exile, 330 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Philoctétos</b>: Greek hero (in the expedition to Troy) left desolate
-on the island of Lemnos, where he suffered deprivations and the
-agonies of a gangrened foot.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Philopoemen</b>: (1) the most distinguished Greek soldier of his
-day; head of the Achaean League several times from 208 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span>;
-a man of culture and high character.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>(2) controlling minister of Attalus II (q.v.).</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Philótas</b>: there were several Macedonians of the name in the
-service of Alexander. The two chief were (1) the son of Parmenio,
-a favourite of Alexander, but found guilty of conspiracy and executed;
-(2) a general who subsequently became governor of Cilicia.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Philotímus</b>: a distinguished physician and writer on medicine
-of the date of Erasistratus and Herophilus (q.v.), <i>c.</i> 300 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Philóxĕnus</b>: a dithyrambic poet of high repute: <i>fl.</i> at Athens
-400 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span> He thence moved to the court of Dionysius (q.v.), by whom
-he is said to have been imprisoned for his scathing criticism on the
-despot’s verses.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Phóciōn</b>: 402-317 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span> An upright Athenian general and statesman,
-who favoured, though probably not in an unpatriotic spirit,
-the submission of Athens to the Macedonian power under Alexander
-(335) and Antipater (q.v.). He was frequently opposed to Demosthenes,
-and was put to death by his countrymen on a charge of
-treason.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Phōcýlȋdes</b>: epic and elegiac poet of Miletus, <i>fl.</i> <i>c.</i> 530 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span> Many
-of his lines passed into current maxims, and were so intended.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Phoenix</b>: a fugitive kindly received by Peleus and entrusted
-with the bringing-up of his son Achilles. He had quarrelled with
-his own father, whose young mistress he had corrupted at the request
-of his jealous mother.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_288'>288</span><b>Pindar</b>: of Thebes, the most eminent lyrist of Greece, composer
-of songs, choral and processional odes, dirges, &amp;c.; lived <i>c.</i> 522-442 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Píttăcus</b>: of Mytilene, <i>c.</i> 650-569. Contemporary of Sappho.
-During the struggles of the oligarchical and popular parties he was
-appointed by the latter ‘elective autocrat’ and legislator. The chief
-representative on the other side had been Myrsilus. A philosophic
-poet and the originator of moral maxims.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Plato</b>: the aristocratic and cultured philosopher of Athens,
-follower of Socrates, founder of the Academy, and writer of the
-Dialogues which go under his name.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Pólĕmo</b>: (1) of Athens, who in his youth abandoned profligate
-habits for the cult of the Platonic philosophy under the influence of
-Xenocrates (q.v.), whom he succeeded 315 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c005'>(2) a Stoic philosopher, traveller, and geographer, who wrote
-copiously on inscriptions, &amp;c.; <i>fl.</i> <i>c.</i> 195 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Polýbius</b>: Greek historian from Arcadia, carried to Italy by the
-Romans 167 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span>, and taken under the patronage of Q. Fabius
-Maximus and Scipio Aemilianus. He accompanied Scipio against
-Carthage and in Spain. Wrote a sound, useful, unimaginative history
-of the years 220-146 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span> A practical statesman and a student of the
-military art.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Polycleitus</b> (-<b>clít</b>-): of Argos, <i>fl.</i> <i>c.</i> 450-412 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span>; a sculptor of the
-first rank, particularly distinguished for his representation of human
-forms, to which he imparted his ideals of strength and beauty
-according to a ‘canon of proportions’. These were best typified
-in his <i>Doryphorus</i> (‘spear-bearer’), which was itself sometimes called
-‘the Canon’. His chief colossal statue was the chryselephantine
-Hera of Argos.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Pontus</b>: in two senses: (1) the Black Sea; (2) a province or region
-on the eastern half of the south coast of that sea.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Praxítĕles</b>: the second greatest name in Athenian sculpture;
-<i>fl.</i> <i>c.</i> 365 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span> He is the head of the ‘later’ (or more graceful) Attic
-school, Pheidias (q.v.) representing the earlier, more massive and
-majestic. He particularly excelled with his statues of Aphrodite
-(e.g. the ‘Venus of Cnidos’).</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Priam</b>: aged king of Troy, father of Hector, whose dead body
-he came to Achilles to ransom.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_289'>289</span><b>Priénë</b>: an Ionian Greek town in Asia Minor a little south of
-Ephesus; the home of Bias.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Pródȋcus</b>: of Ceos, sophist and rhetorical teacher; a contemporary
-of Plato and a frequent visitor to Athens. His bodily weakness was
-notorious.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Prométheus</b>: mythical semi-deity, gifted with great foresight;
-a benefactor of mankind by giving them fire stolen from heaven
-(an offence for which he was cruelly punished by Zeus), and by the
-invention of the civilizing arts. His name was commonly interpreted
-‘Fore-thinker’.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Ptolemy</b>: (1) Ptolemy II (Philadelphus), king of Egypt 285-247
-<span class='fss'>B.C.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c005'>(2) Ptolemy III (Euergetes), king of Egypt 247-222 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c005'>(3) Ptolemy IV (Philopator), king 222-205 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span>; a vicious and
-sensual monarch, ruled by his minister Sosibius.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>(4) Ptolemy V (Epiphanes), king 205-181 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span> See <i>Aristomenes</i>.
