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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #63644 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/63644)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Schools of Hellas, by Kenneth John Freeman
-
-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: Schools of Hellas
- An Essay on the Practice and Theory of Ancient Greek
- Education from 600 to 300 B. C.
-
-Author: Kenneth John Freeman
-
-Editor: Montague John Rendall
-
-Release Date: November 5, 2020 [EBook #63644]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SCHOOLS OF HELLAS ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Carol Brown, Turgut Dincer and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This
-file was produced from images generously made available
-by The Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-SCHOOLS OF HELLAS
-
-AN ESSAY ON THE PRACTICE AND THEORY OF ANCIENT GREEK EDUCATION
-
-
-
-
- [Illustration: Printer’s Logo]
-
-
-
-
- [Illustration: IN A RIDING-SCHOOL
-
- From a Kulix by Euphronios, now in the Louvre. Hartwig’s
- _Meisterschalen_, Plate 53.]
-
-
-
-
-Schools of Hellas
-
-AN ESSAY ON THE PRACTICE AND THEORY OF ANCIENT GREEK EDUCATION
-
-FROM
-
-600 TO 300 B.C.
-
-
-BY
-
-KENNETH J. FREEMAN
-
-SCHOLAR OF TRINITY COLLEGE, CAMBRIDGE; BROWNE UNIVERSITY SCHOLAR;
-CRAVEN UNIVERSITY SCHOLAR; SENIOR CHANCELLOR’S MEDALLIST, ETC.
-
-
-EDITED BY
-
-M. J. RENDALL
-
-SECOND MASTER OF WINCHESTER COLLEGE
-
-
-WITH A PREFACE BY A. W. VERRALL, LITT.DOC.
-
-
-_ILLUSTRATED_
-
-
-London
-
-MACMILLAN AND CO., LIMITED
-
-NEW YORK: THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
-
-1907
-
-
-_All rights reserved_
-
-
-
-
-ΦΙΛΟΚΑΛΟΙΣ [PHILOKALOIS]
-
-ΚΑΙ [ΚΑΙ]
-
-ΦΙΛΟΣΟΦΟΙΣ [PHILOSOPHOIS]
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE
-
-
-The Dissertation here published was written by the late Mr. K. J.
-Freeman, in the course of the year following his graduation at
-Cambridge as a Bachelor of Arts, with a view to his candidature for a
-Fellowship of Trinity College, for which purpose the rules of the
-College require the production of some original work. In the summer of
-1906, three months before the autumn election of that year, his
-brilliant and promising career was arrested by death.
-
-We have been encouraged to publish the work, as it was left, by
-several judgments of great weight; nor does it, in my opinion, require
-anything in the nature of an apology. It is of course, under the
-circumstances, incomplete, and it is in some respects immature. But,
-within the limits, the execution is adequate for practical purposes;
-and the actual achievement has a substantive value independent of any
-personal consideration. No English book, perhaps no extant book,
-covers the same ground, or brings together so conveniently the
-materials for studying the subject of ancient Greek education――education
-as treated in practice and theory during the most fertile and
-characteristic age of Hellas. It would be regrettable that this
-useful, though preliminary, labour should be lost and suppressed, only
-because it was decreed that the author should not build upon his own
-foundation.
-
-Novelty of view he disclaimed; but he claimed, with evident truth,
-that the work is not second-hand, but based upon wide and direct study
-of the sources, which are made accessible by copious references.
-
-The subject is in one respect specially appropriate to a youthful
-hand. Perhaps at no time is a man more likely to have fresh and living
-impressions about education than when he has himself just ceased to be
-a pupil, when he has just completed the subordinate stages of a long
-and strenuous self-culture. It will be seen, in more than one place,
-that the author is not content with the purely historical aspect of
-his theme, but suggests criticisms and even practical applications. It
-may be thought that these remarks upon a matter of pressing and
-growing importance are by no means the less deserving of consideration
-because the writer, when he speaks of the schoolboy and the
-undergraduate, is unquestionably an authentic witness.
-
-But, as I have already said, the work will commend itself sufficiently
-to those interested in the topic, if only as a conspectus of facts,
-presented with orderly arrangement and in a simple and perspicuous
-style.
-
-It is not my part here to express personal feelings. But I cannot
-dismiss this, the first and only fruit of the classical studies of
-Kenneth Freeman, without a word of profound sorrow for the premature
-loss of a most honourable heart and vigorous mind. He was one whom a
-teacher may freely praise, without suspicion of partiality; for,
-whatever he was, he was no mere product of lessons, as this, his first
-essay, will sufficiently show. It is not what he would have made it;
-but it is his own, and it is worthy of him.
-
- A. W. VERRALL.
-
- TRINITY COLLEGE, CAMBRIDGE,
- _January_ 1907.
-
-
-
-
-EDITOR’S STATEMENT
-
-
-It has fallen to my lot to edit this essay, the first, and last, work
-of Kenneth John Freeman, a brilliant young Scholar of Winchester
-College and Trinity College, Cambridge, whose short life closed in the
-summer of 1906.
-
-He was born in London on June 19, 1882, and died at Winchester on July
-15, 1906,――a brief span of twenty-four years, the greater part of
-which was spent in the strenuous pursuit of truth and beauty, both in
-literature and in the book of Nature, but above all among the
-Classics.
-
-Scholarly traditions and interests he inherited in no small measure:
-he was the son of Mr. G. Broke Freeman, a member of the Chancery Bar,
-and a Classical graduate of Trinity College, Cambridge, and the
-grandson of Philip Freeman, Archdeacon of Exeter, himself a Scholar of
-the same great Foundation, Craven University Scholar and Senior
-Classic in 1839. He was also a great-grandson of the Rev. Henry Hervey
-Baber, for many years Principal Librarian of the British Museum, and
-Editor of the _editio princeps_ of the _Codex Alexandrinus_. From them
-he inherited a passion for Classical study, a keen sense of form, and
-a determined pursuit of knowledge, which nothing could daunt, not even
-the recurrent shadow of a long and distressing illness.
-
-Through his mother, a daughter of Dr. Horace Dobell, of Harley Street,
-London, he was also a great-nephew of the poet Sydney Dobell; and thus
-he may well have derived that poetic feeling which distinguished a
-number of verses found among his papers, since printed for private
-circulation.
-
-His School and University career was uniformly successful. At
-Winchester he won prizes in many subjects and several tongues, and
-carried off the Goddard Scholarship, the intellectual blue ribbon, at
-the age of sixteen.
-
-At Cambridge he was Browne University Scholar in 1903, and in the
-first “division” of the Classical Tripos in 1904, in which year he
-also won the Craven Scholarship. The senior Chancellor’s medal fell to
-him in the following year.
-
-There is no need to enumerate his other distinctions, but the epigram
-with which he won the Browne Medal in 1903 is so beautiful in itself
-and so true an epitome of the boy and the man, that I am tempted to
-quote it here:
-
- ξεῖνε, καλὸν τὸ ζῆν καταγώγιόν ἐστιν ἅπασιν,
- [xeine, kalon to zên katagôgion estin hapasin],
- νηπυτίους γὰρ ὅμως νυκτιπλανεῖς τε φιλεῖ,
- [nêpytious gar homôs nyktiplaneis te philei],
- δῶρα χαριζόμενον φιλίας καὶ τερπνὸν ἔρωτα
- [dôra charizomenon philias kai terpnon erôta]
- καὶ πόνον εὔανδρον φροντίδα τ’ οὐρανίαν·
- [kai ponon euandron phrontida t’ ouranian];
- τρυχομένους δ’ ἤδη κοιμᾷ τὸν ἀκήρατον ὕπνον
- [trychomenous d’ êdê koima ton akêraton hypnon]
- πέμπει δ’ ὥστε λαθεῖν οἰκάδ’ ἐληλυθότας.
- [pempei d’ hôste lathein oikad’ elêlythotas].
-
-He was always an optimist, who regarded life as a “fair Inn,” which
-provided much good cheer. Shyness and ill-health limited sadly the
-range of his friends, but not his capacity and desire for
-“friendship.” “Manly toil,” both physical and intellectual, was dear
-to his soul: thus, though no great athlete, he was an ardent Volunteer
-both at School and College, and declared that, had he not chosen the
-teacher’s profession, he would have wished to be a soldier: he writes
-of Sparta and Xenophon with evident sympathy. Also he fought and won
-many an intellectual battle against great odds; to quote one instance,
-he wrote the papers for his Craven Scholarship while convalescent in
-his old nursery. His poems, to complete the parallel, may justly be
-described as the “aspiring thoughts” of a singularly pure and reverent
-heart.
-
-It is a simple, uneventful record: six happy years as a Winchester
-Scholar; three as a Scholar of Trinity College, Cambridge; one year of
-travel and study, mainly devoted to the subject of Education, which
-always had a special attraction for him; and lastly, one year, the
-happiest of his life, when he returned to teach at his old school.
-
-All appeared bright and promising; he was doing the work he desired at
-the school of his choice, health and vigour seemed fully restored, and
-a strenuous life as a Winchester Master lay before him, when an acute
-attack of the old trouble, borne with perfect patience, cut him off in
-the prime of his promise.
-
-Then, to quote his own translation of his epigram:
-
- When I was aweary, last and best
- They gave me dreamless rest;
- And sent me on my way that I might come
- Unknown, unknowing, Home.
-
-The work itself was never finished for the press; indeed, some
-chapters, dealing with Sokrates, Plato, and Aristotle, did not appear
-sufficiently complete to justify publication: these, therefore, we
-have withheld. But this book is in substance what he left it, and he
-was fully aware that the omitted chapters were in need of further
-revision.
-
-In any case, it would have been a labour of love to me to edit this
-dissertation; but the labour has been lightened at every turn by the
-ungrudging help and friendship of many Scholars. Dr. Verrall, besides
-contributing a Preface, has contributed much advice in general and in
-detail; Dr. Sandys has revised the proofs and given me the benefit of
-his comprehensive knowledge of the subject; Dr. Henry Jackson went
-through some of the later chapters and discussed points of general
-interest. The original Essay or the proofs have in addition been
-revised, from different points of view, by Mr. Edmund D. A. Morshead,
-late Fellow of New College, Oxford, and Mr. F. M. Cornford, Fellow of
-Trinity College, Cambridge. Mr. G. S. Freeman (brother of the author)
-is responsible for the Index; while Mr. W. R. H. Merriman has spent
-much pains upon verifying the numerous quotations. In a few cases Dr.
-F. G. Kenyon’s erudition came to the rescue. To all these my best
-thanks are due. Mr. A. Hamilton Smith of the British Museum was most
-helpful in identifying the vases from which the illustrations are
-derived. The author, who was a considerable draughtsman, had drawn
-scenes from Greek vases with his own hand; but of course our
-illustrations are derived from published reproductions, with two
-exceptions. The two British Museum vase-scenes (Illustrations III. and
-IV.) were specially drawn for this book: they have never been
-carefully reproduced before. I must thank the Syndics of the Pitt
-Press at Cambridge for their kind permission to reproduce their print
-of Douris’ Educational Vase from Dr. Sandys’ _History of Classical
-Scholarship_. The design which appears on the cover of this volume is
-also adapted from this vase.
-
-It remains to add a few sentences from a Statement which the author
-himself drew up:
-
-“I have,” he says, “confined my attention very largely for several
-years to original texts and eschewed the aid of commentaries.” This
-will be patent to the reader.
-
-“As to accepted interpretations, I have, purposely and on principle,
-neither read nor heard much of them, since I wished, in pursuance of
-the bidding of Plato himself, not to receive unquestioningly the
-authority of those whom to hear is to believe, but to develop views
-and interpretations of my own. For I have always believed that
-education suffers immensely from the study of books about books, in
-preference to the study of the books themselves. M. Paul Girard’s book
-in French (_L’Éducation Athénienne_) and Grasberger’s in German
-(_Erziehung und Unterricht im klassischen Alterthum_), the latter of
-which I have only read in part, have set me on the track of
-authorities whom I should otherwise have missed, but I believe that my
-acknowledgments in the text and in the notes fully cover my direct
-obligations to them in other respects, although my indirect
-obligations to M. Girard’s stimulating book, which are great, remain
-unexpressed.
-
-“An apology is, perhaps, needed for the peculiar, and not wholly
-consistent, spelling of the Greek words. I had meant to employ the
-Latinised spelling. But when I came to write Lyceum, Academy, and
-pedagogue, my heart failed me. For I did not wish to suggest modern
-music-halls, modern art, and, worst of all, modern ‘pedagogy.’ In
-adopting the ancient spelling I had Browning on my side. But again,
-when I wrote Thoukudides, my heart sank, for I could hardly recognise
-an old friend in such a guise. So I decided, perhaps weakly, to steer
-a middle course, and preserve the Latinised forms in the case of the
-more familiar words. Thus I put Plato, not Platon, but Menon and
-Phaidon.” We have adhered to this principle in the main; we need
-hardly say that Lakedaimon is the transliteration of a Greek word:
-Lacedaemonian is an English adjective. So a citizen of Troizen is a
-Troezenian, and of Boiotia a Boeotian. “I have,” the author concludes,
-“preferred _Hellas_ and _Hellene_ to _Greece_ and _Greek_. For a rose
-by any other name does not always smell as sweet.”
-
- M. J. RENDALL.
-
- WINCHESTER COLLEGE,
- _March_ 1907.
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS
-
-
- PAGE
-
-BIBLIOGRAPHY xvii
-INTRODUCTION 1
-
- PART I
- THE PRACTICE OF EDUCATION
-
- CHAPTER I
-SPARTA AND CRETE 11
-
- CHAPTER II
-ATHENS AND THE REST OF HELLAS: GENERAL INTRODUCTION 42
-
- CHAPTER III
-ATHENS, ETC.: PRIMARY EDUCATION 79
-
- CHAPTER IV
-ATHENS, ETC.: PHYSICAL EDUCATION 118
-
- CHAPTER V
-ATHENS, ETC.: SECONDARY EDUCATION――I. THE SOPHISTS 157
-
- CHAPTER VI
-ATHENS, ETC.: SECONDARY EDUCATION――II. THE PERMANENT SCHOOLS 179
-
- CHAPTER VII
-ATHENS, ETC.: TERTIARY EDUCATION――THE EPHEBOI AND THE UNIVERSITY 210
-
-
- PART II
- THE THEORY OF EDUCATION
-
- CHAPTER VIII
-RELIGION AND EDUCATION IN HELLAS 227
-
- CHAPTER IX
-ART, MUSIC, AND POETRY 237
-
- CHAPTER X
-XENOPHON 259
-
-
- PART III
-
- CHAPTER XI
-
-GENERAL ESSAY ON THE WHOLE SUBJECT 275
-
-
-INDEX 293
-
-
-
-
- ILLUSTRATIONS
-
- AFTER PAGE
-
- Vase by Euphronios, Louvre (centre of X. A and
- X. B)――Mounted Ephebos in Riding-School _Frontispiece_
-
- I. A. Kulix by Douris, Berlin (No. 2285)――The Flute-Lesson
- and Writing-Lesson
- I. B. Kulix by Douris, Berlin (No. 2285)――The Lyre-Lesson
- and Poetry-Lesson 52
-
- II. Kulix by Hieron, now at Vienna――A Flute Lesson:
- The Boy’s Turn 70
-
- III. Hudria in British Museum (E 171)――Music-School Scenes 104
-
- IV. Hudria in British Museum (E 172)――In a Lyre-School 108
-
- V. A. Kulix attributed to Euphronios, at Munich――Scenes
- in a Palaistra
- V. B. Kulix attributed to Euphronios, at Munich――Scenes
- in a Palaistra 120
-
- VI. A. Wrestlers, etc., in the Palaistra
- VI. B. Boxers, etc., in the Palaistra 128
-
- VII. The Stadion at Delphi 132
-
- VIII. Kulix signed by Euphronios, at Berlin――Scenes in
- the Palaistra 174
-
- IX. Vase attributed to Euphronios, at Munich――A
- Riding-Lesson: Mounting 214
-
- X. A. Kulix by Euphronios, now in the Louvre――Scene in
- a Riding-School
- X. B. Kulix by Euphronios, now in the Louvre――Scene in
- a Riding-School 258
-
-
-
-
- SELECT BIBLIOGRAPHY
-
-
- DITTENBERGER, W. De Ephebis Atticis Dissertatio. Dieterich,
- Göttingen, 1863.
-
- DUMONT, A. Essai sur l’Éphébie Attique. 2 vols. Didot, Paris,
- 1875-76.
-
- GIRARD, P. L’Éducation Athénienne au vᵉ et au ivᵉ siècle avant
- J.-C. Hachette, Paris, 1889.
-
- GRASBERGER, L. Erziehung und Unterricht im klassischen
- Alterthum. 3 vols. Würzburg, 1864-81.
-
- LAURIE, S. S. Historical Survey of Pre-Christian Education.
- 2nd Edition. Longmans, London, 1900.
-
- MAHAFFY, J. P. Old Greek Education. Kegan Paul, 1883.
-
- MÜLLER, K. O. Dorians. Edition 1824. English translation;
- Oxford, 1830.
-
- NETTLESHIP, H. In _Hellenica._ 2nd Edition. Longmans, 1898.
-
- SIDGWICK, A. Essay in _Teachers’ Guild Quarterly_, No. 8.
-
- USSING, J. L. (Danish.) German translation. Erziehung bei
- den Griechen (und Römern). Altona, 1870.
-
- WILKINS, A. S. National Education in Greece (Hare Prize,
- Cambridge). Isbister, London, 1873.
-
-
-
-
-INTRODUCTION
-
-
-The meeting-place of two streams has always a curious fascination for
-the traveller. There is a strange charm in watching the two currents
-blend and lose their individuality in a new whole. The discoloured,
-foam-flecked torrent, swirling on remorselessly its pebbles and
-minuter particles of granite from the mountains, and the calm,
-translucent stream, bearing in invisible solution the clays and sands
-of the plains through which its slow coils have wound, melt into a
-single river, mightier than either, which has received and will carry
-onward the burdens of both and lay them side by side in some far-off
-delta, where they will form “the dust of continents to be.”
-
-To the student of history or of psychology the meeting-place of two
-civilisations has a similar charm. To watch the immemorial culture of
-the East, slow-moving with the weight of years, dreamy with centuries
-of deep meditation, accept and assimilate, as in a moment of time, the
-science, the machinery, the restless energy and practical activity of
-the West is a fascinating employment; for the process is big with hope
-of some glorious product from this union of the two. Those who live
-while such a union is in progress cannot estimate its value or its
-probable result; they are but conscious of the discomforts and
-confusion arising from the ending of the old order that passes away,
-and can hardly presage the glories of the new, to which it is yielding
-place. It is in past history, not in the contemporary world, that such
-combinations must be studied.
-
-The chief historical instance of two distinct civilisations blending
-into one is the Renaissance, that mighty union of the spirit of
-ancient Hellas and her pupil Rome with the spirit of medieval Europe,
-which has hardly been perfected even now. But it is often forgotten
-that there were at least two dress-rehearsals for the great drama of
-the Renaissance, in the course of which Hellenism learnt its own charm
-and adapted itself to the task of educating the world. Alexander
-carried the arts, the literature, and the spirit of Hellas far into
-the heart of Asia; and, though his great experiment of blending West
-with East was interrupted by his early death and the consequent
-disruption of his world-empire, yet, even so, something of his object
-was effected in the Hellenistic culture of Alexandria, Syria, and Asia
-Minor. Within a century of his death began the second dress-rehearsal,
-this time in the West. Conquered Hellas led her fierce conqueror
-captive, and the strength of Rome bowed before the intellect and
-imagination of the Hellene. Once more the great man who designed to
-unite the two currents into one stream without loss to either was cut
-off before his plans could be carried out, and the murder of Julius
-Cæsar caused incalculable damage to this earlier Renaissance, for the
-education of Rome, the second scholar of Hellas, was not too wisely
-conducted. Yet the schooling produced Virgil and Horace and that
-Greco-Roman civilisation in which the Teutonic nations of the North
-received their first lessons in culture. After several premature
-attempts, medieval Europe rediscovered ancient Hellas and her pupil
-Rome at the time of the Renaissance. Since that time the influence
-exerted by Hellenism upon modern civilisation has been continuous and
-incalculable. How much of that influence remains unassimilated, how
-far it is still needed, may perhaps be realised best by passing
-straight from the Elgin marbles or a play of Sophocles to a modern
-crowd or to modern literature.
-
-Hellas has thus been the educator of the world to an extent of which
-not even Perikles ever dreamed. How then, it may naturally be asked,
-did the teacher of the nations teach her own sons and daughters? If so
-many peoples have been at school to learn the lessons of Hellenism,
-what was the nature of the schools of ancient Hellas? How did those
-wonderful city-states, which produced in the course of a few centuries
-a wealth of unsurpassed literature, philosophy and art, whose history
-is immortalised by the names of Thermopylae and Marathon, train their
-young citizens to be at once patriots and art-critics, statesmen and
-philosophers, money-makers and lovers of literature? They must have
-known not a little about education, those old Hellenes, it is natural
-to suppose. Have the schools, like the arts and literature and spirit,
-of Hellas any lesson for the modern world? These are the questions
-which the present work will attempt in some measure to answer.
-
-In some measure only; for the spirit of Hellas cannot be caught at
-second hand: it consists in just those subtler elements of refined
-taste and perfect choice of expression which cannot but be lost in a
-translation or a photograph. In like manner, the secret of Hellenic
-education cannot be reproduced by any mere accumulation of bald facts
-and wiseacres’ deductions. It is easy for the modern theorist to give
-an exact account of his ideal school; he has only to tabulate the
-subjects which are to be studied, the books which are to be read, and
-the hours at which his mechanical children are to be stuffed with the
-required mass of facts. But the Hellenic schoolmaster held that
-education dealt not with machines but with children, not with facts
-but with character. His object was to mould the taste of his pupils,
-to make them “love what is beautiful and hate what is ugly.” And
-because he wished them to love what is beautiful in art and
-literature, in nature and in human life, he sought to make his lessons
-attractive, in order that the subjects learnt at school might not be
-regarded with loathing in after life. Education had to be charming to
-the young; its field was largely music and art and the literature
-which appeals most to children, adventure and heroism and tales of
-romance expressed in verse. The music is all but gone, and of the art
-only a few fragments remain; the primary schools of Hellas have left
-to modern research only portions of their literature. Their
-attractiveness must be judged from the poems of Homer. But the charm
-of education lies mainly in the methods of the teacher; and of these
-posterity can know little. Scholars may piece together the books which
-were read and the exercises which were practised, but of the method in
-which they were taught, of their order and arrangement and respective
-quantities, nothing can be known. There is the raw material, the human
-boy, and of the tools wherewith the masters fashioned him, some relics
-are left; but of the way in which the artist used those tools, of the
-true inwardness of his handicraft and skill, not all the diligence of
-Teutonic research can recover a trace. The young art-student will
-learn little of Michel Angelo or Raphael, if he focusses his attention
-simply on the materials and the tools which they employed: to grasp
-their spirit he must go to the Sistine Chapel or to the Dresden
-Gallery, and contemplate their masterpieces. In like manner the
-student of Hellenic education ought to consider not its materials and
-tools, but rather its results and ideals. He must look with his own
-eyes and imagination upon the Aegina pediment or the “Hermes” of
-Praxiteles, if he wishes to comprehend the objects of the Doric and
-Ionic schools. This he must do for himself, since no book can do it
-for him. All that this work can hope to do is to furnish some few
-ideas about the tools wherewith the Hellenic schoolmasters tried to
-fashion the boys at their disposal into the masterpieces bodied forth
-in the “Hermes” and the Aeginetan figures: the skilled fingers and the
-imaginative brains which used the tools are for ever beyond the reach
-of the scholar and the archæologist.
-
-The “Hermes,” with his physical perfection and his plenitude of
-intellect, with the features of an artist and the brow of a thinker,
-may be taken as the ideal of the fully developed Athenian education of
-the early fourth century B.C. The Aeginetan figures stand in the same
-relation to the Spartan and Cretan schools; these heroic figures have
-the bodily harmoniousness, the narrow if deep thought, the hardness of
-the Dorian temper. Perhaps it is not fanciful to see in the so-called
-“Theseus” of the Parthenon an earlier ideal of Athenian training, when
-it aimed at rather less of dreamy contemplation, at a less sensuous
-and more strenuous mode of life. If this be so, that glorious figure
-bodies forth the very ideal of Periclean and Imperial Athens at her
-grandest moment, before the ruin caused by the long war with Sparta.
-
-The stream of Hellenism ran in two currents. Underlying the local
-diversity, which made every little town ethically and artistically
-distinct from its neighbour, was the fundamental difference between
-Dorian and Ionian. Clearly marked in every aspect of life, this
-difference was most marked in the schools. Sparta and Crete on the one
-hand, and Athens, followed closely by her Ionian and Aeolic allies and
-at a greater distance by the rest of civilised Hellas, on the other,
-develop totally different types of education. The young Spartan is
-enrolled at a fixed age in a boarding-school: everything he learns or
-does is under State-supervision. Perfect grace and harmony of body is
-his sole object: he is hardly taught his letters or numbers. The young
-Athenian goes to school when and where his parents like; learns,
-within certain wide limits, what they please; ends his schooling when
-they choose. He learns his letters and arithmetic, studies literature
-and music, and, at a later date, painting, besides his athletic
-exercises, at a day-school. When he grows older, he may add rhetoric
-or philosophy or science or any subject he pleases to this earlier
-course. The State interferes only to protect his morals, and to
-enforce upon him two years of military training between the ages of
-eighteen and twenty.
-
-The superficial differences between the Athenian and the Spartan type
-of school are so striking that at first sight they appear to have no
-one principle in common. It will therefore be necessary to keep the
-two types apart at first and discuss their details separately. But the
-Hellenic thinkers recognised certain deep-seated similarities beneath
-the superficial contradictions, and it became the object of
-educational philosophy to blend the two types into a perfect system.
-As soon as a deeper study has been made of the theory of education in
-Hellas, the distinctions of practice begin to vanish away and the
-similarities of ideal and aim become more and more apparent. When the
-survey of both practice and theory, which is the object of this work,
-has been completed, it should be possible to grasp and estimate the
-common principles, which, amid much variety of detail, governed the
-schools of Hellas.
-
-
-
-
-PART I
-
-THE PRACTICE OF EDUCATION
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-EDUCATION AT SPARTA AND IN CRETE
-
-
-According to a current legend, which Herodotos, owing to his Ionian
-patriotism, is eager to contradict, Anacharsis the Scythian, on his
-return from his travels, declared that the Spartans seemed to him to
-be the only Hellenic people with whom it was possible to converse
-sensibly, for they alone had time to be wise.[1] The full Spartan
-citizen certainly had abundant leisure. He was absolutely free from
-the cares of money-making, for he was supported by an hereditary
-allotment which was cultivated for him by State-serfs. He had no
-profession or trade to occupy him. His whole time was spent in
-educating himself and his younger countrymen in accordance with
-Spartan ideas, and in practising the Spartan mode of life. The
-Spartans divided their day between various gymnastic and military
-exercises, hunting, public affairs, and “leschai” or conversation-clubs,
-at which no talk of business was permitted; the members discussed only
-what was honourable and noble, or blamed what was cowardly and
-base.[2] They were on the whole a grave and silent people, but they
-had a terse wit of their own, and there was a statue of Laughter in
-their city. They were always in a state of perfect training, like the
-“wiry dogs” of Plato’s Republic. They were strong conservatives;
-innovation was strictly forbidden. The unfortunate who made a change
-in the rules of the Ball-game was scourged. In the Skias or
-Council-chamber still hung in Pausanias’ time the eleven-stringed lyre
-which Timotheos had brought to Sparta, only to have it broken;[3] and
-the nine-stringed lyre of Phrunis met the same fate. Having once
-accepted the seven-stringed lyre from Terpander, the Spartans never
-permitted it to be changed. They had also a talent for minute
-organisation; both their army and their children were greatly
-subdivided. Every one at Sparta was a part of a beautifully organised
-machine, designed almost exclusively for military purposes.
-
-In this strangely artificial State, it was essential that the future
-citizens should be saturated with the spirit of the place at an early
-age. There were practically no written laws. Judges and rulers acted
-on their own discretion.[4] This was only possible if a particular
-stamp of character, a particular outlook and attitude, were impressed
-upon every citizen. Consequently, education was the most important
-thing at Sparta. It was both regulated and enforced by the State. It
-was exactly the same for all. The boys were taken away from home and
-brought up in great boarding-schools, so that the individualising
-tendencies of family life and hereditary instincts might be stamped
-out, and a general type of character, the Spartan type, alone be left
-in all the boys. For boarding-schools have admittedly this result,
-that they impose a recognisable stamp, a certain similarity of manner
-and attitude, upon all the boys who pass through them.
-
-Therefore, as soon as a child was born at Sparta, it was taken before
-the elders of the tribe to which its parents belonged.[5] If they
-decided that it was likely to prove sickly, it was exposed on Mount
-Taügetos, there to die or be brought up by Helots or Perioikoi. Sparta
-was no place for invalids. If the infant was approved, it was taken
-back to its home, to be brought up by its mother. Spartan women were
-famous for their skill in bringing up children. Spartan nurses were in
-great demand in Hellas. They were eagerly sought after for boys of
-rank and wealth like Alkibiades. The songs which they sang to their
-charges and the rules which they enforced made the children “not
-afraid of the dark” or terrified if they were left alone; not addicted
-“to daintiness or naughty tempers or screaming”; in fact, “little
-gentlemen” in every way.
-
-No doubt the discipline of the children was strict, but then the
-parents lived just as strictly themselves. There were no luxuries for
-any one at Sparta: the houses and furniture were as plain as the food.
-But there is a charming picture of Agesilaos riding on a stick to
-amuse his children; and the Spartan mothers, if stern towards
-cowardice, seem to have been keenly interested in their children’s
-development; they were by no means nonentities like Athenian ladies.
-
-The children slept at home till they were seven; but at an early age
-were taken by their fathers to the “Pheiditia” or clubs where the
-grown men spent those hours during which they stayed indoors and took
-their meals. About fifty men attended each of these clubs. The
-children sat on the floor near their fathers. Each member contributed
-monthly a “medimnos” of barley-meal, eight “choes” of wine, five
-“mnai” of cheese, two and a half “mnai” of figs,[6] and some very
-cheap relish; if he sacrificed to a god, he gave part of the victim to
-his “mess,” and if he was successful in hunting (which was a frequent
-occupation), he brought his spoils to the common table. There was also
-the famous black broth, made by the hereditary guild of State cooks,
-which only a life of Spartan training and cold baths in the Eurotas
-could make appetising; yet elderly Spartans preferred it to meat.
-Perhaps a fragment of Alkman represents a high-day at one of these
-clubs: “Seven couches and as many tables, brimming full of
-poppy-flavoured loaves, and linseed and sesamum, and in bowls honey
-and linseed for the children.”[7]
-
-A Spartan who became too poor to pay his contribution to his club lost
-his rights as a citizen, and so could not have his children educated
-in the State-system. But as long as the allotments were not alienated,
-such cases were not common. The contribution was κατὰ κεφαλήν [kata
-kephalên],[8] that is, the fixed quantity of provisions had to be
-supplied for every member of the family who attended a club, _i.e._
-for every male, since the women took their meals at home. There is no
-reason whatever for supposing that the boys, either before or after
-they went to the boarding-schools, were fed at the expense of the
-State. It is expressly stated that the number of foster-children, who
-accompanied their benefactors’ sons to school, varied according to the
-extent of their patron’s means.[9] Parents must therefore have paid
-something for their boys while they were at school. The teaching
-involved no expenses; hence it must have been the food for which they
-paid. Thus, only those boys could attend the Spartan schools whose
-parents could afford to pay the customary subscription in kind for
-their own and their children’s food at the common meals. Xenophon, the
-admirer of all things Spartan, adopts the same system in his State,
-since he makes the children of the poor drop out automatically from
-the public schools. It must be remembered that at Sparta families were
-always small, and the population tended to decrease steadily; the
-number of males for whom subscriptions had to be paid by the head of
-the family can rarely have been large.
-
-Generally speaking, therefore, the Spartan schools were only for the
-sons of “Peers” (ὅμοιοι [hómoioi]),[10] that is, those who paid the
-subscriptions. But a certain number of other boys were admitted,
-provided that their food was paid for. A rich Spartan might, if he
-chose, select certain other boys to be educated with his own son or
-sons, and pay their expenses meanwhile.[11] The number of these
-school-companions depended on the number of contributions in kind
-which he was capable of supplying. The school-companions could thus
-attend the Spartan schools; but they did not become citizens when they
-grew up, unless they revealed so much merit that the Spartan State
-gave them the franchise.
-
-From what classes were these school-companions drawn? Sometimes they
-were foreigners, sons either of distinguished guest-friends of leading
-Spartans, or of refugee-settlers in Laconia. Thus Xenophon’s two sons
-were educated at Sparta. These foreign boys were called τρόφιμοι
-[tróphimoi] or Foster-children. Xenophon mentions “foreigners from
-among the τρόφιμοι [tróphimoi].”[12] If these Foster-children, when
-grown up, remained in Sparta they possessed no civic rights. A passage
-in Plato refers to the difficulty which was experienced in getting
-these Foster-children to accept this humble position.[13] It is
-interesting to note that Sparta thus precedes Athens as an educational
-centre to which boys from foreign cities came to receive their
-schooling.
-
-More often Spartan parents chose Helots to be school-companions of
-their sons. Thus Plutarch speaks of “two of the foster-brothers of
-Kleomenes, whom they call Mothakes.”[14] The name Mothax was applied
-to these educated Helots. They seem to have been notorious for the way
-in which they presumed upon their position, if we may assume a
-connection between Mothax and Mothon, a term which is used for the
-patron deity of impudence in Aristophanes, and elsewhere is the name
-of a vulgar dance.[15] They were not enfranchised when their
-school-days were over, and had to settle down to slavish duties,
-unless they showed peculiar merit. But several of the most
-distinguished Spartans, including Lusandros, were enfranchised
-Mothakes.
-
-Xenophon, in a passage which has already been quoted, mentions
-“gentlemen-volunteers of the Perioikoi and certain foreigners of the
-so-called Foster-children and bastards of the Spartiatai, very goodly
-men and not without share in the honourable things in the State.”[16]
-If most of the authorities are right in regarding “the honourable
-things”[17] as a Spartan phrase for their educational system――and
-there is good ground for this view――then this passage shows that
-illegitimate sons, and perhaps eminent Perioikoi, passed through the
-public schools at Sparta although, however, neither were called
-Foster-children, a name reserved for distinguished foreigners. The
-Helots who shared the education were known as Mothakes, and sometimes
-as σύντροφοι [syntrophoi], school-companions; but they do not seem to
-have been called τρόφιμοι [trophimoi], “Foster-children.”
-
-During the best period of Spartan history, none of these extra pupils,
-τρόφιμοι [trophimoi], Mothakes, illegitimate children, and eminent
-Perioikoi, were enfranchised unless they showed peculiar merit. At a
-later date, perhaps, any one who passed through the schools became a
-Spartan citizen. Plutarch makes this a part of Lukourgos’ system; but
-that is improbable. Such a custom would only arise in the days of
-Spartan decay and depopulation. On the other hand, any Spartan boys
-who flinched before the hardships of their national education, lost
-their status, and were disfranchised, if they did not persevere.[18]
-
-Till they were seven, the boys were taken to their fathers’ clubs: the
-girls had all their meals with their mothers at home, for the women
-did not have dining-clubs. By seeing the hardships which their fathers
-endured, and hearing their discussions on political subjects and their
-terse humour, the boys were already being trained in the Spartan mode
-of life; for the clubs served as an elementary school. There, too,
-they learnt to play with their contemporaries, and to exchange rough
-jests without flinching. To take a jest without annoyance was part of
-the Spartan character; but if the jester went too far for endurance,
-he might be asked to stop.
-
-At seven the boys were taken away from home, and organised in a most
-systematic way into “packs” and “divisions.” These were the “ilai,”
-which probably contained sixty-four boys, and the “agelai,” whose
-numbers are unknown.[19] These packs fed together, slept together on
-bundles of reeds for bedding, and played together. The boys had to go
-barefoot always, and wore only a single garment summer and winter
-alike. They were all under the control of a “Paidonomos” or
-“Superintendent of the boys,” a citizen of rank, repute, and position,
-who might at any moment call them together, and punish them severely
-if they had been idle: he had attendants who bore the ominous name of
-Floggers.[20] So, as Xenophon grimly remarks, a spirit of discipline
-and obedience prevailed at Sparta. In order that the boys might not be
-left without control, even when the Paidonomos was absent, any citizen
-who might be passing might order them to do anything which he liked,
-and punish them for any faults which they committed. The most sensible
-and plucky boy in each pack was made a Prefect over it, and called the
-Bouâgor, or “Herd-leader”; the rest obeyed his orders and endured his
-punishments.[21]
-
-The elder men stirred up quarrels among the boys in order to see who
-was plucky. Over every school was set one of the young men over twenty
-who had a good reputation both for courage and for morality.[22] He
-was called the Eiren. He kept an eye on their battles, and used them
-as servants at home for his supper; he ordered the bigger boys to
-bring him firewood, and the smaller to collect vegetables. The only
-way by which such supplies could be obtained was by stealing them from
-the gardens and the men’s dining-clubs. Apparently, then, the boys
-dined with him in his house;[23] they were supplied with a scanty meal
-by their parents to eat there, and were encouraged to make up the
-deficiency by stealing. “When the Eiren had finished supper, he
-ordered one of the boys to sing, and to another he propounded some
-question which needed a thoughtful answer, such as, ‘Who is the best
-of the grown-ups?’ For such particular questions are more stimulating
-than generalities like ‘What is virtue?’ or ‘What is a good citizen?’
-The answer had to be accompanied by a concise reason; failure was
-punished by a bite on the hand. Elder men watched, saying nothing at
-the time, but rebuking the Eiren severely afterwards if he was too
-strict or too lenient.”
-
-Thus we find at Sparta a prefect-system and fagging. But the sense of
-responsibility produced in the elder boys at English public schools
-and the practice which they acquire in exercising authority were
-prevented at Sparta by the perpetual presence of grown men, which made
-Laconian schools more like French Lycées. There is no class of
-professional schoolmasters; the Eiren, the Paidonomos, and any elder
-who chooses, give the instruction freely and gratuitously. Education,
-being so simple, cost nothing at Sparta.
-
-From Plutarch’s mention of stealing from the _men’s_ dining-clubs it
-may safely be inferred that boys of this age dined apart. Whether it
-was always in the Eiren’s house cannot be ascertained. After the age
-of sixteen they must have come into the men’s syssitia; for Xenophon
-implies that the visitor to Sparta could see lads of that age at
-dinner and ask them questions: and a visitor would certainly not have
-dined in a dining-room meant only for boys. Whether the election of
-members took place at that age, or whether they still went to their
-fathers’ clubs, is unknown.
-
-The education was almost entirely physical. Plutarch, it is true, says
-that they learnt “letters, because they were useful.”[24] This may
-have been a later introduction, or perhaps the amount learnt was so
-little as to justify Isokrates in saying that the Spartans “do not
-even learn their letters, which are the means to a knowledge of the
-past, as well as of contemporary events”;[25] he also thought it
-highly improbable that even “the most intelligent of them would hear
-of his speeches, unless they found some one to read them aloud.”[26]
-They had, indeed, little reason to learn to read. Their written laws
-were very few, and these they learnt by heart, set to a tune. They had
-nothing to do with commerce or even with accounts; very few of them
-knew how to count.[27] Hippias, the Sophist, found that all they cared
-to listen to, were “genealogies of men and heroes, foundations of
-cities, and archæology generally.” Probably, like the Dorian
-philosopher Pythagoras, and like Plato, the admirer of all things
-Dorian, they held that memory was all-important, and that the use of
-writing weakened it.[28] Besides the State-laws set to music there
-were songs which praised dead heroes and derided cowards: the diction
-was plain and simple, the subjects grave and moral; many of them were
-war-marches; all were incentive to pluck and energy.
-
-Rhetoric was, of course, utterly forbidden: a young man who learnt it
-abroad and brought it home was punished by the Ephors.[28] Spartans
-learned to be silent as a rule; when they spoke, their remarks were
-short and much to the point, for they thought it wrong to waste a
-word.[29] This was definitely taught to the boys, as has been shown
-above. “If you converse with quite an ordinary Laconian,” says
-Plato,[30] “at first he seems a mere fool; then suddenly, at the
-critical point, he flings forth a pithy saying, and his companions
-seem no better than children compared with him.” This epigrammatic
-wisdom Plato ironically ascribes to the fact that Laconians really
-attend Sophists on the sly, and are greater philosophers than any one
-knows. Many echoes of their terse and grim humour have come down to
-modern times: such as Leonidas’ remark to his troops at Thermopylae,
-“Breakfast here: supper in Hades”; and the Spartan’s description of
-Athens, “All things noble there,” by which he meant that nothing,
-however base, was counted ignoble.
-
-The Spartans must not be regarded as wholly averse to literature. They
-knew Homer, and thought him the best poet of his class, although the
-manner of life he inculcated was Ionic, not Doric.[31] Alkman spent
-his life at Sparta, and has left one splendid song for a chorus of
-Laconian girls. Aristophanes could put a fine chorus into the mouths
-of Laconians, though its subject is noticeably warlike. For it was
-war-poems that the Spartans liked. “They care naught for the other
-poets,” says the Athenian orator, Lukourgos, “but for Turtaios they
-care so exceedingly that they made a law to summon every one to the
-king’s tent, when they are on a campaign, to hear the poems of
-Turtaios, considering that this would make them most ready to die for
-their country.”[32]
-
-After all, the objects of the Spartan education were not intellectual
-acuteness and the accumulation of knowledge, but discipline,
-endurance, and victory in war. Discipline was taught by the perpetual
-presence of authority, and by very severe punishments. Spartan boys
-were practically never left to their own devices: perhaps that is the
-secret of the moral failure of nearly every Spartan who was given a
-position of authority outside Lakedaimon; for responsibility requires
-practice. Endurance was taught by their whole mode of life. They went
-barefooted, with a single garment, played and danced naked under the
-hot Laconian sun;[33] there were no ointments or luxurious baths for
-their bodies, only the Eurotas for a swim, and a bundle of reeds for a
-bed. The food which the boys received was very scanty: often they were
-turned out into the country in the early morning to provide food for
-themselves for the whole day by stealing.