-It was in the early part of his reign that Egypt became a Roman
-protectorate. He came to the throne at the age of four.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Publius Nigidius</b>: contemporary of Cicero; a man of great
-scientific and mathematical learning, as became a Pythagorean.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Pūpius Piso</b>: Roman orator, and consul in 61 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span>; a supporter
-of Clodius and therefore hostile to Cicero.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Pyrrhus</b>: king of Epirus, called in by the people of Tarentum
-against the Romans. After a dearly won victory in 280 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span> he sent
-his eloquent minister to Rome to offer humiliating terms of peace.
-These were rejected, and after a practically equal contest he retired
-from Italy.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Pythagoras</b>: of Samos, <i>fl.</i> <i>c.</i> 540-520 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span> He had apparently
-travelled in the East and acquired, besides mathematical knowledge
-(in which he made some advances), mystical theological views and probably
-also his doctrine of the transmigration of souls. He migrated
-to Croton in South Italy, and there became the founder of a close and
-aristocratic philosophical brotherhood, to whom the word of the master
-was sufficient (<i>ipse dixit</i>). Many legends gathered about him and a
-mystical interpretation was put upon his rather compressed maxims.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Pythian</b>: = ‘belonging to Pytho’, i.e. to Delphi, the seat of the
-chief oracle of Apollo.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_290'>290</span><b>Rhium</b>: the promontory on the south side of the mouth of the
-Corinthian Gulf, the north promontory being Antirrhium.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Rusticus</b>: L. Junius Arulenus Rusticus, a Roman noble of the
-Stoic school and champion of liberty, so far as that was possible under
-the Roman emperors. Put to death by Domitian (emperor <span class='fss'>A.D.</span>
-81-96).</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Samius</b>: lyrist and writer of epigrams at the Macedonian court,
-<i>c.</i> 300 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Scipio</b>: (1) P. Cornelius Scipio Africanus Major; the brilliant
-and almost ideal Roman general who conquered Hannibal in 202 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c005'>(2) P. Cornelius Scipio Aemilianus Africanus Minor, who completed
-the conquest of Carthage 146 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span>; a student of letters and philosophy.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Scirōn</b>: a spot on the Sacred Way from Athens to Eleusis.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Scyros</b>: island in the Aegean off north-east of Euboea. Here
-Achilles was for a time hidden by his mother in woman’s dress,
-and occupied in feminine tasks to keep him from the dangers of
-Troy.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Seleucus</b>: called Callinicus (the ‘Victorious’); king of Syria
-246-226 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span> He was defeated by Antiochus with the help of Gauls
-(= Galatians) at Ancyra, and it was for a time thought that he had
-perished in the rout. He managed, however, to retain his kingdom.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Silániōn</b>: Athenian portrait sculptor <i>c.</i> 324 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span> His <i>Jocasta</i>
-represented her as dying, her pallor being realistically rendered by
-the unworthy device of mixing silver with bronze.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Siléni</b>: a class of tipsy satyrs associated with Dionysus. <i>The</i>
-Silenus was in a sense the Falstaff of Greek legend.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Simónȋdes</b>: a most distinguished poet of Ceos, writer of elegies,
-choral and processional odes, epigrams, and drinking songs (556-467
-<span class='fss'>B.C.</span>). He spent part of his life as a kind of court poet in Thessaly
-and at Syracuse, and visited Athens. His compositions were of
-a high order, and his moral maxims much in vogue, but he was
-notorious for worldliness and a love of money.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Sísyphus</b>: legendary king of Corinth; type of fraudulent and
-criminal cunning; punished in Hades by being compelled to roll
-a stone up a hill for ever and never establishing it at the top.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Socrates</b>: the Athenian philosopher (468-399 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span>), from whose
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_291'>291</span>thinking most of the later schools were in some way descended.