-
-This organised stealing was a feature of Spartan education. At an
-early age, as we have seen, the small boys were sent out to steal
-firewood and vegetables for the Eiren who had charge of them. Later
-they were driven out into the country, to forage for themselves at the
-expense of the farms. There was a definite age at which it was
-customary to begin stealing.[34] The articles which might be stolen
-were fixed by law, and the legal limits might not be transgressed.[35]
-It must be remembered that much property in Laconia was held in
-common. Any one, for instance, who was belated while hunting might
-take what food he pleased from a country house, and even break open
-seals to get at provisions. The Spartans also used one another’s dogs
-and horses freely, without permission. It is therefore absurd to say
-that the system taught the boys to be dishonest. If the State agrees
-to declare certain articles to be common property, it is no longer
-stealing if one citizen removes them from the house of another: he is
-no more dishonest than a man who picks blackberries or buttercups in
-England. At one of the English public schools, tooth-mugs used to be a
-recognised article of plunder. The small fags were expected to keep
-their particular dormitory supplied with them, at the expense of
-others. They were punished by the wronged dormitory if caught in the
-act of removing them: but ingenuity in such thefts was regarded as
-praiseworthy. There was a certain number of these mugs belonging to
-the whole house; they were common property, and could therefore be
-purloined without dishonesty.
-
-Moreover, this system of legalised robbery had a valuable educational
-object at Sparta. It was excellent training in scouting, laying
-ambushes, and foraging, all of which it is very important that a
-future soldier should learn. Xenophon, a soldier himself, notices
-this, and in the _Anabasis_, when he needs a clever strategist, he
-selects a Spartan because he has been educated in this way. Since this
-was the object of the system, the boys, if caught, were flogged, not
-for stealing, but for stealing clumsily. Isokrates declares that skill
-in robbery was the road to the highest offices at Sparta. “If any one
-can show that this is not the branch of education which the
-Lacedaemonians regard as the most important,” he adds, “I admit that I
-have not spoken a word of truth in my life.”[36]
-
-These foraging expeditions of the boys prepared them for the similar,
-if more arduous, duties of “Secret Service”[37] which awaited them
-between eighteen and twenty. Young men of this age were sent in bands
-to the different districts of Laconia for long periods, during which
-they hid in the woods, slept on the ground, attended to their own
-wants without a servant, and wandered about the country by day and
-night.[38] When it appeared good to them or their chiefs they made
-sudden attacks on the Helots, and slaughtered those who seemed
-ambitious enough to be dangerous, the Ephors declaring war on their
-serfs yearly in order that there might be no blood-guiltiness attached
-to these assassinations.[39] There was a regular officer set over this
-secret police, who no doubt directed where the particular youths
-should go.[40] At a critical moment of the Peloponnesian War, 2000 of
-the bravest and most ambitious Helots suddenly “disappeared,” probably
-by this means.[41] But Plato recognised the educational value of such
-a system, if the murders were omitted. In his _Laws_[42] he institutes
-a force of κρυπτοί [kryptoi], 720 in number, who patrol the whole
-country, taking the twelve districts in turn, so as to gain a complete
-acquaintance with it. They have all the farm-servants and beasts at
-their disposal, for digging trenches, making fortifications, roads,
-embankments, and reservoirs, for irrigation works and the like. The
-similarity of name suggests similarity of functions, but how much of
-this the κρυπτοί [kryptoi] at Sparta did cannot be fixed. Probably
-their chief work was to keep watch over the subject populations,
-Perioikoi and Helots, who were otherwise left almost entirely to their
-own devices.
-
-In their institutions of the foraging parties and Secret Service, the
-Spartans show a clear appreciation of boy-nature, as well as a keen
-eye for methods of military training. Moderns are beginning to realise
-that the average boy has so much of the primitive and natural man in
-him that, unless he is permitted to “go wild” and live the savage life
-at intervals, he is apt to become riotous and lawless. Hence in recent
-days the institution of camps for boys in England and “Seton Indians”
-in America. The Spartans, alone of Hellenes, fully recognised this
-peculiarity of boys, and met it with the foraging expeditions and
-secret service. The Athenian boy was not thus provided for until he
-became an ephebos; hence the Athenian streets were full of young
-Hooligans, while the aristocratic lads developed more refined, if more
-vicious, methods of giving vent to their instincts. In these
-country-expeditions alone the Spartan boys had an opportunity of
-escaping from the presence of their elders and developing habits of
-self-reliance and responsibility. Had Sparta made better use of these
-opportunities, the fate of her Empire after Aigospotamoi might have
-been different.
-
-A frequent occupation of all ages at Sparta was hunting. This, too,
-they recognised to be an excellent training for soldiers, since it
-involved courage in meeting wild beasts, skill and ingenuity in
-tracking them, and hardships of all sorts in the forests and on the
-mountains. Laconia was full of game, and Laconian hounds were famous.
-The successful huntsman gave what he had killed to enrich the meals of
-his dining-club, and so won much popularity.
-
-Spartan boys must also have learnt to ride, for they had to go in
-procession on horseback at the festival of Huakinthos.[43] They were
-taught to swim, too, by their daily plunge in the Eurotas. A great
-part of their time was spent in gymnastics, under the close inspection
-of their elders. Boxing and the pankration were forbidden to the young
-Spartan, probably because they developed a few particular muscles at
-the expense of the others.[44] For wrestling no scientific trainers
-were allowed; the Spartan type depended solely on strength and
-activity, not on technical skill; so a Spartan, when beaten by a
-wrestler from another country, said his opponent was not a better man,
-but only a cleverer wrestler.[45] Gladiators, such as those mentioned
-in Plato’s _Laches_ as teaching the use of arms, were not permitted at
-Sparta; these, however, seem to have been unpractical theorists, quite
-useless in battle, as General Laches shows by a funny anecdote about
-one of them.[46] No lounging spectators were permitted in Spartan
-gymnasia; the rule was “strip or withdraw.”[47] The eldest man in each
-gymnasium had to see that every one took sufficient exercise to work
-off his food and prevent him from becoming puffy.[48] The physical
-condition of the boys was inspected every ten days by the Ephors,[49]
-while the competitions of the epheboi seem to have been controlled by
-a special board, the Bidiaioi, who figure in inscriptions.[50]
-Aristotle says of the whole Spartan discipline that it made the boys
-“beast-like,”[51] but admits that it did not produce the one-sided
-athlete, so common in Hellas, who looked solely to athletics, and was
-too much specialised to be good for anything else. Xenophon[52] says
-that it would be hard to find anywhere men with more healthy or more
-serviceable bodies than the Spartiatai. The most beautiful man in the
-Hellenic army at Plataea was a Spartan.[53] The Spartan boys’ manners
-were in some ways surprisingly maidenlike. When they went along the
-highway, they kept their hands under their coat, and walked in
-silence, keeping their eyes fixed on the ground before their feet.
-They spoke as rarely as a statue and looked about them less than a
-bronze figure: they were as modest as a girl. When they came into the
-mess-room, you could rarely hear them even answer a question.[54]
-
-Fighting was encouraged at all ages; there were organised battles,
-somewhat resembling football matches, for the epheboi, in a shady
-playing-field surrounded by rows of plane trees and encircled by
-streams, access to it being given by two bridges. After a night spent
-in sacrifice, two teams of epheboi proceeded to this field. When they
-came near it, they drew lots, and the winners had the choice of
-bridges by which to enter the ground, selecting no doubt in accordance
-with the direction of sun and wind, as a modern football captain, who
-has won the toss, selects the end of the ground from which he will
-start playing. The epheboi fought with their hands, kicked, bit, and
-even tore out one another’s eyes, in the endeavour to drive the
-opposing team back into the water.[55]
-
-The grown men were also encouraged to fight by the following device.
-The Ephors selected three of them, who were called Hippagretai. Each
-of these three selected one hundred companions, giving a public
-explanation in each case why he chose one man and rejected the others.
-So those who had been rejected became foes to those who were selected,
-and kept a close watch over them for the slightest breach of the
-accepted code of honour. Each party was always trying to increase its
-strength or perform some signal service to the State, in order to
-strengthen its own claims. The rivals also fought with their fists
-whenever they met.[56]
-
-This systematised pugnaciousness at Sparta presents an interesting
-parallel to the German University duels and to the fights which used
-to be almost daily occurrences in the life of an English schoolboy.
-Most of the older English public schools can still show the special
-ground which was the recognised scene of these battles.
-
-Floggings were exceedingly common at Sparta. Any elder man might flog
-any boy. It was not etiquette for boys to complain to their parents in
-these cases; if they did so, they received a second thrashing. But the
-triumph of this system was the flogging of the “epheboi” yearly at the
-altar of Artemis Orthia, in substitute for human sacrifice. Entrance
-for the competition was quite voluntary, but competitors seem always
-to have been forthcoming even down to Plutarch’s days. They began by
-practice of some sort in the country.[57] The altar was covered with
-blood; if the floggers were too lenient to some “ephebos” owing to his
-beauty or reputation, the statue, according to the legend, performed a
-miracle in order to show its displeasure.[58] The competitors were
-often killed on the spot; but they never uttered a groan.[59] The
-winner was called the “altar-victor” (βωμονίκης [bômonikês]) and an
-inscription still records such a victory.[60]
-
-The girls at Sparta were also organised into agelai or “packs.”[61]
-They took their meals at home, but otherwise lived a thoroughly
-outdoor life. They had to train their bodies no less than the boys, in
-order that they might bear strong children, so they took part in
-contests of strength as well as of speed.[62] They shared in the
-gymnasia and in the musical training. Among their sports were
-wrestling, running, and swimming; they were exposed to sun and dust
-and toil.[63] They learned to throw the diskos and the javelin;[64]
-they wore only the short Doric “chiton” with split sides.[65] They
-went in procession at festivals like the boys; at certain festivals
-they danced and sang in the presence of the young men, praising the
-brave among them and jeering at the cowards. At the Huakinthia the
-maidens raced on horseback. Theokritos makes a band of 240 maidens,
-“all playmates together, anoint themselves like men and race beside
-the Eurotas.”[66] That passage also gives wool-work to Laconian
-maidens (which is probably untrue, being contradicted by Plato),[67]
-and lyre-playing, which is contradicted by a Laconian in Plutarch, who
-says that “such rubbish is not Laconian.” The result of all this
-outdoor training was great physical perfection: Lampito, the Spartan
-woman in Aristophanes’ _Lusistrata_, is greatly admired by the women
-from other cities for her beauty, her complexion, and her bodily
-condition: “she looks as though she could throttle a bull.” She
-ascribes it to her gymnastics and vigorous dancing.[68] The girls till
-they married wore no veil, and mixed freely with the young men; in
-fact, there was one dance where they met in modern fashion; first the
-youth danced some military steps, and then the maiden danced some of a
-suitable sort.[69] Consequently love-matches were far more possible at
-Sparta than elsewhere in Hellas. After marriage the women had to wear
-veils, and remained at home; gymnastics, dances, and races ceased.
-
-The Spartans were intensely fond of dancing, but it must be remembered
-that they often called dancing what moderns would call drill. For war
-was almost a form of dance; they marched or charged into battle to the
-notes of the flute, crowned and wearing red cloaks. The march tunes
-were in frequent use in Sparta, no doubt at military exercises. Every
-day the epheboi were drawn up in ranks, one behind the other, and went
-through military evolutions and dancing figures alternately, while a
-flutist played to them and beat time with his foot.[70] This is simply
-musical drill. The great national festival of the Gumnopaidia was very
-similar. Three great battalions, consisting respectively of old men,
-young men, and boys, drawn up in rank and file, exhibited various
-movements, chiefly of a gymnastic sort, singing the songs of Thaletas
-and Alkman and Dionusodotos the while and indulging in impromptu
-jesting at one another’s expense, after the fashion of a rustic
-revel-chorus in Attica. Sometimes the battalions appeared one by one,
-and were “led out” like an army, by the Ephors.[71] On other occasions
-all three were drawn up in crescent formation side by side, with the
-boys in the middle. The festival must have closely resembled the
-public parades of the gymnastic clubs in Switzerland. There were posts
-of honour and dishonour, as in battle, cowards usually receiving the
-latter. But Agesilaos, the king, once received an inferior station
-after his victory at Corinth, and turned the insult by a jest, “Well
-thought of, chorus-leader: that’s the way to give honour to the
-post.”[72] Then there was the war-dance, imitating all the actions of
-battle, a sort of manual and bayonet exercise, but accompanied by much
-acting and by music. Every Spartan boy began to learn this as soon as
-he was five.[73] It was done in quick time, if we may judge by the
-“Pyrrhic” or war-dance foot ( ˘ ˘ ). There was also a wrestling-dance,[74]
-and most gymnastics were done to the accompaniment of the flute. In
-fact, chorus-dancing was a regular part of the education of Spartans
-and Cretans: the only experience of singing which most of them
-possessed was acquired in this way.[75] It is true that elegiacs were
-sung as solos before the king’s tent on campaigns, and at meals, when
-the victor got a particularly good slice of meat; but probably this
-accomplishment was confined to a few. Aristotle asserts that the
-Laconians did not learn songs, but claimed nevertheless to be able to
-distinguish good from bad.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Such was the Spartan system of education. To an Englishman their
-schools have a greater interest than those of any other ancient State.
-Sparta produced the only true boarding-schools of antiquity. The
-“packs” of the Spartan boys, like the English public schools, formed
-miniature States, to whose corporate interests and honour each boy
-learned to make his own wishes subservient. Spartan boys, too, like
-our own, had the smaller traits of individuality rubbed off them by
-the publicity and perpetual intercourse with others involved in the
-boarding-school system, in order that the racial characteristics might
-the more emerge in them. They, too, learnt endurance by hardship, and
-were early trained both to rule and to obey by means of the
-institution of prefects and fagging. But here the resemblance stops
-short. The Spartans, like most other nations, were not prepared to pay
-the price at which alone an education in responsibility can be
-obtained, the price which lies in the possible ruin of all the boys
-who are not strong enough to be a law to themselves. They very rarely
-left the boys to themselves without grown men to look after them. They
-were always interfering and supervising, instead of leaving the
-prefects to exercise their authority. And so, when Spartans were sent
-abroad to govern cities or command armies, having had no practice in
-responsibility, they failed shamefully and ignominiously. But this is
-equally true of the Athenians and of other Hellenes. The Spartans
-deserve all credit for their experiments with the boarding-school
-system.
-
-But the system which they adopted had many faults, besides that which
-has already been noticed. There was no individual attention for the
-boys. The hardships were excessive and brutalising. While the boys’
-bodies were developed and trained almost to perfection, their minds
-were almost entirely neglected: hence the stupidities of Spartan
-policy and the lack of imagination which their statesmen showed. It
-was impossible to over-eat or over-drink under the Spartan system, so
-the young Spartan had no experience in self-restraint.[76] The
-gymnasia and dining-clubs caused a great deal of quarrelling (which
-the Spartan authorities welcomed), and of immorality (which was very
-strictly forbidden); the Spartan gymnasia erred less, however, in this
-latter respect than the Athenian. In war the Spartans were only
-invincible so long as they were the only trained troops in Hellas; the
-rise of professional armies ruined them, for they could not adapt
-themselves to new circumstances. They produced no art and very little
-literature, if any. But their whole State was as much a work of art as
-a Doric temple, and of very much the same order, with its symmetry and
-regularity, its sacrifice of detail to the whole, its strength and
-restraint. It was also the inspiration of at least one great piece of
-literature, Plato’s _Republic_.
-
-If courage was their sole object, as perhaps it was, they succeeded in
-obtaining it. The coward was a rare, and a most unhappy bird at
-Sparta. Mothers on several occasions killed sons who returned home
-from a campaign disgraced. “No one would mess with a coward, or
-consort with him. When rival teams were chosen for the game of ball,
-he was omitted. In dances he received the post of dishonour. He was
-avoided in the streets. No one would sit next to him. He could not
-find a husband for his daughters or a wife for himself,” and was
-punished for these offences. “He was beaten if he imitated his betters
-in any way.”[77] If the Hellenes were a nation of children, as the old
-Egyptian called them, the Spartans were at least a manly sort of
-schoolboy. They deified the schoolboy virtues, pluck and endurance. If
-we wish to see how far their education, in its best days, enabled them
-to prove true to their ideals, let us consider those 300 at
-Thermopylae waiting, with jests on their lips, for the onset of
-Oriental myriads, and remember that finest of all epitaphs, of which
-English can give no rendering, written upon their memorial in the pass
-in honour of their obedience unto death――
-
- Go tell the Spartans, thou that passest by,
- That here, obedient to their laws, we lie.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The Cretan system of education was very similar in many ways to the
-Spartan. In both localities the teaching was given by any elder member
-of the community who chose, not by a professional and paid class of
-masters. But in Crete education cost the parent even less than at
-Sparta; for the boys were fed largely at public cost.[78] But so was
-every other Cretan, male and female alike. Each community possessed
-large public estates, cultivated by public serfs.[79] The revenues
-thus accruing to the State were applied to the expenses of government,
-which were small, and to the food-supply of all citizens. Thus men,
-women, and children were all fed mainly at public cost. It may be
-noted, however, that there is no question of providing the children of
-improvident parents with meals at the expense of more provident
-citizens. Moreover, the heads of families, who each possessed an
-allotment, as at Sparta, had to contribute a tenth of the produce of
-their estates.
-
-The women-folk took their meals at home,[80] although the cost of
-their food was mainly defrayed by the public revenues. The men took
-their meals in dining-clubs (ἀνδρεῖα [andreia]). The whole population
-of each community was divided into clubs of this sort, apparently on
-the family basis, so that two or three families made up a club between
-them, to which their children and descendants would in turn belong.
-All the males of the family attended these meals; small children,
-boys, and young men as well as elders are all mentioned as being
-present at the same dinners.[81] The club is only an enlarged family
-party. The small children sat on the ground behind their fathers; they
-waited on themselves and on their elders, but the general
-superintendence of cooking and attendance was in the hands of a woman
-with three or four public slaves and some underlings in her
-control.[82] As they grew older, the sons sat beside their fathers.
-Boys ordinarily received half what their parents had; but orphans were
-allowed the full quantity at their dead father’s club.
-
-Thus the Cretan club was an amalgamation of several families into a
-sort of clan, whose male members all dined together. All the boys of
-the clan formed one boarding-school. They all slept in one room,
-perhaps attached to the dining-hall; there was always a dormitory
-attached to each of these buildings for visitors from other cities, so
-it would be natural to expect a dormitory for the children also. The
-boys took their meals in the club dining-hall, in the presence of
-their elders, by whose improving conversations upon politics and
-morals they were supposed to be educated. These elder members elected
-one of their number to serve as παιδονόμος [paidonomos] or
-“Superintendent of the boys” of their club.[83] Under his directions
-the boys learned letters “in moderation”: they were constantly
-practised in gymnastics, in the use of arms, especially the bow, which
-was a great Cretan weapon, and in the war-dances, the Kuretic and
-Pyrrhic, both indigenous in Crete. They learned the laws of their
-country set to a sort of tune, in order that their souls might be
-drawn by the music, and also, that they might more easily remember
-them. In this way, if they did anything which was forbidden, they had
-not the excuse of ignorance.[84] Besides this, they were taught hymns
-to the gods, and praises of good men. The favourite metre for these
-purposes was the Cretic ( ― ˘ ― ), which was regarded as “severe”
-and so suitable for teaching courage and restraint.[85] The Pæan was
-their chief national form of song. Cretan boys were also practised in
-that terse and somewhat humorous style of speaking which we have
-already seen at Sparta.[86]
-
-Cretan boys were always fighting either single combats or combined
-battles against the boys of another club-school. They were taught
-endurance by many hardships. They wore only a short coat in summer and
-winter alike. They learnt to despise heat and cold and mountain paths
-and the blows which they received in gymnasia and in fighting.
-
-They remained in the club-schools till their seventeenth year,[87]
-when they became epheboi and celebrated their escape from the garb of
-childhood by a special festival.[88] Like their contemporaries at
-Athens, the epheboi took a special oath of allegiance to the State and
-hatred towards its enemies. A fragment still survives of the oath
-taken by the epheboi of Dreros, near Knossos.[89] At seventeen the
-epheboi were collected into “packs” (ἀγέλαι [agelai]) by private
-enterprise. A rich and distinguished young ephebos would gather round
-him as large a pack of his contemporaries as he could; their numbers
-no doubt depended partly on his wealth, and still more on his personal
-popularity. The aristocratic element in this arrangement is very
-noticeable, as in all the institutions of Crete as contrasted with
-Sparta. The father of this young chief usually acted as leader of the
-pack (ἀγελάτης [agelatês]); he possessed full authority over them and
-could punish them as he pleased. He led them out on hunting
-expeditions and to the “Runs” (δρόμοι [dromoi]), that is, the gymnasia
-of the epheboi. Cretans who had not yet entered a pack of epheboi were
-excluded from these runs (ἀπόδρομοι [apodromoi]); when they entered,
-they were called “members of packs” (ἀγέλαστοι [agelastoi]).[90] The
-pack-leader could collect his followers where he pleased;[91] very
-possibly the epheboi did not attend the club dinners ordinarily, but
-fed or slept either at their patron’s house (whence the need of a rich
-pack-leader) or in some special room. They thus corresponded closely
-to the Spartan boys of a younger age under their Eiren. Their food was
-supplied, like that of all Cretans, largely out of the public
-revenues. On certain fixed days “pack” joined battle with “pack” to
-the sound of the lyre and flutes and in regular time, as was the
-custom in war; fists, clubs, and even weapons of iron might be used.
-It was a regular institution, half dance, half field-day, with fixed
-rules and imposed by law. These battles must have closely resembled
-the contests of the Spartan epheboi in the shady playing-fields. The
-life of the boys was surrounded with a military atmosphere throughout.
-They wore military dress and counted their weapons their most valuable
-possessions. Young Cretans remained in the packs till after marriage.
-Then they returned to their homes and the clubs.
-
-Of the practical results of Cretan education nothing can be said. From
-the day when Idomeneus sets sail from Troy, Crete almost disappears
-from Hellenic history. Too strong to be attacked by their neighbours,
-too much weakened by intestine feuds to assume the aggressive, the
-Cretans remained aloof from their compatriots on the mainland and in
-the archipelago till the close of the period of Hellenic independence.
-
-
-APPENDIX A
-
-SPARTAN SYSSITIA
-
-These dining-clubs were organised like “diminutive states.”[92] It was
-enacted who was to recline in the most important place, who in the
-second, and so on, and who was to sit on the footstool, which was the
-place of dishonour, usually assigned only to children. “Each man is
-given a portion to himself, which he does not share with any one. They
-have as much barley bread as they like, and there is an earthenware
-cup of wine standing by each man, for him to put his lips to when he
-feels disposed. The chief dish is always the same for all, boiled
-pork. There is plenty of Spartan broth, and some olives, cheese, and
-figs.[93]
-
-“Each contributes to his mess about 18 gallons of barley meal, 60 or
-70 pints of wine, and a small quantity of figs and cheese, and 10
-Aeginetan obols for extras.” This contribution no doubt covered
-expenses, for the quantity sent by an absentee king, probably
-representing the average consumption of an individual, falls well
-within this estimate (cf. Herod. vi. 57). After the regular meal[94]
-an ἔπαικλον [epaiklon] or extra meal might be served. It would be
-provided by a member of the mess, consisting either of the results of
-hunting or the produce of his farm, for nothing might be bought. The
-ordinary components of such a meal were pigeons, geese, fieldfares,
-blackbirds, hares, lambs, and kids, and wheaten bread, a welcome
-change from the usual barley loaves. The cooks proclaimed the name of
-the giver, so that he might get the credit. ἔπαικλα [epaikla] were
-often exacted as fines for offences from rich members; the poor had to
-pay laurel leaves or reeds. There was also a special sort of ἔπαικλον
-[epaiklon] designed for the children, barley meal soaked in olive
-oil――a sort of porridge, in fact. According to Nicocles the Laconian,
-this was swallowed in laurel leaves――which does not sound very
-inviting.
-
-There were also banquets independent of the messes. These were called
-κοπίδες [kopides].[95] Tents were set up in the sacred enclosure round
-the temple of the deity in whose honour the feast was given. Heaps of
-brushwood covered with carpets served for couches. The food consisted
-of slices of meat, round buns, cheese, slices of sausage, and for
-dessert dried figs and various beans.
-
-At the Tithenidia, or Nurses’ Feast, a κοπίς [kopis] was given at the
-temple of Artemis Koruthalia by the stream Tiassos.[96] The nurses
-brought the boy-babies to it. The sacrifice was a sucking pig, and
-baked loaves were served. The κοπίδες [kopides] were evidently a
-feature of Spartan life: Epilukos makes his “laddie” (κωράλισκος
-[kôraliskos]) remark, “I will go to the κοπίς [kopis] in Amuklai at
-Appellas’ house, where will be buns and loaves and jolly good broth”:
-which shows that the children’s parties at Sparta were regarded as
-attractive.
-
-The Karneia, the great Spartan festival, was an imitation of
-camp-life.[97] The sacrificial meal was served in tents, each
-containing nine men, and everything was done to the word of command.
-
-
-APPENDIX B
-
-CRETAN SYSSITIA
-
-The chief authorities for the attendance at these meals are the two
-historians, Dosiades and Purgion, quoted in Athenaeus (143). Dosiades
-states that an equal portion is set before each man present, but to
-the younger members is given a half portion of meat, and they do not
-touch any of the other things. Purgion says: “To the sons, who sit on
-lower seats by their fathers’ chairs, they give a half portion of what
-is supplied to the men; orphans receive a full share.” The comparison
-of the two passages shows that the “younger members” mentioned by
-Dosiades are what Purgion calls the orphans, and that they are not yet
-full-grown men. Thus they must be either the boys or the epheboi. It
-is not, however, at all likely that the epheboi, who were of military
-age and engaged in violent exercises, would be given only half
-rations, so these younger members are the boys not yet included in the
-ἀγέλαι [agelai]. Dosiades continues: “On each table is set a drinking
-vessel, of weak wine. This all who sit at the common table share
-equally. The children have a bowl to themselves,” that is, the boys
-who sat beside their fathers but not at the table. “After supper first
-they discuss the political situation, and then recall feats in battle,
-and praise those who have distinguished themselves, encouraging the
-youngers to heroism.” The quotation shows that not merely the small
-children are in question, but boys of an age to understand politics
-and war.
-
-
- [1] Herodotos, 4. 77.
-
- [2] Plutarch, _Lukourgos_, 25. Kratinos (Athen. 138)
- ridicules these clubs and says that the attraction of them
- was that sausages hung there on pegs to be nibbled.
-
- [3] Pausanias, 3. 12. A similar event happened at Argos.
- Plutarch, _On Music_, 37.
-
- [4] Aristot. _Pol._ ii. 9, 10.
-
- [5] Plutarch, _Luk._ 16.
-
- [6] Say, 1½ bushels of meal, 5 gallons of wine, 5 lbs. of
- cheese, and 2½ lbs. of figs.
-
- [7] Smyth, _Melic Poets_, “Alkman,” 26, if the emendation
- παίδεσσι [paidessi] be correct.
-
- [8] Aristot. _Pol._ ii. 9.
-
- [9] Phularchos (Athen. vi. 271).
-
- [10] Xen. _Anab._ iv. 6. 14; Aristot. _Pol._ ii. 9. 31.
-
- [11] Phularchos (Athen. vi. 271 e).
-
- [12] Xen. _Hellen._ v. 3. 9.
-
- [13] Plato, _Rep._ 520 D.
-
- [14] Plut. _Kleom._ 8.
-
- [15] Aristoph. _Knights_, 635, 695 (with Schol. on 697,
- φορτικὸν ὀρχήσεως εῖδος [phortikon orchêseôs eidos]); Eurip.
- _Bacch._ 1060.
-
- [16] Xen. _Hellen._ v. 3. 9.
-
- [17] Xen. _Constit. of Lak._ iii. 3; _Hellen._ v. 4. 32.
-
- [18] Xen. _Constit. of Lak._ iii. 3.
-
- [19] “Agelai” of young men are mentioned by inscriptions at
- Miletos and Smurna [Böckh, 2892, 3326]; there may have been
- boarding-schools somewhat resembling those of Sparta at
- these towns for young men.
-
- [20] μαστιγόφοροι [mastigophoroi]. Xen. _Constit. of Lak._
- ii. 2. Aristotle calls Paidonomoi an aristocratic
- institution. They existed in Crete, and inscriptions mention
- them in Karia, Teos, and many other places.
-
- [21] Plut. _Lukourgos_, 16. Hesychius declares that the
- Bouâgor was a boy, so the word cannot mean the Eiren, who
- was over twenty.
-
- [22] Plut. _Lukourgos_, 17; Xen. _Constit. of Lak._ ii. 11.
-
- [23] In which case the Eiren corresponds closely to the
- Cretan Agelates.
-
- [24] _Lukourgos_, 16; _Lac. Institutions_, 247.
-
- [25] Isok. _Panath._ 276 D.
-
- [26] _Panath._ 285 C.
-
- [27] Plato, _Hippias Maj._ 285 C.
-
- [28] Sext. Empir. _Mathem._ 2, § 21.
-
- [29] Plut. _Lukourgos_, 19-20.
-
- [30] Plato, _Protag._ 342 E.
-
- [31] Plato, _Laws_, 680 D. Crete repudiated Homer
- altogether.
-
- [32] Luk. _against Leokrates_, 107. The Polemarchos was
- judge in these singing competitions, and the winner received
- a bit of meat (Philochoros in Athen. 630 f.).
-
- [33] Plato, _Laws_, 633 E.
-
- [34] Plut. _Apoph._
-
- [35] Xen. _Anab._ iv. 6. 14.
-
- [36] Isok. _Panath._ 277.
-
- [37] κρυπτεία, κρυπτή [krypteia, kryptê].
-
- [38] Plato, _Laws_, 633 C.
-
- [39] Plut. _Lukourgos_, 28. Isokrates merely mentions that
- the Ephors could kill as many Helots as they liked
- (_Panath._ 271 B).
-
- [40] Plut. _Kleom._ 28.
-
- [41] Thuc. iv. 80.
-
- [42] Plato, _Laws_, 763 B. Some have supposed that κρυπτοί
- [kryptoi] is an interpolation. If so, the resemblance must
- have been close enough to strike a commentator who knew
- Lakedaimon, in spite of the fact that the ages in the two
- systems are different.
-
- [43] Polukrates (in Athen. 139 e).
-
- [44] Aristot. _Pol._ viii. 4; Plut. _Luk._ 19.
-
- [45] Plut. _Apoph._ 233 E. Plato adopts the Spartan views
- about wrestling in the _Laws_.
-
- [46] Plato, _Laches_, 183 D, E.
-
- [47] Plato, _Theait_. 162 B and 169 B.
-
- [48] Xen. _Constit. of Lak._ v. 8.
-
- [49] Athen. xii. 550 d. Their dress and bedding was
- inspected at the same time.
-
- [50] Pausan. iii. 11. 2. βίδεος [bideos], Böckh, 1241, 1242;
- βίδυος [bidyos], 1254.
-
- [51] Aristot. _Pol._ viii. 4. 1.
-
- [52] Xen. _Constit. of Lak._ v. 9.
-
- [53] Herod. ix. 72.
-
- [54] Xen. _Constit. of Lak._ ii. 4.
-
- [55] Paus. iii. 14. 2.
-
- [56] Xen. _Constit. of Lak._ iv.
-
- [57] Hesychius, Φούαξιρ [Phouaxir].
-
- [58] Paus. iii. 16. 11.
-
- [59] Plut. _Lukourgos_, 18; Cicero, _Tusc. Disp._ v. 27.
-
- [60] Böckh, 1364.
-
- [61] Pindar, _Frag. Hyporch._ 8 Λάκαινα παρθένων ἀγέλα
- [Lakaina parthenôn agela].
-
- [62] Xen. _Constit. of Lak._ i. 4.
-
- [63] Cicero, _Tusc. Disp._ ii. 15.
-
- [64] Plut. _Lukourgos_, 14.
-
- [65] Whence they were called φαινομήριδες [phainomêrides].
- This chiton may be seen in the conventional statues of
- Artemis.
-
- [66] Theok. _Idyll_ 18. 23.
-
- [67] _Laws_, 806 A.
-
- [68] _Lusistrata_, l. 80 onwards. In the play Lampito is
- married. Aristophanes has either made a mistake or the
- gymnastics are meant to be in the past only.
-
- [69] The ὄρμος [ormos] dance. Compare the dance at the end
- of the _Lusistrata_, where “man stands by woman, and woman
- by man.”
-
- [70] Lucian, _Dancing_, 274.
-
- [71] Xen. _Hellen._ vi. 4. 16.
-
- [72] Xen. _Ag._ ii. 17.
-
- [73] Athen. 630 a.
-
- [74] Athen. 678 b.
-
- [75] Plato, _Laws_, 666 D.
-
- [76] _Laws_, 634-635.
-
- [77] Xen. _Constit. of Lak._ ix. 5.
-
- [78] Aristot. _Pol._ ii. 10. 8.
-
- [79] Additional revenues for the same objects were derived
- from the taxes paid by Perioikoi and serfs (Athen. 143 a,
- b).
-
- [80] Plato, _Laws_, 781 A.
-
- [81] Historians quoted by Athen. 143 e.
-
- [82] _Ibid._
-
- [83] Strabo, x. 4. 483 (on authority of Ephoros), and
- Herakleides Pont. iii. (who provide most of the details
- about Crete).
-
- [84] Aelian, _True History_, ii. 39.
-
- [85] Strabo, x. 4. 480.
-
- [86] Sosikrates (in Athen. 261 e), speaking of Phaistos.
-
- [87] Hesychius, ἀπάγελος [apagelos].
-
- [88] ἐκδύσια [ekdysia], Antoninus Liberalis, 18.
-
- [89] Mahaffy, p. 81; Grasberger, iii. 61.
-
- [90] Eustathius on _Il._ ix. 518.
-
- [91] Herakl. Pont. iii. 3.
-
- [92] Persaeus _ap._ Athen. 140 f.
-
- [93] Dicaearchus _ap._ Athen. 141 a.
-
- [94] Sphaerus _ap._ Athen. 141 c, d.; and Molpis, _ibid._
-
- [95] Polemon _ap._ Athen. 56 a, and 138-139.
-
- [96] Cp. the crèche temples in Plato’s _Laws_, 794 A.
-
- [97] Demetrius of Scepsis (_ap._ Athen. 141 e).
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-ATHENS AND THE REST OF HELLAS: GENERAL INTRODUCTION
-
-
-Laconia and Crete were mainly agricultural countries that had little
-concern with trade or manufactures. Their citizens comprised a landed
-aristocracy, supported by estates which were cultivated for them by a
-subject population; there was no necessity, therefore, for them to
-prepare their boys for any profession or trade, or even to instruct
-them in the principles of agriculture. The young Spartan or Cretan no
-more needed professional or technical instruction of any sort than the
-richer absentee Irish landlords of the present day. He could give the
-whole of his school-time, without any sacrifice of his financial
-prospects, to the training of his body and of his character.
-
-But the rest of Hellas was for the most part the scene of busy
-manufactures and extensive trade. It would be natural to expect that
-great commercial peoples, like the Athenians or the Ionians of Asia
-Minor, would have set great store by the commercial elements of
-education, and to assume that business methods and utilitarian
-branches of study would have occupied a large place in their schools.
-But this was very far from being the case. To a Hellene education
-meant the training of character and taste, and the symmetrical
-development of body, mind, and imagination. He would not have included
-under so honourable a name either any course of instruction in which
-the pupils mastered their future trade or profession, or any
-accumulation of knowledge undertaken with the object of making
-money. Consequently technical training of all sorts was excluded
-from Hellenic schools and passed over in silence by Hellenic
-educationalists. Information concerning it must be pieced together
-from stray facts and casual allusions, and the whole idea of
-“utilitarian” instruction, in the modern sense of the word, must be
-carefully put aside during any consideration of Hellenic schools.
-
-For the Hellenes as a nation regarded all forms of handicraft as
-_bourgeois_ (βάναυσος [banausos]) and contemptible. Herodotos says
-that they derived this view from the surrounding peoples, who all held
-it.[98] To do anything in order to extract money from some one else
-was, in their opinion, vulgar and ungentlemanly. The lyric poets and
-the Sophists were alike blamed for taking fees. The cheapness and
-abundance of serf- or slave-labour made it possible for a large
-proportion of the free population to live in idleness, and devote
-their time to the development of the body by physical exercises, of
-the mind by perpetual discussions, and of the imagination by art and
-music. Citizenship required leisure, in the days before representative
-government came into vogue. It was owing to this principle that the
-Athenian received pay for a day’s attendance in the Law Courts or the
-Assembly, for by this means the poorest citizen obtained an artificial
-leisure for the performance of his duties. Otherwise true citizenship
-was impossible. Plato regards a tradesman as unfit to be an acting
-citizen.[99] Aristotle rejects as unworthy of a free man all trades
-which interfere with bodily development or take time which ought to be
-devoted to mental improvement.[100] Xenophon explains the reason of
-this attitude. The discredit which attaches to the _bourgeois_
-occupations is quite natural; for they ruin the physical condition of
-those who practise them, compelling them to sit down and live in the
-shade, and in some cases to spend their day by the fire. The body thus
-becomes effeminate, and the character is weakened at the same time.
-Tradesmen, too, have less leisure for serving their friends and the
-State. In some communities, especially the most warlike, the citizens
-are not allowed to practise sedentary trades.[101] The owner of a
-factory or a farm worked by slave-labour was exempt from corrupting
-influences: it was only actual work which was degrading.
-
-A large number, however, from among the poorer classes were compelled
-to work with their own hands; so these, as well as the slaves,
-required technical instruction. Some indications survive as to the
-manner in which this was imparted. Trades were mostly hereditary; “the
-sons of the craftsmen learn their fathers’ trade, so far as their
-fathers and their friends of the same trade can teach it.”[102] But
-others might also learn. Xenophon mentions such cases. “When you
-apprentice a boy to a trade,” he says, “you draw up a statement of
-what you mean him to be taught,”[103] and the fees were not paid
-unless this agreement was carried out. The _Kleitophon_[104] mentions
-as the two functions of the builder or the doctor the practising of
-their profession and the teaching of pupils. The _Republic_[105] says:
-“If owing to poverty a craftsman is unable to provide the books and
-other requisites of his calling, his work will suffer, and his sons
-and any others whom he may be teaching will not learn their trade so
-well.” The teaching of building is mentioned in the _Gorgias_.[106] In
-the _Republic_[107] Plato states that the παῖδες [paides] of the
-potters――a word which will include both sons and apprentices――act as
-servants and look on for a long time before they are allowed to try
-their hands themselves at making pots. “To learn pot-making on a
-wine-jar” was a proverb for beginning with the most difficult part of
-a subject. The pupils of a doctor named Pittalos are mentioned in the
-_Acharnians_ of Aristophanes.[108] The comic poets of the early third
-century contain several references to cookery-schools. Sosipater makes
-one cook say that his pupils must learn astrology, architecture, and
-strategy before they come to him, just as Plato had exacted a
-preliminary knowledge of mathematics from his disciples. Euphron gives
-ten months as the minimum length of a course of cookery. Aristotle
-mentions a man at Syracuse who taught slaves how to wait at table, and
-perform their household duties: perhaps the play of Pherekrates[109]
-entitled _The Slave-Teacher_ may have dealt with a similar case. From
-these fragments a picture can be drawn of a regular system of
-apprenticeship by which the knowledge of the trades was handed down.
-Solon, wishing to encourage Athenian manufactures, had enacted that if
-a father did not have his son taught some trade, he could not legally
-demand to be supported in his old age.[110] But the general opinion of
-Hellas still maintained that “technical instruction and all teaching
-which aimed only at money-making was vulgar and did not deserve the
-name of education. True education aimed solely at virtue, making the
-child yearn to be a good citizen, skilled to rule and to obey.”[111]
-For all the gold on the earth and under it, according to Plato, could
-not pay the price of virtue, or deserve to be given in exchange for a
-man’s soul. Thus the Spartans and Cretans did not stand alone, but had
-the support of all Hellas, in banishing from their schools any idea of
-technical or professional instruction.
-
- * * * * *
-
-But in one notable point their idea of education differed from that
-which was prevalent in most of the Hellenic States. The regular course
-of education in Athens and in most Hellenic States was for boys
-alone: no girls need apply. The women lived in almost Oriental
-seclusion;[112] the duty of an Athenian mother was, according to
-Perikles,[113] to live so retired a life that her name should never be
-mentioned among the men either for praise or blame. Listen to the
-description which an Athenian country gentleman gives of his
-wife.[114] “What was she likely to know when I married her? Why, she
-was not yet fifteen when I introduced her to my house, and she had
-been brought up always under the strictest supervision; as far as
-could be managed, she had not been allowed to see anything, hear
-anything, or ask any questions. Don’t you think that it was all that
-could be expected of her, if she knew how to take raw wool and make it
-into a cloak, and had seen how wool-work is served out to
-handmaidens?” Sokrates, however, to whom this question is addressed,
-seems to think that she might have learnt “from her father and mother
-the duties which would belong to her in after life.” These, however,
-in this case her husband had to teach her. He explains to her that she
-must see that everything has a place to itself and is always put
-there; she must also give out the stores, teach the slaves their
-duties and nurse them when they are ill, and tend the young children.