-His object was to bring philosophy down to earth, and to arrive at
-true and universal definitions. His simple character, his whimsical
-irony, and his dialectical skill formed the groundwork for many
-stories. His method was conversational and non-didactic. He wrote
-nothing, and what we know of him is due to his disciples Plato and
-Xenophon, and to later writers.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Solōn</b>: of Athens, <i>c.</i> 638-558 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span>; aristocrat, trader, traveller,
-poet and thinker. Chosen at a time of political and financial crisis
-as mediator between parties in Attica, and as constitution-maker,
-he behaved with strict impartiality and self-effacement. We may
-believe that he visited Egypt, but his intercourse with Croesus (q.v.)
-is of doubtful warrant. Author of much proverbial wisdom.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Sophocles</b>: 496-406 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span>; second in date, and perhaps in merit,
-of three great Athenian tragedians; a genial and practical man of
-the world.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Sótădes</b>: a poet at Alexandria <i>c.</i> 280 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span> He wrote songs and
-satires of a lascivious kind. One account states that in consequence
-of his abuse he was thrown into the sea in a leaden chest.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Speusippus</b>: of Athens, nephew and disciple of Plato, and his
-successor as head of the Academy (347-339 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span>); a writer on ethical
-and dialectical subjects. His character is said to have excelled his
-intellect.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Spínthărus</b>: the best known person of the name was an inferior
-tragic poet of Heraclea on the Black Sea satirized by Aristophanes
-and other comedians.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Stilpo</b>: a high-minded and sane philosopher of great dialectical
-acuteness. Founder of the Megarian school, which made a cult of
-virtue while denying the possibility of knowledge. See also under
-Demetrius.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Sulla</b>: the distinguished Roman general, 138-78 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span> He took
-charge of the war against Mithridates in 87 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span>, his capture of Athens
-taking place in the next year. His love of pleasure resulted in the
-pimpled face referred to in Plutarch’s article on <i>Garrulity</i>. Caecilia
-Metella was his fourth wife.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Sýbăris</b>: the oldest Greek settlement in the southernmost part
-of Italy, once large, prosperous, and a by-word for effeminate luxury
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_292'>292</span>(whence ‘sybarite’); afterwards completely overthrown and destroyed,
-its place being taken by Thurii (q.v.).</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Taenărum</b>: now Matapan; cape at the end of the middle prong
-of the Peloponnese.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Télĕphus</b>: king of Mysia at the time of the Trojan war. He was
-wounded by Achilles, and could only be cured by ‘that which had
-wounded him’. The remedy turned out to be the rust of Achilles’ spear.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Tháïs</b>: a witty and beautiful courtesan of Athens, first associated
-with Alexander during his Asiatic campaigns and then with Ptolemy
-in Egypt.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Thales</b>: of Miletus, <i>c.</i> 635-555 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span> Famous as a physical philosopher,
-mathematician, and shrewd practical man. He is regularly
-mentioned first among the Seven Sages.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Theaetétus</b>: a high-minded Athenian youth, eager for knowledge,
-who plays his part in Plato’s dialogue of that name.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Theágĕnes</b>: Theban general at Chaeronea (338 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span>).</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Theánō</b>: wife or pupil (or both) of Pythagoras (q.v.), herself a
-writer on philosophy and a pattern of virtue.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Themistŏcles</b>: became political leader at Athens 483 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span>, and
-commanded the Athenian contingent at the battle of Salamis.
-Subsequently (471 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span>) this extremely able, but apparently not
-extremely honest, man was ostracised. His last days were spent
-in the service of Persia. His son Diophantus is of no note.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Theócritus</b>: of Chios, rhetorician and sophist, noted for his caustic
-wit. The Antigonus who put him to death was Antigonus the
-‘One-Eyed’.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Theógnis</b>: elegiac poet of the sententious order. He flourished
-at Megara <i>c.</i> 550-540 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span> Amid the feuds of his country he sides
-with the aristocrats, and allusions to political injustice are frequent.
-Many current maxims of proverbial wisdom were fathered on
-‘Theognis’ as a matter of course.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Theōn</b>: painter of Samos, contemporary of Apelles (q.v.) and
-Alexander; spoken of by Pliny as ‘next to the first’.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Theophrastus</b>: of Lesbos and afterwards of Athens; disciple
-and successor of Aristotle as head of the Peripatetics (322 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span>). An
-encyclopaedic writer on logic, physics, history, biology, zoology, &amp;c.
-His best-known work is his <i>Characters</i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_293'>293</span><b>Theopompus</b>: king of Sparta, <i>fl.</i> <i>c.</i> 750 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span> To his reign
-belonged the change of the form of government by the establishment
-of the popular ‘ephors’ to control the royal power.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Thersítes</b>: misshapen and virulent demagogue in the Greek army
-before Troy.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Thĕtis</b>: sea-goddess; mother of Achilles.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Thrasybúlus</b>: despot of Miletus, contemporary and friend of
-Periander (q.v.), over whom he exercised a bad influence, as in advising
-him to ‘cut down the tall poppies’.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Thúrii</b>: Greek city in South Italy on the west side of the Gulf
-of Tarentum, noted for its special democratic system.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Tīmágĕnes</b>: an Alexandrian or Syrian rhetorician and historian.
-He taught and wrote at Rome under Augustus, whose friendship
-he obtained, losing it, however, through his caustic freedom.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Tīmocléa</b>: of Thebes. Plutarch tells of her noble and daring
-spirit in his <i>Life of Alexander</i> (c. 12).</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Tīmomăchus</b>: painter of Byzantium, first century <span class='fss'>B.C.</span>; particularly
-famed for his <i>Ajax</i> and <i>Medea</i>, which were bought by Julius
-Caesar. Medea was represented meditating the murder of her children.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Timóthëus</b>: (1) an able and spirited Athenian general, who
-obtained several rather roving successes, chiefly against the Lacedaemonians.
-Something of a free lance; of popular character and
-considerable culture; <i>fl.</i> 378-354 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c005'>(2) poet and musician of Miletus, settled at Athens; <i>fl.</i> <i>c.</i> 400-360
-<span class='fss'>B.C.</span> His poems were mainly dithyrambs (high-flown and wordy
-compositions) or cognate lyrics. His music, at first ill received on
-account of its vulgarizing innovations, became immensely popular.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Tissaphernes</b>: Persian satrap of lower Asia Minor. See
-Alcibiades.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Tīthónus</b>: a mortal beloved of Eos (Aurora), who obtained for
-him immortality, but forgot to obtain him immortal youth.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Troezen</b>: a town in the east of the Peloponnese near the entrance
-of the Saronic Gulf.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Tyndareus’ sons</b>: Castor and Pollux, the traditional preservers
-of seamen.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Typhōn</b>: = Set; Egyptian malignant deity; brother, enemy, and
-slayer of Osiris.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_294'>294</span><b>Xenócrătes</b>: 396-314 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span>: philosopher from Chalcedon, disciple
-of Plato, and philosophic teacher and writer. His earnestness of
-character and application to study atoned for his lack of the Graces.
-Became head of the Academic school next but one after Plato.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Xenóphănes</b>: philosopher of Colophon, and afterwards of Elea in
-Italy, in later part of sixth century <span class='fss'>B.C.</span> Noted for his high conception
-of a Deity as neither anthropomorphic nor subject to human passions.
-His doctrines were embodied in hexameter verse.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Xenophōn</b>: of Athens; the well-known historian, and leader of
-the retreat of the ‘Ten Thousand’ as recorded in his <i>Anabasis</i>.
-A philosophical adherent of Socrates and a voluminous writer.