-The summary of the explanation is that Heaven has appointed a fair
-division of labour between husband and wife: the wife manages
-everything indoors and the husband everything out of doors. A
-stay-at-home husband or a gad-about wife equally offend against
-respectability. As a rule, apparently, the women simply sat in the
-house, “like slaves,” as it seemed to the ordinary athletic Hellene.
-Xenophon’s model husband suggests that his wife should take exercise
-by walking about the house to see how the supplies were given out, to
-inspect the arrangements of the cupboards, and to watch the washing
-and the wringing-out of the clothes: this exercise will give her
-health and an appetite. But Xenophon was an admirer of Spartan customs
-and the athletic Spartan women: probably these ideas would not have
-occurred to the ordinary Athenian husband.
-
-Another picture may be quoted from Hellenic literature to show the
-extent of education which an ordinary woman received.[115] A certain
-Aristarchos comes to Sokrates in great distress. A number of female
-relatives, quite destitute, have been thrown upon his hands owing to
-various circumstances, and he must support them; but he has not the
-requisite means. Sokrates naturally suggests that he should make them
-work for their living. But they do not know how to, says Aristarchos.
-However, by dint of questioning, Sokrates elicits the fact that they
-can make men’s and women’s garments, and also pastry and bread. These,
-then, were apparently the accomplishments which an ordinary girl in
-Hellas, brought up without any idea of having to earn her own living,
-would acquire. Plato also mentions weaving and cooking as the
-provinces in which women excel,[116] and describes the women of Attika
-as “living indoors, managing the household and superintending the loom
-and wool-work generally.”[117]
-
-Thus the Athenian girl spent her time indoors, learning to be a
-regular “Hausfrau,” skilled in weaving, cooking, and household
-management. She had her special maid to wait on her,[118] as her
-brothers had their paidagogos. She would, as a rule, be married young,
-and would naturally be very shy after such an upbringing; the marriage
-was arranged between the bridegroom and the parents, and, owing to the
-seclusion of the women at Athens, love-matches were well-nigh
-impossible. The match was mainly a question of the dowry.
-Xenophon[119] gives a vivid picture of one of these girl-wives
-gradually “growing accustomed to her husband and becoming sufficiently
-tame to hold conversation with him.” To keep their beauty under such
-conditions they employed rouge and white, and high-heeled shoes. Such
-mothers would be quite incapable of giving any literary or musical
-education to their children; hence the boys went away to school as
-soon as possible. Their school-life usually began when they were about
-six years old, the exact age being left to the parents’ choice.[120]
-Before this, they learnt in the nursery the various current fables and
-ballads, and the national mythology.[121] “As soon as the child
-understands what is said, the nurse and the mother and the paidogogos,
-yes, and the father himself, strive with one another in improving its
-character, in every word and deed showing it what is just and what is
-unjust, what is beautiful and what is ugly, what is holy and what is
-unholy. It is always ‘Do this’ and ‘Don’t do that.’ If a child is
-disobedient, it is corrected with threats and blows.”[122] Besides
-this purely moral training there might, no doubt, be a certain amount
-of technical or of literary instruction at home,[123] and bits of
-poetry might be learnt. Up to this age boys and girls lived together.
-
-The sons of rich parents apparently went to school earliest: their
-poorer fellow-citizens went later.[124] This was natural. The poor
-could not keep their sons at school for a long time, for they wanted
-their services in the shop or on the farm, and the fees were a burden:
-so they did not send them till they were old enough to pick up
-instruction quickly. The rich, on the other hand, to whom money was no
-object, sent their boys to school at an early age, when they could do
-little more than look on, while their elders worked. Aristotle
-commends this custom, and imposes two years of such “playing at
-school” upon the boys of his ideal State.[125]
-
-The ordinary system of primary education at Athens consisted of three
-parts, presided over respectively by the “grammatistes,”
-“kitharistes,” and “paidotribes.”[126] The grammatistes taught
-reading, writing, and some arithmetic, and made his pupils read and
-learn by heart the great poets, Homer and Hesiod and others. The
-kitharistes taught the boys how to play the seven-stringed lyre and
-sing to it the works of the lyric poets, which they would incidentally
-have to learn. The paidotribes presided over their physical
-development in a scientific way; he taught them wrestling, boxing, the
-pankration, running, jumping, throwing the diskos and javelin, and
-various other exercises; his school-room was the palaistra. To this
-triple system some boys added drawing and painting;[127] but this
-subject seems to have been an extra till late in the fourth century.
-Literature, music, and athletics composed the ordinary course at
-Athens.
-
-Which of the three branches of education began first? Probably they
-were all taught simultaneously. The order in which they are usually
-mentioned does not point to a fixed sequence. Letters were naturally
-mentioned first, because all citizens alike learned this subject.
-Gymnastics were put last, because, owing to the public gymnasia, these
-exercises were carried on long after the other schooling had ceased.
-Moreover, most of the recognised exercises of the palaistra were not
-taught to small boys; from the nature of the exercises and from the
-pictures on the vases it may be deduced that the average boy did not
-learn them till his twelfth year at the earliest. But physical
-training of an easier sort of course commenced much earlier, and boys
-seem to have attended a palaistra from their sixth year onwards to
-receive it. Both Plato and Aristotle demand that it should begin
-several years before any intellectual instruction; and Plato, making
-athletics such as shooting and riding begin at six, defers letters
-till ten and lyre-playing till thirteen. Gymnastics would naturally
-occupy a part of the day for a healthy young Hellene during the whole
-time from his sixth year till manhood. It is thus that the _Charmides_
-mentions “quite tiny boys” as present in the palaistra, as well as
-older lads and young men.
-
-Lyre-playing may have been deferred, as a harder subject, till the boy
-had learned letters for several years; but the seven-stringed lyre,
-with the simple old Hellenic music, was probably not a very difficult
-instrument to master. The chief factor which determined the
-arrangement of subjects in an ordinary family was no doubt the
-paidagogos. If there was only one son, he could go to whatever school
-his parents pleased; but if there were several, elders and youngers
-had all to go to the same school at the same time, for there was only
-one paidagogos to a whole family as a rule, and he could never allow
-any of his charges to go out of his sight.
-
-That the three subjects were usually taught simultaneously may be
-inferred from a passage of Xenophon. “In every part of Hellas except
-Sparta,” he says, “those who claim to give their sons the best
-education, as soon as ever the child understands what is said to him,
-at once make one of their servants his paidagogos, and at once send
-him off to school to learn letters and music and the exercises of the
-Palaistra.”[128] The emphasis upon the word “at once” certainly
-implies that the three subjects began simultaneously.
-
-On the vases letters and music are seen being taught side by side in
-the same school; this was a convenient and natural arrangement.
-Writing-tablets and rulers are also seen suspended on the walls
-of music-schools and palaistrai, and lyres on the walls of
-letter-schools[129]; which suggests that the boys went from one
-building to another in the day, taking their property with them. Plato
-states that three years apiece was a reasonable time for learning
-letters and the lyre.[130] The eight years between six and fourteen,
-the ordinary time devoted at Athens in the fourth century to the
-primary triple course, would give space for these six years, with two
-years to spare for elaboration. Gymnastics are meant to go on during
-the whole period in Plato, and so do not require a special allowance
-of time to themselves.
-
-This system of primary education at Athens may reasonably be traced
-back to the beginning of the sixth century. Solon is credited with a
-regulation which made letters compulsory, and with certain moral
-enactments dealing with existing schools and palaistrai. The
-much-disputed popularisation of Homer at Athens by Peisistratos was
-probably connected with the growth of the Schools of Letters. Of the
-existence of music-schools at this date there is evidence from a
-sixth-century vase in the British Museum,[131] which represents a
-youth amusing himself with a dog, behind a seated man who is playing a
-lyre. This might not seem very conclusive in itself; but now compare
-it with the two “amphorai” of the fifth century,[132] which
-undoubtedly represent scenes in a music-school. The situation is
-almost identical; each alike shows the boy playing with the animal
-behind his master’s chair. Curiously enough, all three vases come from
-Kameiros in Rhodes, although they are of Athenian manufacture. Thus
-the music-school may also be traced back well into the sixth century,
-in company with the school of letters and the palaistra; and the
-antiquity of the system of Primary Education is thus established.
-
- [Illustration: PLATE I. A.
-
- THE FLUTE LESSON, THE WRITING LESSON (ABOVE A WRITING-ROLL, A FOLDED
- TABLET, A RULING SQUARE, ETC.)
-
- From the Kulix of Douris, now at Berlin (No. 2285).
- _Monumenti dell’ Instituto_, ix. Plate 54.]
-
- [Illustration: PLATE I. B.
-
- THE LYRE LESSON, AND THE POETRY LESSON (ABOVE IS AN ORNAMENTAL
- MANUSCRIPT BASKET)
-
- From a Kulix by Douris, now in Berlin (No. 2285).
- _Monumenti dell’ Instituto_, ix. Plate 54.]
-
-In earlier days this primary course had no doubt sometimes lasted till
-the boy was eighteen: but towards the end of the fifth century a
-secondary stage of education arose, occupying the years immediately
-preceding eighteen. This secondary stage is recognised in the
-pseudo-Platonic _Axiochos_ and in the fragment of Teles quoted by
-Stobaeus. More important evidence is supplied by Plato. In the
-_Republic_ he assigns an elaborate system of mathematics to the age
-just before ἐφηβεία [ephêbeia], which he sets at seventeen or
-eighteen, the natural age varying with the individual, while the legal
-age remained fixed.
-
-When did this Secondary Education begin? Aristotle, counting back from
-ἐφηβεία [ephêbeia], assigns three years to it.[133] He has just
-commended the arrangement of education, not on hard and fast lines,
-but in accordance with the natural growth of the individual: so he
-must mean his ἐφηβεία [ephêbeia] to vary from seventeen to
-eighteen.[134] Thus he puts the beginning of secondary education at
-fourteen or fifteen, the average age of ἥβη [hêbê] in Hellas, as in
-Rome. From ἥβη [hêbê] till twenty-one the young Athenian was a
-μειράκιον [meirakion]. Thus in point of age the παῖς [pais] of the
-primary schools corresponds to the Roman “impubes,” and the μειράκιον
-[meirakion] to the “adolescens”; but μειράκιον [meirakion] and παῖς
-[pais] are used very loosely, and the former word is often replaced by
-νεανίσκος [neaniskos]. We shall, as a rule, call the pupils of the
-primary schools boys, and those of the secondary lads.
-
-Fourteen did not, however, represent an exact point at which it was
-compulsory to leave the primary school. Sons of the poor left earlier;
-rich or unoccupied Athenians might remain later: Sokrates even
-attended a lyre-school among the boys when he was middle-aged. The
-primary schoolmasters started advanced classes in astronomy and
-mathematics to suit elder pupils.[135] In the palaistrai there were
-separate classes of boys and lads, who were only supposed to meet on
-feast-days;[136] in the _Charmides_, however, grown men, lads, boys,
-and quite tiny boys are all exercising together.
-
-Many lads, especially in earlier times, did not attend the schools at
-all, but gave their time to gymnastics and whatever else they
-pleased.[137] Xenophon relates this as one of the demerits of the
-Athenian system.[138]
-
-The mental attainments of a lad who is apparently but little over
-fourteen are sketched in Plato’s _Lusis_. The lad Lusis knows how to
-read and write, and how to string and play the lyre. He recognises a
-quotation from Homer, and has even come across the “prose treatises of
-the very wise, who say that like must always be friendly to like;
-these are the men who reason and write about the Universe and
-Nature.”[139]
-
-This secondary education, beginning soon after fourteen, was only for
-the rich: the poor could not afford to keep their sons away from the
-farm or trade any longer. It might be scattered over the whole of the
-next six or seven years; but there was a serious interruption, which
-usually terminated it. At eighteen the young Athenian became in the
-eye of the law an ephebos and was called out to undergo two years of
-military training. During this period of conscription it was no doubt
-possible, especially in the laxer days of the fourth century, to do
-some intellectual work; but Plato is probably only accepting the usual
-custom when he frees the epheboi of his State from all mental studies
-and makes them give their whole energies to military and gymnastic
-training. And when the ephebos returned to civil life, he was a full
-citizen and was hardly likely to return to school; he might attend an
-occasional lecture or so, but that was all.
-
-Thus secondary education usually occupied the years between fourteen
-and eighteen, although the latter limit was in no way definitely
-fixed, and the same subjects might be studied at any age. In earlier
-days no doubt lads spent their time in continuing their musical
-studies: primary education could be conducted in a more leisurely
-fashion when there was still little to be learnt, and the lyre may
-have been deferred till this age, as Plato in similar circumstances
-defers it in the _Laws_. But in the days of Perikles knowledge began
-to increase and boys had more to learn. So the lyre was crowded into
-the first period of education, and a new series of secondary subjects
-arose. It was these years which were usually devoted to the four
-years’ course which was customary in the school of Isokrates. Before
-this date the time was, as a rule, spent in attending the lectures of
-the wandering Sophists or in picking up a smattering of philosophy.
-Among the subjects which thus formed a part of secondary education
-were mathematics of various kinds, more advanced literary criticism, a
-certain amount of natural history and science, a knowledge of the laws
-and constitution of Athens, a small quantity of philosophy, ethical,
-political, and metaphysical, and above all, rhetoric. Plato in his
-_Republic_, developing this Athenian system of secondary education,
-assigns to the years immediately preceding eighteen the theory of
-numbers, geometry, plane and solid, kinetics and harmonics, and
-expressly excludes dialectic as more suitable to a later age;[140] in
-the _Laws_, prescribing for the whole population, not for a few
-selected intellects, he orders practical arithmetic, geometry,
-and enough astronomy to make the calendar intelligible. The
-pseudo-Platonic _Axiochos_[141] ascribes to Prodikos the statement
-that “when a child grows older, he endures the tyranny of
-mathematicians, teachers of tactics, and ‘critics.’” These last are
-the professors of that curious criticism of poetry which is found, for
-instance, in the _Protagoras_ as a subject of the lectures of that
-Sophist as well as of Hippias.
-
-At eighteen the young Athenian partially came of age. He then had to
-submit to a two years’ course of military training, of which the first
-year was spent in Athens and the second in the frontier forts and in
-camp. During this period he probably had little time for intellectual
-occupations. But when the military power of Athens collapsed under the
-Macedonian dominion, the military duties of the epheboi became
-voluntary, and their training was replaced by regular courses of
-philosophy and literature. The military system became a University,
-attended by a few young men of wealth and position and a good many
-foreigners. As the forerunner of the first University, the two years’
-training of the epheboi may fitly receive the name of Tertiary
-Education, in spite of the fact that till the third century it
-involved only military instruction.
-
-Thus we have Athenian education divided into three stages: Primary
-from six to fourteen, Secondary from fourteen to eighteen, and
-Tertiary from eighteen to twenty; while gymnastic training extended
-over the whole period.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Of these three stages the third alone was compulsory and provided by
-the State. The second was entirely voluntary, and only the richest and
-most leisured boys applied themselves to it. Gymnastics of some sort
-were rendered almost obligatory by the liability of every citizen to
-military and naval service at a moment’s notice; but they needed
-little encouragement. Of the primary subjects, letters were probably
-compulsory by law, and music was almost invariably taught. An old law,
-ascribed to Solon,[142] enacted that every boy should learn swimming
-and his letters; after which, the poorer might turn their attention to
-trade or farming, while the richer passed on to learn music, riding,
-gymnastics, hunting, and philosophy. In the _Kriton_ of Plato the
-personified Laws of Athens, recounting to Sokrates the many services
-which they had done him, mention that they had “charged his father to
-educate him in Music and Letters.”[143] But the Laws in Hellas include
-the customs, as well as the constitution, of a State. It was certainly
-customary for nearly every citizen at Athens to learn some music; but
-it was not compulsory. We meet no Athenian in literature who is
-ignorant of his letters; we meet several who know no music. In
-Aristophanes, Demosthenes and Nikias are on the lookout for the most
-vulgar and low-class man in Athens, in order that he may oust Kleon
-from popular favour, by outdoing him in vulgarity. They find a
-sausage-seller. But even this man knows his letters, though not very
-well.[144] Of music, however, he is ignorant, and he has never
-attended the lessons of a paidotribes,[145] though Kleon seems to
-expect him to have done so. Kleon, who is represented as an utter
-boor, is yet said to have attended a lyre-school.[146] In the
-_Theages_[147] literature and lyre-playing and athletics are mentioned
-as the ordinary education of a gentleman. In fiercely democratic
-Athens every parent was eager to bring up his sons as gentlemen, and
-no doubt sent them through the whole course if he could possibly
-afford it. But the State attitude towards education, as distinct from
-the voluntary customs of the citizens, may be summarised in the words
-of Sokrates to Alkibiades: “No one, so to speak, cares a straw how you
-or any other Athenian is brought up.”[148]
-
-The schoolmasters opened their schools as private enterprises, fixing
-for themselves the fees and the subjects taught. The parents chose
-what they thought a suitable school, according to their means and the
-subjects which they wished their sons to learn. Thus Sokrates says to
-his eldest son, Lamprokles,[149] “When boys seem old enough to learn
-anything, their parents teach them whatever they themselves know that
-is likely to be useful to them; subjects which they think others
-better qualified to teach they send them to school to learn, spending
-money upon this object.” This suggests that the poor may frequently
-have passed on their own knowledge of letters to their sons without
-the expense of a school. But all this was a private transaction
-between parent and teacher. The State interfered with the matter only
-so far as to impose certain moral regulations on the schools and the
-gymnasia, to fix the hours of opening and closing, and so forth, and
-to suggest that every boy should be taught his letters.
-
-The teaching of the elementary stages of Letters, that is, the three
-R’s, was, as will be shown later on, cheaply obtained, and was within
-the reach of the poorest. Music and athletics would naturally be more
-expensive, for they required much greater study and talents upon the
-part of their teachers. The State did take some steps to make these
-branches of education cheaper, and so throw them open to a larger
-number.
-
-Gymnasia and palaistrai were built at public expense,[150] that any
-one might go and exercise himself without charge. These buildings were
-also open to spectators, so that any one could acquire at any rate a
-rudimentary knowledge of boxing, wrestling, and the other branches of
-athletics, by watching his more proficient fellow-citizens practising
-them. The epheboi received instruction in athletic exercises at the
-cost of the State. But the children, so far as they received physical
-training in schools, must have received it in private palaistrai;
-their lessons are described as taking place “in the house of the
-paidotribes,” ἐν παιδοτρίβου [en paidotribou]――an idiom which always
-implies ownership or special rights; and the majority of palaistrai
-were private buildings, called by their owners’ names. Thus we hear of
-the palaistrai of Siburtios, of Taureas,[151] and so forth: Siburtios
-and Taureas were no doubt the paidotribai who taught there. In a later
-age, when the boys of different palaistrai ran torch races against one
-another, the palaistra of Timeas is victorious on two occasions, that
-of Antigenes once.[152]
-
-By the system of leitourgiai rich citizens were made chargeable for
-the expenses of the epheboi of their tribe who were training for the
-torch races. These races seem to have been the only branch of
-athletics which was thus endowed; however, they were numerous, even in
-the smaller country districts, so that many epheboi must have profited
-by this free training.[153] “Leitourgiai” also provided free
-instruction in chorus-dancing (which included singing as well as
-dancing) for such boys as were selected for competition. The rich
-“choregos” appointed for the year had to produce a chorus of boys
-belonging to his tribe for some festival, paying all the expenses of
-teaching and training them himself.[154] It is to this free school
-that the Solonic law refers when it mentions the “joint attendance of
-the boys and the dithyrambic choruses”; for it goes on to state that
-the ordinance with regard to this matter was that the “choregos”
-should be over forty.[155] In Demosthenes,[156] a certain Mantitheos,
-who had not been acknowledged by his father at the usual time,
-“attended school among the boys of the Hippothontid tribe to learn
-chorus-dancing”: had he been acknowledged, he would have gone to the
-Acamantid, his father’s tribe. No doubt, if the choregos was keen
-about gaining a victory, he would give a trial to more than the fifty
-boys required for a dithyrambic contest. In any case, provided that
-all the tribes competed, this one contest (and there were several in
-the course of a year) gave a free education to 500 boys. Xenophon
-notices that it was the “demos,” the poor majority, who mainly got the
-advantage of free training under gumnasiarchoi and choregoi:[157] the
-rich naturally preferred to send their boys to more select
-schools.[158]
-
-Thus the more elementary stages of letters alone were compulsory at
-Athens, but music and gymnastics were almost universally taught, and
-the cost of instruction in these subjects was reduced in various ways
-by State action: the greater part might be learned for nothing. But
-parents needed little compulsion or encouragement to get their
-children taught. So much did the Hellenes regard education as a
-necessity for their boys, that when the Athenians were driven from
-their homes by Xerxes, and their women and children crossed over to
-Troizen, the hospitable Troizenians provided their guests with
-schoolmasters, so that not even in such a crisis might the boys be
-forced to take a holiday.[159] And when Mitulene wished to punish her
-revolted allies in the most severe way possible, she prevented them
-from teaching their children letters and music.[160]
-
-Of State action with regard to education in Hellas elsewhere than in
-Sparta, Crete, and Athens, little is known. But the Chalcidian cities
-in Sicily and Italy are said to have provided literary education at
-public expense and under public supervision.[161] The law enacting
-this is ascribed to the great lawgiver, Charondas, and, although he is
-a somewhat shadowy figure,[162] there must have been some foundation
-for the story, at any rate at a later date. During the Macedonian
-period kings and other rich men often bequeathed large sums of money
-to their favourite cities, in order to endow the educational system.
-We hear of this happening in Teos and at Delphi: in these places the
-parents, if they paid any fees at all, cannot have paid much. But
-there is no authority for any such endowments during the period which
-we are considering.
-
- * * * * *
-
-But if education was neither enforced nor assisted to any considerable
-degree by the State, it was certainly encouraged by the prizes which
-were offered. Every city, and probably most villages, had local
-competitions annually, and in many cases more frequently still, in
-which some of the “events” were reserved for citizens, while others
-were open to all comers. There were separate prizes for different
-ages; the ordinary division was into boys and grown men, an
-intermediate class of “the beardless” being sometimes added. But in
-some Attic inscriptions the boys are divided into three groups, and in
-Chios the epheboi were so distributed.
-
-These competitions were no doubt largely athletic. But music was
-usually provided for as well, and in many places there were literary
-competitions also. At Athens the different φρατρίαι [phratriai] seem
-to have offered prizes annually on the Koureotis day of the Apatouria
-to the boys who recited best, the piece for recitation being chosen by
-each competitor. Kritias took part in the competition when ten years
-old.[163] From Teos we have a list of prizemen, belonging, it is true,
-to a later date; but it may be quoted, to give some idea of what the
-subjects might be.[164]
-
- _Senior Class_ (_by age_).
-
- For rhapsody, Zoïlos, son of Zoïlos.
- For reading, Zoïlos, son of Zoïlos.
-
- _Middle Class._
-
- For rhapsody, Metrodoros, son of Attalos.
- For reading, Dionusikles, son of Metrodoros.
- For general knowledge, Athenaios, son of Apollodoros.
- For painting, Dionusios, son of Dionusios.
-
- _Junior Class._
-
- For rhapsody, Herakles.
- For reading.
- For caligraphy.
- For torch race.
- For playing lyre with fingers.
- For playing lyre with plektron.
- For singing to lyre.
- For reciting tragic verse (tragedy).
- For reciting comedy.
- For reciting lyric verse.
-
-
-From Chios we have the following[165]:――
-
- When Hermesileos, Dinos, and Nikias were gumnasiarchoi, the
- following boys and epheboi were victorious in the competitions
- and offered libations to the Muses and Herakles from the
- sums which were given to them in accordance with the decree
- of the people, when Lusias was taster of the offerings:――
-
- For reading, Agathokles.
- For rhapsody, Miltiades.
- For playing lyre with fingers, Xenon.
- For playing lyre, Kleoites.
-
- _Long Distance Race_ (varied from 2¼ miles to about ¾ mile).
- Boys Asklepiades.
- Junior epheboi Dionusios.
- Middle ” Timokles.
- Senior ” Moschion.
- Men ” Aischrion.
-
- _Stadion_ (200 yards).
- Boys _Athenikon_.
- Junior epheboi Hestiaios.
- Middle ” _Apollonios_.
- Senior ” Artemon.
- Men ” Metrodoros.
-
- _Diaulos_ (400 yards).
- Boys _Athenikon_.
- Junior epheboi Hubristos.
- Middle ” Melantes.
- Senior ” _Apollonios_.
- Men ” Menis.
- (Apollonios seems to have been so
- good that, though a middle ephebos,
- he competed in and won the
- senior ephebos’ race here, unless
- there were two boys of the same
- name.)
-
- _Wrestling._
- Boys _Athenikon_.
- Junior epheboi Demetrios.
- Middle ” Moschos.
- Senior ” Theodotos.
- Men ” Apellas.
-
- _Boxing._
- Boys Herakleides.
- (The rest is wanting.)
-
- (Notice the three victories of the boy Athenikon.)
-
-At Thespiai in Boiotia[166] there were prizes for senior and junior
-boys in the various races, and in boxing, wrestling, pankration, and
-pentathlon, besides open prizes for poetry and music of all kinds.
-Attic inscriptions arrange the events thus[167]:――
-
- _Stadion._
- Junior Boys.
- Middle Boys.
- Senior Boys.
- Boys Open.
- Men.
-
- _Diaulos._
- Junior Boys.
- Middle Boys.
- Senior Boys.
- Boys Open.
- Men.
-
- _Fighting in Heavy Arms._
- Junior Boys.
- Middle Boys.
- Senior Boys.
- Epheboi.
-
-The Olympian and Pythian festivals, however, had only a single series
-of contests for boys:――
-
- _Olympia._
- Boys. Stadion (Pind. _Ol._ xiv.).
- Boxing (Pind. _Ol._ x., xi.).
- Wrestling (Pind. _Ol._ viii.).
- (only in 628 B.C.) Pentathlon.
- (not till 200 B.C.) Pankration.
-
- _Pythia._
- Boys. Long Distance Race.
- Diaulos (400 yards) (Pind. _Puth_. x.).
- Stadion (200 yards) (Pind. _Puth._ xi.).
- Boxing.
- Wrestling (Bacchul. xi.).
- Pankration (not till 346 B.C.).
-
-But at Nemea both pentathlon[168] and pankration[169] for boys had
-already been established by Pindar’s time, as well as the more usual
-contests.[170]
-
-How far individual schoolmasters, as distinct from the State, gave
-prizes to their pupils, is little known; an epigram in the _Anthology_
-supplies the only evidence, by narrating that “Konnaros received
-eighty knucklebones because he wrote beautifully, better than the
-other boys.”[171] But probably as a general rule the task of rewarding
-merit was left to the public contests.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Thus the State did much to encourage, if it did little to assist or
-enforce, education. With such splendid rewards before them, boys were
-probably quite eager to attend school, or at any rate the palaistra.
-As soon as they were old enough to go to school,[172] they were
-entrusted to an elderly slave,[173] who had to follow his master’s
-boys about wherever they went and never let them go out of his
-sight.[174] This was the paidagogos――a mixture of nurse, footman,
-chaperon, and tutor――who is so prominent a figure on the vases and in
-the literature of classical Hellas. There was only one for the family,
-so that all the boys had to go about together and to attend the same
-schools and the same palaistrai at the same time.[175] He waited on
-them in the house, carried their books or lyres to school, sat and
-watched them in the schoolroom, and kept a strict eye upon their
-manners and morality in the streets and the gymnasia. Thus, for
-instance, in Plato, Lusis and Menexenos have their paidagogoi in
-attendance at the palaistra, who come and force them away from the
-absorbing conversation of Sokrates, when it is time for them to go
-home.[176] On a vase these attendants may be seen sitting on stools
-behind their charges, in the schools of letters and music, with long
-and suggestive canes in their hands.[177] A careful parent would, of
-course, see that a slave who was to occupy so responsible a position
-was worthy of it: but great carelessness seems often to have been
-shown in this matter. The paidagogoi of Lusis and Menexenos, boys of
-rank and position, had a bad accent, and on a festival day, it is
-true, were slightly intoxicated.[178] Plutarch notices that in his
-time parents often selected for this office slaves who were of no use
-for any other purpose.[179] Xenophon, feeling the demerits of the
-Athenian custom, commends the Spartans, who entrust the boys not to
-slaves, but to public officials of the highest rank.[180] But in
-well-regulated households the paidagogos was often a most worthy and
-valuable servant. Sikinnos, who attended the children of Themistokles
-in this capacity, was entrusted by his master with the famous message
-to Xerxes, which brought on the battle of Salamis; he was afterwards
-rewarded with his freedom, the citizenship of Thespiai, and a
-substantial sum of money.[181] The custom of employing these
-male-nurses dated back to early times at Athens: for Solon made
-regulations about them.[182]
-
-Boys were entrusted to paidagogoi as soon as they went to school at
-six. This tutelage might last till the boy was eighteen[183] and came
-of age; but more frequently it stopped earlier. Xenophon,[184] in his
-wish to disparage everything not Spartan, declares that in all other
-States the boys were set free from paidagogoi and schoolmasters as
-soon as they became μειράκια [meirakia], _i.e._ at about fourteen or
-fifteen. The conjunction of schoolmasters suggests the explanation of
-the variations in age. When an elder brother ceased to attend school,
-and his younger brothers were still pursuing their studies, there
-being only one paidagogos, he had to be left unattended. But in cases
-where there was only one son, or where the eldest of several stayed on
-at school until he came of age, he would have the paidagogos to attend
-him until he was his own master.
-
-The life of such an attendant must have been an anxious one in many
-cases. Plato compares his relations towards his charges with the
-relations of an invalid towards his health: “He has to follow the
-disease wherever it leads, being unable to cure it, and he spends his
-life in perpetual anxiety with no time for anything else.”[185] With
-unruly boys of different ages, and consequently of different tastes
-and desires, the slave must have been often in a difficult position.
-He had, however, the right of inflicting corporal punishment.
-
-The chief object of the paidagogos was to safeguard the morals of his
-charges. Boys were expected to be as modest and quiet in their whole
-behaviour, and as carefully chaperoned, as young girls. Parents told
-the schoolmasters to bestow much more attention upon the boy’s
-behaviour than upon his letters and music.[186] This attitude was
-characteristic of Athens from the first. The school laws of Solon, as
-quoted by Aischines, deal wholly with morality. He gives the following
-account of them[187]:――
-
- “The old lawgivers stated expressly what sort of life the
- free boy ought to lead and how he ought to be brought up;
- they also dealt with the manners of lads and men of other
- ages.” “In the case of the schoolmasters, to whom we are
- compelled to entrust our children, although their livelihood
- depends upon their good character, and bad behaviour is
- ruinous to them, yet the lawgiver obviously distrusts them.
- For he expressly states, first, the hour at which the free
- boy ought to go to school; secondly, how many other boys are
- to be present in the school; and then at what hour he is to
- leave. He forbids the schoolmasters to open their schools
- and the paidotribai their palaistrai before sunrise, and
- orders them to close before sunset, being very suspicious of
- the empty streets and of the darkness. Then he dealt with
- the boys who attended schools, as to who they should be and
- of what ages; and with the official who is to oversee these
- matters. He dealt too with the regulation of the paidagogoi,
- and with the festival of the Muses in the schools and of
- Hermes in the palaistrai. Finally, he laid down regulations
- about the joint attendance of the boys and the round of
- dithyrambic dances; for he directed that the Choregos should
- be over forty.”
-
- “No one over the age of boyhood might enter while the boys
- were in school, except the son, brother, or son-in-law of
- the master: the penalty of infringing this regulation was
- death. At the festival of Hermes the person in charge of the
- gymnasium[188] was not to allow any one over age to
- accompany the boys in any way: unless he excluded such
- persons from the gymnasium, he was to come under the law of
- corrupting free boys.”
-
-It will be noticed that these regulations are entirely concerned with
-morality: they safeguard an existing system. They prescribe neither
-the methods nor the subjects of education; for with such matters the
-Athenian government did not interfere. But over the question of morals
-it becomes unexpectedly tyrannous, and makes the most minute
-regulations worthy of the strictest bureaucracy. It interfered on this
-point in other ways also. The solemn council on the Areiopagos had a
-special supervision over the young, from Solon’s time onward; this was
-partially taken away from it by Ephialtes and Perikles, but the
-_Axiochos_ shows that, though in abeyance, it continued to exist; in
-the middle of the fourth century, however, Isokrates laments that it
-had fallen into disuse.
-
-The _Axiochos_ also states that the ten Sophronistai, elected to guard
-the morals of the epheboi, exercised control over lads also. These
-officials probably took their rise in the days of Solon: the
-regulation that they must be over forty harmonises with the other
-enactments of those days; and, although they died out at the end of
-the fourth century, they were revived under the Roman Empire. Now it
-is most unlikely that the archaistic legislators of imperial times
-would have revived an office which had only existed during the closing
-decades of the fourth century. Solon is known to have appointed a
-magistracy specially to deal with the children;[189] and, if these
-magistrates were not the Sophronistai, all trace of his creation has
-been lost, which is most unlikely to have happened. So the
-Sophronistai probably date from early times. Their duty was a general
-supervision of the morals of the young; their chief function would be
-to prosecute, on behalf of the State, parents and schoolmasters who
-infringed Solon’s moral regulations. But such prosecutions would
-usually be undertaken by private individuals concerned in the case,
-and so this magistracy tended to become a sinecure. It may even have
-ceased to exist after the fall of the Areiopagos. But it seems to have
-revived under the restored democracy for a while (if the _Axiochos_
-belongs to Aischines the Sokratic), to sink again in the middle of the
-century. At the close of the century it revives once more with the
-changes in the ephebic system, and finally perishes when the epheboi
-became too few to need ten officers to supervise their morals. An
-account of the Sophronistai of this later period will be given in
-connection with the epheboi.
-
- [Illustration: PLATE II.
-
- THE FLUTE LESSON――THE BOY’S TURN
-
- _Wiener Vorlegeblätter_, Series C, Plate 4.
- From a Kulix by Hieron, now at Vienna.]
-
-The strategoi[190] exercised a superintendence over the epheboi during
-their two years’ training as recruits, as would naturally be expected.
-Late in the fourth century they appear also to have been connected
-with the local schools in Attica; an inscription at Eleusis, which
-Girard assigns to 320 B.C., thanks the strategos Derkulos for the
-diligence which he had shown in supervising the education of the
-children there.[191] Whether they exercised such functions in the days
-when their military duties were more important, is more than doubtful.
-But any Athenian magistrate could interest himself in the schools, no
-doubt, and intervene to check abuses.[192]
-
- * * * * *
-
-In the period of juvenile emancipation and increasing luxury and
-indulgence for children which marked the closing decades of the fifth
-century, it became customary for conservative thinkers to look back
-with longing, and no doubt idealising, eyes to the “good old times.”
-The sixth and early fifth centuries came, probably unjustly, to be
-regarded as the ideal age of education, when children learned
-obedience and morality, and were not pampered and depraved; when they
-were beautiful and healthy, not pale-faced, stunted, and
-over-educated.
-
-Listen to Aristophanes,[193] yearning for “the good old style of
-education, in the days when Justice still prevailed over Rhetoric, and
-good morals were still in fashion. Then children were seen and not
-heard; then the boys of each hamlet and ward walked in orderly
-procession along the roads on their way to the lyre-school,――no
-overcoats, though it snowed cats and dogs. Then, while they stood up
-square――no lounging――the master taught them a fine old patriotic song
-like ‘Pallas, city-sacker dread,’[194] or ‘A cry that echoes
-afar,’[195] set to a good old-fashioned tune. If any one tried any
-vulgar trills and twiddles and odes where the metre varies, such as
-Phrunis and Co. use nowadays, he got a tremendous thrashing for
-disrespect to the Muses.” While being taught by the paidotribes, too,
-they behaved modestly, and did not spend their time ogling their
-admirers. “At meals children were not allowed to grab up the dainties
-or giggle or cross their feet.” “This was the education which produced
-the heroes of Marathon.… This taught the boys to avoid the Agora, keep
-away from the Baths, be ashamed at what is disgraceful, be courteous
-to elders, honour their parents, and be an impersonation of
-Modesty――instead of running after ballet-girls. They passed their days
-in the gymnasia, keeping their bodies in good condition, not mouthing
-quibbles in the Agora. Each spent his time with some well-mannered lad
-of his own age, running races in the Akademeia under the sacred
-olives, amid a fragrance of smilax and leisure and white poplar,
-rejoicing in the springtide when plane-tree and elm whisper together.”
-All the voices of generations of boys, bound down to indoor studies
-when wood and field and river are calling them, the complaint of ages
-of fevered hurry and bustle, looking back with regret on the days of
-“leisure” and “springtide,” seem to echo in Aristophanes’ lament for
-the ways that were no more.
-
-“This education,” he goes on, “produced a good chest, sound
-complexion, broad shoulders, small tongue; the new style produces pale
-faces, small shoulders, narrow chest, and long tongue, and makes the
-boy confuse Honour with Dishonour: it fills the Baths, empties the
-Palaistra.”
-
-The next witness to be called is Isokrates. He is somewhat prejudiced
-by his dream of restoring the Areiopagos to its old power, but he is
-an educational expert and his evidence is supported by that of many
-others. In the days when the Areiopagos had the superintendence of
-morals, he says,[196] “the young did not spend their time in the
-gambling dens, and with flute-girls and company of that sort, as they
-do now, but they remained true to the manner of life which was laid
-down for them.… They avoided the Agora so much, that, if ever they
-were compelled to pass through it, they did so with obvious modesty
-and self-control. To contradict or insult an elder was at that time
-considered a worse offence than ill-treatment of parents is considered
-now. To eat or drink in a tavern was a thing that not even a
-self-respecting servant would think of doing then; for they practised
-good manners, not vulgarity.”
-
-Call Plato next.[197] “In a democratic state the schoolmaster is
-afraid of his pupils and flatters them, and the pupils despise both
-schoolmaster and paidagogos. The young expect the same treatment as
-the old, and contradict them and quarrel with them. In fact, seniors
-have to flatter their juniors, in order not to be thought morose old
-dotards.”
-
-The counts of the indictment are luxury, bad manners, contempt for
-authority, disrespect to elders, and a love for chatter in place of
-exercise. The old regime had strictly forbidden luxury. Warm baths had
-been regarded as unmanly, and were even coupled with drunkenness by
-Hermippos.[198] The boys had only worn a single garment, the
-sleeveless chiton, a custom which survived till late times in Sparta
-and Crete; but at Athens they began to wear the ἱμάτιον [himation] or
-overcoat as well. Xenophon, blaming parents “in the rest of Hellas”
-(_i.e._ elsewhere than in Sparta), says: “They make their boy’s feet
-soft by giving him shoes, and pamper his body with changes of clothes;
-they also allow him as much food as his stomach can contain.”[199]
-Children began to be the tyrants, not the slaves, of their households.
-They no longer rose from their seats when an elder entered the room;
-they contradicted their parents, chattered before company, gobbled
-up the dainties at table, and committed various offences against
-Hellenic tastes, such as crossing their legs. They tyrannised over
-the paidagogoi and schoolmasters. Alkibiades even smacked a
-literature-master. A similar change came over the position of children
-in England during the latter half of the nineteenth century. If Maria
-Edgeworth could have met a modern child, she would have uttered quite
-Aristophanic diatribes against the decay of good manners.
-
-With this change went a more serious matter, a change of tone. Whether
-the old days were as moral as the conservatives supposed, may be
-doubted; but the atmosphere of Periclean and Socratic Athens, as
-represented by all its literary lights, was certainly most unsuitable
-for the young. Perhaps general morality was no worse, but the
-immorality was no longer concealed from the children. The old laws
-which had excluded unsuitable company from the schools and palaistrai
-were neglected, and these educational buildings became the resort of
-all the fashionable loungers of Athens.
-
-The preference given to conversation over exercise was a feature of
-the age. In part, it was a preference for intellectual as against
-purely physical education. The free discussion with children of
-ethical subjects probably ceased with the death of Sokrates; this can
-hardly be regretted, if Plato’s evidence as to the nature of Socratic
-dialogues is to be believed. From the importance which Plato gives to
-gymnastics as a corrective to exclusive μουσική [mousikê] even in the
-education of his highly intellectual Philosopher-Kings, we may suspect
-that the revolt against excessive athletics at Athens, of which
-Euripides had been the leader, had gone too far, and that a reaction
-was needed. Certainly the Athenians do not distinguish themselves for
-pluck or energy in the fourth century: in Platonic phrase, the temper
-of their resolution had been melted away by their exclusive devotion
-to intellectual and artistic pursuits.
-
-Let me close this subject, however, with a more pleasing picture of
-that αἰδώς [aidôs] or modesty at which the older education had aimed.
-It is taken from the midst of that brilliant but corrupt Socratic
-Athens.[200] Young Autolukos had won the boys’ contest for the
-pankration at the great Panathenaic festival. As a treat, Kallias, a
-friend of his father, had taken him to the horse-races, and afterwards
-invited him out to dinner with his father Lukon: such a dignity was
-rarely accorded to an Athenian boy.
-
-The boy sits at table, while the grown men recline. Some one asked him
-what he was most proud of――“Your victory, I suppose?” He blushed and
-said, “No, I’m not.” Every one was delighted to hear his voice, for he
-had not said a word so far. “Of what then?” some one asked. “Of my
-father,” replied the boy, and cuddled up against him.
-
-These shy, blushing boys were a feature of the age. The stricter
-parents, knowing the dangers which surrounded their sons, tried to
-keep them entirely from any knowledge or experience of the world.
-
- * * * * *
-
-As far as can be discovered from the somewhat fragmentary evidence,
-the Athenian type of education was prevalent throughout the civilised
-Hellenic world, with the exception of Crete and Lakedaimon, which had
-systems of their own. Xenophon, in praising the Spartan system and
-contrasting it with that which was prevalent in neighbouring
-countries, ascribes to what he calls “the rest of Hellas” educational
-customs and arrangements exactly similar to those which are found to
-have existed at Athens. His statement is borne out by other evidence.