-Lived <i>c.</i> 444-359 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Zacýnthus</b> = Zante, the southernmost of the Ionian islands.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Zéno</b>: (1) of Citium in Cyprus and subsequently of Athens;
-founder of the Stoic philosophy; a man of simple, if rather dour,
-character, and capable of an apt retort: <i>fl.</i> <i>c.</i> 270 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span> A writer on
-ethical, physical, and other philosophic subjects.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>(2) Philosopher of Elea; disciple of Parmenides (q.v.); upholder
-of popular liberty against a usurping despot.</p>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_295'>295</span>
- <h2 id='appendix' class='c003'>APPENDIX <br /> NOTES ON THE GREEK TEXT</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c004'>4 D ἐνίοτε γὰρ εἰδότες αἰσθομένοις μᾶλλον αὐτοῖς τοῦτο λεγόντων.
-Read ... εἰδότες, (ἢ) αἰσθόμενοι ἢ καὶ ἄλλων αὐτοῖς τοῦτο λεγόντων.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>5 C ἵνα μάθῃς ὅτι τῶν ἀναξίων τὰ τίμια οὐδὲν διαφέρει. The sense
-requires ἀξίων ‘cheap’.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>6 C πρὸς δὲ τούτοις τί ἄν τοὺς παῖδας ... καλὸν γάρ τοι κτλ.
-The cause of the lacuna is obvious if we read τί ἄν τοὺς παῖδας
-(καλὸν διδάσκοιεν;) καλὸν γάρ τοι κτλ.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>7 B ἕως ἔτι μέμνημαι τῆς παιδείας. Rather ... (ταύτης) τῆς παιδείας.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>7 F τὸ μὲν γὰρ εὐγενῶς εὐτυχεῖν ἀνδρός, τὸ δ᾽ ἀνεπιφθόνως εὐηνίου
-ἀνθρώπου. Read τὸ μὲν γὰρ εὐγενῶς ἀτυχεῖν ἀνδρός, τὸ δ᾽ ἀνεπιφθόνως
-εὐθηνεῖν ἀνθρώπου.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>8 B καὶ ἀπὸ πηγῆς τὴν ἐπιστήμην τηρεῖν συμβέβηκεν. Read ἀπὸ
-πείνης ...</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>8 D ἰσχνὸς δὲ στρατιώτης πολεμικῶν ἀγώνων ἐθὰς ἀθλητῶν καὶ
-πολεμίων φάλαγγας διωθεῖ. Read ... ἀθλητῶν καταπιμέλων ...</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>8 F καὶ ταῦτα μὲν δὴ τῷ λόγῳ παρεφορτισάμην, ἵν᾽ ἐφεξῆς καὶ
-τἄλλα ... συνάψω. Read ... νῦν δ᾽ ἐφεξῆς.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>11 A ἵνα δὲ γέλωτα παράσχῃ τοῖς ἄλλοις, αὐτὸς πολὺν χρόνον
-ἔκλαυσεν. We require the antithesis γέλωτα (βραχὺν) παράσχῃ.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>12 E ὅτι δεῖ τὸν βίον ἐπιτηδεύειν καὶ μὴ δεῖν δεσμῷ προσάπτειν.
-Read ... καὶ μηδενὶ δεσμῷ ...</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>13 B ὡς ἐκ λυρικῆς τέχνης. The sense requires νευροσπαστικῆς,
-to which νευρικῆς may be equivalent.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>14 C τὸ μὲν οὖν πάσας τὰς προειρημένας ... συμπεριλαβεῖν εὐχῆς
-ἴσως ἢ παραινέσεως ἔργον ἐστί. The word most easily lost would
-be (εὐημερίας). Also (μἂλλον) is to be supplied.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>44 B ἐν τῷ καταφρονεῖν τιθέμενοι καὶ τὸ σεμνὸν ὑπεροψίᾳ διὼκοντες.
-Read ἐν τῷ καταφρονεῖν (τὸ φρονεῖν) τιθέμενοι ...</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>46 B ᾠδήν τινα πεποιημένην ἐφ᾽ ἁρμονίας. Read ἐφ᾽ ἁρμονίας
-(νέας) or the like.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_296'>296</span>74 A τοιοῦτον γὰρ ἡ θεραπευτικὴ παρρησία ζητεῖ τρόπον, ἡ δὲ
-πρακτικὴ τὸν ἐναντίον. The sense requires ἡ δὲ ταρακτικὴ ...</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>152 A εἰ μὴ μόνος εἴη φρόνιμος. Probably εἰ ἐμμόνως εἴη ...</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>152 D σὺ δὲ δεινὸς εἶ κοράκων ἐπαΐειν καὶ κολοιῶν, τῆς δὲ σοῦ
-φωνῆς οὐκ ἀκριβῶς ἐξακούεις. For τῆς δὲ σοῦ (δεσου) read τῆς
-(δεδουσ i.e.) δ᾽ Αἰδοῦς ...</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>158 D δεινὸν μὲν οὖν ... καὶ τὸ γεωργίας αὐτῇ. The sense
-requires αὐτῆς.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>159 D ὥσπερ ἐν μυλῶνι τῷ σώματι τὴν ψυχὴν ἐγκεκαλυμμένην.
-Read ἐγκεκλῃμένην.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>160 F ἐπὶ τὸν τόπον οἷ προσέμελλε. Read προσέκελλε.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>163 D ... ἀπαντῆσαι μόνον ... θαλάττῃ ἕπεσθαι κτλ. The sense
-would be given by ... ἀπαντῆσαι μόνον (θαρρῆσαι, τὸ δ᾽ ἀπαλλάττεσθαι,
-καὶ ἐκ τῆς) θαλάττης ἕπεσθαι κτλ.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>504 B ὅτι πρεσβύτης ἐστὶν ἐν Ἀθήναις παρὰ πότον σιωπᾶν δυνάμενος.
-Rather ... πρεσβύτης (εἷς) ...</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>504 C ἀλλ᾽ ὅμως εἰπὼν καὶ ἀναφωνήσας ἐκεῖνο περὶ αὑτοῦ τὸ ...
-Probably ἀλλ᾽ ὅμως (τὸ τοῦ Ὀδυσσέως) εἰπὼν κτλ.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>513 A Φιλίππου γράψαντος εἰ δέχονται τῇ πόλει αὐτόν, εἰς χάρτην
-ΟΥ μέγα γράψαντες ἀπέστειλαν. There would be more point in ... εἰς
-χάρτην (τὴν αὐτὴν) ... Moreover, what they wrote was simply Ο.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>514 F τὸ γὰρ μάτην καὶ διακενῆς οὐχ ἧττον ἐν τοῖς λόγοις ἢ τοῖς
-ἔργοις ἔστιν. Read ... οὐχ ἧττον (εὐλαβητέον) ἐν ...</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>515 D ὅσσον ὕδωρ κατ᾽ Ἀλίζονος ἢ δρυὸς ἀμφὶ πέτηλα. Perhaps
-ὅσσον ὕδωρ καταχεῖ νότος ἦ ...</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='large'>Footnotes</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote' id='f1'>
-<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r1'>1</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>The reproof might ostensibly be general, but its particular application
-was readily felt. Musonius, we are told by Epictetus, made all his hearers
-feel ‘as if some one had been talking to him about them’.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f2'>
-<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r2'>2</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>See <i>Concerning Busybodies</i>, 522 E.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f3'>
-<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r3'>3</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Over and above his resemblances to Macaulay as a writer of essays and
-biographical history, there is a distinct similarity between their conversational
-tastes. We can imagine a Plutarch fully at home with
-Macaulay at one of those astonishing early Victorian breakfast-parties
-where a man might be asked if he ‘knew his Popes’, and where he might
-be endured while he recited them. Plutarch’s <i>Table-Talk</i>, like his <i>Dinner-Party
-of the Seven Sages</i>, reveals for contemporary Greek society the same
-deliberate cult of intellectual conversation sharpened by challenge and
-debate. In such conversation he must himself have played a conspicuous
-part. Nevertheless, it may fairly be gathered that the Greek or Graeco-Roman
-interlocutors in the reign of Trajan were the more ingenuously
-athirst for reciprocal enlightenment, however dubiously we may regard
-the value of the information or misinformation actually gained. Nor
-is it easy to believe that Plutarch would have thought it etiquette to
-indulge in the protracted monologues to which the more modern society
-submitted with such grace as it best could.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f4'>
-<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r4'>4</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>e.g. in his <i>De repugnantiis Stoicorum</i> and his <i>Non posse suaviter vivi
-secundum Epicurum</i>. Yet, as Mahaffy says, ‘it would be hard to say
-whether the number of Stoic dogmas which he rejects exceeds that which
-he quotes with approval’ (<i>The Greek World under Roman Sway</i>, pp. 300 sqq.).</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f5'>
-<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r5'>5</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Volkmann names in particular Clement of Alexandria and Basil.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f6'>
-<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r6'>6</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>This does not mean that he had no friends among the rhetorical
-teachers (the contrary is shown by his reference to ‘our Niger’ in <i>praec.