-Chios certainly had a School of Letters before 494 B.C.; for a
-building of this sort collapsed in that year, destroying all but one
-of the 120 pupils.[201] Boiotia, byword for stupidity, had schools
-even in the smaller towns. A small place like Mukalessos had more than
-one; for a detachment of wild Thracian mercenaries in the pay of
-Athens fell upon the town at daybreak one morning during the
-Peloponnesian War, and entering “the largest school in the place,”
-killed all the boys.[202] Arkadia had an equally bad reputation; yet,
-according to Polubios,[203] in every Arcadian town the boys were
-compelled by law to learn to sing. Troizen must have had schools in
-480, when she provided them for her Athenian guests. Aelian vouches
-for schools in Lesbos,[204] Pausanias[205] for a school of sixty boys
-in Astupalaia in 496 B.C. The poet Sophocles dined with a master of
-letters whose school was either in Eretria or Eruthrai.[206] The
-inscriptions show that before the third century there were flourishing
-schools in most of the islands.
-
-Gymnastic education must have gone on in every Hellenic city, for the
-athletic victors at the great games come from every part. Musical
-training too was required for the dancing and singing which were
-universal throughout Hellas; but how far the lyre was taught must
-remain doubtful. In Boiotia the flute replaced the lyre in the
-schools. But it may be taken for granted that letters, some sort of
-music, and gymnastics were taught in every part of civilised Hellas,
-with the possible exception that letters may not have been taught at
-Sparta.
-
-Secondary Education, as long as it was supplied by the Sophists,
-reached every village in the Hellenic world; later, it had a tendency
-to be confined to the large towns. The Tertiary system of military
-training and special gymnastics for the epheboi would seem, from the
-scanty evidence of the inscriptions, to have been well-nigh universal.
-
-I will now proceed to give a more detailed account of the several
-branches of this widespread educational system. As the evidence comes
-almost entirely from Athens, my description will deal in the main with
-Athenian education; but, as the same type prevailed throughout the
-greater part of Hellas, the description may be taken as applying to
-the other cities also.
-
-
- [98] Herod. ii. 167. Corinth was an exception.
-
- [99] Plato, _Laws_, 846 D.
-
- [100] Arist. _Pol._ viii. 2. 4.
-
- [101] Xen. _Econ._ iv. 3. Sitting was regarded as a slavish
- attitude, since the free citizen mostly stood or lay down.
- Xen. _Econ._ iv. 3.
-
- [102] Plato, _Protag._ 328 A.
-
- [103] Xen. _Revenues_, ii. 2.
-
- [104] Plato, _Kleitophon_, 409 B.
-
- [105] Plato, _Rep._ 421 E.
-
- [106] Plato, _Gorg._ 514 B.
-
- [107] Plato, _Rep._ 467 A.
-
- [108] Aristoph. _Acharn._ 1032.
-
- [109] The fifth-century comic poet.
-
- [110] Plutarch, _Solon_, 22.
-
- [111] Plato, _Laws_, 643 E.
-
- [112] Except possibly in Chios and Lokris, and of course in
- Sparta.
-
- [113] Thuc. ii. 45. 4.
-
- [114] Xen. _Econ._ vii. 5.
-
- [115] Xen. _Mem._ ii. 7.
-
- [116] Plato, _Rep._ 455 C.
-
- [117] Plato, _Laws_, 805 E.
-
- [118] As in Lusias, _ag. Diogeiton_, 32. 28.
-
- [119] In the _Econ._ vii. 10.
-
- [120] Thus the _Axiochos_ (366 D) puts seven years as the
- age at which grammatistai and paidotribai began. Plato
- (_Laws_, 794) says six; Aristotle (_Pol._ vii. 17) about
- five; Xenophon (_Constit. of Lak._ ii.) “as soon as the
- children begin to understand.”
-
- [121] Aesop was popular then, as now. This is the μουσική
- [mousikê] anterior to γυμναστική [gymnastikê], so keenly
- criticised in the _Republic_.
-
- [122] Plato, _Protag._ 325 C-E.
-
- [123] Xen. _Mem._ ii. 2. 6.
-
- [124] Plato, _Protag._ 326 C.
-
- [125] Aristotle, _Pol._ vii. 17. 7.
-
- [126] The three in this order in Plato, _Protag._ 312 B,
- 325-326; _Charmid_. 159 C; _Kleitoph_. 407 C; Xen. _Constit.
- of Lak._ ii. 1; Isok. _Antid._ 267. The first two in this
- order in _Charmid._ 160 A; _Lusis_, 209 B; inverted in
- _Euthud._ 276 A. Aristot. (_Pol._ viii. 3) gives γράμματα,
- γυμναστική, μουσική [grammata, gymnastikê, mousikê]. Plato
- in the _Laws_ 810 A makes κιθαριστική [kitharistikê] follow
- γραμματική [grammatikê]; Aristophanes mentions the
- paidotribes just after the κιθαριστής [kitharistês].
-
- [127] Aristot. _Pol._ viii. 3. 1.
-
- [128] Xen. _Constit. of Lak._ ii.
-
- [129] See Illustr. Plates I. A and I. B.
-
- [130] Plato, _Laws_, 810 A.
-
- [131] Vase B 192.
-
- [132] Vases E 171, 172; see Plates III. and IV.
-
- [133] Aristot. _Pol._ viii. 4. 9.
-
- [134] _Ibid._ viii. 1. 2.
-
- [135] [Plato] _Rivals_, 132 A.
-
- [136] Plato, _Lusis_, 206 D.
-
- [137] Plato, _Laches_, 179 A.
-
- [138] Xen. _Constit. of Lak._ iii.
-
- [139] Plato, _Lusis_, 214 B.
-
- [140] Rhetoric is, of course, banished from a Platonic
- state.
-
- [141] [Plato] _Axiochos_, 366 E.
-
- [142] See Petit, _Leges Atticae_, ii. 4, compiled with great
- ingenuity out of many authors. Hence the proverbs ὁ μήτε
- νεῖν μήτε γράμματα ἐπιστάμενος [ho mête nein mête grammata
- epistamenos], of utter dunce, and πρῶτον κολυμβᾶν δεύτερον
- δὲ γράμματα [prôton kolymban deuteron de grammata]. The
- spelling-riddles of the tragedians imply a whole nation
- interested in spelling.
-
- [143] Plato, _Kriton_, 50 D.
-
- [144] Aristophanes, _Knights_, 189.
-
- [145] _Ibid._ 1235-1239.
-
- [146] _Ibid._ 987-996.
-
- [147] [Plato] _Theages_, 122 E.
-
- [148] Plato, _Alkibiades_, i. 122 B. The Athenian State,
- however, from the time of Solon onwards, supported and
- educated at public expense the sons of those who fell in
- battle. The endowed systems in Teos and at Delphoi belong to
- the third century; it is impossible to say whether such
- existed earlier.
-
- [149] Xen. _Mem._ ii. 2. 6.
-
- [150] [Xen.] _Constit. of Athens_, ii. 10.
-
- [151] Plutarch, _Alkib._ 3; Plato, _Charmides_, 153 A.
-
- [152] _C.I.A._ ii. 1. 444, 445, 446.
-
- [153] See Excursus on γυμνιασιαρχοί [gymniasiarchoi].
-
- [154] He could, and had to, use compulsion in collecting
- boys. This suggests that a parent could always, if he
- wished, get this free education for his son.
-
- [155] This rule fell into abeyance.
-
- [156] Dem. _against Boiot._ 1001.
-
- [157] [Xen.] _Constit. of Athens_, i. 13.
-
- [158] On the strength of the passages quoted from the law,
- and from Demosthenes, and of Aristophanes, _Clouds_, 964,
- some have maintained a theory that the Athenian tribes
- provided free education in dancing, and perhaps in other
- subjects, to all free boys, exclusive of competitions. But
- the quotation in Aischines, except for the actual law, which
- is a later interpolation, certainly refers only to the
- choregoi, and the passage in Demosthenes is concerned only
- with chorus-dancing for competitions. In Aristophanes the
- boys of the same neighbourhood naturally attend the same
- school, that is all.
-
- [159] Plut. _Themist._ 10.
-
- [160] Ael. _Var. Hist._ vii. 15.
-
- [161] Diod. Sic. xii. 42.
-
- [162] Probably lived _circa_ 500 B.C.
-
- [163] Plato, _Tim._ 21 B.
-
- [164] Böckh, 3088.
-
- [165] _Ibid._ 2214. I have omitted patronymics.
-
- [166] _C.I.G. Boeot._ 1760-1766.
-
- [167] Böckh, 232, 245.
-
- [168] Pind. _Nem._ vii.
-
- [169] Bacchul. xiii., Pind. _Nem._ v.
-
- [170] Wrestling, Pind. _Nem._ iv., vi.
-
- [171] _Anthol._ ed. Jacobs, vi. 308.
-
- [172] Sometimes earlier. Plato, _Protag._ 325 C.
-
- [173] Elderly, as in the picture of Medeia and her children
- given in Smith’s _Smaller Classical Dictionary_ under
- “Medea,” and on Douris’ Kulix, Plates I. A and I. B (if
- those are paidagogoi), and on other vases.
-
- [174] So Fabius Cunctator was called Hannibal’s paidagogos,
- because he followed him about everywhere.
-
- [175] There is only one for Lusis and his brothers (Plato,
- _Lus._ 223 A), for Medeia’s two children (Eur. _Med._), for
- two boys in _Lusis_, 223 A, and for Themistocles’ children
- (Herod. viii. 75).
-
- [176] Plato, _Lus._ 208 C. He is referred to as ὅδε [hode],
- showing that he is present.
-
- [177] Illustr. Plates I. A and I. B. Perhaps only the
- walking-stick carried by all Athenians.
-
- [178] Plato, _Lus._ 223 A.
-
- [179] Plut. _Education of Boys_.
-
- [180] Xen. _Constit. of Lak._ ii. 2.
-
- [181] Herod. viii. 75.
-
- [182] Aischin. _ag. Timarch._ 35. 10.
-
- [183] In the guardian’s accounts given by Lusias, _ag.
- Diogeiton_, 32. 28, a paidagogos is paid for till the boy is
- eighteen; but there was a younger brother, for whom he may
- have been required, so the elder may have been free earlier.
- In Plautus (_Bacch._ 138) we find a paidogogos in attendance
- till his charge was twenty.
-
- [184] Xen. _Constit. of Lak._ iii. 1.
-
- [185] Plato, _Rep._ 406 A.
-
- [186] Plato, _Protag._ 325 D.
-
- [187] Aischin. _ag. Timarch._ 9.
-
- [188] γυμνασιαρχής [gymnasiarchês]. See Excursus on
- γυμνασιαρχοί [gymnasiarchoi]. This law was totally neglected
- in Socratic Athens. See Plato’s _Lusis_.
-
- [189] Aischin. _ag. Timarch._ 10. The word σωφρονιστής
- [sôphronistês], in a general sense, occurs three times in
- Thucydides.
-
- [190] Deinarchos, _ag. Philokles_, 15.
-
- [191] Girard, _L’Éducation Athénienne_, pp. 51, 52.
-
- [192] The Archon Eponumos had the control of orphans and
- probably intervened if their education was neglected.
-
- [193] Aristoph. _Clouds_, 960 ff.
-
- [194] By Lamprokles (476 B.C.).
-
- [195] By Kudides (? = Kudias. Smyth, _Melic Poets_, p. 347).
-
- [196] Isok. _Areiop._ 149 C, D.
-
- [197] Plato, _Rep._ 563 A.
-
- [198] _Floruit_ 432 B.C. (in Athen. 18 C).
-
- [199] Xen. _Constit. of Lak._ ii. 1.
-
- [200] Xen. _Banquet_, iii. 13.
-
- [201] Herod. vi. 27.
-
- [202] Thuc. vii. 29.
-
- [203] Pol. iv. 20. 7.
-
- [204] Ael. _Var. Hist._ 7. 15.
-
- [205] Pausan. vi. 9. 6.
-
- [206] Athen. 604 a-b.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-ATHENS AND THE REST OF HELLAS: PRIMARY EDUCATION
-
-
-We have seen that Primary Education in Hellas consisted of letters and
-music, with a contemporary training in gymnastics; to which triple
-course was added, late in the fourth century, drawing and painting.
-How the day was divided between mental and physical training is
-unknown――probably, like everything else, this varied with the taste of
-the individual――but the following sketch from Lucian,[207] although it
-belongs to a much later date, may perhaps give some idea of a
-schoolboy’s day:――
-
- “He gets up at dawn, washes the sleep from his eyes, and
- puts on his cloak. Then he goes out from his father’s house,
- with his eyes fixed upon the ground, not looking at any one
- who meets him. Behind him follow attendants and paidagogoi,
- bearing in their hands the implements of virtue,
- writing-tablets or books containing the great deeds of old,
- or, if he is going to a music-school, his well-tuned lyre.
-
- “When he has laboured diligently at intellectual studies,
- and his mind is sated with the benefits of the school
- curriculum, he exercises his body in liberal pursuits,
- riding or hurling the javelin or spear. Then the
- wrestling-school with its sleek, oiled pupils, labours under
- the mid-day sun, and sweats in the regular athletic
- contests. Then a bath, not too prolonged; then a meal, not
- too large, in view of afternoon school. For the
- schoolmasters are waiting for him again, and the books which
- openly or by allegory teach him who was a great hero, who
- was a lover of justice and purity. With the contemplation of
- such virtues he waters the garden of his young soul. When
- evening sets a limit to his work, he pays the necessary
- tribute to his stomach and retires to rest, to sleep sweetly
- after his busy day.”
-
-The school hours were naturally arranged to suit the times of Hellenic
-meals, for which the boys returned home. The ordinary arrangement was
-a light breakfast at daybreak, a solid meal at mid-day, and supper at
-sunset. So the schools opened at sunrise.[208] Solon enacted that they
-should not open earlier. They closed in time to allow the boys to
-return home to lunch,[209] opened again in the afternoon, and closed
-before sunset.[210] How many of the intermediate hours were spent in
-work,[211] and what intervals there were, is unknown. There was, of
-course, no weekly rest on Sundays; but festivals, which were whole
-holidays, were numerous throughout Hellas, and, in Alexandria at any
-rate, on the 7th and 20th of every month the schools were closed,
-these days being sacred to Apollo.[212] There were also special school
-festivals, such as that of the Muses, and holidays in commemoration of
-benefactors; thus Anaxagoras left a bequest to Klazomenai, on
-condition that the day of his death should be celebrated annually by a
-holiday in the schools.[213] It must also be remembered that one of
-the three branches of Primary Education in Hellas would be called play
-in England: an afternoon spent in running races, jumping, wrestling,
-or riding would not be regarded as work by an English schoolboy.
-Music, too, is usually learned during play-hours in an English school.
-Even Letters, when the elementary stage was past, meant reciting,
-reading, or learning by heart the literature of the boy’s own
-language, and most of it not stiff literature by any means, but such
-fascinating fairy-tales as are found in Homer. There is little trace
-of Hellenic boys creeping unwillingly to school: their lessons were
-made eminently attractive.
-
-Of the fees which were paid to schoolmasters little is known. An
-amusing passage in Lucian,[214] dealing with the under-world,
-describes those who had been kings or satraps upon earth as reduced in
-the future state “to beggary, and compelled by poverty either to sell
-kippers or to teach the elements of reading and writing.” From this it
-may be inferred that elementary schoolmasters did not make much money
-by their fees. This inference is supported by the fact that even the
-poorest Athenians managed to send their sons to such schools. Plato in
-the _Laws_ reserves the profession for foreigners, thus suggesting
-that it was neither well paid nor highly esteemed. To call a man a
-schoolmaster was almost an insult; Demosthenes, abusing Aischines,
-says, “You taught letters, I went to school.”[215] The weakness of the
-masters’ position may be seen too from the extreme contempt with which
-their pupils seem to have treated them. The boys bring their
-pets――cats and dogs and leopards――into school, and play with them
-under the master’s chair. Theophrastos,[216] in describing the
-characteristics of the mean man, says that “he does not send his
-children to school all the month of Anthesterion” (that is, from the
-middle of February to the middle of March) “on account of the number
-of feasts.” The school-bills were paid by the month, and, since boys
-did not go to school on the great festivals, and Anthesterion
-contained many such days, the mean parent thought he would not get his
-money’s worth for this particular month, and so withdrew his boys
-while it lasted.
-
-Mean parents also deducted from the fees in proportion, if their sons
-were absent from school owing to ill-health for a day or two;[217] but
-this was not usually done. The bills were paid on the 30th of each
-month.[218] Schoolmasters apparently had some difficulty in getting
-their bills paid at all; according to Demosthenes’ statement, his
-bills were never paid, owing to the fraudulent behaviour of his
-guardian Aphobos.[219]
-
-No doubt the fees varied according to the merits of the school, for
-the schools at Athens seem to have differed greatly. Demosthenes, when
-boasting of his career, in his speech _On the Crown_, says that he
-went as a boy to the _respectable_ schools;[220] the quality and
-quantity of the teaching must have been varied to suit the parent’s
-pocket. For the poor there would probably be schools where only the
-elements of reading and writing were taught. In the higher class of
-school these elements would be taught by under-masters, frequently
-slaves; but free citizens might also be reduced by poverty to take
-such a post. This may be seen from the case of the father of
-Aischines, the orator.[221] Impoverished and exiled like many
-democrats by the Thirty Tyrants, he returned with the Restoration a
-ruined man. To earn his living, he became an usher at the school of
-one Elpias, close to the Theseion, and taught letters: his son
-Aischines seems to have begun his life by assisting his father in this
-occupation. His opponent, Demosthenes, takes advantage of the contempt
-with which these ushers were regarded to declare that the father was a
-slave of Elpias,[222] “wearing big fetters and a collar,” and the son
-was employed in “grinding the ink and sponging the forms and sweeping
-out the schoolroom (παιδαγωγεῖον [paidagôgeion]), the work of a
-servant, not of a free boy.”
-
-No doubt letters and music were often taught at the same school, in
-different rooms. Such an arrangement would be natural and convenient.
-The vases suggest it, but their evidence is uncertain. The school
-buildings seem often to have been surrounded by playgrounds. A passage
-in Aelian[223] shows us the boys, just let out of school, playing at
-tug-of-war. No doubt in these places they played with their hoops and
-tops, and amused themselves with pick-a-back and the stone- and
-dice-games which corresponded to our marbles. In villages these
-playgrounds probably did duty as palaistrai.
-
-The headmaster of the school sat on a chair with a high back;
-under-masters and boys had stools without backs, but cushions were
-provided. For lessons in class there were benches.[224] There
-was a high reading-desk for recitations. Round the walls hung
-writing-tablets, rulers, and baskets or cases containing manuscript
-rolls labelled with the author’s name, composing the school library;
-the rolls might also hang by themselves.[225] Masters were expected to
-possess at any rate a copy of Homer――Alkibiades thrashed one who did
-not. Sometimes they emended their edition themselves.[226] In the
-music-schools hung lyres and flutes and flute-cases. The παιδαγωγειον
-[paidagôgeion] mentioned by Demosthenes may have been an anteroom
-where the paidagogoi sat, but more probably the word is only a
-rhetorical variant for “schoolroom.” There were often busts of the
-Muses round the walls,[227] which were also decorated with vases,
-serving for domestic purposes, and, perhaps, illustrating with their
-pictures the books which the boys were reading. At a later date, at
-any rate, a series of cartoons, illustrating scenes in the _Iliad_ and
-_Odyssey_, were sometimes hung upon the walls: the “Tabula Iliaca,”
-now in the Capitoline Museum, has been recognised as a fragment of
-such a series.
-
-The first stage was to learn to read and write. Instead of a slate,
-boys in Hellas had tablets of wax, usually made in two halves, so as
-to fold on a hinge in the middle, the waxen surfaces coming inwards
-and so being protected. Sometimes there were three pieces, forming a
-triptych, or even more. For pencil, they had an instrument with a
-sharp point at one end, suitable for making marks on the wax, and a
-flat surface at the other, which was used to erase what had been
-written, and so make the tablets ready for future use. These tablets
-are shown in the school-scenes on the fifth-century vases.[228] At a
-later period, when parchment and papyrus became more common, these
-materials were used in the schools. Lines could be ruled with a lump
-of lead, and writing done either with ink and a reed pen or with lead;
-for erasures a sponge was employed.
-
-The early stages of learning to write are described in the
-_Protagoras_ of Plato.[229] “When a boy is not yet clever at writing,
-the masters first draw lines, and then give him the tablet and make
-him write as the lines direct.” The passage has been variously
-interpreted. Some regard the master as merely writing a series of
-letters which the boy is to copy underneath. The word used in Greek
-for the master’s writing is ὑπογράψαντες [hypograpsantes], and it is
-significant that the word for a “copy” in this sense is a derivative
-of this word, ὑπογραμμός [hypogrammos]. Such a copy, corresponding to
-the phrases like “England exports engines” or “Germany grows grapes,”
-which are employed in English schools for this purpose, is
-extant.[230] It is a nonsense sentence designed to contain all the
-letters of the alphabet μάρπτε σφὶγξ κλὼψ ζβυχθηδόν [marpte sphinx
-klôps zbychthêdon]. If this rendering is correct, the master wrote a
-sentence of this sort on the tablets, and the boy copied it
-underneath. Others interpret the lines which the master draws on the
-tablet as parallel straight lines, within which the boy had to write.
-Just such a device is often employed in English copy-books. The word
-used for “lines,” γραμμαί [grammai], usually means “straight lines,”
-which supports this interpretation. But ὑπογραφή [hypographê], on the
-other hand, a derivative of ὑπογράφειν [hypographein], is used for
-irregular traces, _e.g._ a footstep,[231] and ὑπογράφειν
-[hypographein] itself is a technical term in Hellenic art for
-“sketching in” what is afterwards to be finished in detail.
-Consequently a third rendering of the passage makes the master draw a
-faint, rough outline of the various letters, and the boy has to go
-over them with his pen, marking the grooves in the wax deeper and
-filling in the details. For example, in England, the master might draw
-|·| and the boy go over the two vertical lines and draw in the other
-two, M. Thus all three interpretations are sensible and rest on good
-authority. But surely the master may be regarded as adopting all three
-processes, according to the intelligence of the pupils. For the
-beginner he would outline the whole letter, and leave him only the
-task of going over it again. Then he would gradually give less and
-less help, till the boy was capable of writing the letters with the
-assistance of the parallel lines alone. Finally these would be
-withdrawn, and the boy would be left to write his imitation of the
-copy without assistance. The phrase in Plato is purposely vague, and
-will include the whole of this process.
-
-The letters were written in lines horizontal and vertical, so that
-they fell beneath one another. No stops or accents were inserted, and
-no spaces were left between words. The writing-master probably ruled
-both the horizontal and the vertical lines on the tablet for his
-pupil. On the Vase of Douris,[232] an under-master is represented as
-writing with his pen on a wax tablet, while a boy stands in front of
-him. He is probably meant either to be writing a copy or else
-correcting his pupil’s exercise. Over his head hangs a ruler, for
-marking out the guiding lines on the tablet. Behind the boy sits a
-bearded man with a staff, who is probably the paidagogos. The boys in
-the class are clearly coming up one by one to receive their copies or
-have their exercises corrected, while the rest are doing their
-writing. It will be noticed that there is no desk or table: the
-Hellenes wrote with their tablets on their knees.
-
-As soon as the boy had acquired a certain facility in writing, he
-entered the dictation class. The master read out something, and the
-boys wrote it down.[233] At first, of course, very simple words would
-be dictated, and there would not be much to write. But, later on, the
-boys would write at his dictation passages of the poets and other
-authors. For this purpose, ink and parchment may sometimes have been
-employed: Aischines seems to have “ground ink”[234] for a
-writing-school. Various “elaborations in the way of speed and beauty”
-of writing seem to have been customary in the case of more advanced
-pupils.[235] Possibly they learnt to make flourishes and ornamental
-letters. Speed would naturally be taught, for it was usual to take
-notes at the lectures of Sophists and Philosophers, and speed is
-required for this purpose. This must have involved the use of the
-cursive letters, which otherwise were not needed, for the Hellene had
-not very much writing to do, unless he became a clerk to a public
-body.
-
-Learning to read must have been a difficult business in Hellas, for
-books were written in capitals at this time. There were no spaces
-between the words, and no stops were inserted. Thus, the reader had to
-exercise much ingenuity before he could arrive at the meaning of a
-sentence. Still more difficult for the boys to grasp was the Attic
-accent, upon which the masters set a great importance. So difficult
-was it, that few foreigners ever acquired it, and a born Athenian, if
-he went abroad for a few years, often lost the power of speaking with
-the Attic intonation. The first step in learning to read is to acquire
-the alphabet. The Hellenes, wishing, as usual, to make learning as
-easy as possible, seem to have put the alphabet into verse. A metrical
-alphabet, ascribed to Kallias, a contemporary of Perikles, is still
-extant, but in a mutilated form, which has been restored in several
-not very convincing ways. Probably it has been adapted to suit
-different alphabets, for there were several current in different parts
-of Hellas. The following is a conjectural restoration:――
-
- ἔστ’ ἄλφα, βῆτα, γάμμα, δέλτα τ’, εἶ τε, καί
- [est’ alpha, bêta, gamma, delta t’, ei te, kai]
- ζῆτ’, ἦτα, θῆτ’, ἴωτα, κάππα, λάβδα, μῦ,
- [zêt’, êta, thêt’, iôta, kappa, labda, mu,]
- νῦ, ξεῖ, τὸ οὖ, πεῖ, ῥῶ, τὸ σίγμα, ταῦ, τὸ ὖ,
- [nu, xei, to ou, pei, rhô, to sigma, tau, to u,]
- πάροντα φεῖ τε χεῖ τε τῷ ψεῖ εἰς τὸ ὦ.
- [paronta phei te chei te tô psei eis to ô.]
-
-This complete alphabet of twenty-four letters, which appears in modern
-Greek Grammars, was not adopted for official purposes at Athens till
-403 B.C., “but it is clear that it was in ordinary use at Athens
-considerably earlier.”[237]
-
-This metrical alphabet formed the prologue to what may be called a
-spelling-drama, in which the whole process of learning to spell was
-expressed either in iambic lines or in choral songs. Since its author,
-Kallias, is coupled with Strattis, the comic poet,[238] it may be
-inferred that the play was a comedy, not a tragedy; the chorus would
-then be twenty-four in number. Each member of the chorus represented
-one of the twenty-four letters. In the first choric song the letters
-were put together in pairs, in the fashion of a spelling class. The
-first strophé runs as follows:――
-
- Beta Alpha BA
- Beta Ei BĔ
- Beta Eta BĒ
- Beta Iota BI
- Beta Ou BŎ
- Beta U BU
- Beta O BŌ[239]
-
-In the corresponding antistrophé Gamma was similarly coupled with the
-seven vowels, and so on apparently through the alphabet. During the
-song, which was set to excellent music, the members of the chorus,
-dressed to represent the letters quite clearly, and no doubt posturing
-in the right attitude, would form themselves into the required pairs.
-Thus, during the first line Beta and Alpha would come together, during
-the second Beta and Ei, and so on. After this song came a lecture on
-the vowels, in iambic verse, the chorus being told to repeat them one
-by one after the speaker. There seems to have been a plot of some sort
-in this extraordinary drama, but the main interest was, no doubt, the
-spelling. Opportunities were also taken for describing the shapes of
-the letters, the audience having to guess what letter was intended.
-This kind of alphabetical puzzle seems to have caught the popular
-fancy at Athens, for Euripides, Agathon, and Theodektes all employed
-it. In each case the concealed word was “Theseus.”
-
-Euripides’ description, if it be his, may be rendered thus:――
-
- First, such a circle as is measured out
- By compasses, a clear mark in the midst.
- The second letter is two upright lines,
- Another joining them across their middles.
- The third is like a curl of hair. The fourth,
- One upright line and three crosswise infixed.
- The fifth is hard to tell: from several points
- Two lines run down to form one pedestal.
- The last is with the third identical.
-
-In the same spirit, Sophocles, in his satyric drama _Amphiaraos_,
-introduced an actor who represented the shapes of the letters by his
-dancing.[240] Periclean Athens seems to have taken a very keen
-interest in matters of spelling: the audience must all have known
-their letters, or such devices could never have become so popular.
-
-Kallias’ play is the ancestor of such books as _Reading without
-Tears_. His dramatic presentation of the process of spelling must have
-caught the imagination and impressed the memory of many Athenian boys.
-It may even be suspected that his method was adopted in enterprising
-schools, and spelling lessons were conducted to a tune, perhaps even
-accompanied by dancing.[241] The tunes of Kallias were highly praised,
-and were, no doubt, very different from the monotonous drone which
-announces to the outside world the presence of a Board School.
-
-To return to more prosaic methods. Plato gives an interesting
-sketch[242] of a reading class. “When boys have just learnt their
-letters, they recognise any of them readily enough in the shortest and
-easiest syllables, and are able to give a correct answer about them.
-But in the longer and more difficult syllables they are not certain,
-but form a wrong opinion and answer wrongly. Then the best way is to
-take them back to the syllables in which they recognise the same
-letters and then compare them with those in which they made mistakes,
-and, putting them side by side, show that in both combinations the
-same letters have the same meaning.”
-
-Take an English example. The master writes SCRAPE on the blackboard
-and asks the boys to tell him what letters it contains. The class fail
-to recognise the letters: the word is too long and difficult. The
-master then writes beside it consecutively APE, RAPE, CAPE, in all of
-which the boys recognise the letters correctly. Then CRAPE and SCRAP.
-From these he passes on to SCRAPE, which they now recognise by analogy
-from the words which they know already. “Finally, they learn always to
-give the same name to the same letter whenever it comes.”[243]
-
-The methods by which boys learn to spell are the same in all ages.
-“When boys come together to learn their letters, they are asked what
-letters there are in some word or other.”[244] A certain amount of
-mental arithmetic seems to have been included in this stage of
-spelling: the pupils were asked _how many_ letters there were in a
-word, as well as the order in which they were arranged.[245] But this
-will be discussed later.
-
-While the boys were still unable to read, and often afterwards owing
-to the comparative scarcity of books, the master dictated to them the
-poetry which he intended them to learn by heart, and they repeated it
-after him.
-
-The Kulix of Douris gives an interesting picture of either a reading
-or a repetition lesson.[246] On a high-backed chair sits an elderly
-master, holding a roll in his hand. On it is inscribed what is clearly
-meant to be an hexameter line from some epic poet, but Douris was not
-very well educated, and so the line is misspelt and will not scan. In
-front of the master stands a boy, behind whom sits an elderly man who
-is probably, as in the writing scene, a paidagogos. The master may be
-dictating the poem while the boy learns it by heart after him, or he
-may be hearing him say it. But very possibly the scene represents a
-reading-lesson. The attitudes of boy and master are not very
-convenient, if both are reading out of the same book; but this was
-unavoidable, for, owing to the canons of vase-painting, the figures
-could only be full-faced or in profile, and the front of the
-manuscript had to be turned in such a way as to be legible.
-
-On the walls of the school hang a manuscript rolled up and tied with a
-string, and an ornamental basket. These baskets were used as
-bookcases, to hold the manuscript rolls. They may sometimes be seen on
-vases suspended over the heads of reading figures, as in the British
-Museum vase,[247] which represents a woman reading a scroll. The
-paidagogos, we may notice, is revealing his humble origin by crossing
-his feet, a serious offence against good manners in Hellas.
-
-“When the boys knew their letters and were beginning to understand
-what was written, the masters put beside them on the benches the works
-of good poets for them to read, and made them learn them by heart.
-They chose for this purpose poets that contained many moral precepts,
-and narratives and praises of the heroes of old, in order that the boy
-might admire them and imitate them and desire to become such a man
-himself.”[248] It is noteworthy that Hellenic boys began at once with
-the very best literature to be found in their language: there was no
-preliminary course of childish tales. Grammar, when invented, was
-taught at a later stage: the boys plunged straight into literature.
-
-The schoolmasters at Athens differed as to which was the best way of
-introducing boys to their national literature. The great majority held
-that a properly educated boy ought to be saturated in all poetry,
-comic and serious, hearing much of it in the reading class, and
-learning much of it――in fact, whole poets――by heart.[249] A minority
-would pick out the leading passages,[250] the “purple patches,” and
-certain whole speeches,[251] and put them together and have them
-committed to memory. Plato argued in favour of expurgated editions of
-passages carefully selected according to a very strict standard, since
-much in literature was good and much bad.[252]
-
-Homer, of course, played the largest part in these literary studies;
-from early times “he was given an honourable place in the teaching of
-the young.”[253] Vast quantities of the _Iliad_ and _Odyssey_ were
-learnt by heart. Nikeratos, in Xenophon,[254] says: “My father,
-wishing me to grow up into a good man, made me learn all the lines of
-Homer; and now I can repeat the whole of the _Iliad_ and _Odyssey_
-from memory.” Such prodigious feats were, no doubt, assisted by the
-rhapsodes, who could be heard at Athens declaiming Homer “nearly every
-day.”[255] The Hellenes did not let their greatest poet lie neglected,
-to be “revived” at long intervals. Homer was supposed to teach
-everything, especially soldiering and good morals. “I suppose you
-know,” continues Nikeratos,[256] “that Homer, the wisest of men, has
-written about all human matters. So whoever of you wishes to excel as
-a householder or public speaker or general, or desires to become like
-Achilles or Aias or Nestor or Odusseus, let him come to me.” Then he
-proceeds to show how, for example, the poet gives full directions
-about the proper way to drive a chariot in a race. Aristophanes[257]
-makes the shade of Aeschylus say, “Whence did divine Homer win his
-honour and renown, save from this, that he taught drill, courage, the
-arming of troops? Many a man of valour he trained, and our own dead
-hero, Lamachos. I took my print from him, and represented many deeds
-of valour done by a Patroklos or lion-hearted Teukros, to rouse my
-countrymen to model themselves upon such men, when they heard the
-trumpet sound.”
-
-The great poet does not seem to have been taught pedantically; the
-attention of the boys was not concentrated simply on the difficulties
-of the Homeric vocabulary. In fact, probably they were little troubled
-with such points; the sense, the rhythm, and the beauty of the
-original do not depend upon an exact understanding of every word, as
-many a modern reader has discovered. In a fragment of Aristophanes,[258]
-a father asks his son the meaning of some hard words in Homer, such as
-ἀμένηνα κάρηνα [amenêna karêna] and κόρυμβα [korymba]; the son is
-quite unable to translate them, at any rate when separated from their
-context, and can only retort by asking his father to interpret some
-archaic phrases in Solon’s laws. A later comic poet[259] introduced a
-cook who insisted on using Homeric language, just as a modern _chef_
-writes his _menu_ in French; the man who has hired him is ludicrously
-unable to understand his phrases, and has to go in search of a
-commentary.
-
-Explanations and interpretations of supposed moral allegories in
-Homer, and lessons drawn from a close study of his characters, were
-very popular in Hellas, and no doubt figured in the schools.
-
-If Homer occupied the first place in literary education, other leading
-authors were not neglected. All the great poets were made useful.
-“Orpheus taught ceremonial rites and abstinence from bloodshed, and
-Mousaios medicine and oracles, and Hesiod the tillage of land, the
-seasons of fruits and ploughing.”[260] Hesiod probably served more as
-a theological handbook than as a manual of agriculture; the moral
-precepts to Perses in the _Works and Days_ probably also found favour
-with schoolmasters. The fourth-century comic poet Alexis gives an
-interesting catalogue of a school library.[261] Besides Orpheus,
-Hesiod, and Homer, who have been mentioned already, there are
-Epicharmos, Choirilos, the author of an epic poem on the Persian war,
-and what is called vaguely “tragedy,” probably meaning a selection
-from the great tragedians. We can see from Plato’s attacks that
-Aeschylus and Euripides must have been important in the schools, and
-we know that Athenian gentlemen were expected to be able to recite
-them at dinner-parties, and must therefore have learnt them by heart.
-The vague words “tragedy” and “comedy” are similarly used of the
-recitations of the boys at Teos. Various editions of moral precepts
-were also popular. Among these were _The Precepts of Cheiron_, or
-Cheironeia, supposed to have been given by the wise Centaur to his
-pupil Achilles and put into verse by Hesiod; on a vase at Berlin three
-boys are seen reading this work with apparent interest. The extant
-lines of Theognis are often supposed to represent a school edition of
-the poet’s works, containing the more improving portions. The lyric
-poets were taught at the lyre-school, and I shall discuss them later.
-
-Alexis also mentions “all sorts of prose works” in the school library.
-The only one of these to which he gives a more definite name is a
-cookery-book by Simos. But that is only introduced for the sake of a
-joke; such a work would not, of course, figure in an Athenian school.
-Aesop may have been a prose work read in schools; it was considered
-the sign of an ignoramus “not to have thumbed Aesop,” or to be able to
-quote him.[262] Such moral works as Prodikos’ _Choice of Herakles_
-were probably popular in schools. The case of Lusis in Plato suggests
-that some of the old nature-philosophers may have been read. No doubt
-the school library varied according to the taste of the master, and
-his freedom of choice may have led to some curious selections. But on
-the whole prose works very rarely figured in the elementary schools,
-partly because they were usually too technical, still more because the
-artistic and literary sense of the Hellenes regarded poetry, if only
-because of its greater beauty and its imaginative value, as better for
-educational purposes than prose.
-
-It must be remembered that when boys recited Homer or Aeschylus or
-Euripides, they acted them, delivering even the narrative with a great
-deal of gesture, and dramatising the speeches as fully as they could.
-The almost daily recitations of the rhapsodes, and the frequent
-dramatic performances in the theatres, gave them plenty of examples of
-the way to act. The Hellenes were extremely sensitive and sympathetic:
-they were a nation of actors. The rhapsode Ion tells Plato that, when
-he recited Homer, his eyes watered and his hair stood on end. This may
-give the modern reader some idea of what his repetition-lesson meant
-to a boy at Athens. More may be gathered from Plato’s vehement
-denunciations of dramatisation in poetry intended for use in schools;
-he believed that this continuous acting exerted an evil influence upon
-character. But this question will be discussed elsewhere.
-
-The schoolrooms were used as the scene of lectures, to which grown-up
-men were invited; probably the lectures would be given to the boys at
-a different time. The wandering teacher, Hippias of Elis, meeting
-Sokrates one day, invited him to such a lecture, which, from its
-subject, was clearly meant mainly for the young.[263] After the fall
-of Troy, according to the story which Hippias invented for the
-occasion, Neoptolemos asked the wise old Nestor what was good and
-honourable conduct and what manner of life would cause a young man to
-win renown. Given this convenient opening, Nestor replied by
-suggesting many excellent rules of conduct. Hippias had delivered this
-lecture at Sparta, where it had won great applause. He now proposes,
-he says, “to deliver it the day after to-morrow in the schoolroom of
-Pheidostratos, and to impart much other valuable information at the
-same time, at the request of Eudikos son of Apemantos. Mind you come
-and bring any friends who will be capable of appreciating what I say.”
-No doubt it was a very excellent little sermon on the duties of life,
-closely analogous to Prodikos’ famous _Choice of Herakles_, and most
-improving for the pupils of Pheidostratos, if they were allowed to
-attend.
-
-One charming picture of two Athenian school friends,[264] in their
-sleeveless tunics, is extant. “I saw you, Sokrates,” says a guest at a
-dinner-party, “when you and Kritoboulos at the School of Letters were
-both looking for something in the same book, putting your head against
-his, and your bare shoulder against his shoulder.”
-
-It is also recorded that the Athenians were great hands at
-nicknames:[265] it may be inferred that this peculiarity extended also
-to their schoolboys.
-
-A vivid picture of school life has recently come to light in the third
-Mime of Herondas. It belongs to the Alexandrian period in point of
-date, but many of its details will, no doubt, suit the Athenian
-schools just as well; it is, however, quite inconceivable that gags
-and fetters were used as punishments at Athens in the schools.
-
-A mother, Metrotimé, brings her truant boy, Kottalos, to his
-schoolmaster Lampriskos to receive a flogging.
-
- METROTIMÉ. Flog him, Lampriskos,[266]
- Across the shoulders, till his wicked soul
- Is all but out of him. He’s spent my all
- In playing odd and even: knucklebones
- Are nothing to him. Why, he hardly knows
- The door o’ the Letter School. And yet the thirtieth
- Comes round and I must pay――tears no excuse.
- His writing-tablet, which I take the trouble
- To wax anew each month, lies unregarded
- I’ the corner. If by chance he deigns to touch it,
- He scowls like Hades, then puts nothing right
- But smears it out and out. He doesn’t know
- A letter, till you scream it twenty times.
- The other day his father made him spell
- MARON; the rascal made it SIMON; dolt
- I thought myself to send him to a school:
- Ass-tending is his trade. Another time
- We set him to recite some childish piece;
- He sifts it out like water through a crack,
- “Apollo,” pause, then “hunter.”
-
-The poor mother goes on to say that it is useless to scold the boy;
-for, if she does, he promptly runs away from home to sponge upon his
-grandmother, or sits up on the roof out of the way, like an ape,
-breaking the tiles, which is expensive for his parents.
-
- Yet he knows
- The seventh and the twentieth of the month,
- Whole holidays, as if he read the stars.
- He lies awake o’ nights adreaming of them.
- But, so may yonder Muses prosper you,
- Give him in stripes no less than――――
- LAMPRISKOS. Right you are.
- Here, Euthias, Kokkalos, and Phillos, hoist him
- Upon your backs.[267] I like your goings on,
- My boy. I’ll teach you manners. Where’s my strap,
- The stinging cow’s-tail!
- KOTTALOS. By the Muses, Sir,
- Not with the stinger.
- LAMP. Then you shouldn’t be
- So naughty.
- KOTT. O, how many will you give me?
- LAMP. Your mother fixes that.
- KOTT. How many, mother?
- METR. As many as your wicked hide can bear.
- KOTT. Stop, that’s enough, stop.
- LAMP. You should stop your ways.
- KOTT. I’ll never do it more, I promise you.
- LAMP. Don’t talk so much, or else I’ll bring a gag.