-san.</i>, § 16), but only that he distrusted the type. He refused to approve
-of a fluent and polished style as an end in itself. Pliny describes how
-the amazingly voluble Isaeus would offer his audience a choice of subject
-and allow it to dictate the side which he should take. He would then
-rise and demonstrate his extemporizing powers with much show of
-rhetorical ornament.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f7'>
-<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r7'>7</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Volkmann says of the <i>Lives</i>, ‘Das Werthvolle an ihnen sind nicht die
-historischen Details, die er giebt, sondern die eingestreuten Reflexionen,
-die ethischen Betrachtungen, das Eingehen auf individuelle Stimmungen
-und Leidenschaften der grossen Männer.’</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f8'>
-<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r8'>8</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Aulicis tantum scripsit, non doctis</i>, says Scaliger.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f9'>
-<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r9'>9</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Volkmann guesses that it is <i>ein Produkt der späteren Sophistik</i>. If so,
-we may congratulate the Sophist on his perfect reproduction of Plutarch’s
-style and of his non-sophistic tone.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f10'>
-<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r10'>10</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Bacon’s Essay <i>Of Followers and Friends</i> owes almost nothing to
-Plutarch beyond the title. We do, however, find him borrowing the words
-‘for there is no such Flatterer as a Man’s selfe’.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f11'>
-<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r11'>11</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>As Volkmann happily puts it, he writes ‘with comfortable breadth’.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f12'>
-<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r12'>12</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>The sentences would doubtless have been easier still if Plutarch had
-not felt bound to follow the fashion of the time and elaborately avoid
-hiatus.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f13'>
-<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r13'>13</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Perhaps this is why Plutarch, as seen through Amyot, appeared to
-Montaigne ‘close and thorny,’ while his sense was nevertheless ‘closely-jointed
-and pithily-continued’.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f14'>
-<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r14'>14</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Stobaeus (sixth century) had access to much of Plutarch that is now
-lost.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f15'>
-<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r15'>15</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>See an observation of Professor Summers, <i>Seneca Select Letters</i>, Introduction,
-p. lxxiv.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f16'>
-<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r16'>16</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Plutarch ‘is the theme of more than 230 allusions or direct references
-on the part of Jeremy Taylor’ (Sandys, <i>A History of Classical Scholarship</i>,
-i. 300).</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f17'>
-<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r17'>17</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>He was familiar reading of the twelfth and thirteenth centuries, and
-appears in the <i>Gesta Romanorum</i>. Later the <i>Adagia</i> of Erasmus draw
-freely upon him.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f18'>
-<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r18'>18</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>‘Il a en quelque sorte créé Plutarque,’ says Demogeot.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f19'>
-<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r19'>19</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>Euphues</i> appeared in 1579. Jusserand (<i>The English Novel in the
-Time of Shakespeare</i>, p. 127) remarks that Euphues ‘addresses moral
-epistles to his fellow men to guide them through life’, but he appears to
-be unaware that Lyly borrowed this object, as well as so large a quantity
-of his matter, from Plutarch.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f20'>
-<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r20'>20</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>We meet, for example, with the story of Zeno, ‘the olde man in
-Athens that amiddest the pottes could hold his peace.’</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f21'>
-<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r21'>21</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>History of Greek Classical Literature</i>, ii. 427.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f22'>
-<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r22'>22</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>The Literature of Ancient Greece</i>, p. 396.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f23'>
-<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r23'>23</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Quoted by Sandys (<i>A History of Classical Scholarship</i>, i. 300).</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f24'>
-<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r24'>24</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>The home of Bias.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f25'>
-<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r25'>25</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>According to another account he waited till the shadow was equal
-in length to the stick. The pyramid was then also equal in height to the
-length of its shadow.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f26'>
-<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r26'>26</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>The divinities of spring-water.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f27'>
-<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r27'>27</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>The title <i>Lusios</i> or <i>Luaios</i> was popularly interpreted Deliverer (from
-care or difficulty).</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f28'>
-<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r28'>28</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>See note on <i>Amasis</i>.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f29'>
-<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r29'>29</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>i.e. anointing himself, not in connexion with bathing, but with
-exercise in the wrestling-schools.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f30'>
-<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r30'>30</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>The precise remark is uncertain, the text here being corrupt.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f31'>
-<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r31'>31</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Equivalent to a command to ‘go weep’.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f32'>
-<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r32'>32</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>In antiquity these vessels were of bronze.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f33'>