- KOTT. I won’t talk, only do not kill me, please.
- LAMP. Let him down, boys.
- METR. No, leather him till sunset.
- LAMP. Why, he’s as mottled as a water-snake.
- METR. Well, when he’s done his reading, good or bad,
- Give him a trifle more, say twenty strokes.
- KOTT. Yah!
- METR. I’ll go home and get a pair of fetters.
- Our Lady Muses, whom he scorned, shall see
- Their scorner hobble here with shackled feet.
-
-The exact age at which arithmetic was taught to boys at Athens
-involves a somewhat complicated inquiry. The arrangements which Plato
-makes in the _Republic_ and _Laws_ defer this subject till the age of
-sixteen. In the _Laws_[268] he says: “It remains to discuss, first the
-question of Letters, and secondly that of the Lyre and practical
-arithmetic――by which I mean so much as is necessary for purposes of
-war and household management and the work of government.” His citizens
-will also require, he thinks, enough astronomy to make the calendar
-intelligible to them. In this passage he distinctly couples practical
-arithmetic with music; and when he proceeds to detail, he makes the
-study of the lyre last from thirteen to sixteen, and then deals with
-arithmetic, the weights and measures, and the astronomical calendar,
-studies which terminate with the seventeenth year. This course is
-designed for all the free boys in his State: it is to be noticed that
-it is eminently practical, elementary, and concrete. In the _Republic_
-he is educating a few picked boys: before they are eighteen they are
-to have gone through a course of abstract and theoretical mathematics,
-the Theory of Numbers, Plane and Solid Geometry, Kinetics and
-Harmonics. Thus he mentions two sorts of mathematics, the one
-practical and concrete, called by the Hellenes λογιστική
-[logistikê],[269] whose object is mainly mercantile, and the other
-theoretical and abstract, which they called ἀριθμητική [arithmêtikê].
-Both sorts are to be learned in the period next before the eighteenth
-year.
-
-But it must not be assumed that this was the case at Athens. The
-philosopher is dealing with an ideal State, where education can be
-arranged in the theoretically best way, not with the real Athens,
-where the boy might be called away to the counting-house or the farm
-at any moment, and many did not stay at school after they had once
-learned to read and write. Moreover Plato, as a good Pythagorean, saw
-a peculiar appropriateness in making numbers follow music, and his
-Dorian sympathies made him divide up education into clearly marked
-periods, in each of which only one subject was taught. This
-arrangement, I have already shown, did not find favour at Athens.
-
-His system must, then, be received with caution. It is inherently far
-more probable that the simpler, practical arithmetic would be taught
-at the elementary schools of letters, which all citizens, including
-future tradesmen and artisans, attended, not at some later date in a
-separate school. But can any evidence be found for such an
-arrangement? Yes, Plato himself in the _Laws_[270] declares that the
-future builder ought to play with toy bricks and learn weights and
-measurements when he is a child. His builder, at any rate, cannot wait
-to learn arithmetic till he is sixteen. Then, in the same work, he
-quotes the instance of Egypt, where “a very large number of children
-learn practical arithmetic _simultaneously with their letters_,” and
-he goes on to commend the methods by which it was taught. Now Egypt in
-the _Laws_ is represented as the home of ideal education, a sort of
-Utopia. Again, in Plato[271] Protagoras blames his brother Sophists
-for “leading their pupils _back_, much against their wish, and casting
-them _again_ into the sciences from which they have escaped, practical
-arithmetic and astronomy and geometry and music.” How could the
-Sophists[272] be described as “leading them back and casting them
-again” into studies from which they had escaped? Where had they learnt
-these subjects before they were fourteen? It could only have been at
-school. But what the Sophists taught must have been new to the boys,
-or they would not have paid to learn it. It was new, because the
-Sophists taught the advanced and theoretical stages, which appear in
-the _Republic_, and the elementary schoolmasters taught the simpler
-and concrete elements of arithmetic, weights and measures, and the
-calendar, described in the _Laws_, which were necessary to every
-Athenian citizen. From all this it may be assumed that the Athenian
-boys, like Plato’s Egyptian boys, learnt simple arithmetic, weights
-and measures, and perhaps the calendar, “simultaneously with their
-letters.”
-
-Now there are two passages in Xenophon which seem to suit this view.
-They are not conclusive in themselves, but they give a valuable hint.
-In the first[273] it is stated that any one who knows his letters
-could say _how many_ letters there are in “Sokrates,” and in what
-order they occur. In the second,[274] in the course of an argument,
-two illustrations are used, in close connection with one another. The
-passage runs:――“Take the case of Letters. Suppose some one asks you
-how many letters there are in ‘Sokrates,’ and which are they?… Or take
-the case of Numbers. Suppose some one asks what is twice five?” These
-two quotations certainly make simple counting a part of learning
-letters, with which study the second passage also closely connects the
-multiplication table. It would seem that it was part of a spelling
-lesson to answer such questions as “How many letters in ‘Sokrates’?”
-Answer, “Eight.” “Where does R come?” Answer, “Fourth.” It may be
-noticed also that the symbols of the numerals in ancient Hellas were,
-with one or two exceptions, identical with the current alphabet. The
-games with cubic dice and knucklebones, to which the boys were much
-addicted, must also have needed some arithmetical skill. The natural
-conclusion is that simple arithmetic, with, probably, the weights and
-measures, and the outlines of the calendar, were taught by the
-letter-master: the practice of music by the music-master: while the
-theory of numbers, of astronomy, and of music were taught by the
-Sophists to μειράκια [meirakia].
-
- Fives
- -------------------------------
- | | |
- | | | Thousands
- | O | |
- -------------------------------
- | | |
- | | | Hundreds
- | | O O O |
- -------------------------------
- | | |
- | | | Tens
- | O | O O|
- -------------------------------
- | | |
- | | | Units
- | O | O O O|
- -------------------------------
-
-Simple counting was done on the fingers. “Reckon on your fingers,”
-says a character in Aristophanes,[275] “not with pebbles.” A common
-word for counting was πεμπάζειν [pempazein], “to reckon on the five
-fingers”; the division of the month into three periods of ten days can
-be traced to the same custom. But by various devices it was possible
-to count up to very large numbers on the fingers. Pebbles were also
-employed to assist in arithmetic. In the case of complicated accounts
-a reckoning board (ἄβακος [abakos] or ἄβαξ [abax]) was used, on which
-the pebbles varied in value according to their position. Such boards
-go back to early days at Athens, for Solon compared the life of a
-courtier to a pebble upon them, since he was now worth much and now
-little.[276] A character in a fourth-century comedy[277] sends for an
-abacus and pebbles, in order that he may do his accounts. The pebbles
-were arranged in grooves, being worth one or ten or a hundred and so
-forth, according to the groove in which they were placed. If they were
-put on the left-hand side of the board, their value was multiplied by
-five.[278] The various games of πεσσοί [pessoi], which somewhat
-resembled chess, were played on a somewhat similar board to this, and
-these chess-boards were known as ἄβακες [abakes]. Now the art of
-playing with πεσσοί [pessoi] is more than once coupled by Plato with
-arithmetic or mathematics generally in such a way as to show that the
-game must have involved mathematical skill.[279] As was usual in
-Athens, instruction went hand in hand with amusement, and, in playing
-games, the boys learned arithmetic willingly. A similar value seems to
-have attached to the game of knucklebones, which the boys in the
-_Lusis_ are found playing during their whole holiday. Each boy carried
-a large basket of knucklebones, and the loser in each game paid so
-many of them over to the winner. The art of playing this game is also
-coupled with mathematics by Plato;[280] so it must at any rate have
-encouraged the study of arithmetic, in his opinion. In the school
-scene of the British Museum amphora, a little bag, usually supposed to
-contain knucklebones, is figured: so they may even have been used in
-schools for teaching arithmetic. In another school scene this bag is
-present with a lyre and ruler; so it was evidently part of the school
-furniture.
-
- [Illustration: PLATE III.
-
- MUSIC-SCHOOL SCENES
-
- From a Hudria in the British Museum (E 171).]
-
-After such revelations of Hellenic educational methods, it is natural
-to suppose that the ingenious devices by which the “Egyptians,”[281]
-according to Plato, “make simple arithmetic into a game” for their
-children, were really used in Attica. One of these devices[282] was as
-follows. The master took, say, sixty apples. First he divided them
-among two boys, who were made to count their share, thirty each; then
-among three boys, twenty each; then among four, fifteen each; then
-among five, twelve each; and then among six, ten each. This would
-teach the system of factors. Then, again, a real or imaginary
-competition in boxing or wrestling[283] was arranged, say in a class
-of nine. The boys would work out, by actual experiment, how many
-fights would be necessary, if each boy had to fight all the others one
-by one, and how many if a system of rounds and byes was introduced.
-This might even teach Permutations and Combinations.
-
-In another case a number of bowls, some containing mixed coins, gold,
-silver, and bronze, some all of one sort, would be handed round the
-class. The boys would have to count them, add and subtract them, and
-so on. Thus they would learn addition and subtraction of money, and
-would also gain a clear knowledge of the national coinage.
-
-Plato was immensely impressed with the educational value of
-Arithmetic. “Those who are born with a talent for it,” he says, “are
-quick at all learning; while even those who are slow at it, have their
-general intelligence much increased by studying it.”[284] “No branch
-of education is so valuable a preparation for household management and
-politics, and all arts and crafts, sciences and professions, as
-arithmetic; best of all, by some divine art, it arouses the dull and
-sleepy brain, and makes it studious, mindful, and sharp.”[285]
-
-The question of the more advanced stages of Mathematics, which were
-taught to older boys, may be left for the chapter on Secondary
-Education.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The chief and often the sole instrument taught in the music school was
-the seven-stringed lyre,[286] with a large sounding-board originally
-made of a tortoise’s shell.[287] It might be played either with the
-hand or else with the “plektron” or striker; the boy Lusis had learnt
-to do either.[288] The boys were also taught how to tighten and relax
-the strings by turning the pegs till the proper degree of tension was
-obtained. They brought their own lyre with them from home, the
-paidagogos carrying it behind his charge. This was a wise regulation
-from the master’s point of view; for the boys seem to have usually
-ruined these instruments by their early efforts.[289] Like the piano,
-the lyre required great delicacy of touch and very agile fingers, and
-these qualities could only be obtained by continual practice.[290]
-
-As would naturally be expected, individual tuition was usual in the
-lyre-school; instrumental music cannot be learnt in class. The vases
-make this point quite clear. The master has a single boy seated in
-front of him; both hold lyres in their hands, to which they are
-singing, the words of the song being sometimes represented by a string
-of little dots. In Plate IV., on the left of this group, a boy is
-coming up to take his turn, lyre in hand, while behind him stands his
-paidagogos, leaning on a reading-desk and following his charge with
-his eyes. On the right is a boy just taking up his flute-case and
-preparing to depart, while another sits in the corner, wrapped in his
-cloak, waiting for his turn to take a lesson. In Plate III.,[291] the
-master is playing a barbitos and apparently singing, while the pupil
-plays the flute. On the left is a flute-master playing, and a pupil
-just leaving him, flute in hand. Another pupil, with a lyre, is
-waiting to take a lesson from the master in the centre, and is amusing
-himself meanwhile by playing with an animal that is probably a
-leopard,[291] like that which figures in Plate IV. Another pet, a dog,
-is howling in disgust at the music. On the right, a pupil with a flute
-is advancing to take a lesson from the flute-master in front of him.
-Behind him follows a young man, who may be an elder brother replacing
-the customary paidagogos for the nonce, or an admirer. In the
-background sits a small child, sucking his thumb, probably the younger
-brother of one of the pupils, who has come, in accordance with
-Aristotle’s advice, to look on, although still too young to learn.
-
- [Illustration: PLATE IV.
-
- IN A LYRE-SCHOOL
-
- From a Hudria in the British Museum (E 172).]
-
-As soon as his pupils knew how to play, the master taught them the
-works of the great lyric poets,[292] which were not taught in the
-school of letters. These were set to music, and the boys sang them and
-played the accompaniment. Every gentleman at Athens was expected to be
-able to sing and play in this manner when he went out to a
-dinner-party. The custom, however, began to become unfashionable
-during the Peloponnesian War. When old Strepsiades, in the
-_Clouds_,[293] asked Pheidippides to take the lyre and sing a song of
-Simonides, his new-fashioned son replies that playing the lyre was
-quite out of date, and singing over the wine was only fit for a
-slave-woman at the grindstone. Whether this state of feeling continued
-and whether it had a prejudicial effect on the music-schools cannot be
-decided. Sometimes the guests brought their boys to sing to the
-company: in the _Peace_ the son of the hero Lamachos is going to sing
-Homer, while the coward Kleonumos’ boy has a song of Archilochos
-ready. Alkaios and Anakreon were also favourites;[294] the lyric
-portions of Kratinos’ comedies, too, are mentioned as sung at
-banquets:[295] no doubt, the same was true of the other great
-comedians. As the iambic parts of Aeschylus and Euripides were recited
-at the dinner-table, it is natural to suppose that their songs were
-also sung. The aged Dikasts in the _Wasps_ sing the choruses from
-Phrunichos’ _Sidonians_. Old songs like Lamprokles’ “Pallas, dread
-sacker of cities” and Kudides’ “A cry that echoes afar” were popular
-in earlier times. No doubt there was plenty of variety in accordance
-with the master’s taste. At the music school, too, may have been
-taught the metrical version, set to music, of the Athenian laws, which
-was ascribed to Solon,[296] and that of the legislation of Charondas,
-which Athenian gentlemen sang over their wine.[297] Athenian boys were
-expected to know the laws by the time that they were epheboi, and may
-well have been taught them in this convenient and attractive way at
-the lyre-master’s. To know how to play the lyre became the mark of a
-liberal education, since every one learned letters, but the poorest
-did not enter the music-school. “He doesn’t know the way to play the
-lyre,” became a proverb for an uneducated person, who had not had so
-many opportunities in life as his wealthier fellow-citizens. So, as a
-plea for a defendant we find――
-
- He may have stolen. But acquit him, for
- He doesn’t know the way to play the lyre.[298]
-
-To this the Dikast retorts that he has not learnt the lyre either, so
-he must be forgiven if he is so stupid as to condemn the accused.[299]
-
-At the beginning of the fifth century the Hellenes were stimulated,
-according to Aristotle,[300] by their growing wealth and importance to
-make many educational experiments, especially in music. All manner of
-musical instruments were tried in the music-schools, but were rejected
-on trial, when the moral effects could be better appreciated. Among
-the instruments thus found wanting was the flute. At one time the
-flute became so popular at Athens that the majority of the free
-citizens could play it. But its moral effect proved to be
-unsatisfactory; it was the instrument which belonged to wild religious
-orgies, and it aroused that hysterical and almost lunatic
-excitement[301] which the Hellenes regarded as a useful medicine, when
-taken at long intervals of time, for giving an outlet to such feelings
-and working them off the system, in order that a long period of calm
-might follow. But such a medicine was most unsuitable to be the daily
-food of boys. The flute had two other disadvantages. It distorted the
-face sufficiently to horrify a sensitive Hellene.[302] It also
-prevented the use of the voice: the boys could not sing to it, as they
-sang to the lyre. So Athena, in the old legend, had been quite right
-in throwing the instrument away in disgust: it was only suitable for a
-Phrygian Satyr, for it made no appeal to the intellect, but only to
-the passions.[303]
-
-This is Aristotle’s account. It may be objected that the vases which
-represent scenes in the music-schools show the flute and the lyre
-being taught side by side, and apparently equally popular. But these
-vases can mostly be traced more or less certainly to the first half of
-the fifth century, and so they bear out Aristotle’s statement.
-Moreover, the flute did not, of course, die out in Hellas by any
-means; it only became an extra, instead of the regular instrument in
-schools. The most notable Athenians, Kallias and Kritias and
-Alkibiades, are said to have played it.[304] It always remained
-popular at Thebes. But at Athens, in the banquets, while the guests
-usually played the lyre themselves, the flute was as a rule only
-played by professional flute-girls,[305] although on the vases the
-guests are sometimes found performing on this instrument also.[306]
-Probably the Athenian attitude may be summed up in the “ancient
-proverb”:[307]
-
- A flutist’s brains can never stay:
- He puffs his flute, they’re puffed away.
-
-It was usual to play on two flutes at the same time. Such a pair has
-been found,[308] together with a lyre, in a tomb at Athens. The flutes
-are somewhat over a foot in length, and have five holes on the upper
-and one on the lower side. Each has a separate mouthpiece. Besides
-this, flute-players sometimes wore a sort of leathern muzzle[309] over
-their mouths; but this does not appear in the schools. The pair of
-flutes were carried in a double case, made of some spotted skin; it
-had a pocket on one side, to hold the mouthpieces,[310] and a cord
-attached by which it could be hung up when not in use. The two flutes
-seem to have corresponded to treble and bass, “male” and “female” as
-Herodotos calls them. The treble was on the right, the bass on the
-left.[311] Flutes could be set to different harmonies, apparently by
-some rearrangement of stops. In the case of the flute, as in the case
-of the lyre, individual tuition was the rule. First the master played
-an air, and then the boy had to repeat it, while the master
-criticised.[312] Or the master played the air on a barbitos and sang
-to it, while the pupil accompanied him on the flute. This method had
-two advantages. The master was able to play at the same time as the
-boy, and give him instruction while playing, which the flute prevented
-him from doing. The song, too, which he was enabled to sing obviated
-one of the chief disadvantages of the flute: for the Hellenes objected
-to instrumental music as meaningless, unless it was accompanied by
-words.
-
-There seem to have been music-schools scattered throughout Attica,
-besides those established in the capital: the description of the
-village boys marching off to the lyre-master’s in a snow-storm without
-overcoats has already been quoted. The names of a few masters are
-extant. Lampros taught Sophocles the poet.[313] Sokrates[314]
-recommends Nikias to send his son to the famous Damon, who “is not
-merely a first-class musician, but also just the man to be with boys
-like this.” But whether these musicians kept regular schools cannot be
-ascertained. Sokrates himself in his later years attended the
-music-school of Konnos, and learned among the boys. “I am disgracing
-Konnos the music-master,” he says, “who is still teaching me to play
-the lyre. The boys who are my schoolfellows laugh at me and call
-Konnos the ‘Greybeard teacher.’”[315] The same Konnos adopted the
-common but iniquitous custom of bestowing his chief attention on his
-more promising pupils, while neglecting the backward.[316]
-Aristophanes caricatures Kleon’s school-days as follows: “The boys who
-went to school with Kleon say he would often set his lyre to the
-Dorian (= Gift-ian) harmony alone. Finally, the lyre-master lost his
-temper and told the paidagogos to take him away, saying, “This boy
-can’t learn anything but the Briberian (Dorodokisti) mode.”[317]
-
-The attitude of the philosophers towards music will be discussed
-elsewhere. Plato’s view may be summed up in the words which he puts in
-the mouth of Protagoras the Sophist.[318] “The music-master makes
-rhythm and harmony familiar to the souls of the boys, and they become
-gentler and more refined, and having more rhythm and harmony in them,
-they become more efficient in speech and in action. The whole life of
-Man stands in need of good harmony and good rhythm.” Aristotle’s
-attitude is briefly this. “Music is neither a necessary nor a useful
-accomplishment in the sense in which Letters are useful, but it
-provides a noble and worthy means of occupying leisure-time.”[319]
-
- * * * * *
-
-Aristotle mentions that in his day some added drawing and painting to
-the three parts of the course.[320] It was not universal, like these,
-and it does not seem to have started till the fourth century. In the
-_Republic_ and _Laws_ Plato does not attack and criticise it among the
-other educational subjects; but it plays so prominent a part in the
-_Republic_ that it is obvious that the philosopher regarded it as a
-dangerous enemy to the views which he wished to spread. It is
-noticeable that the discussion of Art comes in as an after-thought, in
-Book X. May it not be inferred that when Plato wrote the earlier
-books, drawing and painting were not yet in vogue in the schools, but
-they became popular before he had finished his great work?
-
-In Periclean Athens the possibilities of artistic training had
-certainly existed. In the _Protagoras_,[321] as an instance in some
-argument, it is suggested that the lad Hippokrates might “go to this
-young fellow who has been in Athens of late, Zeuxippos of Heraklea.
-Every day that he was with him he would improve as an artist.” Earlier
-in the same dialogue Sokrates remarks that his friend might go to
-Polukleitos or Pheidias, and pay to be taught sculpture.[322] The
-large numbers of boys who became apprentices to the potters at Athens
-must have learned line-drawing and designing and painting from the
-earliest times. But art probably did not become a usual part of a
-liberal, as distinct from a technical, education till the middle of
-the fourth century.
-
-This date is fixed by a passage in Pliny.[323] According to him, its
-introduction was due to Pamphilos the Macedonian. At his instance,
-first at Sikuon, where he lived, and afterwards in the rest of Hellas,
-free boys were taught before everything painting on boxwood, and this
-art was included in the first rank of the liberal arts. Now Pamphilos’
-picture of the Herakleidai is mentioned in the _Ploutos_ of
-Aristophanes, which appeared in 388 B.C. Apelles, his pupil, began to
-come into prominence about 350: Pamphilos himself seems to have lived
-on till the close of the century. The introduction of painting into
-the schools at Sikuon may therefore be dated, roughly, about 360 B.C.,
-and from there the custom spread over Hellas. By 300 B.C. no doubt art
-had become a regular part of the educational curriculum; for the
-philosopher Teles,[324] who probably lived about that time, mentions
-the gymnastic trainer, the letter-master, the musician, and the
-painter as the four chief burdens of boys. A trace of the new
-art-schools, with their technical vocabulary, is found in the _Laws_,
-the work of Plato’s old age:[325] “paint in or shade off,” he says,
-“or whatever the artists’ boys call it.”
-
-Of the methods used in drawing and painting in Hellas little trace is
-left. Polugnotos and his contemporaries had produced idealised
-pictures, taking points from many beautiful men and women and uniting
-them to make one perfect man or woman. When Idealism gave way to
-Realism in Hellas, the change affected painting also. The artists
-tried to create a real illusion in their works, taking subjects like
-chairs or tables and making the spectator believe them to be
-real. They were helped by the developments of perspective and
-foreshortening, which were discovered at this time. It is against this
-exaggerated realism and the choice of homely subjects that Plato’s
-attack is directed: he hates such illusions as shams.[326] In the
-diatribes of the _Republic_ the possibility of idealised painting
-seems to be forgotten. Whether the boys in the art-schools also
-suffered by this change and were condemned to draw chairs and tables
-only cannot be decided.
-
-The pupils, of course, did not have paper to draw and paint upon, nor
-was canvas employed. Ordinarily they used white wood, boxwood for
-preference, owing to its smoothness. Lead or charcoal would serve for
-drawing; for erasures, instead of india-rubber a sponge was used.[327]
-They may, perhaps, have practised on their wax tablets. One process
-was σκιαγραφία [skiagraphia] “shadow-drawing,” which produced rough
-sketches in light and shade: these seem to have been only intelligible
-when considered from a distance. Plato regarded them with distrust, as
-a sort of conjuring.[328]
-
-In ordinary painting, which might be either watercolour or
-encaustic,[329] the first thing was to sketch in the outline
-(ὑπογράφειν, περιγραφή [hypographein, perigraphê]); the artist then
-filled in (ἀπεργάζεσθαι [apergazesthai]) the picture with his colours,
-with perpetual glances, now to the original, now to the copy, mixing
-his paints the while. Beginners would, no doubt, rub out (ἐξαλείφειν
-[exaleiphein]) frequently, and paint in again.
-
-Aristotle,[330] in discussing artistic education, notices that it gave
-boys a good eye for appreciating art, and enabled them to exercise
-good taste in buying furniture, pottery, and other household
-requisites, which, to judge from the scanty relics, must have been
-masterpieces of beauty in the house of a cultivated Athenian. But
-still more important, it gave them “an eye for bodily beauty”:[331]
-which suggests that the human form, especially its proportions, formed
-the chief study of the art-schools. Proportion was the essence of
-Hellenic art; the great sculptors, as is well known, spent much time
-in drawing up a canon of perfect proportions for the human body. The
-boys may well have used their companions in the palaistrai for models,
-and the canons of physical proportion which they were taught by the
-art-master would serve to stimulate them with a desire to attain to
-such a perfection of body by their own athletic exercises.
-
-
- [207] Lucian, _Loves_, 44-45.
-
- [208] Aischin. _ag. Timarch._ 12; Thuc. vii. 29; Plato,
- _Laws_.
-
- [209] Lucian, _Parasite_, 61.
-
- [210] Aischin. _ag. Timarch._ 12.
-
- [211] _Anthol. Palat._ x. 43 has been quoted as evidence
- that six hours’ work a day was a maximum. The epigram runs:
- “Six hours suffice for work; rest of the day, expressed in
- numerals, says ζῆθι [zêthi], ‘enjoy life.’” But the point is
- the joke that the numerals for 7, 8, 9, 10, the later hours
- of the day, are ζʹ [z´], ηʹ [ê´], θʹ [th´], ιʹ [i´], which
- spells ζῆθι [zêthi]. The epigram does not mean to state a
- fact; the joke is its only _raison d’être_. In any case
- schools are not mentioned.
-
- [212] Herondas, _Schoolmaster_ (iii.) 53.
-
- [213] Mahaffy, _Greek Education_, p. 54.
-
- [214] Lucian, _Nekuom._ 17.
-
- [215] Dem. _de Cor._ 315.
-
- [216] Theoph. _Char._ 30.
-
- [217] _Ibid._ 30.
-
- [218] Herondas, iii. 3.
-
- [219] Demos. _ag. Aphobos_, i. 828.
-
- [220] Demos. _Crown_, 312.
-
- [221] Demos. _Crown_, 270. This is the most probable
- restoration of the facts from the statements of the opposing
- orators.
-
- [222] _Ibid._ 313.
-
- [223] Aelian, _Var. Hist._ xii. 9 (at Klazomenai).
-
- [224] Benches do not appear on vases, because a row of boys
- involves elaborate perspective; the artist preferred to take
- single boys on stools, as a sort of section of a class, just
- as he gave the stools only two legs. Xen. _Banquet_, 4. 27,
- shows two boys sitting side by side. It is not necessary to
- reject benches, with Girard.
-
- [225] Alexis, _Linos_ (in Athen. 164 B.C.). See Illustr.
- Plates I. A and I. B.
-
- [226] Plut. _Alkib._ 7.
-
- [227] Herondas, iii. 83. 96.
-
- [228] See Illustr. Plate No. I. A.
-
- [229] Plato, _Protag._ 326 D.
-
- [230] In Clement of Alexandria, who gives two others.
- _Strom._ v. 8 (p. 675, Potter). A writing copy set by a
- master, though not of the alphabetical kind described by
- Clement, is actually extant on a wax tablet in the British
- Museum (Add. MS. 34,186). It consists of two lines of verse
- written out by the master and copied twice by a pupil.
-
- [231] Aeschylus, _Choeph._ 209.
-
- [232] Illustr. Plate I. A.
-
- [233] Xen. _Econ._ xv. 5.
-
- [234] Demosth. _de Cor._ 313.
-
- [235] Plato, _Laws_, 810 A (cp. the prizes for calligraphy
- in Teos).
-
- [236] Athen. 453 d.
-
- [237] Giles’ _Manual of Comparative Philology_, § 604.
-
- [238] Athen. 453 c, d.
-
- [239] A fragment of terra-cotta has been found at Athens,
- containing on it:
- αρ βαρ γαρ δαρ [ar bar gar dar]
- ερ βερ γερ δερ [er ber ger der]
- which must have belonged to some spelling-book――perhaps the
- brick formed part of the wall of a schoolroom.――Quoted by
- Girard, p. 131.
-
- [240] Athen. 454 f.
-
- [241] This is by no means inconceivable, when it is
- remembered that the Hellenes often set even the laws to
- music, in order to make them easier to learn and remember.
-
- [242] Plato, _Polit._ 278 A, B.
-
- [243] _Ibid._
-
- [244] _Ibid._ 285 C.
-
- [245] Xen. _Econ._ viii. 14.
-
- [246] See Illustr. Plate I. A.
-
- [247] Case E 190.
-
- [248] Plato, _Protag._ 325 E.
-
- [249] Plato, _Laws_, 811.
-
- [250] τὰ κεφάλαια [ta kephalaia]――a phrase used in later
- times for “commonplaces,” “topics,” which suggests that
- these selections were of that sort.
-
- [251] As the great speeches are picked out from Shakespeare
- for “repetition” nowadays.
-
- [252] Plato, _Laws_, 802, 811.
-
- [253] Isokrates (_Paneg._ 74 A). He says the object was to
- make the boys hate the barbarians; as, _e.g._, English boys
- might learn _Henry V._ in order to dislike the French!
-
- [254] Xen. _Banquet_, iii. 5.
-
- [255] _Ibid_.
-
- [256] _Ibid_. iv. 6.
-
- [257] Aristoph. _Frogs_, 1035.
-
- [258] From the _Banqueters_.
-
- [259] Straton (in Athen. 382, 383).
-
- [260] Aristoph. _Frogs_, 1032.
-
- [261] Athen. 164.
-
- [262] Aristoph. _Birds_, 471; _Wasps_, 1446. 1401.
-
- [263] Plato, _Hipp. Maj._ 286 B.
-
- [264] Xen. _Banquet_, iv. 27. School friendships are also
- mentioned in Aristot. _Eth._ viii. 12; Aristoph. _Clouds_,
- 1006.
-
- [265] Athen. 242 d.
-
- [266] The translation is free, and I omit a good deal that
- is less relevant.
-
- [267] For a picture of such a flogging see p. 599 of Bury’s
- _Roman Empire_.
-
- [268] Plato, _Laws_, 809 C.
-
- [269] The distinction between λογιστική [logistikê],
- reckoning up and comparing numbers, chiefly in bills and the
- like, practical arithmetic, and ἀριθμητική [arithmêtikê],
- theory of numbers, is noted in Plato, _Gorg._ 451 B.
-
- [270] Plato, _Laws_, 643 B.C.
-
- [271] Plato, _Protag._ 318 D.
-
- [272] So Theodoros in the _Theaitetos_.
-
- [273] Xen. _Econ._ viii. 14.
-
- [274] Xen. _Mem._ iv. 4. 7.
-
- [275] Aristoph. _Wasps_, 656.
-
- [276] In Diogenes Laertius, i. 2. 10.
-
- [277] Alexis (in Athen. 117 e).
-
- [278] An abacus of a very similar sort is still in use in
- China and Japan, even in banks. The “pebbles” are pushed to
- and fro, not in grooves, but on wires passing through the
- middle of them. Calculations can be made by this means with
- marvellous rapidity.]
-
- [279] e.g. _Polit._ 299 D. πεττείαν ἢ ξύμπασαν ἀριθμητικήν
- [petteian ê xympasan arithmêtikên].
-
- [280] Plato, _Phaid._ 274.
-
- [281] Plato, _Laws_, 819 B.
-
- [282] The restoration of this process rests on Athen. 671;
- the other two are purely conjectural.
-
- [283] Suggests at once Hellenic, not Egyptian customs.
-
- [284] Plato, _Rep._ 526 B.
-
- [285] Plato, _Laws_, 747.
-
- [286] Technically speaking, this was λύρα [lyra], the κιθάρα
- [kithara] being a professional instrument which was not
- taught at school.
-
- [287] Illustr. Plate I. B.
-
- [288] Plato, _Lusis_, 209 B. On Inscriptions there are
- separate prizes for the two methods.
-
- [289] Xen. _Econ._ ii. 13.
-
- [290] _Ibid._ xvii. 7.
-
- [291] Cp. British Museum Vase E 57, on which a man is
- leading a leopard by a string.
-
- [292] Plato, _Protag._ 326 B.
-
- [293] Aristoph. _Clouds_, 1356.
-
- [294] Aristoph. fragment of _Banqueters_.
-
- [295] Aristoph. _Knights_, 526.
-
- [296] Plut. _Solon_, iii.
-
- [297] Hermippos (in Athen. 619 b).
-
- [298] Aristoph. _Wasps_, 959.
-
- [299] _Ibid._ 989.
-
- [300] Aristot. _Pol._ viii. 6. 11.
-
- [301] For this reason it was opposed to _Dorian_ influences
- by Pratinas. It was excluded from the Pythian games (Pausan.
- 10. vii. 5). Pratinas bids it be content to “lead drunk
- young men in their carousals and brawls.”
-
- [302] Telestes, in his defence of the flute, could only
- retort that Athena, being condemned to eternal spinsterhood,
- ought not to be particular about her looks (Athen. 617).
-
- [303] Aristot. _Pol._ viii. 6. 11.
-
- [304] Athen. 184 d. Plutarch, however, says that when
- Alkibiades’ masters tried to make him learn the flute, he
- refused, declaring that it was unfit for gentlemen (_Alk._
- ii. 5).
-
- [305] Not a respected profession at Athens.
-
- [306] Brit. Mus. E 495, 64, 71.
-
- [307] Athen. 337 f.
-
- [308] Smith’s _Dictionary of Antiquities_.
-
- [309] φορβεία [phorbeia]. It belonged to professionals.
-
- [310] γλωσσοκομεῖον [glôssokomeion].
-
- [311] See the “Inscription” of the _Andria_ and other plays
- of Terence.
-
- [312] See Illustr. Plate II.
-
- [313] Athen. 20 f.
-
- [314] Plato, _Laches_, 180 D.
-
- [315] Plato, _Euthud._ 272 C.
-
- [316] _Ibid._ 295 D.
-
- [317] Aristoph. _Knights_, 987-996.
-
- [318] Plato, _Protag._ 326 B.
-
- [319] Aristot. _Pol._ viii. 3. 7.
-
- [320] _Ibid._ viii. 3. 1.
-
- [321] Plato, _Protag._ 318 B.
-
- [322] _Ibid._ 311 C.
-
- [323] Plin. _Hist. Nat._ 35.
-
- [324] Stob. _Floril._ 98, p. 535.
-
- [325] Plato, _Laws_, 769 B.
-
- [326] See _Rep._ X. 596 E, 605 A, etc. In the _Sophist_, 235
- D, 266 D, etc., Plato reserves his denunciation for
- φανταστική [phantastikê] which creates illusions; he almost
- approves of εἰκαστική [eikastikê]. Idealised painting is
- hinted at in _Rep._ 472 D, 484 C.
-
- [327] Aeschylus, _Agamemnon_, 1329.
-
- [328] Plato, _Theait._ 208 E.
-
- [329] The modern oil process was not employed till late on
- in the Renaissance. Fresco was common.
-
- [330] Aristot. _Pol._ viii. 3. 12.
-
- [331] θεωρητικὸν τοῦ περὶ τὰ σώματα κάλλους [theôrêtikon tou
- peri ta sômata kallous].
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-ATHENS AND THE REST OF HELLAS: PHYSICAL EDUCATION
-
-
-It is well known that the Hellenes attached an enormous importance to
-physical exercise. This was partly, no doubt, due to their intense
-appreciation of bodily beauty, which it was the endeavour of their
-gymnastic training to produce. But it must be remembered that to be in
-“good condition” was essential to them. Any morning an Hellenic
-citizen might find himself called upon to take the field against an
-invader, or might be despatched to ravage an enemy’s territory. Only
-the most cogent excuses were accepted. Plato[332] has left a vivid
-picture of a rich man, who has lived in idleness and luxury, suddenly
-called out to serve his country. Unhappy Dives marches along panting
-and perspiring, he is ill on board ship, and in battle when he has to
-charge or fight vigorously, he has no wind and is in a state of
-hopeless misery; while his poorer or wiser companions, who are “lean
-and wiry, and have lived in the open air,” mock at him and despise
-him. Sokrates points out to young Epigenes,[333] who has neglected his
-physical condition, what risks he runs. In battle, when a retreat is
-sounded, he will be left behind by his companions, and be either
-killed or taken prisoner by the foe; and the lot of the captive was
-frequently slavery for life, unless his friends ransomed him. But
-there were also intellectual and moral risks. “Bodily debility,” says
-Sokrates, “frequently causes a loss of memory, and low spirits, and a
-peevish temper, and even madness, to invade a man, so as to make even
-intellectual pursuits impossible.” To be a good citizen and to be a
-good thinker a man must always be in good physical condition. It
-became a duty to oneself and to the State “to live in the open air and
-accustom oneself to manly toils and sweat, avoiding the shade and
-unmanly ways of life.”[334] By divine ordinance, “Sweat was the
-doorstep of manly virtue,” as old Hesiod had sung.[335]
-
-This addiction to gymnastic exercises of all kinds was characteristic
-of the Hellenic peoples from the days of Homer. The original object
-had been symmetrical development of the body, health, speed, strength,
-and agility. But, as the Egyptian sage remarked, the Hellenes were a
-nation of children――it is just that which gives to them their charm
-and interest――and children usually and naturally care most for the
-body. Consequently athletics were carried too far: they became an end
-in themselves, instead of being merely a means of attaining physical
-activity and health. The professional athlete became a sort of spoilt
-child, fed at public expense,[336] courted by crowds of admirers, and
-all the time he was quite useless for everything except his own
-particular sort of contest, boxing or wrestling or the like. The
-tendency was ruinous: the Hellenes preferred to be good gymnasts
-rather than good soldiers.[337] The competitor, boy or man, who
-entered for one of the great prizes had to live in complete idleness
-from other pursuits.[338] Such professionals “slept all the day long,
-and if they departed from their prescribed system of training in the
-very slightest degree, they were seized with serious diseases.”[339]
-Consequently they were useless as soldiers, since in war it is
-necessary to be wide awake, not torpid, and to be able to stand
-vicissitudes of heat and cold, and not to be made ill by changes of
-diet. Specialisation even led to deformity. The long-distance runner
-developed thick legs and narrow shoulders, the boxer broad shoulders
-and thin legs.[340] It is to this specialisation that Galen[341]
-attributes the decline in utility of Hellenic athletics. Philostratos
-even notes that only in the good old days was the health of athletes
-not actually impaired by their exercises. In those times, he says,
-they grew old late, and took part in eight or nine Olympic
-contests――retained, that is, their efficiency for thirty years or
-more; moreover, they were as good soldiers as they were athletes.
-Later, these habits changed, and athletes became averse to war,
-torpid, effeminate, luxurious in their diet. The medical profession
-took upon itself to advise them――a good thing in its way, but
-unsuitable for athletes; for it told them to sit still after meals
-before taking exercise, and introduced them to elaborate cookery.
-Bribery also came into vogue among the professionals; usurers began to
-enter the training schools on purpose to lend them money for bribing
-their opponents.[342] The first recorded instance of this was early in
-the fourth century.[343]
-
- [Illustration: PLATE V. A.
-
- SCENES IN A PALAISTRA
-
- _Archaeologische Zeitung_, 1878, Plate 11. From a Kulix at Munich,
- attributed to Euphronios.]
-
- [Illustration: PLATE V. B.
-
- SCENE IN A PALAISTRA――A BOY WITH HALTERES, A BOY WITH JAVELIN, AND
- TWO PAIDOTRIBAI
-
- _Archaeologische Zeitung_, 1878, Plate II. From a Kulix at Munich,
- attributed to Euphronios.]
-
-Critics of this exaggerated athleticism were not wanting, even in the
-earliest times. The attack begins with Xenophanes of Kolophon. In an
-elegiac poem he writes: “If a man wins a victory at Olympia … either
-by speed of foot or in the pentathlon, or by wrestling, or competing
-in painful boxing, or in the dread contest called the pankration, his
-countrymen will look upon him with admiration, and he will receive a
-front seat in the games, and eat his dinners at the public cost, and
-be presented with some gift that he will treasure. All this he will
-get, even if he only win a horse race. Yet he is not as worthy as I;
-for my wisdom is better than the strength of men and steeds. Nay, this
-custom is foolish, and it is not right to honour strength more than
-the excellence of wisdom. Not by good boxing, not by the pentathlon,
-nor by wrestling, nor yet by speed of foot, which is the most honoured
-in the contests of all the feats of human strength――not so would a
-city be well governed. Small joy would it get from a victory at
-Olympia: such things do not fatten the dark corners of a city.”
-
-Pass straight from this to the works of Pindar, in order to see
-whether Xenophanes’ attack was justified. To Pindar the world holds
-nothing better than an Olympian victory. Be the descendant of athletes
-and be an athlete yourself――that is the summit of human attainment and
-bliss. His gods are either athletes themselves or founders of athletic
-contests. A man’s true desires may usually be best traced in the
-conception which he forms of the future state: Pindar’s portrait of
-Elysium is characteristic. First the scenery, a magnificent
-description in his best manner:
-
- In that Underworld the sun shines in his might
- Through our night.
- Round that city through the dewy meadow-ways
- Roses blaze.
- Through the fragrant shadows, bright with golden gleams,
- Fruitage teems.…
- Every flower of joyance blooms nor withers there.[344]
-
-And in this Paradise how are the shades of the departed occupying
-themselves? “Some take their joy in horses, some in gymnasia, some in
-draughts.”[345] That is the highest bliss conceivable, in Pindar’s
-opinion.
-
-But Euripides did not agree with him. He denounces the athletic life
-with much vigour.[346] “Of countless ills in Hellas, the race of
-athletes is quite the worst.… They are slaves of their jaw and
-worshippers of their belly.… In youth they go about in splendour, the
-admiration of their city, but when bitter old age comes upon them,
-they are cast aside like worn-out coats. I blame the custom of the
-Hellenes, who gather together to watch these men, honouring a useless
-pleasure.[347] Who ever helped his fatherland by winning a crown for
-wrestling, or speed of foot, or flinging the quoit, or giving a good
-blow on the jaw? Will they fight the foe with quoits, or smite their
-fists through shields? Garlands should be kept for the wise and good,
-and for him who best rules the city by his temperance and justice, or
-by his words drives away evil deeds, preventing strife and sedition.”