-<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r33'>33</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Which was bequeathed ‘to the wisest’. It was given to Thales, who
-passed it on to another, and the process was repeated till it came back
-to Thales, whereupon he dedicated it to Apollo.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f34'>
-<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r34'>34</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>The text here is corrupt.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f35'>
-<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r35'>35</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>i.e. Epicurean.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f36'>
-<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r36'>36</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Member of a religious council which met at Delphi and represented
-the chief states of all Greece.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f37'>
-<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r37'>37</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Made of polished bronze.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f38'>
-<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r38'>38</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Which contained ‘every charm: love, desire, and sweet converse’
-(Homer, <i>Il.</i> xiv. 214).</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f39'>
-<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r39'>39</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>The use of oil to soften the hair was practically universal.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f40'>
-<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r40'>40</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>A common punishment for a slave was to put him to hard labour
-in turning the mill, in place of a horse or ass.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f41'>
-<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r41'>41</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>A frequent pretence of ancient witches.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f42'>
-<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r42'>42</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>These were farmed.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f43'>
-<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r43'>43</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>The Homeric σιγαλόεντα (‘glossy’) is brought, either in error or by
-a deliberate pun, into relation with σιγή (‘silence’).</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f44'>
-<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r44'>44</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>The <i>paedagogus</i>, an attendant slave, who accompanied the boy and
-watched over his conduct.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f45'>
-<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r45'>45</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>In his <i>Phaedrus</i>.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f46'>
-<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r46'>46</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>i. e. in the mixolydian mode, which was of a sad and dirgelike character.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f47'>
-<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r47'>47</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>The rest of the essay is missing.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f48'>
-<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r48'>48</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>i.e. a rough and mountainous island.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f49'>
-<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r49'>49</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>A ‘satyric’ drama was a half-comic interlude or sequel to tragedies.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f50'>
-<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r50'>50</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>In the Stoic sense of <i>adiaphoria</i>.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f51'>
-<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r51'>51</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Since diagrams were often drawn with sticks in the dust.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f52'>
-<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r52'>52</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>The Greek jest does not admit of translation. The same word may
-mean both ‘theft’ and a ‘stealthy act’.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f53'>
-<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r53'>53</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>The point lies in an ambiguity which is possible only in the Greek.
-The words may equally mean: ‘You issued no invitation when sacrificing
-your friends,’ and ‘when sacrificing, you did not invite your friends’.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f54'>
-<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r54'>54</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Or what French would call the <i>gouverneur</i>.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f55'>
-<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r55'>55</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span> This article is in all probability not the work of Plutarch. See the
-Introduction.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f56'>
-<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r56'>56</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>The play upon words (<i>ēthikas</i>, ‘moral’ and <i>ĕthikas</i>, ‘of habit’) is not
-adequately translatable.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f57'>
-<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r57'>57</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>The Greek text is here corrupt; the translation represents the
-probable sense.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f58'>
-<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r58'>58</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>The Greek text is again faulty. The sense here given is approximate.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f59'>
-<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r59'>59</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>These maxims were probably in the first instance merely hygienic,
-or even popular superstitions, but subsequently they received recondite
-interpretations.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f60'>
-<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r60'>60</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>The Greek verse is doggerel, and no attempt is made to better it in
-the English.</p>
-</div>
-<div>
-
- <ul class='ul_1 c002'>
- <li>Transcriber’s Notes:
- <ul class='ul_2'>
- <li>Missing or obscured punctuation was silently corrected.
- </li>
- <li>Typographical errors were silently corrected.
- </li>
- <li>Inconsistent spelling and hyphenation were made consistent only when a predominant
- form was found in this book.
- </li>
- <li>Footnotes have been collected at the end of the text, and are linked for ease of
- reference.
- </li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- </ul>
-
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
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