-
-In return for this, the athlete-loving populace, finding their voice
-in the popular poet Aristophanes, denounced Euripides and his Sophist
-friends for emptying the gymnasia and making the boys desire only a
-good tongue, instead of a sound body, turning them into pale-faced,
-indoor pedants, fit for nothing but jabbering nonsense. The attitude
-of the poet in the _Clouds_ and _Frogs_ is just that of an average
-schoolboy discussing a student.
-
-Plato has already been quoted as an authority against the athlete of
-his day. In the _Laws_ he rejects every kind of gymnastics which is
-not strictly conducive to military efficiency, and, like the Spartans,
-condemns the pankration and boxing. Races in the ideal State are to be
-run in full armour, and the javelin and spear are to replace the
-quoit. It is exactly the position of some moderns, who would
-substitute shooting and field-days for cricket and football. The case
-against the athletes may be closed with Aristotle’s testimony: he also
-condemns the specialisation of the trained professional.[348]
-
-But these denunciations of athletes do not apply so much to Athens as
-to the other States of Hellas. The Athenian Agora was full of the
-statues of generals and patriots, not, as was the usual custom, of
-athletes.[349] The author of the treatise on the Athenian
-constitution,[350] writing in the early days of the Peloponnesian War,
-notices that the democracy had driven gymnastics out of fashion.[351]
-He writes as one of the aristocrats who, like Pindar and his princely
-friends, cared mainly for the body and the outward beauties of life:
-the democracy was vulgar, for it could not spend all its time in
-bodily exercises and musical banquets. No doubt at that period in
-Athens, as can be seen in Aristophanes, there was a reaction in favour
-of intellectual pursuits against the exclusive athleticism of the
-preceding age: the time of the citizens in a great democracy was also
-largely monopolised by State duties, whether in the Assembly or in the
-Law Courts or in fighting by sea or land. But athletics still remained
-quite sufficiently popular even at Athens, and athletic “shop”
-remained one of the chief topics of conversation at a dinner-party.[352]
-
- * * * * *
-
-Gymnastic exercises centred round two sorts of buildings which are
-often confused, the “gymnasium” and the “palaistra.” The former may be
-said to correspond to the whole series of fields and buildings
-intended for games, which surround a modern public school, including
-football and cricket grounds, running track and jumping pit, fives
-courts, and so forth. The “palaistra” often resembled little more than
-the playground of a village school: it only demanded a sandy floor,
-and sufficient privacy to protect the exercises from intrusion: such
-buildings could be run up at private expense in the smallest villages,
-and were often attached to private houses. A “gymnasium,” on the other
-hand, must have cost a vast sum to erect: even a great capital like
-Athens only possessed three in the fourth century; small towns must
-have been unable to afford them at all. But the gymnasia were public
-buildings, open to all; they were always full of citizens of all ages,
-practising or watching others practise; they were a fashionable place
-of resort, where Sophists lectured in the big halls, and philosophers
-taught in the shady gardens. For the trainer who wished to instruct
-his class of boys they were wholly unsuitable; besides, any casual
-stranger could stand by and get a lesson for nothing. Consequently,
-even at Athens, the boys were taught in palaistrai which could be
-closed to the public:[353] in the towns and villages there was no
-other place.
-
-It is quite true that boys went to the gymnasia. Aristophanes[354]
-talks of “a nice little boy on his way home from the gymnasium.” In
-Antiphon,[355] some older boys are practising the javelin in a
-gymnasium; a younger boy, who had been standing among the spectators,
-being called by his paidotribes, runs across the course and is killed.
-If the reading “paidotribes,” for which K. F. Hermann would substitute
-“paidagogos,” is correct, we find a paidotribes and his class of
-younger boys present in a gymnasium, probably to practise
-javelin-throwing, which must have demanded a larger space than the
-palaistra often afforded. The elder boys are probably not under his
-tuition, for they are using real javelins, not the unpointed shafts
-which were employed at school. Paidotribai with small palaistrai may
-often have taken their classes to the free public gymnasia to practise
-the diskos, the javelin, and running, which required a large space.
-But none the less the palaistra was the usual scene of the teaching of
-boys.[356] It must not, however, be supposed that a palaistra was
-always reserved for boys. The “many palaistrai,” which the democracy
-built for itself,[357] were doubtless as much public buildings, open
-to all ages, as the Akademeia or Lukeion. The palaistrai owned or
-hired by private teachers must have been open to adults when the boys
-were not present; that which is the scene of the _Lusis_ was
-apparently attended by two classes, one of boys and the other of
-youths, who only met there on festival days. In the palaistra of
-Taureas, however, mentioned in the _Charmides_, the different classes
-seem all to meet in the undressing-room; but on that occasion the
-building may have been open for general practice, not for teaching.
-Some such arrangement into classes must have taken place in the
-village palaistrai.[358] The master who taught the boys in the
-palaistra was called the paidotribes, “boy-rubber”: he must have owed
-his name to the great part which rubbing, whether with oil or with
-various sorts of dust, played in athletics.[359] He was expected to be
-scientific. He had to know what exercises would suit what
-constitutions:[360] he is often coupled with the doctor.[361] His
-object was to prevent, the doctor’s to cure, diseases. He even
-prescribed diet. Besides health, he was expected to aim at beauty and
-strength.[362] His training, in Plato’s opinion, also served to
-produce firmness of character and strength of will: he must therefore
-know how much training to administer to each boy, for too much would
-cause excess of these qualities and lead to savage brutality, and too
-little would result in effeminacy.[363]
-
-Since so much science was demanded of the paidotribes, parents
-exercised much forethought in choosing a gymnastic school for their
-boys:[364] they would “call upon their friends and relations to give
-advice, and deliberate for many days,” in order to find a trainer
-whose instructions would “make their son’s body a useful servant to
-his mind, not likely by its bad condition to compel him to shirk his
-duty in war or elsewhere.”[365] This at Athens, no doubt: in the
-smaller towns and villages there could have been little choice:
-parents must have taken what they could get.
-
-On arriving at the chosen palaistra with his paidagogos the boy would
-find a class assembling. He would first go into the undressing-room[366]
-and strip. For all the exercises were performed naked. This no doubt
-gave the trainer a good opportunity of watching which muscles most
-required development, and what constitutional weaknesses, if any, must
-be treated circumspectly. Passing into the palaistra proper, the boy
-would find an enclosure surrounded, in the case of the more expensive
-schools, with pillars. There would be no roof. Hellenic custom
-maintained that it was healthy to expose the naked body to the open
-air and the mid-day sun: a white skin was regarded as a sign of
-effeminacy.[367] If the sun became dangerously hot, little caps were
-worn, which at other times hung on the walls of the palaistra. The
-floor was sand. Before wrestling or practising the pankration or
-jumping, the boys had to break up the soil with pickaxes[368] in order
-to make it soft: these pickaxes were also suspended on the walls.
-Beside them would be also _kôrukoi_ or punch-balls, _haltêres_ (a sort
-of dumb-bell, used for jumping and other exercises), the scrapers with
-which the dirt and sweat were removed, bags to hold the cords which
-were used as boxing-gloves, and spare javelins. Grown-up men were not
-allowed to enter during the lessons, but could apparently, if they
-wished, watch “from outside,” that is, probably, from the
-dressing-room, where we often find Sokrates conversing with the
-pupils, boys and lads: he could not, probably, penetrate further.
-
-The symbol of office which marked the paidotribes was a long forked
-stick depicted in the vases.[369] This was probably derived from the
-branch which the umpires at the games held in their hands. The two
-symbols are so much alike when represented on the vases[370] that it
-is often hard to distinguish them. There were generally several
-under-masters in the palaistra. The more proficient boys also were
-employed in teaching backward schoolfellows; these “pupil-teachers”
-appear on vases,[371] holding the stick of office like the grown-up
-masters. No doubt, poor boys managed to get instruction in this manner
-from their richer friends in the public gymnasia and palaistrai,
-without attending a school at all.
-
-The staff of a palaistra also included professional flute-players, for
-most of the exercises[372] were performed to the sound of a flute, in
-order that good time might be preserved in the various movements. The
-player in these cases wore the φορβεία [phorbeia] or mouth-band.[373]
-
-As I have pointed out in Chapter II., although the literary
-authorities make gymnastic training of a sort begin with the seventh
-year, it is not at all probable that the more recognised exercises,
-such as boxing and wrestling, began till a good many years later. The
-vases suggest that these subjects were taught some years after letters
-and music had begun, for they represent only older boys as learning
-them. Aristotle seems to vouch for a graduated course of gymnastic
-exercises during boyhood.[374]
-
- [Illustration: PLATE VI. A.
-
- IN THE PALAISTRA: WRESTLERS, PAIDOTRIBES, BOY PREPARING GROUND
-
- Gerhard’s _Auserlesene Vasenbilder_, cclxxi. Fig. 2.]
-
- [Illustration: PLATE VI. B.
-
- IN THE PALAISTRA: BOY PUTTING ON BOXING-THONG, A PANKRATION LESSON,
- AND A PAIDOTRIBES
-
- Gerhard’s _Auserlesene Vasenbilder_, cclxxi. Fig. 1.]
-
-What did the boys learn at the palaistra in the meantime? Deportment
-and easy exercises. A passage in Aristophanes informs us that they
-were taught the most graceful way to sit down and get up.[375] Vases
-represent boys learning how to stand straight. There were also all
-sorts of exercises in which the unpointed javelin played the part of a
-training-rod and the halteres the part of dumb-bells. The paidotribes
-might also try to strengthen particular muscles in particular boys. In
-an epigram,[376] a trainer is exercising a boy’s middle by bending him
-over his knee, and then, while holding his feet fast, swinging him
-over backwards.
-
-No doubt what was known as “gesticulation” (to cheironomein)
-[τὸ χειρονομεῖν] played a large part in this earlier training.
-“Gesticulation” meant a scientific series of gestures and movements of
-all the limbs, somewhat like the modern systems of physical education
-taught by Sandow and others. It was chiefly an exercise for the arms,
-as the name implies, but on a celebrated occasion Hippokleides the
-Athenian stood on his head on a table and “gesticulated” with his
-feet.[377] The particular movements were very carefully designed, and
-were all intended to be beautiful and gentlemanly.[378] Gesticulation
-served as a preparation for various dancing-systems, but was distinct
-from dancing, for Charmides was able to gesticulate but unable to
-dance.[379] It was also preparatory to gymnastics, for it resembled
-the movements of a boxer sparring at the air for lack of an
-opponent.[380] The halteres were possibly often employed, for they
-played a part in many gymnastic exercises.[381] This “gesticulation,”
-then, being a preliminary to gymnastics and dancing, would be the
-natural thing for the small boys to learn in the palaistra. Other
-early exercises were rope-climbing[382] and a sort of leap-frog.[383]
-The various kinds of ball-game,[384] mostly designed to exercise the
-body scientifically, may also have been employed. Of the regular
-exercises of the palaistra, which I am about to discuss, running and
-jumping would suit quite small boys; the diskos and javelin could also
-be begun at an early age, for smaller sizes were made for children.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The age at which the recognised exercises were first taught no doubt
-varied with individual taste and physical capacity: no strict line can
-be drawn. These exercises were wrestling, boxing, the pankration,
-jumping, running, throwing the diskos and the javelin.
-
-_Wrestling_ (πάλη [palê]) was probably regarded as the most important
-of these subjects, for it gave its name to the Palaistra. For this
-exercise the soil was broken up with the pickaxe and watered: the
-bodies of the combatants were oiled beforehand. By these means the
-Hellenes prevented their boys from disfiguring their bodies with bumps
-and bruises, and the slipperiness of the ground and of the
-antagonist’s body made the exercise more difficult and therefore more
-valuable. Three throws were necessary for victory. There were two
-sorts of wrestling. In one the victor had to throw his antagonist
-without coming to the ground himself; this was a matter of ingenious
-twists and turns somewhat like the Japanese jiu-jitsu. In the other
-both combatants rolled over and over on the ground: this was less
-scientific. The leading paidotribai had their own favourite systems of
-wrestling, with various openings, as in chess, and various ways of
-meeting them. “What style of wrestling did you learn at the
-Palaistra?” Kleon asks the sausage-seller.[385] When two boys were set
-to wrestle in school, they were not allowed to contend as they pleased
-with a view to victory, but had to carry out the directions of the
-paidotribes.[386] A fragment of a system of wrestling has been
-unearthed at Oxurhunchos.[387]
-
-Suppose there are two boys, Charmides and Glaukon. The paidotribes
-sets them to wrestle, while the rest of the class watch. He holds a
-long forked stick in his hand. Pointing with it to Charmides, he says,
-“You put your right hand between his legs and grip him.” Then to
-Glaukon, “Close your legs on it, and thrust your left side against his
-side.” To Charmides, “Throw him off with your left hand.” To Glaukon,
-“Shift your ground, and engage.” Each group of directions, or figure
-σχῆμα [schêma], as it was called, closes with the word “Engage” πλέξον
-[plexon]. At this point, probably, the two boys were allowed to
-wrestle at will, the result, however, being foreseen and inevitable
-owing to the previous moves.
-
-An epigram in the _Anthology_ represents instruction of this sort
-being given: the boy retorts in the middle, “I can’t possibly do it,
-Diophantos; that’s not the way boys wrestle.”[388]
-
-But, to use a parallel given by Isokrates, a pupil is not yet a
-complete orator, when he knows how to create pathos, irony, and so
-forth, and has been taught the parts of a speech: he has still to
-learn when and where and in what order to employ these several
-artifices. So with wrestling. A boy who knows his “figures” is not yet
-a wrestler: he has got to learn when is the right moment to employ
-each of them in an actual contest with a real antagonist. “When the
-paidotribes has taught his pupils the ‘figures’ invented for bodily
-training and practised them and made them perfect in these, he makes
-the boys go through their exercises again and accustoms them to
-physical toil, and compels them to string together one by one the
-figures which they have learnt, that they may have a firmer grasp of
-them and get a clearer comprehension of the right occasions for using
-them: for it is impossible to comprehend these in an exact
-science.”[389] The boys have to judge for themselves, in the heat of
-the contest, which figure it will be expedient to use: the trainer
-cannot fix that beforehand. But they will best be able to judge, if by
-long practice they have discovered which figures suit them best and
-which prove fatal to a particular type of opponent.
-
-_Boxing_ was similarly taught by a series of “figures.” The boys used
-the light gloves, consisting of strings wound round the hands, not the
-heavy, metal-weighted gloves which professional athletes wore. The
-_pankration_[390] was a mixture of boxing and wrestling: the boys
-usually wore similar gloves for this but left the fingers unfastened,
-only the wrists and knuckles being protected: sometimes they fought
-with bare hands. For both these exercises it was usual to wear dogskin
-caps, in order to protect the ears from injury. The pankration seems
-to have been regarded as an unsatisfactory game for boys: so it was
-excluded from both Olympian and Pythian games till a comparatively
-late date. For one thing, it was dangerous, and the exercise was very
-severe. But in the palaistra, carefully regulated by the paidotribes
-and stopped when the fighting became dangerous, no doubt it was
-harmless enough. Alkibiades, however, once succeeded in biting an
-opponent who was pressing him hard, being ready to do anything rather
-than be beaten. “You bite like a girl, Alkibiades!” exclaimed the
-indignant boy. “No, like a lion,” answered Alkibiades.[400]
-
- [Illustration: PLATE VII.
-
- _Photo by Mr. R. Coupland._
-
- STADION AT DELPHI FROM THE FORTIFICATIONS OF PHILOMELOS.
- Length about 220 yards.
-
-
- _Photo by Mr. R. Coupland._
-
- STADION AT DELPHI FROM THE FORTIFICATIONS OF PHILOMELOS.
- A nearer view.]
-
-_Running_ needs no comment: the methods are much the same in all ages.
-The chief distances for races in Hellas were the Stadion or 200
-yards,[401] the Diaulos or quarter-mile, and the Long-distance race,
-which varied from three-quarter mile to about three miles. The race in
-armour was not taught to boys. Races were often run over soft sand,
-where the runners sank in, just as long-distance races in England
-often include a ploughed field or two. The sand made running both a
-more severe exercise (so that a shorter distance sufficed) and also a
-better training for war.
-
-For the _long jump_ the Hellenes used the “halteres” or light
-dumb-bells, to assist their momentum.[402] Even in competitions, a
-flute-player stood by, to give the competitors the assistance of his
-music: no doubt it helped them to manage their steps so as to “take
-off” on the right spot. They alighted into a large sandy pit, dug up
-by the ever-present pickaxe: the jump was only measured if they came
-down on to this evenly, leaving a clear trace of their foot.
-
-The _diskos_ was a flat circle of polished bronze or other metal.[403]
-The specimen in the British Museum is between 8 and 9 inches in
-diameter, and is inscribed with athletic pictures on either side. It
-was flung with either hand. A great many attitudes were necessary
-before the diskos was launched, and every muscle of the body must have
-been well exercised in the process. The time was given, in the
-palaistra, by a flute-player. In competitions both the distance and
-the direction of the throw were taken into consideration.
-
-Boys learnt to throw the _javelin and spear_ by practising with long
-unpointed rods, which were also used for a variety of physical
-exercises. The mark seems to have been a sort of croquet-hoop or pair
-of compasses, fixed into the ground: other targets were also
-employed.[404] The vases which represent this pursuit often show the
-paidotribes carrying this hoop or fixing it into the ground. It was
-planted at a fixed distance which was stepped out.
-
-It may be mentioned, before we leave the “paidotribes,” that his fee
-for his whole course seems to have been a μνᾶ [mna], about £4:[405]
-this enabled the pupil to attend his lectures “for ever,” that is,
-perhaps till the course was finished. Or perhaps this sum made a pupil
-a life-member of a particular private palaistra.
-
-Let us now look into one of the gymnasia at Athens, the Akademeia or
-Lukeion. We will suppose that it is late in the afternoon, for this
-was a favourite time for taking exercise: the Athenians liked to get a
-good appetite for their evening meal. Outside, a troop of young men
-who intend to be enrolled in the State-cavalry are practising their
-evolutions, mounting, in the absence of stirrups, by a leaping-pole,
-and charging in squadrons. On another side a body of heavy infantry
-with spear and shield are assembling for a night march into the
-Megarid;[406] they are packing their supplies, onions and dried fish,
-perhaps, into their knapsacks as they fall in, and are grumbling at
-having to leave Athens just when a festival is coming; a burly
-countryman is complaining to his general that it is not his turn to
-serve, as he took part in the raid into Boiotia last week, and his
-general is threatening him with a prosecution for insubordination if
-he becomes abusive. After paying our respects to the patron deities,
-Herakles and Hermes and Eros,[407] and having muttered a curse on all
-tyrants suggested by the statue of Eros which Charmos the
-father-in-law of Hippias the Peisistratid set up,[408] we enter the
-gymnasium.
-
-The first room which we come to is the undressing-room.[409] On the
-benches round the walls a row of men are sitting discussing the exact
-nature of Self-control: an extremely ugly person, to whom they all pay
-great respect, is stating that it is an exact science, and, if only
-they can discover this science, the whole world will become virtuous.
-Lads and men are stripping all about the room, and passing off to take
-their exercises elsewhere; others keep coming in and dressing and
-listening to the discussion for a minute or two. A handsome young
-fellow comes in: the ugly man makes room for him with great energy,
-and his friends who are sitting at the end of the bench are pushed off
-suddenly on to the floor. A shout of laughter, mingled with some
-strong Attic abuse, arises. Not wishing to be involved as witnesses in
-an interminable lawsuit, we hurry out through the further door into a
-great cloister.[410] In the centre of this is a large open space, with
-no roof. Here we meet a well-known mathematician from Kurene,[411] who
-is walking round the cloister with a crowd of pupils: he is explaining
-to them that famous theorem about right-angled triangles, whose proof
-is so neat that Pythagoras the vegetarian sacrificed a hundred oxen
-when he discovered it. At intervals the mathematician stops and draws
-a diagram in the dust with his stick. As we follow him, we can look
-into the rooms which surround the cloister. In one, a crowd of men are
-anointing themselves with oil.[412] The rubbing, which is so good for
-all bodily ills, and the oil, even if not followed by any further
-exercise, are regarded as an excellent thing. An Athenian gentleman is
-expected to carry about a certain fragrance of this oil,[413] and his
-skin must always be sleek with it; but as a rule the anointing is a
-prelude to exercise, and is meant to make the joints supple and the
-body slippery enough to elude a wrestler’s grip.[414] A slave or an
-attendant stands by many of the men, holding one of those dainty
-oil-flasks which make so great a feature in modern Museums of
-Archæology. Through the next door we see the “dusting-room.” Various
-sorts of dust were used for rubbing the body. They served to clean it
-of sweat after exercise, to open the pores, to warm it when cold, and
-to soften the skin. A yellow dust was particularly popular; for it
-made the body glisten so as to be pleasant to look at, as a good body
-in good condition ought to be.[415] Next perhaps will be the
-bathing-room――a popular place in the evening, for it was usual to take
-a bath before dinner.[416] The bathers either splash themselves out of
-great bowls which stand upon pedestals, or receive a shower bath by
-getting a companion or an attendant to pour a pitcher of water over
-them. Tanks capable of receiving the whole body at once were not
-usual, though known to Homer.[417] Then we see the room of the
-_korukos_, or punch-ball, which will present a very curious
-appearance.[418] The _korukos_ is a large sack hanging from the
-ceiling by a rope. The lighter _korukoi_ are filled with fig seeds or
-meal, the heavier with sand. They hang at about the height of a man’s
-waist. You push one of them gently at first, and more and more
-violently as you gain experience; having pushed it, you plant yourself
-in the way of the rebound, and try to stop the sack with your hands or
-your chest or your back or your head. If you are not strong enough,
-you will be knocked over, and the room will laugh. This will practise
-you in standing steady, and make all parts of your body firm and
-muscular. The _korukos_ can also be used as a punch-ball, to
-strengthen the boxer’s arms and shoulders. This exercise is especially
-recommended for boxers and pankratiasts: the latter ought to use the
-heavier variety. Perhaps there will also be some lay-figures hanging
-up round the walls, for these also were used for practising. Here,
-too, some unlucky individuals who, from unpopularity or other causes,
-are unable to find an antagonist, will be exercising their fists on
-thin air. But both these expedients were regarded as ridiculous.[419]
-
-There were a large number of other rooms round the cloister, some
-intended for exercises in wet weather, for, if possible, exercise was
-always taken out of doors; for it was regarded as a great object to
-make the skin brown and hard by exposure to the sun. So King Agesilaos
-put his Asiatic captives up for sale in his camp naked, in order that
-his Hellenic soldiers, seeing their pale, soft flesh, unused to
-exposure, might despise their enemy. But as most of these rooms were
-furnished with seats, they were largely used as lecture-halls by
-wandering Sophists,[420] who gave free lectures in them to any
-passer-by who might care to listen, in order to attract regular,
-paying pupils. So we can take our pick and hear lectures on poetry or
-metaphysics, music or rhetoric, geography or history, at our pleasure.
-
-After this, we can turn our attention to the great central
-courtyard,[421] which is surrounded by the cloister, or to the
-racecourse and open spaces which lie beyond it. In one part will be
-the wrestling arena.[422] Pairs of oiled, naked combatants will be
-struggling together, amid a crowd of cheering spectators, and perhaps
-the trainer will be standing by, giving them directions. One group
-attracts especial attention: for the pair are going to represent
-Athens at Olympia next year. Elsewhere the pankratiasts are
-contending, some sparring at arm’s length, others joined in a deadly
-grapple, rolling over and over on the ground and pummelling one
-another’s heads with their gloved knuckles. They are covered with
-clotted dust and oil and will need much scraping. Then there are the
-boxers, bearing either the light gloves, or, if they intend to take
-part in a big competition, the heavy iron balls padded over with
-leather which were used in the great Games.[423] There are races too
-in progress, lap by lap round the great Stadion. Some of the runners
-are naked, others are wearing helmet and shield, since they are
-practising for the Race in Armour. Friends run beside them for a
-little way, pacing them and encouraging them. Others are jumping, with
-the halteres in their hands, into the pit, while their friends mark
-the point where their heels have left a mark in the sand. A
-professional flute-player, with his mouth-band on, sets the time. Each
-is, no doubt, hoping to beat Phaüllos’ great jump of 55 feet――the
-world’s record. Everywhere are crowds of spectators,[424] and
-everywhere eager trainers giving advice, hoping, if their pupil gains
-a prize at some great Games, to make a name for themselves, and
-attract a crowd of lads to their paid lessons: perhaps they will even
-be immortalised by some contemporary Pindar in a song in honour of
-their pupil’s victory.
-
-In another corner, it may be, there will be teams practising together.
-A regiment of epheboi may be undergoing their gymnastic training
-before service on the frontier:[425] or a team of them may be
-training, watched by the rich “gumnasiarchos,” for the torch-race at
-the festival of Hephaistos, or for the race from the Temple of
-Dionusos to that of Athena of the Sunshades, where the winner will
-receive a large bowl containing wine and honey and cheese and meat and
-olive oil――not all mixed together, let us hope.[426] There may also be
-teams practising wrestling and other bodily exercises together. Their
-trainer, “thinking it impossible to lay down separate regulations for
-each individual, orders roughly what suits the majority. So every one
-of the team takes an equal amount of exercise, and they all start and
-all stop running, or wrestling, or whatever it may be, at the same
-moment.”[427]
-
-In the larger open spaces we shall find Athenians throwing the diskos,
-like Muron’s celebrated figure, or practising archery, or flinging the
-spear or javelin. In watching these care must be exercised: unwary
-spectators may be killed or injured. Mythology is full of unfortunates
-killed in this way. Was not the fair Huakinthos slain by Apollo’s
-quoit? Antiphon, too, in his new book on speech-writing, takes as one
-of his themes a boy killed by a comrade’s javelin accidentally. We can
-also take a lesson in the use of spear and shield from the teacher of
-arms: a pair of Sophists, who specialise in this subject, have just
-come to Athens, and will doubtless be exhibiting their skill here. We
-remember, though, that the warlike Spartans ridicule these professors,
-and General Laches regards them as quite useless for military
-purposes, as we heard him telling Sokrates the other day.[428] So we
-will pass on.
-
-The vast majority of people in the gymnasium confine themselves to
-walking about. The colonnades and the gardens are convenient and
-attractive, and there is plenty to watch everywhere. The “xustos,” or
-covered cloister,[429] where athletes exercise in bad weather, is
-particularly popular among the walkers. And while they walk, they
-talk. There is a group of philosophical students arguing about the
-Supreme Good or constructing an ideal State. There is a party of
-inquirers who are discussing the nature of plants, or the varieties of
-crustaceans. Yonder, a half-naked, unkempt enthusiast is declaiming
-against luxury. “Man,” he cries, “is independent of circumstances.”
-Everywhere, walkers and spectators and talkers, but walkers above all.
-
-For the average Athenian spent all his time upon his legs: to sit down
-was the mark of a slave.[430] He walked nearly all day: the distance
-which he covered in five or six days would easily stretch from Athens
-to Olympia. He took a walk before breakfast, another before lunch,
-another before dinner, and another between dinner and bed.[431]
-
-Games of ball are going on in the ball-court yonder.[432] We may
-remember that the poet Sophocles was a famous player.[433] But the
-shadow on the great sun-dial has nearly reached the ten-foot mark
-which announces dinner-time to the Athenian world. The crowds who have
-been exercising themselves are scraping off the sweat and dirt with
-the στλεγγίς [stlengis] or scraper,[434] or else hurrying to the
-bath-rooms. After the bath comes another anointing, with oil and water
-this time.[435] Then away through the nearest gate into the city,
-while the great buildings on the Akropolis grow misty in the twilight
-and Athena’s guardian Spear catches the last rays of the setting sun.
-
-All this was open to the poorest Athenian: there was no fee for
-entrance. The only expenses were those incurred in buying an oil-flask
-and scraper, which the State did not as a rule provide, and any fees
-that might be paid to a trainer for special “coaching.” The poor could
-learn as much as they required from watching those who were
-proficient. It was usual to tip the man in the public baths who poured
-cold water over the bathers and assisted them generally: but this
-probably did not apply to the bath-rooms in the gymnasia. The State
-certainly made it easy for every citizen to take as much exercise as
-he pleased.
-
-Women were wholly excluded from athletics at Athens. In Sparta girls
-exercised themselves as much as the boys. In other Dorian States
-feminine athletics were encouraged to a less degree. At Argos there
-were foot-races for girls. In Chios they could be seen wrestling in
-the gymnasia.[436]
-
- * * * * *
-
-But the gymnasia and palaistrai, though they provided so many
-different kinds of exercises, did not supply the Hellenes with their
-sole opportunities for keeping the body in good condition. Hunting was
-a popular employment at Sparta and no doubt elsewhere: Xenophon, who
-was devoted to it, would have liked to make it more popular in
-Attica,[437] where it languished, perhaps from lack of game. Swimming
-and rowing were usual accomplishments. Riding was compulsory for rich
-citizens at Athens, for they had to serve in the cavalry; it was also
-popular in Thessaly, the land of horses. Military service provided
-both an incentive to physical exercise and a frequent means of
-obtaining it. Dancing was universal throughout the Hellenic world and
-played a larger part in Hellenic education than is usually recognised.
-At Sparta it was of paramount importance. At Athens it was taught free
-to large numbers of boys under the system of leitourgiai. Plato
-divides physical education into dancing and wrestling.[438]
-Aristophanes[439] brackets dancing between the palaistra and music,
-when he wishes to give the three elements of a gentleman’s education.
-Choral dancing to a Hellene was at once the ritual of religion, the
-ordinary accompaniment of a festival or public holiday, the highest
-form of music, and the most perfect system of physical exercise then
-discovered.
-
-The modern reader finds it very hard to realise why Hellenic
-philosophers attach so much educational importance to the various
-kinds of dance. This is because modern dancing differs from its
-ancient prototype in two very important particulars: it is not
-connected with religion and it is not dramatic. In the East dancing
-was, and is, the language of religion. David, to show his fervour,
-danced before the Ark with all his might. In Hellas, dancing
-accompanied every rite and every mystery.[440] The choral dance
-afforded the outlet to religious enthusiasm which elsewhere is
-provided by services: any change in its characteristics was a change
-in ritual and in the inexpressible sentiments and moral attitudes
-which become so closely bound up with habitual religious observances.
-And, since it was the usual ritual of worship, dancing became
-all-important in education, as providing the forms through which the
-highest aspirations of the children were accustomed to find
-expression.
-
-The boy who danced in honour of Dionusos was trying to assimilate
-himself to the god, whose history and personality would be brought
-home to him vividly by the vineyards around him: they would serve him
-for a parable. The vine that came so mysteriously out of the earth,
-lived its short life in the rain and sunshine, and was crushed and
-killed at the harvest, to rise again in the strange juice which
-thrilled him with such wondrous power――there was plenty of parable for
-him there. And while he felt the god’s history so vividly, he was
-acting it, for acting was the very essence of Hellenic dancing. He
-would act the sorrows of Dionusos, his persecution from city to city,
-and his final conquest; he would match each incident in the story with
-suitable inward feelings and outward gestures of sorrow and triumph.
-Thus his dancing came to be a keenly religious observance, accompanied
-by more vivid acting than is possible on a modern stage; such dancing,
-it must be remembered, was the parent of Attic Drama. The dramatic
-power of such acting became enormous; one dancer, it is said, could
-make the whole philosophic system of Pythagoras intelligible without
-speaking a word, simply by his gestures and attitudes.[441]
-
-In such dramatic dancing the subject or plot was important. Here the
-weakness of the old Hellenic mythology became fatal. For it was the
-old myths that supplied the motives of religious dances as well as of
-the drama, and many of them were morally unsatisfactory. When a chorus
-of boys danced the _Birth-pangs of Semelé_, the most famous dithyramb
-of Timotheos, not unnaturally objections were raised. The new school
-of musicians and poets, which arose towards the end of the fifth
-century, tried to represent everything and anything in the most
-realistic way possible: their dancers had to imitate with voice and
-gesture “blacksmiths at the forge, craftsmen at work, sailors rowing
-and boatswains giving them orders, horses neighing, bulls
-bellowing,”[442] and so forth. They chose the commonest and coarsest
-scenes, just like Dutch painters. In their hands, dancing became
-something vulgar, as well as morally risky, though still under a
-semi-religious sanction. It is this charge which justified Plato’s
-denunciations of the dramatic element in poetry and music. It must be
-remembered that the choregos at Athens, who collected the boys from
-his tribe to dance these dithyrambs, could use compulsion if fathers
-refused to allow their sons to join his chorus.[443] Yet the
-advantages of learning to dance were great, quite apart from the
-religious aspects. Dancing was a scientifically designed system of
-physical training, which exercised every part of the body
-symmetrically.[444] The different masters invented systems of their
-own, just as the paidotribai invented systems of wrestling; in both
-cases the teaching began with a series of figures, which were
-afterwards fitted together. Different localities also had their own
-particular figures.[445]
-
-The solo dance was used for private exercise. It also made its way
-into the drama. Sometimes, too, in the choral performances one or two
-of the best dancers were singled out to perform more elaborate
-evolutions expressing the dramatic course of the subject. But the
-choral dance was universal throughout Hellas. Its motives ranged from
-the solemn religious questionings of Aeschylus to the drunken
-buffoonery of the vine-festivals. The dance might be the act of
-worship of a whole people, as in the great festivals at Delos. It
-might, like the Gumnopaidia at Sparta, be designed to exhibit the
-physical perfection and practise the military evolutions of a nation
-in arms. It might celebrate the triumphant return of an Olympian
-victor to his native city, as did many of the dances which accompanied
-the extant odes of Pindar. The chorus-songs of Tragedy and Comedy were
-set to dances of a sort; but from these last boys seem to have been
-excluded.
-
-For educational purposes, besides the dithuramboi already mentioned,
-the two most important classes were the War-dance and the Naked-dance
-(γυμνοπαιδία [gymnopaidia]).[446] In the War-dance the performers,
-clad in arms, imitated all the ways in which blows and spears might be
-avoided, now bending to one side, now drawing back, now leaping in the
-air, now crouching down: then, again, they acted as though they were
-hurling javelins and spears and dealing all manner of blows at close
-quarters.[447] The Kuretic dance in Crete was very similar; the
-dancers “in full armour beat their swords against their shields and
-leaped in an inspired and warlike manner.”[448] The field-days, when
-teams of boys and “packs” of epheboi fought one another to the sound
-of music, were only a more warlike sort of dance. In fact, war and the
-war-dance were as closely connected in Hellas as war and drill in
-Modern Europe. The Thessalians called their heroes “dancers”; Lucian
-quotes an inscription that “the people set up this statue to Eilation,
-who danced the battle well”: “chief dancer” (προορχηστήρ
-[proorchêstêr])[449] was a dignified title. The same author observes
-that in warlike Sparta the young men learn to dance as much as to
-fight, and that their military and gymnastic exercises alike were
-inextricably mixed up with dancing.[449]
-
-The “Naked-dance” was to gymnastics what the war-dance was to
-war.[450] It represented the movements of the palaistra set to music,
-accompanied by some singing.[451] The style was solemn, like that of
-the ἐμμέλεια [emmeleia], or dance of Tragedy. It was performed in the
-main by boys, as the name γυμνοπαιδία [gymnopaidia] implies; but grown
-men also took part, as at Sparta, where practically the whole male
-population danced it at once. Plato seems to mean a similar type by
-his “peace-dance” (in the _Laws_), which is to be a thanksgiving for
-past mercies or a prayer for continued prosperity.
-
-In the regular system of education at Athens, it is true, the boys
-learned only to sing and play, not to dance. But owing to the
-perpetual demand for boys from each of the ten tribes to compete at
-the great festivals in war-dances and dithyrambs, dancing must have
-been a common accomplishment. These competitors also attracted and
-encouraged a large number of dancing-masters. Any boy who showed
-promise as a dancer, or perhaps even as a singer only, would be
-singled out by the agents who collected choroi for the choregoi.
-
-Some rich man, let us call him Tisias,[452] has just been appointed
-choregos of the Erechtheid tribe for the war-dance of boys at the
-Panathenaic festival, or a boy-chorus in dithyrambs at the Thargelia.
-After drawing lots with the choregoi of other tribes, he gets
-Pantakles assigned to him as his poet and music-master, to teach the
-boys: he might, if he wished, hire at his own expense extra dancing-
-and music-masters.[453] Tisias then sends for Amunias, whom the
-Erechtheid tribe have chosen to collect their choroi and keep an eye
-on them while they are being trained. If Tisias bears a bad name or is
-unpopular with his tribe, he and his agent will have trouble in
-collecting the boys; for the fathers will refuse to give them up, and
-there will be fines imposed and securities taken, before the chorus
-assembles. But as a rule the parents will accept gladly; it is a
-chance of a free education for a month or so, for Tisias will pay all
-expenses, even of meals, and the State supplies the teacher; it is a
-chance, too, for the boy to distinguish himself.
-
-Meanwhile, Tisias will have provided a suitable schoolroom, in his own
-house, if possible; rich men, to whom the post of choregos was a
-frequent burden, would keep an apartment for the purpose. If he
-himself is busy, he will depute friends, who can be trusted to swear
-in his favour before the Courts, to watch the teaching; the agent will
-also be present.[454] For sometimes accidents occurred. Once a boy was
-given a dose to drink, to improve his voice, and it killed him.[455]
-
-When the day of the competition came, the chorus would be suitably
-dressed at Tisias’ expense; he might perhaps allow them gold
-crowns.[456] There might be nine other choroi entering for the prize,
-but in the time of Demosthenes this was not common. The whole Athenian
-people and many foreigners would be present at the contest, and it
-would be an anxious day for choregos, boys, and parents. The State
-gave the prizes,[457] usually a tripod, which went to the winning
-choregos, who would set it up in some public place with an appropriate
-inscription, such as――
-
- The Oeneid tribe was victorious; a choros of boys.
- Eureimenes, son of Meleteon, was choregos. Nikostratos
- taught.[458]
-
-Or――
-
- Lusikrates, son of Lusitheides of Kikunna, was choregos. The
- boys of the Acamantid tribe won. Theon played the flute.
- Lusiades taught. Euainetos led.[459]
-
- * * * * *
-
-We pass to the position which riding held in Athenian education. The
-two richest classes in the State were liable to service in the
-cavalry. They had to supply their own horses, which were examined and,
-if unfit, rejected; but the State paid them a sum of £8 annually for
-maintenance and arms in time of peace. As, however, the number of the
-citizen cavalry never rose above 1000, the whole of these two classes
-can never have been so employed at once: the remainder served in the
-heavy infantry. The two Hipparchoi elected for the year, and their
-subordinates, the ten Phularchoi, who each commanded a tribal
-contingent, on coming into their office, would note how many of the
-thousand who had served in the former year were no longer liable to
-service owing to age, and would fill up the vacancies; they would also
-make good those gaps which occurred from time to time during their
-term of office owing to wounds or death or sudden poverty. To secure a
-recruit, they had only to go to some rich and active young man who was
-not already serving; if he refused to be enrolled, they could
-prosecute him. The training often began before eighteen, for Xenophon
-speaks of persuading the recruit’s guardians,[460] from whom he would
-be free at that age. So Teles mentions the horse-breaker as among the
-teachers of the lad in the secondary stage of education. No doubt it
-took some training to make an efficient cavalryman, and the Hipparchoi
-liked to take the recruits young; but to keep a stud was the favourite
-amusement of a rich young Athenian, and many would learn to ride
-without any view to military efficiency. As the Hellenes rode without
-stirrups, mounting was one of the great difficulties of the young
-rider, and figures chiefly on the vases. Often they used the long
-cavalry-spear as a vaulting-pole.[461] Otherwise a groom or the master
-gave the pupil a leg up: on a vase[462] in the British Museum the
-master is seen simply pushing the boy into his seat. A comic
-poet,[463] who has left us a picture of the young recruits learning to
-ride under the eye of their Phularchoi, speaks only of mounting and
-dismounting.[464] “Go to the Agora,” says the speaker to his slave,
-“to the Hermai, where the phularchoi keep coming, and to the pretty
-disciples whom Pheidon is teaching to mount their steeds and to get
-down again.” Xenophon, among much sound advice to the young rider
-about buying, training, and keeping his horse, gives the Hipparchos
-the following suggestions:――
-
- “Persuade the younger men to vault on to their horses. It
- will be best if you supply the teacher for this. The older
- men may be put up by some one else in the Persian way. To
- practise the men in keeping their seats over difficult
- country, frequent riding expeditions are a good thing, but
- will be unpopular. So tell your men to practise by
- themselves whenever they are in the open country. But take
- them out yourself occasionally and test them over all sorts
- of ground. Give them sham fights in different kinds of
- country. In order to make them keen about throwing the
- javelin from horseback,[465] stir up rivalry between the
- different squadrons and give prizes for this and for good
- riding and the like. Above all make yourself and your
- attendant gallopers as smart as possible.”[466]
-
-There were frequent reviews under the eyes of the Boule. In the
-race-course at the Lukeion there was a sham fight, each hipparchos
-commanding five squadrons which pursued one another, and then charged
-front to front, passing through the gaps in one another’s lines.
-They had, also, to wheel in line. The review was followed by
-javelin-throwing.[467] Another review was held at the Akademeia, on a
-course with a hard soil (ὁ ἐπίκροτος [ho epikrotos])――good practice
-for cavalry intending to fight in rocky Attica. Here they had, among
-other manœuvres, to charge at full gallop and suddenly come to a
-halt.[468]
-
-One of the attractions of the cavalry service was the great
-Panathenaic procession, where the horsemen played a leading part: an
-idealised picture of them may be seen on the frieze of the Parthenon.
-Xenophon gives a series of directions how to make the horses prance
-and hold their heads up on this great occasion, and suggests devices
-in gait which will attract popular notice. This and kindred
-processions must have made recruiting for the cavalry easy.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Swimming_ seems to have been, as would naturally be expected, an
-exceedingly common accomplishment in the maritime states of Hellas;
-even at inland Sparta the boys must have learnt it for their daily
-plunge in the Eurotas. According to tradition,[469] there was a law at
-Athens that every boy should be taught reading, writing, and swimming:
-the proverb for an utter dunce was “he knows neither his letters nor
-how to swim.”[470] Herodotos distinctly implies that all Hellenes knew
-how to swim. “The Hellenic loss at Salamis,” he says, “was small. For,
-as they knew how to swim (as opposed to the barbarians who did not),
-when their ships were destroyed, they swam over to the island.”[471]
-He takes it as a matter of course that every sailor could swim. The
-whole crew of a captured trireme during the Peloponnesian War as often
-as not jumped overboard and escaped by swimming.[472] In a story in
-Athenaeus the boys of Lasos, on coming out of the wrestling-school, go
-off together for a bathe and begin to dive. A friend of Aristippos
-used to boast to him of his diving.[473] During the blockade of
-Sphakteria by the Athenian fleet, numbers of Helots swam over from the
-mainland to the island under water.[474] Scanty and scrappy as they
-are, these details show that swimming must have been taught to most
-boys, at any rate if they were ever likely to serve in a fleet. Plato
-twice[475] uses a metaphor drawn from a man swimming on his back,
-showing that this method was known. When a young disputant is being
-severely handled in a discussion, Sokrates intervenes, “wishing to
-give the boy a rest, since he saw that he was getting a severe ducking
-and he feared that he might lose heart.”[476] The phrase suggests that
-the sight of boys learning to swim was familiar. They could learn
-either in the innumerable creeks and bays of the sea, or in the lakes
-and rivers, or in diving-pools.[477] There were also various
-“gymnastic games” which young people played in the water
-together;[478] but of their nature nothing is known.
-
-It cannot reasonably be doubted that in the maritime states a large
-proportion of the boys, at any rate of the lower classes, were taught
-to _row_, since each trireme required a crew of 200, nearly all of
-whom had to use the oar. In the good old days, according to
-the _Wasps_, the main object was to be a good oar,[479] and
-rowing-blisters were a sign of patriotism.[480] In an emergency, the
-Athenians could make the whole citizen force under a certain age
-embark on the fleet and could win a victory with these rowers; this
-would have been impossible if the average citizen had been ignorant of
-rowing.[481] On such occasions many even of the Hippeis embarked:
-Aristophanes jestingly asserts that in an expedition to Korinth the
-horses tried also, shouting, “Gee-ho, put your backs into it. Do more
-work, Dobbin.”[482] Before the close of the war,[483] Charon, the
-ferryman of Styx, assuming that every Hellene knows the way to row,
-makes the souls of the departed row themselves across. Boat-races were
-certainly known at this period. A client of Lusias asserts that he has
-won a race with a trireme off Cape Sounion.[484] Probably the
-trierarchoi, the rich men appointed to fit out the State navy, either
-voluntarily or by regular custom, made the ships race one another.
-Thus the races would be as much inter-tribal contests as the
-dithyrambs or torch-races. Two crews of the epheboi of a later date
-used to race in the two sacred triremes. The vessels sailing out for
-the Sicilian expedition raced as far as Aigina.[485] A fragment of
-Plato the comic poet[486] refers to similar contests:
-
- Thy high-heaped tomb on this fair promontory
- Shall take the greetings of our far-flung fleets,
- And watch the merchants sailing out and in,
- And be spectator when the galleons race.
-
-
-EXCURSUS I
-
-The “gumnasiarchoi” have created some confusion among those who have
-discussed Attic ways. Some authorities would make them rich men
-performing a “leitourgia” and holding a similar position to the
-trierarchoi and choregoi: others make them officials appointed to
-superintend the gymnasia.
-
-The gumnasiarchia is certainly reckoned among leitourgiai as a general
-rule. A speaker in Lusias,[487] giving a list of these duties which he
-had performed, says: “I supplied a chorus of men at the Thargelia, a
-chorus of war-dancers at the Panathenaia, a cyclic chorus at the
-little Panathenaia, I was Gumnasiarchos for the Prometheia and was
-victorious, then choregos with a chorus of boys, then with beardless
-war-dancers at the little Panathenaia.” In Andokides[488] a
-gumnasiarchos at the Hephaisteia is mentioned. The author of the
-treatise on the Athenian constitution says:[489] “In the case of the
-choregiai, gumnasiarchiai, and trierarchiai, the Athenians realise
-that the rich fill the offices and the populace serve under them and
-get the benefit. So the populace claims to be paid for singing and
-running and dancing and sailing in the ships.” Now “singing and
-dancing” belong to the choregiai, and “sailing in the ships” to the
-trierarchiai. So “running” is left for the gumnasiarchiai. The main
-feature of the yearly festivals of Hephaistos and Prometheus, which
-the two earlier passages gave as the scene of the duties of the
-gumnasiarchos, was a torch-race. It may thus be inferred that the duty
-of the gumnasiarchos was to collect, and train, a team of his own
-tribe for the torch-race at these festivals.[490] In connection with
-this duty, they could prosecute members of their team, or any one who
-interfered with them, for impiety before the Archon Basileus,[491]
-since the race was a religious function. They were thus in the
-sacrosanct position which Demosthenes as choregos claims for himself
-in his speech against Meidias.
-
-So far the gumnasiarchos is an ordinary performer of a leitourgia, and
-his duties are confined to providing a tribal team for the torch-races
-at the Prometheia and Hephaisteia. His team, usually at any rate,
-consisted of epheboi, as we learn from an inscription describing the
-victory of Eutuchides with his epheboi.[492]
-
- * * * * *
-
-There is also the law quoted as Solon’s in Aischines’ speech against
-Timarchos.[493] “The gumnasiarch_ai_ (note that it is a different
-word) “are not to allow any one over age to keep company with the boys
-at the festival of Hermes in any way whatsoever: if he does not keep
-all such persons out of the gymnasia, the gumnasiarch_es_ shall be
-liable to the law that prescribes penalties for those who corrupt free
-boys.” But the orator himself only mentions paidotribai, and special
-enactments dealing with the Hermaia; there is no mention of a
-gumnasiarches. The law itself is an addition made in a later period
-when there was a special officer to control the gymnasia. But there is
-no evidence for such an official in the days of the independence of
-Hellas.
-
-One interesting passage remains. “I was gumnasiarchos in my deme,” or
-country district, says a speaker in Isaios.[494] There must therefore
-have been local torch-races, for which rich men were called upon to
-pay and train teams, just as there were certainly local theatrical
-performances. The passage opens up a prospect of vigorous athletic
-life throughout the country districts and villages of Attica.
-
-
- [332] Plato, _Rep._ 556 B-D.
-
- [333] Xen. _Mem._ iii. 12. 1.
-
- [334] Plato, _Phaidr._ 239 c.
-
- [335] Hesiod, _Works and Days_, 289.
-
- [336] Solon reduced this endowment to 500 drachmai for an
- Olympian victor, 100 for an Isthmian (Plut. _Solon_, 23).
-
- [337] Plut. _Quaest. Rom._ 40.
-
- [338] Plato, _Laws_, 807 c.
-
- [339] For this their vast appetites were partly responsible.
- Milo and Theagenes each ate a whole ox in a single day
- (Athen. 412 f). Astuanax the pankratiast ate what was meant
- for nine guests (_ibid._ 413 b).
-
- [340] Xen. _Banquet_, ii. 17.
-
- [341] Galen, _On Medic. and Gym._ § 33 (ed. Kühn. v. 870).
-
- [342] Philos. _On Gymnastics_, 54.
-
- [343] Pausan. v. 21. 10.
-
- [344] Pind. _Olymp._
-
- [345] Pindar, frag.
-
- [346] Fragment of _Autolukos_.
-
- [347] A very bold attack on the Olympian games, which must
- have caused a sensation in the theatre.
-
- [348] Aristot. _Pol._ vii. 16. 13.
-
- [349] Lukourg. _ag. Leok._ 51.
-
- [350] [Xen.] _Constit. of Athens_, i. 13.
-
- [351] κατέλυσε [katelyse] must mean this, as in [Andok.]
- _ag. Alkibiades_, where that gentleman is said to be
- καταλύων τὰ γυμνάσια [katalyôn ta gymnasia] by his bad
- example.
-
- [352] See end of Aristoph. _Wasps_.
-
- [353] As shown by the beginning of Plato, _Lusis_, 203 B.
-
- [354] Aristoph. _Birds_, 141.
-
- [355] Antiphon, _Second Tetralogy_.
-
- [356] The law quoted in Aischines _ag._ _Timarchos_ is
- spurious, being a later interpolation; it cannot therefore
- be used as evidence.
-
- [357] [Xen.] _Constit. of Athens_, ii. 10.
-
- [358] The division of the boys into classes by age in the
- contests points to such a usage. Cp. the ἡλικίαι [hêlikiai]
- at Teos.
-
- [359] Later, this was done by a special official, the
- ἀλειπτής [aleiptês].
-
- [360] Aristot. _Pol._ iv. 1. 1.
-
- [361] _e.g._ Plato, _Gorg._ 504 A; _Protag._ 313 D; Aristot.
- _Pol._ iii. 16. 8.
-
- [362] Plato, _Gorg._ 452 B.
-
- [363] The paidotribes is distinguished from the gumnastes as
- the schoolmaster from the crammer. The gumnastes coached
- pupils chiefly for the great games, while the paidotribes
- presided over physical training generally, especially of
- boys, but sometimes of epheboi. See the elaborate discussion
- in Grasberger, i. 263-268.
-
- [364] Plato, _Protag._ 313 A.
-
- [365] _Ibid._ 326 C.
-
- [366] ἀποδυτήριον [apodytêrion].
-
- [367] See Thompson, Plato, _Phaedr._ 239 C., and Eur.
- _Bacch._ 456.
-
- [368] Illustr. Plate VI. A.
-
- [369] Illustr. Plates VI. A and VI. B.
-
- [370] See especially the Panathenaic vases in the British
- Museum.
-
- [371] _e.g._ Brit. Mus. E 288.
-
- [372] Brit Mus. B 361, E 427, E 288.
-
- [373] Illustr. Plate VIII.
-
- [374] Aristot. _Pol._ viii. 4.
-
- [375] Aristoph. _Clouds_, 973.
-
- [376] _Anthol. Palat._ xiii. 222.
-
- [377] Herod, vi. 127-129.
-
- [378] Athen. 629 B.
-
- [379] Xen. _Banquet_, ii. 19.
-
- [380] Plato, _Laws_, 830 C.
-
- [381] Philostratus, _On Gymnastics_, 55.
-
- [382] Galen, _De sanit. tuend._ ii. 8.
-
- [383] Grasberger, i. 154.
-
- [384] Described at length, Grasberger, i. 84-98.
-
- [385] Aristoph. _Knights_, 1238.
-
- [386] See Illustr. Plate VI. A for a wrestling lesson.
- Lucian, _Ass._ 8-11.
-
- [387] Oxyrhynchus Papyri, Grenfell and Hunt, Part III. No.
- 466 (1903). The papyrus is of the second century.
-
- [388] _Anthol. Palat._ xii. 206.
-
- [389] Isok. _Antid._ 184.
-
- [390] See Illustr. Plate VI. B for a pankration lesson.
-
- [400] Plut. _Alkib._ ii. 3.
-
- [401] See Illustr. Plate VII.
-
- [402] See Illustr. Plate V. B.
-
- [403] Illustr. Plate V. A.
-
- [404] Illustr. Plate V. B.
-
- [405] Athen. 584 C, referring to about 320 B.C.
-
- [406] Aristoph. _Peace_, 357.
-
- [407] Zeno in Athen. 561 C.
-
- [408] Athen. 609 D.
-
- [409] ἀποδυτήριον [apodytêrion]. See Plato, _Charmides_, 153
- ff.
-
- [410] κατάστεγος δρόμος [katastegos dromos]. Plato,
- _Euthud._ 273 A.
-
- [411] Theodoros (Plato, _Theait._).
-
- [412] This was often done outside (Plato, _Theait._ 144 C).
- The oil-room (ἐλαιοθέσιον [elaiothesion]) of Vitruvius may
- be a later invention. This preliminary anointing was called
- ξηραλοιφεῖν [xêraloiphein]. After the baths they rubbed
- themselves with a mixture of oil and water; this was
- χυτλοῦσθαι [chytlousthai].
-
- [413] See Xen. _Banquet_, 1. 7.
-
- [414] Aristoph. _Knights_, 492.
-
- [415] Philostratus, _On Gymnastics_, 56. It was usual to be
- dusted before wrestling.
-
- [416] Xen. _Banquet_.
-
- [417] For a good bathing scene, see Brit. Mus. Vase E 83.
- Also E 32.
-
- [418] Philostratus, _On Gymnastics_, 57.
-
- [419] Plato, _Laws_, 830 C.
-
- [420] Particular Sophists attached themselves to particular
- gymnasia and palaistrai which they came to regard as their
- schools. Mikkos has already occupied the newly-built
- palaistra in the _Lusis_, 204 A. Cp. Plato’s position at the
- Akademeia and Aristotle’s at the Lukeion.
-
- [421] αὐλή [aulê] (Plato, _Lusis_, 206 E).
-
- [422] κονίστρα [konistra].
-
- [423] Plato, _Laws_, 830 B.
-
- [424] For the excitement of the spectators and their shouts
- of encouragement see Isok. _Euag._ 32.
-
- [425] Some gymnasia provided a large “Room of the Epheboi.”
- So in Vitruvius’ model.
-
- [426] Athen. 495-6.
-
- [427] Plato, _Polit._ 294 D, E.
-
- [428] But by the end of the fourth century the teacher of
- arms becomes an important individual in the training of the
- epheboi.
-
- [429] Plato, _Euthud._ 273 A.
-
- [430] Xen. _Econ._ iii. 13.
-
- [431] Xen. _Econ._ xi. 18; _Banquet_, i. 7, ix. 1.
-
- [432] σφαιριστήριον [sphairistêrion].
-
- [433] Athen. 20 f.
-
- [434] Brit. Mus. E 83, for a picture of this in use.
-
- [435] χυτλοῦσθαι [chytlousthai].
-
- [436] Athen. 566 e.
-
- [437] _Hunting with Hounds_, passim. So Plato in the _Laws_,
- with reservations.
-
- [438] Plato, _Laws_, 795 E.
-
- [439] Aristoph. _Frogs_, 729.
-
- [440] Lucian, _On Dancing_, 15.
-
- [441] Athen. 20 d.
-
- [442] Plato, _Rep._ 396 A, B.
-
- [443] Antiphon, _The Choreutes_, 11.
-
- [444] Xen. _Banquet_, ii. 17.
-
- [445] Lakonian and Attic (Herod. vi. 129); Persian (Xen.
- _Anab._ vi. 1. 10); Troizenìan Epizephurian Lokrian, Cretan,
- Ionian, Mantinean in Lucian, _On Dancing_, 22.
-
- [446] Not necessarily nude, for γυμνός [gymnos] only
- represents the absence of the armour used in the War-dance.
-
- [447] Plato, _Laws_, 815 A.
-
- [448] Lucian, _On Dancing_, 8.
-
- [449] Lucian, _On Dancing_, 8.
-
- [450] The dance known as γυμνοπαιδική [gymnopaidikê] is
- described in Athen. 631 b, as including representations of
- wrestling. In 678 b, c, the festival of the Γυμνοπαιδίαι
- [Gymnopaidiai], and the dances in it are referred to, but no
- mention is there made of wrestling.
-
- [451] Athen. 630 d.
-
- [452] This sketch is drawn chiefly from Antiphon, _The
- Choreutes_.
-
- [453] Demos. _ag. Midias_, 533.
-
- [454] Rivals sometimes tried to interrupt the lessons or
- bribe the teacher (Demos. _Mid._ 535).
-
- [455] The situation of Antiphon’s speech.
-
- [456] Demos. _Mid._ 520.
-
- [457] Xen. _Hiero_, ix. 4.
-
- [458] Böckh, 212.
-
- [459] _Ibid._ 221.
-
- [460] Xen. _Hipparch._ i. 11.
-
- [461] Illustr. Plate IX.
-
- [462] Brit. Mus. E 485.
-
- [463] Mnesimachos, _Hippotrophos_ (Athen. 402 f).
-
- [464] See Illustr. Plates X. A, X. B and the Frontispiece
- for scenes in a riding-school.
-
- [465] The mark was a suspended shield, Brit. Mus.
- Prize-Amphora 7, Room IV.
-
- [466] A rough summary of Xen. _Hipparch._ i. 15-26.
-
- [467] Xen. _Hipparch._ iii. 6.
-
- [468] Xen. _Hipparch._ iii. 14.
-
- [469] Petit, _Leg. Att._ ii. 4.
-
- [470] Plato, _Laws_, 689 D.
-
- [471] Herod. viii. 89.
-
- [472] _e.g._ Thuc. iv. 25.
-
- [473] Diogenes Laert. ii. 8. 73.
-
- [474] Thuc. iv. 26.
-
- [475] Plato, _Rep._ 529 C; _Phaidr._ 264 A.
-
- [476] Plato, _Euthud._ 277 D.
-
- [477] Plato, _Rep._ 453 D.
-
- [478] Galen, _de loc. aff._ iv. 8. See Grasberger, i. 151.
-
- [479] Aristoph. _Wasps_, 1095.
-
- [480] _Ibid._ 1119.
-
- [481] Xen. _Hellen._ i. 6. 24.
-
- [482] Aristoph. _Knights_, 600.
-
- [483] Aristoph. _Frogs_, 200-271, describes a rowing lesson.
-
- [484] _Lus._ 21. 5.
-
- [485] Thuc. vi. 32.
-
- [486] Plut. _Themist._ 32.
-
- [487] Lusias, speech 21. 1-2.
-
- [488] Andok. 17. 20.
-
- [489] [Xen.] _Constit. of Athen._ i. 13.
-
- [490] So
- lampadi γυμνασιαρχεῖν λαμπάδι [gymnasiarchein].――Isaios,
- _Philoktemon_, 62. 60.
- γυμνασιαρχεῖσθαι εὐ ταῖς λαμπάσιν [gymnasiarcheisthai eu
- tais lampasin].――Xen. _Revenues_, 4. 52.
- λάμπάδι νικήσας γυμνασιαρχῶν [lampadi nikêsas
- gymnasiarchôn].――Böckh, 257.
-
- [491] Dem. _ag. Lakritos_, 940; Aristot. Ἀθ. Πολ. [Ath.
- Pol.] 57.
-
- [492] Böckh, 243.
-
- [493] Aesch. _Tim._ 12.
-
- [494] Isaios, _Menekles_, § 42. See Wyse’s edition on the
- passage.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-SECONDARY EDUCATION: I. THE SOPHISTS
-
-
-At fourteen or soon after, it was usual for the ordinary course of
-letters and lyre-playing to terminate: the gymnastic lessons might be
-carried on till old age interrupted them. During the first
-three-quarters of the fifth century, the lad, on leaving school, was
-left to live more or less as he pleased, if he was rich enough not to
-have to work for his living: the sons of poorer citizens at this age,
-if not before, settled down to learn a trade or engaged in
-merchandise. Rich boys, no doubt, spent most of their time in athletic
-pursuits; riding and chariot-driving were favourite amusements. But
-with the Periclean age arose a violent desire for a further course of
-intellectual study, and a system of secondary education arose, to
-occupy the four years which elapsed between the time when the lad
-finished his primary education and the time when the State summoned
-him to undergo his two years of military training.
-
-Many of the primary schools of the better sort started courses of
-study for lads, providing, no doubt, separate class-rooms, or else the
-younger boys attended at different hours from those at which the elder
-pupils assembled. Probably some such provision had been made much
-earlier for those who wished to obtain a more advanced knowledge of
-literature and music than was offered by the primary schools. But in
-the time of Sokrates many masters seemed to have held classes for lads
-as well as for boys. On entering the schools of Dionusios,[495] the
-master of letters, Sokrates finds a class of lads assembled here.[496]
-They all belong to noble families: the poor were no doubt unable to
-afford education of this sort. Two of the lads were busy discussing a
-point of astronomy, and were quoting the authority of Oinopides[497]
-and Anaxagoras, for Sokrates catches these two names as he enters the
-room. They were drawing circles on the ground and imitating the
-inclination of some orbit or other with their hands. This scene shows
-a much more advanced sort of study than was usual at the primary
-school of letters. The Sophists seem to have often lectured in
-class-rooms.
-
-More often secondary education was imparted, not in the regular
-schools by regular, established masters, but by the wandering savants,
-who taught every conceivable subject, and were all grouped together
-under the general name of Sophists.[498] From this category the
-mathematicians and astronomers, who in all respects occupied the same
-position, are often excluded. This is due to the authority of Plato,
-who, while detesting the other subjects taught as secondary education,
-had a great affection for mathematics and astronomy, the only subjects
-which he prescribes for lads in the _Republic_ and _Laws_. But
-Aristophanes, taking a more logical position, includes geometry and
-astronomy among the subjects taught by the burlesque Sophists of the
-_Clouds_. In point of fact, secondary education included any subject
-that the lad or his parents desired; and the wandering professors who
-imparted it, and even established teachers like Isokrates, who kept
-permanent secondary schools at Athens, were all alike, in the popular
-view, Sophists.
-
-But the more important subjects do naturally fall into two great
-groups, Mathematics and Rhetoric. Mathematics, as may be seen from the
-_Republic_, meant, as a part of secondary education, the Science of
-Numbers, Geometry, and Astronomy, with a certain amount of the theory
-of Music, which, owing partly to Pythagorean traditions, was classed
-with mathematics. We have already seen a class learning Astronomy.
-Plato, in the _Theaitetos_,[499] supplies a sketch of a lesson in more
-advanced arithmetic, which, by Hellenic custom, was usually expressed
-in geometrical terms in order to obtain the assistance of a diagram.
-The lad Theaitetos says to Sokrates that Theodorus of Kurene, the
-great contemporary mathematician, had been teaching him. “He was
-giving us a lesson in Roots, with diagrams, showing us that the root
-of 3 and the root of 5 did not admit of linear measurement by the foot
-(that is, were not rational). He took each root separately up to 17.
-There, as it happened, he stopped. So the other pupil and I
-determined, since the roots were apparently infinite in number, to try
-to find a single name which would embrace all these roots.
-
-“We divided all number into two parts. The number which has a square
-root we likened to the geometrical square, and called ‘square and
-equilateral’ (_e.g._ 4, 9, 16). The intermediate numbers, such as 3
-and 5 and the rest which have no square root, but are made up of
-unequal factors, we likened to the rectangle with unequal sides, and
-called rectangular numbers.” And so on. As the pupils apply the same
-principle to cubes and cube roots, Theodorus must have initiated them
-into the mysteries of solid geometry also.
-
-Here we find a professor lecturing to a select class, in this case of
-only two lads, and his pupils, as in the class-room of Dionusios,
-discussing and elaborating among themselves afterwards the
-subject-matter of the lecture. Theodoros is mentioned as teaching
-Geometry, Astronomy, and the theory of Music, as well as the Science
-of Numbers. Geometry by this time included a good number of the easier
-propositions which were afterwards incorporated in the works of
-Euclid; the school of Pythagoras, and, later, that of Plato, did much
-to develop it. The problem of squaring the circle was already
-occupying attention.[500] Compasses and the rule were the ordinary
-geometrical implements: diagrams were drawn on the ground, on dust or
-sand. In Arithmetic surds[501] were a popular subject: but
-arithmetical problems, being usually expressed in terms of geometry
-plane or solid, become as a rule a part of the latter science.
-
-To Plato these mathematical studies are alone suitable for secondary
-education: the philosopher Teles,[502] carrying on the same tradition,
-makes arithmetic and geometry the special plagues of the lad.[503] But
-then the philosophers despised Rhetoric.
-
-Rhetoric, from the time of Gorgias onwards, formed a very large part
-of secondary education Isokrates was its greatest professor. He
-provided in his school a course of three or four years for lads, to
-occupy their time till they were epheboi. But the methods, the aims,
-and the personality of this interesting professor will be discussed
-later.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Besides mathematics and rhetoric, there were literary studies. The
-_Axiochos_ gives κριτικοί [kritikoi] among the teachers of a lad.
-These are the lecturers on literary subjects, who concerned themselves
-with interpretations, often far-fetched, of the poets; a summary of
-the literary discussion in the _Protagoras_ may give some idea of such
-a lesson.
-
-“PROTAGORAS. I consider that it is a most important part of a man’s
-education to be skilled in poetry; to understand, that is, what is
-rightly said, and what is not, by the poets. Simonides says to Skopas,
-son of Kreon the Thessalian, ‘To become indeed a good man is hard, a
-man foursquare, wrought without blame in hands and feet and mind.’ You
-know the poem? Do you know then that farther on in the same poem he
-says, ‘But the saying of Pittakos, wise though he was, seems to me not
-said aright: he said, “’Tis hard to be noble.”’ Don’t you see that the
-poet has contradicted himself?”
-
-Sokrates replies by distinguishing “being” from “becoming,” and
-suggests that χαλεπός [chalepos] (hard) may mean not “difficult” but
-“bad.” He then gives a lecture in his turn. He picks out a μέν [men]
-in the first line and puts it into a most unwarrantable position in
-his translation, and makes “indeed” go with “hard.” To become good is
-difficult but possible, to be and remain good quite impossible. Hence
-Simonides goes on to say that he is quite satisfied with those who do
-no positive harm. Sokrates also notes a philological point, that
-ἐπαίνημι [epainêmi] in the poem is a Lesbian Aeolic form, justified
-because the poem is addressed to a citizen of Mitulene. It may be
-remarked that Hippias also possessed a lecture on the subject. A
-lecture on Homer by a Sophist is mentioned by Isokrates: such lectures
-were frequently given by the rhapsodes.
-
-Grammar was also taught, and the right use of words. Less usual
-subjects were geography,[504] art, and metre. Logic was in its
-infancy, but the growing lad could practise himself in argument by
-listening to the disputes of the dialecticians. Current conversation
-was full of ethical and political discussions: in the fourth century
-there were the philosophical schools of Plato and, later, of
-Aristotle, and the lectures of Antisthenes the cynic in Kunosarges;
-and Isokrates taught political science. Lads seem to have been
-expected to learn something, at any rate, of the laws of their
-country: no doubt they were taken up to the Akropolis to read Solon’s
-code: occasionally they may have been present as spectators in the
-law-courts, in order that they might gain an idea of legal procedure.
-Those who intended to become speech-writers for the courts would
-doubtless learn more: they would also attend some well-known writer
-like Lusias or Isaios, and learn the art of forensic rhetoric.
-
-It must be clearly understood that the whole of this secondary
-education was purely voluntary. The parent need not send his lad to
-hear any teaching of the sort: the poorer classes certainly would not.
-The richer parents could choose what subjects they or their sons
-preferred: rhetoric or literature, geography or mathematics――it was
-all one to the State. Teachers came and went: few stayed in Athens
-long. Their pupils had either to follow them abroad, as Isokrates went
-to Gorgias in Thessaly, or wait for their next visit. It was only the
-schools of Isokrates, of the great philosophers, and of a few
-speech-writers like Lusias and Isaios, that had any permanence in
-Athens. Isokrates himself had taught in Chios for a time: Plato was
-more than once in Sicily, and his school had to do without him in his
-absence. There is a peculiar fluidity about secondary education in
-Hellas: the teachers are always on the move. Endowed buildings for
-them there were none: they taught in their own houses and gardens, or
-in those of rich hosts, or in school-rooms borrowed for the occasion,
-or in public resorts like the gymnasia, or even in the streets.
-Consistent or continuous instruction was the exception: the Sophists
-proper gave it only to a few. The average lad at this time naturally
-acquired a wide and superficial knowledge of a great number of
-subjects, just the amount of knowledge which is such a dangerous
-thing. The lads became Jacks-of-all-trades: Plato, struck with the
-educational error of wide superficiality, wrote the _Republic_ as a
-counterblast, preaching “One man, one trade.” This protest is largely
-directed against the specious superficiality of the Sophists’
-teaching.
-
-Consequently, secondary education fell into two halves, the fluid
-teaching of the wandering Sophists and the continuous teaching of the
-more stationary schools of Plato and Isokrates. It will be convenient
-to accept this division, and take the fluid half first. In subjects,
-the two must overlap one another: the Sophists taught logic as much as
-Plato, rhetoric as much as Isokrates, and universal information of
-very much the same range as Aristotle. But the method was different,
-just because as a rule the Sophist was here to-day and gone to-morrow,
-while the stationary teachers taught the same pupils for several years
-together and could study their particular idiosyncrasies, and the
-value of education depends very largely on the teacher’s understanding
-of, and sympathy with, the individual boys whom he teaches.
-
-It is of interest to trace the development of the term Sophia and of
-the Sophists who professed it.
-
-The earliest thoughts of the Hellenic peoples were enshrined in
-hexameter verse. Homer and Hesiod represent the science and
-philosophy, as well as the religion, of their age. The poetical
-tradition survived in philosophy as late as Parmenides and Empedokles:
-the last trace of it may perhaps be found in the myths of Plato. The
-religious and ritual thinkers and the composers of oracles also
-employed verse. Consequently “wisdom,” in the earliest Hellenic
-literature, is mainly associated with poetry and music, and the words
-σοφοί [sophoi] and σοφισταί [sophistai] are applied indiscriminately
-to poets.[505] This sense of σοφιστής [sophistês] survived in later
-times, and Protagoras could call Homer, Hesiod, Mousaios, Orpheus, and
-Simonides all alike by this title. Orpheus is so styled in the
-_Rhesos_. Phrunichos called Lampros the musician a “hyper-sophist,”
-and Athenaeus declares that Sophist was a general title for all
-students of music.
-
-A second use of the word “wise man” had also existed from the earliest
-times, by which it had been applied to those who were skilful in some
-particular craft, such as carpentering,[506] medicine,[507] or
-chariot-driving.[508]
-
-The “Seven Sages” also received the name of Sophist,[509] and in their
-age the cognate words σοφός [sophos] and σοφία [sophia] became
-connected with practical and political wisdom.[510]
-
-Then the rise of education in Hellas, in which these old poets and
-thinkers were largely employed, and the analogy of the other
-educational titles with similar endings, γραμματιστής [grammatistês]
-and κιθαριστής [kitharistês], gave the word σοφιστής [sophistês] an
-association with the teaching profession. Scientific knowledge was
-beginning to accumulate. Sufficient history was known to serve as a
-foundation for political theory and precept. Rhetoric was becoming an
-essential preliminary to political life, since, with the rise of
-democracy, persuasion became the dominating influence in law-courts
-and assemblies. The desire for knowledge was never so keen as during
-the latter half of the fifth century in Hellas. With the demand came
-the men. All over the Hellenic world arose professional teachers, who
-carried the knowledge, which they had learnt from one another or
-discovered for themselves, from city to city. Everywhere their
-lectures attracted large and enthusiastic crowds. Among the subjects
-which they studied and taught may be mentioned mathematics (including
-arithmetic, geometry, and astronomy), grammar, etymology, geography,
-natural history, the laws of metre and rhythm, history (under which
-head fell also mythology and genealogies), politics, ethics, the
-criticism of religion, mnemonics, logic, tactics and strategy, music,
-drawing and painting, scientific athletics, and, above all, rhetoric.
-To such a heterogeneous collection what name could be given but
-“wisdom,” σοφία [sophia]? The name Sophist was applied indiscriminately
-to all these secondary teachers.
-
-There are several interesting accounts of these Sophists in extant
-literature, but the writers are always prejudiced opponents.
-
-In the _Clouds_ of Aristophanes, the Sophists and their pupils are
-represented as living in an underground Thinking-Shop. They are pale
-and squalid, engaged in all sorts of researches. Natural history is
-represented by the important question, “How many times the length of
-its own foot does a flea jump?” a problem which is solved by actual
-experiment. Later in the play they inquire why the sea does not
-overflow, since the rivers are always running into it. Scientific
-instead of mythological explanations of thunder and lightning are
-given. There is religious criticism too, such as Xenophanes had
-uttered long before: “If Zeus imprisoned his own father, why has he
-not been punished?” There is astronomy, “the paths and orbit of the
-sun,” and a hanging basket is introduced as an observatory. Geometry
-and compasses are mentioned. The visitor is shown a map of the world,
-containing Euboia, Lakedaimon, and Attica on a large enough scale, it
-would seem, to mark the deme Kikunna; perhaps, as Strepsiades expects
-to find dikastai on it at Athens, it had pictures of elephants and
-monsters in unknown districts. The students are interested in metres
-and rhythms. The poet laughs at grammar, forming “cockess” as the
-logical feminine of cock, and making the chief Sophist object to
-feminine nouns with masculine terminations. It is suggested that the
-pupils at the Thinking-Shop are dirty, half-starved vegetarians, too
-economical to go to the hair-cutter or the baths, abstaining from wine
-and the gymnasia. But the main point attacked by Aristophanes is the
-teaching of Argument. The whole object of learning under the Sophists
-is, according to him, to be able to cajole the dikastai and so win
-impunity to cheat, and to have an argument to justify anything. The
-successful scholars beat their fathers and mothers, giving logical
-reasons for their behaviour; they refuse to go to school, and are too
-clever to believe or accept anything. But their intellectual
-exhilaration is spasmodic; they have been taught, if they reach a
-difficult problem, to jump on to something else.
-
-A vivid sketch of Sophist-life is given in Plato’s _Protagoras_. Young
-Hippokrates, on returning to Athens in the evening after pursuing a
-runaway slave to the frontier, hears that Protagoras the great Sophist
-has arrived in the city. Only the lateness of the hour deters him from
-rushing off to find Sokrates, who will give him an introduction to the
-teacher. Next morning he comes round to Sokrates’ house long before it
-is light, bangs and shouts at the door in his excitement, and
-announces that he is ready to spend all the money which he and all his
-friends possess, in fees.
-
-They go off to the house of Kallias, where Protagoras and other
-Sophists are staying. The porter is so worn out by the number of
-visitors that he is distinctly rude. They find Protagoras walking up
-and down in the cloisters of the house, with three or four listeners
-on either side, one of whom is learning to be a Sophist himself.
-Behind follows a crowd, mostly composed of the foreigners whom he
-draws from city to city, like Orpheus, with his magic voice. Another
-Sophist, Hippias, is sitting on a sort of throne in the opposite part
-of the cloisters; around him on benches are a number of inquirers, who
-were asking him questions about natural science and astronomy. A third
-Sophist, Prodikos, is in a side-building, still in bed, covered up in
-blankets.[511] His audience sat on neighbouring beds. The whole
-assemblage finally collect couches and benches together in a great
-circle to hear a discussion between Sokrates and Protagoras. Kallias,
-the host on this occasion, often entertained Sophists: at another time
-he had Gorgias and Polos in the house. His cloisters must have
-provided a favourite lecture-room. The Sophists also haunted the
-gymnasia. The discussion in the _Euthudemos_ takes place in the
-undressing-room of the Lukeion: the two Sophists have been walking in
-the cloister. Hippias on one occasion lectures in a school-room, on
-another in a public place at Olympia.
-
-Protagoras was the first of these teachers to take pay. His system was
-very fair. On the close of their course of instruction his pupils, if
-they chose, paid the fee for which he asked; otherwise, they went into
-a temple, and, after taking an oath, paid as much as they said his
-instruction was worth.[512] Hippias made about £600 in a very short
-time in Sicily, receiving some £80 from the tiny town of Inukos,
-although Protagoras was also lecturing in the island at the time.
-Prodikos charged £2 for a particular lecture on correct speech,[513]
-but there was also a less complete form of it which cost only 10d.; he
-seems to have been noted for the gradations in his charges, for there
-were also lectures at 5d., 1s. 8d., and 3s. 4d.[514] The sum which
-Euenos of Paros asked for teaching the whole duties of a man and a
-citizen was £20.[515] Probably, however, the charges of these
-Sophists, and the money which they made, were much exaggerated by
-their contemporaries. Isokrates, the pupil of Gorgias, gives a much
-lower estimate. “None of the so-called Sophists,” he says, “will be
-found to have collected much money. On the contrary, some passed their
-lives in poverty and the rest in quite ordinary circumstances. The
-richest Sophist within my memory was Gorgias. He spent most of his
-time in Thessaly, the most prosperous part of Hellas. He lived to a
-great age and followed his profession for a great many years. He did
-not take upon himself any public burdens by settling in any one city.
-He did not marry or have children to bring up. Yet with all these
-opportunities of growing wealthy, he only left about £800 at his
-death.”[516] It must be remembered that the Sophists received money
-only from those who definitely enrolled themselves as pupils or came
-to a few advertised lectures. Hippias lectured at Sparta frequently,
-and never received a penny. Any one might go and ask a Sophist a
-question, and would almost always receive a voluminous answer. The
-eloquence and practical skill of these men were also always at the
-disposal of their own city. Like the greater Renaissance scholars,
-Hippias, Gorgias, and Prodikos were much occupied in going on
-embassies. For the larger part of their life-work they received no
-payment whatever; what they actually received was possibly less than
-what their philosophic opponents obtained in donations from friendly
-tyrants.
-
-At any rate, their fees were not heavy enough to damp the ardour of
-their pupils. Young men left their relations and friends to follow
-Sophists from city to city. These enthusiastic disciples were almost
-ready to carry their teachers about on their shoulders, so great was
-their affection for them. Why this enthusiasm? Partly because the
-Sophists were men of great personal charm. Partly because in that age
-the thirst for knowledge was unbounded. Partly from a desire to learn
-the way of virtue, which the Sophists claimed to teach. But the most
-potent reason was ambition. The young wished to shine in conversation,
-the great occupation of the age, and to be able to discuss every
-conceivable topic with intelligence. But education was also the road
-to political success. The Sophists taught systematic rhetoric, and
-logic of a sort. They also supplied the subject-matter for orations,
-in their practical handling of political science, of history, of
-ethical commonplaces; for a public oration was expected to be a
-storehouse of erudition. Rhetoric was needful not only for power, but
-also for security; for in the courts it had more influence than mere
-argument and facts.
-
- * * * * *
-
-About the individual Sophists little is known. They appear for us only
-in the pages of those who traduced them. Plato is mainly occupied with
-various conclusions which he draws from their philosophic theories,
-which were not a part of their teaching. _Protagoras_, the eldest of
-them, a most dignified personage, set himself to train good citizens:
-he claimed that he enabled his pupils to manage their households and
-govern their states. He imparted to them all the worldly wisdom which
-he had gained by long years of personal experience. He made a special
-study of political science, no doubt for this purpose, and left a
-treatise upon the subject, which was sufficiently excellent for a
-certain Aristoxenos to be able to say that Plato had plagiarised most
-of the _Republic_ from it.[517] Being businesslike, he favoured
-clearness of thought, and studied grammar: he was the first to
-separate nouns into the three genders.[518]
-
-_Prodikos_ belonged to the same practical school. He began by teaching
-his pupils the right use of words.[519] Thus he told Sokrates not to
-use δεινός [deinos] when he meant “clever”; for its proper meaning was
-“terrible,” applicable to war, disease, or the like.[520] There is an
-amusing skit on his pet subject in Plato.[521] “The audience in a
-philosophical debate should give an impartial but not an equal
-attention to both speakers; for it is not the same thing. For it is
-right to give an impartial hearing, but you ought to incline, not
-equally towards both, but rather towards the wiser speaker. I also ask
-you to agree, and to discuss, not to dispute. For friends discuss with
-friends for friendship’s sake, but enemies dispute. In this way our
-meeting will be best conducted. For you, the speakers, would thus win
-from the audience most repute, not praise (for repute is without
-deception in the minds of the hearers, but praise is an outward
-expression of what is often not felt); and we, the audience, would
-thus receive most happiness, not pleasure; for happiness is produced
-by the mental reception of knowledge and wisdom, pleasure by eating or
-by some other pleasant physical state.” It was easy to laugh, but, as
-Plato himself shows, these distinctions of meaning were extremely
-useful in meeting logical quibbles, and were much needed in
-contemporary logic. Besides this, Prodikos was a moral teacher, and
-composed the famous _Choice of Herakles_, in which he inculcated the
-duty of hard work as opposed to a life of laziness and pleasure. He
-was an invalid, but worked on in spite of ill-health; the result was,
-perhaps, a certain amount of pessimism.
-
-_Hippias_ was a marvellously all-round genius. He once came to the
-Olympian festival with everything that he wore or carried made by
-himself, ring, oil bottle, shoes, clothes, a wonderful Persian girdle;
-he also brought epic poems, tragedies, dithyrambs, and all sorts of
-prose-works.[522] He knew astronomy, geometry, arithmetic, grammar. At
-Sparta he taught history and archæology. He had a wonderful system of
-mnemonics, by which, if he once heard a string of fifty names, he
-could remember them all.[523] He lectured on Homer and other poets. He
-also composed a moral discourse, which won great applause at Sparta,
-where quibbles or bad morality would have been sternly repressed; it
-was afterwards delivered in an Athenian school-room. Hippias was
-always ready to answer any question which was put to him, and was
-rarely at a loss.
-
-A less prominent Sophist was _Antiphon_, who must be carefully
-distinguished from his namesake the Attic orator. He published works
-on physics, on concord (ὁμόνοια [homonoia]), and on political science.
-The fragments are interesting, and show some popular handling of
-ethical teaching. The following extracts[524] will give some idea of
-the man:――
-
- “First among things human I reckon education. For if you
- begin anything whatever in the right way, the end will
- probably be right also. The nature of the harvest depends
- upon the seed you sow. If you plant good education in a
- young body, it bears leaves and fruit the whole life long,
- and no rain or drought can destroy it.”
-
- “Life is like a day’s sentry-duty, and the length of life is
- comparable to a single day. While our day lasts, we look up
- to the sunlight, then we pass on our duty to our
- successors.”
-
- “A miser stored up money in a hiding-place, and did not lend
- or use it. Then it was stolen. A man to whom he had refused
- to lend it told him to put a stone in the hiding-place
- instead, and imagine that it was money; it would be just as
- useful.”
-
-Among the Sophists were some apparently who were merely jesters, and
-used their brains solely in arousing laughter. It may well be doubted
-whether the account which Plato gives of _Euthudemos_ and
-_Dionusodoros_ is true to life; but they probably represent a type. As
-teachers, no sane man could take them seriously. They had been
-gladiators, and had taught forensic rhetoric; afterwards they
-discovered a genius for quibbles. They were ready to make out any
-statement to be true or false. The respondent may only answer “Yes” or
-“No,” and no previous statement could be quoted against them, since
-they did not claim to teach anything consistent. A sample[525] of
-their arguments will make their methods clearer. “_A._ Your father is
-a dog. _B._ So is yours. _A._ If you answer my questions, you will
-admit it. Have you a dog? _B._ Yes, a very bad one. _A._ Has it
-puppies? _B._ Mongrels like itself. _A._ Then the dog is a father?
-_B._ Yes. _A._ Isn’t the dog yours? _B._ Certainly. _A._ Then being
-yours and a father, it is your father, and you are the brother of
-puppies.” Absurd as it is, such discussions are a good means of
-teaching logic, since they make the search for rules intellectually
-compulsory.
-
-No doubt there were black sheep among the lesser Sophists, to whom
-Plato’s bitter definitions in the _Sophist_ were quite applicable, who
-were “hunters after young men of wealth and position, with sham
-education as their bait, and a fee for their object, making money by a
-scientific use of quibbles in private conversation, while quite aware
-that what they were teaching was wrong.” But they do not appear in
-extant literature, which has only recorded a very few, and those the
-very pick, of the hundreds of Sophists that there must have been in
-the Socratic age.[526]
-
- * * * * *
-
-The Sophists who have been mentioned so far have been but little
-concerned with Rhetoric: they form rather a school of Logic, opposed
-to the rhetorical school of _Gorgias_ and his followers.
-
- [Illustration: PLATE VIII.
-
- IN THE PALAISTRA: FLUTE-PLAYERS (WITH φορβεία [phorbeia]),
- JAVELIN-THROWER, DISK-THROWER, AND BOXER
-
- Gerhard’s _Auserlesene Vasenbilder_, cclxxii. Fig. 1.
- From a Kulix, now at Berlin, signed by Epiktetos (No. 2262).]
-
-Of the rise of Rhetoric in Hellas I need say little: the whole subject
-has been admirably treated elsewhere.[527] For educational purposes,
-Hellenic rhetoric started with several fatal drawbacks and some
-counterbalancing advantages. The southern nature of the Hellenes
-preferred sensuous charm of sound to logical accuracy of fact; their
-rhetoric, arising as it did out of poetry, and modelling itself upon
-its literary parent, pandered only too readily to their taste. With
-truth it had no more to do than Homer had; its object was to please
-the ear by curious rhythms, balanced clauses, parisosis, and all other
-possible devices. As long as the form was excellent, no matter how
-trivial the subject:[528] mice or salt were good enough for a theme.
-The oration must, of course, be full of passion, but that could be
-simulated: rhetoric had inherited the legacy of acting from its
-parent, Lyric Poetry. So rhetoric became simply a question of style,
-not of argument; and since arguments were not required, the strength
-or weakness of a case did not matter: rhetoric could make any cause
-attractive to a sensuous Hellenic ear by its tricks of style, and thus
-make “the weaker cause the stronger.” The method by which its
-professors taught their pupils brought out this attitude clearly. They
-were accustomed to take an imaginary case, and then to teach their
-pupils how to write a speech on either side of it: the extant
-“Tetralogies” of Antiphon are examples of the method, which was
-excellent educationally; for it is good to see the arguments on both
-sides of a case. It was the carelessness about fact and indifference
-to truth, and the element of acting, that were so dangerous to the
-pupils. These elements certainly wrecked the justice of the Athenian
-courts; their effect on Hellenic character was probably equally
-unsatisfactory.
-
-Rhetoric also inherited the “gnome” or commonplace, a general
-statement about ethics or politics or what not, which could be
-developed into a sententious little essay. Budding orators learned to
-compose a little store of these and keep them ready for use, to be
-inserted in a speech whenever an opportunity occurred. For writing
-these essays, a certain amount of independent thought about politics
-and ethics was necessary; and both the thought and the essay-writing
-were no doubt good for the lads.
-
-The flowery and poetic style, which was the main characteristic of
-early Hellenic rhetoric, was the creation of Gorgias. A fragment of a
-funeral oration, in which no doubt he put forth all his powers, may be
-given as a sample of the sort of thing which his pupils learned to
-write:――
-
-“As witness to their deeds these dead set up trophies over the foe,
-offerings to Zeus, offered by themselves. They were not unskilled in
-natural Ares nor lawful loves nor armèd strife nor beauty-loving
-Peace; revering the Gods by Justice, honouring their parents by
-Service, just to their countrymen by Equality, faithful to their
-friends by Loyalty. Therefore, when they died, love for them died not
-with them, but deathless in bodies no longer bodies it lives when they
-live no longer.” In the _Encomium on Helen_ we have “fright exceeding
-fearful, and pity exceeding tearful, and yearning exceeding painful,”
-and “productive of pleasure, destructive of pain.” In the _Palamedes_
-Gorgias even uses puns.
-
-His poetical compounds and those of his pupil _Alkidamas_ were famous.
-In short, at this time there was no boundary whatever between poetry
-and prose: prose, if anything, was the more poetical of the two.
-
-This strange hothouse Euphuistic style of Gorgias took Hellas by
-storm, and his influence was enormous: it even half-mastered the
-austere mind of Thucydides. As reformed by the greater critical
-faculties of his pupil Isokrates, it became the parent of Ciceronian
-Latin and so of the prose literature of centuries.
-
-The other rhetorical Sophists of the time are less interesting.
-_Likumnios_ and _Polos_, teacher and pupil, seem to have devoted
-themselves to questions of rhythm: they employed quaint conceits and
-affectations, like Gorgias. _Theodoros_ and _Euenos_ divided and
-subdivided the parts of an oration into “confirmation” and “additional
-confirmation,” and “by-blames” and “by-panegyrics”: in which work
-Polos joined them. _Thrasumachos_ of Chalcedon, who seems to have been
-a bigger man altogether, began to attack the psychological side of
-rhetoric by studying the questions of pathos and indignation; these
-studies he embodied in pamphlets, and no doubt his results were
-imparted to his pupils.
-
-One of the beauties of old Hellenic education had been that it did not
-make the rich a class apart from the poor by giving a widely different
-form of culture. The rise of the Sophists changed all this: their fees
-excluded the poor. The odium of resultant class-separation fell upon
-the teachers. Their pupils, rich, aristocratic, and cultured, inclined
-towards oligarchy. Hellenic sentiment held the teacher responsible for
-the whole career of his pupils. So for this reason again the
-democracies regarded the Sophists with suspicion, as the trainers of
-oligarchs and tyrants. It was chiefly because he had been the teacher
-of Kritias and Alkibiades that Sokrates was put to death by the
-restored democracy. The persuasive powers which the rhetoricians gave
-to their pupils might be, and often were, misused; the pupils might
-mislead the Ekklesia into bad policy or the law-courts into injustice
-by their eloquence. However much the Sophists might protest that they
-taught only rhetoric, not ethics, they were held responsible for the
-dishonesty as well as for the eloquence of such pupils. Besides,
-rhetoric gave the rich man, who alone could buy it, a most
-undemocratic influence in the State. The odium against the Sophists
-was increased by their religious and political views. They were free
-thinkers in all things. Protagoras was a frank agnostic; Gorgias
-believed that nothing whatever existed. Their political theories were
-equally revolutionary, full of the idea of Social Contracts and the
-right of the one strong man. All this was extremely distasteful to the
-majority, who were democratic and orthodox. But it must be remembered
-that no such views appeared in lectures: they were confined to an
-occasional book or to private conversation. Outwardly the Sophists
-were law-abiding and respectable servants of the constitution, and
-their lectures were, if anything, rather commonplace.
-
-Thus the prejudice against them was excited partly by their
-freethinking and partly by their fees. The first of these two reasons
-applied still more to Sokrates and the philosophic schools. But
-Sokrates neither asked nor received fees: Plato and Aristotle only
-accepted presents. Consequently when the philosophic party tried to
-dissociate themselves in the popular mind from the Sophists with whom
-they were confounded, they attempted to revive the old Hellenic
-prejudice against taking fees for “wisdom,” which had given trouble to
-the lyric poets, and to emphasise the money-making aspects of the
-Sophists’ profession. This rather absurd appeal to the gallery has
-influenced posterity; but it did not win universal acceptation in
-Hellas. Aischines still calls Sokrates a Sophist. Under the Roman
-Empire “Sophist” became a title of distinction applied to artistic
-stylists and teachers like Libanius.
-
-
- [495] Plato’s own schoolmaster, Diog. Laert. iii. 5.
-
- [496] [Plato] _Lovers_, 132.
-
- [497] Reputed inventor of Euclid i. 12 and 23, and a great
- astronomer.
-
- [498] Thus the lad Theages, who has learnt letters,
- lyre-playing, and wrestling, is vaguely in search of a
- Sophist, to make him “wise” ([Plato] _Theages_, 121 D, 122
- E).
-
- [499] Plato, _Theait._ 147 D.
-
- [500] Aristoph. _Birds_, 1005.
-
- [501] Plato, _Hipp. Maj._ 303 B.
-
- [502] Stob. 98, p. 535.
-
- [503] And learning to ride. He is thinking of the
- aristocratic lad, who would afterwards enter the later
- exclusive ephebic college.
-
- [504] Among the common amusements of Athenian dinner-parties
- was a geographical game, in which A gave, say, the name of a
- city in Asia beginning with K, and B had to reply with one
- in Europe beginning with the same letter (Athen. 457).
-
- [505] Pind. _Isthm._ 5 (4) 36. σοφισταί [sophistai]; σοφός
- [sophos], Pind. _Ol._ i. 15; _Pyth._ i. 42. σοφία [sophia],
- _Hymn to Hermes_, and Pind. _Ol._ i. 187.
-
- [506] Hom. _Il._ 15. 412.
-
- [507] Pind. _Pyth._ 3. 96.
-
- [508] _Ibid._ 5. 154.
-
- [509] In Isokrates, _Antid._ 235.
-
- [510] As in Theog. 1074.
-
- [511] He was an invalid.
-
- [512] Plato, _Protag._ 328 C.
-
- [513] Plato, _Krat._ 384 E.
-
- [514] [Plato] _Axioch._ 366 C.
-
- [515] Plato, _Apol._ iv. 20 B.
-
- [516] Isok. _Antid._ 156.
-
- [517] Diog. Laert. iii. 25.
-
- [518] Aristot. _Rhet._ iii. 3. 5.
-
- [519] Plato, _Euthud._ 277 E.
-
- [520] Plato, _Protag._ 341 A.
-
- [521] _Ibid._ 337 A-C.
-
- [522] Plato, _Hipp. Min._ 368.
-
- [523] Plato, _Hipp. Maj._ and _Protag._ 318.
-
- [524] Quoted in the Teubner Antiphon from Stobaeus. _Flor._
- 98. 533. _Flor._ Appendix, 16. 36. This Antiphon comes in
- Xen. _Mem._ i. 6. 1.
-
- [525] Plato, _Euthud._ 298 D.
-
- [526] It is not fair to condemn Polos and Thrasumachos on
- the score of the opinions which Plato puts into their
- mouths.
-
- [527] Jebb, _Attic Orators_.
-
- [528] Compare Renaissance poetry in Italy.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-SECONDARY EDUCATION: II. THE PERMANENT SCHOOLS
-
-
-Athens was the place in which the fluid educational system of the
-Sophists would naturally begin to crystallise. Not only were the
-Athenians the keenest and most intellectual of the Hellenes: owing to
-the vast trade of their city, merchants, astronomers, inventors,
-poets, thinkers of all sorts, poured into it, and men of all trades
-and all tongues collected there. Many stayed there for a few days
-only, in passing; for Athens was a sort of Clapham Junction in those
-days. All these brought a perpetual supply of new ideas into the city,
-which the inhabitants were quick to assimilate.
-
-But, possessing all the advantages of a commercial centre, Athens was
-free from the disadvantages. The clamour and vulgarity of trade were
-confined to the Peiraieus: in the gymnasia or the streets or the
-colonnades of Athens the philosopher and the thinker could teach and
-meditate in peace, in an atmosphere ennobled by her treasures of
-architecture and art and sculpture, which subdued the most blatant
-visitor, amid the literary circles which her dramatic contests
-attracted and encouraged. Here was an ideal spot for the meeting-place
-of the best minds in Hellas and the growth of a great educational
-system. The city was an education in itself. Perikles had called
-Athens the school of Hellas; the name was now to be justified in its
-most literal sense.
-
-Early in the fourth century there arose established secondary schools
-in Athens. Plato began to teach Logic and Philosophy, Isokrates
-Rhetoric, not for a few weeks at a time, but permanently: their
-courses lasted three or four years. Characteristically, there was no
-State organisation or interference; Isokrates taught in his own house,
-near the Lukeion, Plato in his garden near Kolonos and in the
-Akademeia. Their pupils came from all parts of the civilised world,
-staying in Athens during their course of study. Plato imposed a
-preliminary examination in mathematics upon his pupils; Isokrates only
-commended a knowledge of such subjects. The students of these two
-schools became recognised features of Athenian life.
-
-Plato led his pupils towards intellectual research and a life of
-retirement; the tendency of the school was markedly aristocratic, and
-several of the lads became tyrants in after life. Isokrates inculcated
-the practical life: his teaching was meant as a preparation for
-success in society and politics. But as his school naturally was only
-for the comparatively wealthy and leisured classes, it also tended to
-be aristocratic; however, it produced some of the leading democratic
-statesmen of the day.
-
-Besides these two great schools others grew up. It is hard to
-distinguish exactly between the boys who went to Isokrates in order to
-learn political speaking and those who went to a “logographos” like
-Lusias or Demosthenes to learn forensic oratory. The “logographoi” do
-not seem to have claimed to impart culture, but only technical
-instruction: they are thus on the boundary line of education. But
-Demosthenes went to the “logographos” Isaios to get precisely the
-instruction which Isokrates had refused him: so it is hard to make a
-clear distinction. I shall therefore give a short sketch of the
-“logographoi” also.[529]
-
-By the time that these schools began to establish themselves the
-Sophists were beginning to die out. Times were harder in the fourth
-century, and fewer people had money to spend on these expensive
-teachers. The intellectual movement of the Periclean age had spent
-itself, and the desire for universal knowledge was no longer so keen.
-Moreover, it is quite probable that settled schools, like that of
-Isokrates at Athens, were forming in many of the great centres: it is
-known that Isokrates himself taught for a while in Chios. The great
-demerit of the Sophists’ teaching, namely, that it was too much in a
-hurry and gave no time for personal endeavour on the part of the
-pupil, had been recognised: and the result was that the Sophists
-settled down in a single place and gave continuous courses of
-instruction.
-
-But a good many Sophists of the old type remained, to vex Isokrates by
-their criticisms and rivalries. They still came to Athens at the great
-festivals, and gave hurried lectures.[530] But they had not the
-originality of their predecessors, and people preferred to read the
-works of Protagoras or Gorgias for themselves to hearing them repeated
-as original by a lecturer. Books were already a serious rival to
-lecturing, and were a cause of much searching of heart to Plato:
-Isokrates, however, preferred to write himself and so advertise his
-school.
-
-Besides the wandering Sophists there were probably a good many
-teachers, both of Philosophy and of Rhetoric, established permanently
-at Athens. Isokrates mentions casually that all the schools[531]
-produce only two or three first-class speakers. In his educational
-prospectus, _Against the Sophists_, he criticises these rivals freely.
-“They merely try to attract pupils by low fees and big promises. The
-speeches which they write themselves are worse than the improvisations
-of the wholly untrained, yet they promise to make a complete orator
-out of any one who comes to them; for they make no allowance for
-natural talent or for experience, but regard eloquence as an exact
-science, just like the A B C and equally communicable; whereas it is
-really a progressive art, where the same thing must never be said
-twice, and its rules must be relative to the occasion and the
-circumstances.”[532] It is clear that these rivals committed the
-serious crime of underselling Isokrates and also of issuing more
-attractive prospectuses; perhaps, too, they are the captious critics
-to whom he is always referring.
-
-Isokrates is still more severe on various philosophical teachers; he
-cannot mean Plato alone, for he mentions their fees, and Plato made no
-charge. There must have been a large number of philosophical
-professors, of whom Plato was only the most brilliant. But in many
-points Isokrates no doubt meant his denunciations to apply to Plato
-also. The summary of his attack is as follows:――“They make impossible
-offers, promising to impart to their pupils an exact science of
-conduct, by means of which they will always know what to do. Yet for
-this science they charge only 3 or 4 μναῖ [mnai] (£12 or £16), a
-ridiculously small sum. They try to attract pupils by the specious
-titles of the subjects which they claim to teach, such as Justice and
-Prudence. But the Justice and the Prudence which they teach are of a
-very peculiar sort, and they give a meaning to the words quite
-different from that which ordinary people give; in fact, they cannot
-be sure about the meaning themselves, but can only dispute about it.
-Although they profess to teach Justice, they refuse to trust their
-pupils, but make them deposit the fees with a third party before the
-course begins.”[533] Here we have a picture of a distinct group of
-ethical teachers all trying to work at that Socratic paradox that
-virtue is knowledge, and imparting their results to pupils for low
-fees.
-
-All these Professors of Ethics seem to have made Mathematics and
-Astronomy a part of their course, just as Plato did. “To the old
-Athenian education, of Letters and Music and Gymnastics, they have
-added a more advanced course, consisting of Geometry and Astronomy and
-such subjects, together with eristic dialogues,” that is,
-Dialectic.[534] This course seems to have been much criticised as
-being a mere waste of time, since it was of no practical use and the
-knowledge so obtained was soon forgotten in after life. But Isokrates,
-although these subjects played no part in his own school, was
-sufficiently good an educationalist to see their merits: the study of
-subtle and difficult matters like Astronomy and Geometry “trains a boy
-to keep his attention closely fixed upon the point at issue and not to
-allow his mind to wander; so, being practised in this way and having
-his wits sharpened, he will be made capable of learning more important
-matters with greater ease and speed.”[535] But all these unpractical,
-if improving, studies should be abandoned before the nineteenth year:
-for they dry up the human nature and make men unbusinesslike. “Some of
-those who have become so adept in these subjects that they teach them
-to others, show themselves in the practical conduct of life less wise
-than their pupils, not to say than their servants.”[536] Consequently,
-those who care to study mathematics and eristic should confine them to
-the years between fourteen and eighteen: and then pass on to learn
-rhetoric with Isokrates; the rest can come to his school as lads, as
-many did.
-
-But, although he differentiated himself so carefully from what moderns
-would call the philosophical schools, Isokrates styled himself a
-teacher of philosophy quite as much as they did. To him, as to the
-Romans, philosophy was the art of living a practical life. “That which
-is of no immediate use either for speech or for action does not
-deserve the name of Philosophy.”[537] The true philosopher is not the
-dreamer who neglects what is practical and essential, but the man of
-the world who learns and studies subjects which will make him able to
-manage his household and govern his state well; for this is the object
-of all labour and all philosophy.[537] With this practical end in view
-he ridicules the metaphysical researches of “the old Sophists, of whom
-Demokritos said that the number of realities was infinite, and
-Empedokles declared for four, and Ion for not more than three, and
-Alkmaion for only two, and Parmenides and Melissos for one, while
-Gorgias asserted that nothing existed at all.”[538]
-
-In the promises which he makes of imparting to his pupils this
-practical wisdom which he calls philosophy, Isokrates is
-characteristically cautious. An exact science, which will embrace all
-possible questions and circumstances which may arise in domestic and
-political matters, is an impossibility; men must be content with a
-general capacity of forming a right judgment in view of each
-particular case when it arises. Consequently he defines as “wise men,”
-σοφοί [sophoi], “those whose judgment usually hits upon the right
-course of action,” and as “seekers after wisdom” or philosophers,
-φιλόσοφοι [philosophoi], “those who occupy themselves with those
-studies and pursuits from which they will most quickly obtain this
-practical wisdom,”[539] or capacity of forming correct judgments. But
-a judgment can only be formed properly after a proper deliberation: so
-the work of Philosophy is to practise her pupils in this
-deliberation.[540]
-
-This practice is, of course, provided in the school of Isokrates; for
-his school was, in fact, a debating or deliberating society, in which
-the pupils wrote and recited carefully composed speeches on given
-themes, or listened to the harangues of their master. Sometimes they
-discussed events of the day and matters of general interest[541] at
-the moment; at another time their topic was some constitutional or
-historical question, or the comparative merits of different nations
-and governments.[542] At another time, as may be seen from the example
-of Isokrates’ own orations, they dealt with those mythical characters
-who were historical realities as well as sacred personages to the
-average Hellene, Theseus and Helen and Bousiris: this in their eyes
-was almost equivalent to religious instruction and they were virtually
-writing theological essays. No doubt also the pupils wrote and recited
-those “commonplaces” or short essays on general topics, composed in a
-most elaborate style, which ancient orators kept in stock, ready to be
-inserted in a speech when a suitable opening presented itself.
-Isokrates’ own works are particularly full of these highly finished
-little essays:[543] so it is at least extremely probable that he
-insisted upon their composition in his school. Before his pupils, too,
-Isokrates would recite those fine sermons of his, like the
-_Demonikos_; and effective pieces of moral exhortation they must have
-been.
-
-Thus the Isocratean school claimed to be, and was, a school of morals:
-it was also a school of good style and composition. The boys’ essays
-had to be written in a particular style, grandiloquent and ornate, to
-suit their themes. “For it is absurd to suppose that the matter and
-manner of ordinary conversation or of forensic oratory are suitable to
-Pan-Hellenic themes; on the contrary, in this kind of speech the
-thoughts must be more original and more lofty, the style more
-striking, and the diction more poetical and elaborate.”[544] Style,
-diction, and matter must, in fact, be that which Isokrates worked out
-in his own speeches. That style[545] I do not mean to discuss here.
-The fact that he wrote in a study and never spoke in public, has made
-him exaggerate the merits of the artistic prose-style of which he was
-the first really great exponent; but of its popularity with an
-Hellenic audience there can be no question. The pupils of Isokrates
-became the most eminent politicians and the most eminent prose-writers
-of the time; his house, as Cicero puts it, was the school of Hellas
-and the manufactory of eloquence.
-
-To acquire this kind of oratory, there was need both of natural
-ability and of diligent study. Isokrates professes to supply, first an
-exact science of all the rhetorical devices and the various forms
-which speech can take, and then practice in the right employment and
-arrangement of these several parts. To learn the technique of rhetoric
-is comparatively easy, if the aspirant applies to the right man; but
-the right use of the technique can never be brought under any set of
-rules, or taught by one man to another: it can only be learnt by
-experience. The future orator must try the effect of each arrangement
-and combination of technique on the audience, and so draw up his own
-system.[546] The requisite audience for these experiments will be
-provided by the other pupils of the school, with the master as chief
-critic. A good master is essential. By his personal influence he will
-be able to communicate those finer elements of style which cannot be
-communicated in formal teaching. If he is worth his salt, all his
-pupils will bear the stamp of his own manner, and will easily be
-distinguished from every one else by the similarity of their style to
-his and to one another’s.[547] Education in rhetoric at Isokrates’
-school seems to have begun with the study of his own works. In the
-_Panathenaikos_ he describes himself as reading the speech over with
-two or three of his regular pupils; they revise and criticise it as
-they go along. This would give Isokrates the opportunity of expounding
-his own views of technique, with his own works before him as
-illustrations. It may be inferred from the beginning of the _Bousiris_
-that the written speeches of other Sophists were also studied, and
-their faults, or aberrations from Isocratean canons, pointed out, in
-order that they might be avoided in future. At any rate, Isokrates
-complains that other professors of the same sort of Rhetoric at Athens
-made use of his writings for teaching their own pupils, though, of
-course, according to him, they did so in order to show the boys what
-to admire, not what to avoid. When this technique had been fully
-mastered Isokrates set his pupils to write speeches on their own
-account, choosing for them some great and improving theme: in these
-speeches they had to apply the rules which they had learnt, and the
-subtler influences which they had imbibed, from their teacher. But
-they had also to think out the subject-matter, and in this lies much
-of the merit of the whole system. For, as Isokrates observes, the
-essayist who writes upon such themes will have to think noble
-thoughts, and select noble deeds as his instances and illustrations.
-This contemplation of what is noble will be a greater incentive to
-virtue than any so-called science of ethics:[548] for there is no
-science which can create goodness in wicked natures, but exhortation
-and persuasion can work wonders. Moreover, since the orator’s best
-argument is, after all, a good reputation, the young orator will see
-that his conduct and character are as excellent as possible.[548] And
-the practice of weighing just what thoughts and actions are suitable
-to the speech involves that faculty of sound deliberation which is
-necessary for the formation of right judgments. In fact, Isocratean
-“Philosophy” does more to form character than it does to produce
-eloquence.[549]
-
-The pupils practised themselves, as we have seen, by delivering their
-harangues before Isokrates and their fellow-pupils. The school formed
-a select clique of trained critics of Rhetoric; the encouragement of
-criticism by this means must have been valuable. To this council
-Isokrates submitted his own orations before publication; former pupils
-were also invited to attend on these occasions. There is an
-interesting account of such an assembly at the end of the
-_Panathenaikos_. “I was revising the speech as it stands down to this
-point,” Isokrates says, “with three or four of the lads who are
-accustomed to study with me. On reading it through, we were satisfied
-with it and thought it only needed a peroration. I determined,
-however, to send for one of those among my pupils who had been brought
-up in an oligarchy and had set themselves to praise Lakedaimon, so
-that he might notice any false charge which we had unwittingly brought
-against the Spartans.” The pupil comes, and, while praising the speech
-enthusiastically, makes an unguarded criticism of its matter which led
-to a long discussion, in the course of which he and Isokrates deliver
-lengthy harangues. Finally, the pupil is crushed. The boys who had
-been present throughout the discussion were completely convinced by
-Isokrates and applauded him warmly. But the master himself was not
-satisfied. So three or four days later he called together all his old
-pupils who were in Athens, and the speech was submitted to their
-judgment, and received with enthusiastic applause. The former critic
-then delivered a brilliant harangue, trying to elucidate a hidden
-meaning in the speech. “The crowd of pupils, which is usually ready to
-applaud, shouted, flocked round him, and congratulated him, thoroughly
-agreeing with his eulogy of me,” says Isokrates. “I praised him too,
-but did not reveal whether he had hit off my secret meaning or not.”
-
-The whole tone of the passage suggests that such an appeal to the
-pupils for criticism and advice was common, the only extraordinary
-feature being the presence of the “old boys.” This view is supported
-by other passages. In the _Areiopagitikos_[550] Isokrates tells his
-imaginary audience that “Some who heard me on a former occasion
-describe this constitution which Athens once enjoyed, while praising
-it enthusiastically and calling our ancestors happy,… told me that I
-was not likely to persuade you to adopt it.” On another occasion his
-speech made such an impression upon this preliminary audience that “No
-one praised the beauty of the style, as they usually do, but all
-admired the truth of the argument.” When he first told his pupils that
-he meant to send an advisory speech to Philip, “they all thought he
-was mad, and had the impudence to rebuke him, a thing which they had
-never done before.… But when they had heard the speech, they changed
-their minds completely and thought that Philip, Athens, and all Hellas
-would alike be grateful to him.”[551]
-
-Isokrates’ great political pamphlets, with their wonderfully polished
-style and their striking themes, naturally served him as an excellent
-advertisement, as he naïvely admits in the _Antidosis_. Those who
-required further information about his educational methods and aims
-would turn to the prospectus _Against the Sophists_, which he
-published at the beginning of his career. Owing to these attractions,
-pupils came to him from all parts of the Hellenic world, from Pontos,
-Sicily, and Cyprus;[552] he had “more than all the other teachers of
-philosophy put together.”[553] They were not merely private citizens,
-but statesmen, generals, kings, and tyrants.[554] Probably the age at
-which they came varied greatly, but most of his actual pupils would
-probably be between fifteen and twenty-one. He often speaks of
-μειράκια [meirakia] as among them. Moreover, he speaks of parents
-bringing their sons to him,[555] which they certainly would not do if
-the boys were over eighteen. Public life in the average Hellenic state
-began at twenty; so boys would wish to be ready for it by that age.
-The course at Isokrates’ school lasted for three or four years.[556]
-The Athenian lad was more or less busy with his military duties from
-eighteen to twenty, so he would probably take the course between
-fourteen and eighteen; natives of other states would fit it in
-according to their local customs. The fee for the whole course was 10
-mnai, or £40.[557] The story[558] goes that Demosthenes, having only
-£8, offered to pay that sum for one-fifth of the course. But Isokrates
-replied that he could not sell his philosophy in slices; the customer
-must take the whole fish or none at all. Probably, however, the tale
-is a fiction: Isokrates himself claims not to have made any money out
-of his countrymen, and only to have charged his foreign pupils.
-
-Since, soon after the opening of his school, he had a hundred pupils,
-the accounts of his great wealth, which he repudiated so indignantly,
-cannot have been far wrong, especially as he received 20 talents
-(nearly £5000) for his panegyric on Euagoras. His own comparison of
-his wealth with that of Gorgias, who left only £800 at his death, is
-curious, if the above statements are true.
-
-But his pupils, drawn from a class that had sufficient substance to
-live at leisure,[559] seem to have been well satisfied with what they
-got for their money. “At the end of their time, when they were on the
-point of sailing home to their friends, they so loved their life in
-Athens that they parted from it with tears and sighs.” Isokrates kept
-on friendly terms with them afterwards. Thus he writes to Timotheos,
-tyrant of Herakleia and an old pupil, to congratulate him on his
-accession and commend to him another old pupil, Autokrator. Then there
-is the charming letter in which he introduces Diodotos, another of his
-pupils, to the Macedonian Antipater, at some personal risk, for there
-was war between Athens and Macedon at the time. “I have had many
-pupils,” the letter runs, “some of whom have become great orators,
-some men of action, some great thinkers, some, with no particular
-talents, have at any rate become upright and cultured gentlemen:
-Diodotos combines all these qualities.”
-
-The chief boast of the school of Isokrates was that it produced
-gentlemen. Isokrates defines education not as a knowledge of
-metaphysics and a contemplation of the Good, nor yet as technical
-ability in some particular profession, art, or trade, but as a sort of
-culture and polish. “This is my definition of the educated man,” he
-says. “First, he is capable of dealing with the ordinary events of
-life, by possessing a happy sense of fitness and a faculty of usually
-hitting upon the right course of action.
-
-“Secondly, his behaviour in any society is always correct and proper.
-If he is thrown with offensive or disagreeable company, he can meet it
-with easy good-temper; and he treats every one with the utmost
-fairness and gentleness.
-
-“Thirdly, he always has the mastery over his pleasures, and does not
-give way unduly under misfortune and pain, but behaves in such cases
-with manliness and worthily of the nature which has been given to us.
-
-“Fourthly (the most important point) he is not spoilt or puffed up nor
-is his head turned by success, but he continues throughout to behave
-like a wise man, taking less pleasure in the good things which chance
-has given him at birth than in the products of his own talents and
-intelligence.
-
-“Those whose soul is well tuned to play its part in all these ways,
-those I call wise and perfect men, and declare to possess all the
-virtues; those I regard as truly educated.”[560]
-
-Thus the object of Isokrates was rather to impart culture and polish
-to his pupils than to teach them rhetoric; it is in this point that he
-differs from the other professors who taught the same sort of rhetoric
-as he did at Athens and have now been forgotten, and from the
-logographoi, who taught the kind of speaking which suited the Athenian
-law-courts, without professing to supply anything but a technical
-knowledge of their particular subject.
-
-In an Athenian trial the prosecutor and defendant had each to deliver
-a speech for themselves; afterwards, regular advocates might address
-the jury in some cases, but this was rare. So the duty of an Athenian
-lawyer was simply to write speeches for his clients to deliver, not to
-speak himself. Thus the metic Lusias, who had no right to speak in a
-court himself, was a famous lawyer, or logographos, speech-writer, as
-the Hellenes called him.
-
-Mantitheos, say, finds himself involved in a lawsuit. He comes to
-Lusias and explains the circumstances. Lusias masters the details,
-looks up the laws on the question, and studies his client’s age,
-character, and so forth. He then writes a speech sufficiently
-dramatised to come naturally from Mantitheos’ mouth. In composing it
-he will simulate the indignation which he supposes his client to feel,
-he will adopt the nonchalant air of injured innocence which Mantitheos
-showed in telling the story, and so on, till the speech is a real bit
-of dramatisation like the speeches in a tragedy. When composed, the
-speech would be carried off by Mantitheos, learnt by heart, and duly
-recited. It is all a bit of acting on Lusias’ part. The habit of
-simulating feelings when writing speeches was dangerous, when the
-logographos came forward to speak in his own person on some question.
-Demosthenes never quite escapes the suspicion of acting and posing,
-even in his most impressive moments.
-
-Besides these clients, the Athenian lawyers had permanent pupils, who
-either intended to be lawyers themselves or thought the study would
-help them in a political life. Their methods of teaching, as may be
-seen from Plato’s _Phaidros_, resembled those of Isokrates. In the
-dialogue called by his name, Phaidros is going out to walk off the
-effects of sitting indoors too long.[561] He had been listening to
-Lusias, “the cleverest speech-writer of the age,” reciting one of his
-speeches, on which he had spent much labour. Phaidros had made him
-repeat it several times, and has now borrowed the book in order to
-learn it by heart during his walk. Sokrates persuades him to read it
-aloud, in doing which he is quite carried away by its eloquence.[562]
-Sokrates then proceeds to criticise the style and matter of the
-speech,[563] and to compose one of his own on the same subject to show
-how it ought to be treated.
-
-This reveals the method of teaching. The teacher, as here and in
-Isokrates’ case, recites a speech of his own, explaining how it was
-done and asking for criticism from the pupils. Then the pupil would
-learn it by heart and declaim it in some solitary place. On other
-occasions, as Sokrates does here, the master would take the speech of
-some rival professor and criticise it severely, composing a better
-speech himself. The _Bousiris_ and _Helen_ of Isokrates show this
-method. Or else the pupil replied to the teacher, or the teacher wrote
-two speeches on opposite sides of the question. The extant work of
-Antiphon and the lost work of Gorgias[564] are of this type.
-
-Most of the Attic orators seem to have taken pupils. Isaios taught
-Demosthenes. Demosthenes in his turn seems to have had great
-popularity as a teacher. He “promises to teach young men the art of
-speaking”;[565] “he filled Aristarchos with empty hopes of becoming
-the prince of orators all in a moment”;[566] “he invited some of his
-pupils to come and listen to the speech _On the False Embassy_,
-promising to show them how to cheat and mislead the audience”;[567]
-“later on he will brag before his boys of his tricks.” These passages
-give an interesting picture of Demosthenes and his pupils, as seen
-through his opponent’s green spectacles.
-
- * * * * *
-
-In opposition to the schools of Rhetoric stood the schools of
-Philosophy, leading their pupils towards the life of retirement and
-contemplation and away from the strenuous life of political and social
-activity.[568] We have seen that there were many professors of
-Philosophy at Athens in Isokrates’ time, charging fees of three or
-four mnai for their course. But only one of them is known to
-posterity, and he gave lessons gratis. Otherwise, Plato must be taken
-as a member of a class, albeit the most brilliant member. The teaching
-of Plato centred, as is well known, round the Akademeia. Plato
-possessed a house and garden, which he bequeathed to his school,
-between that gymnasium and Kolonos. When he and his pupils wished to
-be private they could withdraw into his gardens; otherwise they
-frequented the Akademeia, from which their school took its name. It
-was not every one who could obtain admission to the school, for, as
-Plato taught gratuitously, he could pick and choose his pupils. He
-expected would-be students to be well grounded in Geometry: there must
-have been some sort of entrance-examination. His successor,
-Xenokrates, finding that an applicant was ignorant of Music, Geometry,
-and Astronomy, told him to go away: “for you give philosophy no chance
-of getting a grip upon you.”[569] The inner circle of the school had
-their meals in common: the banquets were extremely plain. Timotheos,
-the Athenian general, who was accustomed to rich living, after having
-been a guest at one of these meals, remarked, on meeting Plato next
-day, “Your suppers are more pleasant on the following day than they
-are at the time.”[570] After the meal, a larger number of friends
-probably came in; this, at any rate, was a custom at the similar
-meetings held by the philosopher Menedemos a generation later.[571]
-The discourse often went on all night. There was a fixed code of rules
-to regulate these meals,[572] which is suggestive of Plato’s
-pleasantries in the _Laws_ about the educational value of strictly
-regulated bouts of intoxication. But drunkenness was, of course, not
-allowed: Plato had a particular objection to it, and used to tell
-drunkards to look in the looking-glass and they would never err in
-that way again.[573] It offended his strict canons of physical beauty
-and propriety. It is interesting to note that the author of the
-_Republic_ admitted women on terms of equality to this inner circle of
-the Akademeia, in defiance of Athenian prejudice. Lastheneia of
-Mantineia and Axiothea of Phlious, who dressed in male attire, are the
-first champions of women’s rights to a University education who appear
-in history.[574] The discussions of this clique were probably
-conducted after the model of the Platonic dialogue, and doubtless were
-in Plato’s mind when in the _Laws_ he constructed his curious ethical
-and political debating-society for the older and wiser members of his
-state.
-
-But admission to these mysteries must have been reserved for
-comparatively few, personal friends and mature thinkers: the members
-formed rather a private club than an educational system. The young
-Athenian who wished, when his primary education was finished, to study
-philosophy under Plato, had two means open to him: there were lectures
-in various public places; there was also a school for lads in the
-Akademeia.
-
-The only lecture,[575] of which any very definite trace is left, was
-not a great success from the educational point of view. Plato
-announced beforehand that his subject would be “The Good.” A great
-crowd collected, expecting to hear a neat Isocratean discussion of
-such things as Health, Wealth, Friendship, which were popularly
-considered to be rival claimants for the title of the Good. But Plato
-began to talk about arithmetic and geometry and astronomy, and
-discussed the One as the Good. The whole lecture was couched in
-enigmatical language. The majority of the audience went away in
-despair.[576] Only practised Platonists like Aristotle and Herakleides
-and Hestiaios did their best to understand the lecture, and took
-notes. The whole idea of a “popular lecture” must have been repugnant
-to Plato. In his view, knowledge was only for the few, who, starting
-with great natural abilities, could devote themselves for years at a
-time to continual study and research. The pupil must be talented to
-start with: he must undergo a long course of preparatory studies in
-Logic and Mathematics: only when middle-aged might he approach the
-inner mysteries of Philosophy. Holding such educational ideas as
-these, Plato naturally made his lectures unintelligible to all but a
-few: his main subject for public exposition seems to have been that
-curious mathematical metaphysic which Aristotle combats as Platonic,
-although it is nowhere found in the extant dialogues. By reading the
-_Metaphysics_ of Aristotle the modern inquirer can perhaps realise how
-difficult Plato’s lectures must have been.[577]
-
-At the school in the Akademeia, Plato seems to have instructed his
-lads chiefly in Logic and Mathematics. Logic consisted chiefly of
-definitions, such as those for which Sokrates was always hunting, and
-that curious process of “division” which is exemplified at such length
-in the _Sophist_ and _Politikos_. Diogenes Laertius[578] gives a long
-catalogue of such divisions, of which only a few can be found in
-extant works: the rest must have figured in the school, and survived
-as traditions in the commentaries. A comic poet has left a picture of
-the logic school at work[579]:――
-
- “_A._ What of Plato and Speusippos and Menedemos? Upon what
- are they now engaged? What is their thought? What argument
- is investigated among them? Tell me, I pray, if you know.
-
- “_B._ I can tell you clearly. For at the Panathenaia I saw a
- herd (ἀγέλη [agelê]: note the Spartan word) of lads in the
- gymnasium of the Akademeia, and listened to strange,
- portentous arguments. They were drawing up definitions about
- natural history. They separated the life of animals and the
- nature of trees and the tribes of vegetables: then, among
- these last, they inquired to what tribe the cucumber
- belonged.… First of all they stood speechless, and, putting
- their heads down, thought for a long time. Then suddenly,
- while the lads still had their heads down, and were
- thinking, one of them said it was a circular vegetable,
- another declared that it was a herb, another suggested a
- tree. A Sicilian Doctor who was present ridiculed them most
- rudely. But the lads took no notice; and Plato, very gently
- and without losing his temper at all, told them to try again
- to define the species to which it belonged. So they began
- their divisions again.”
-
-In the _Sophist_ the mysterious stranger divides Art into (1) creative
-or productive, (2) acquisitive. Then acquisitive art into (1)
-acquisition by exchange, (2) acquisition by capture. Then the art
-which acquires its object by capture is divided into public or
-competitive and secret or hunting. Then, when hunting has been duly
-divided and subdivided, a definition of angling is obtained. In the
-parody by Epikrates, the same process is employed in order to define
-“cucumber,” although the stages are, of course, confused. A cucumber
-is a form of life. Life is divided into animals and vegetation:
-vegetation into trees and vegetables. Then the doubt arises, to which
-half does the cucumber belong. Some of the pupils say it is a
-vegetable, some a tree. So the lesson begins again.
-
-Plato’s pupils seem to have been expected to take great care of their
-personal appearance: their neatness is a common butt of contemporary
-comedians[580]:――
-
- Then rose a smart young man from the Akademeia
- Of Plato.…
- His hair was neatly smoothed, his foot was neatly
- Laced in the sandal, bound with even lengths
- Of shoe-lace curved about his ankle-bones:
- And neat the corselet of his weighty cloak.
-
-And again:
-
- _A._ Who’s that old fellow yonder, do you know?
- _B._ He looks a Hellene, wears a mantle white,
- A fair grey tunic, little soft felt hat,
- A well-tuned[581] staff, in fact, to put it short,
- ’Tis like a glimpse of the “Academy.”[582]
-
-Of Plato himself, as he walked up and down among his pupils, wrestling
-with intellectual difficulties, several pictures survive in
-literature. A character in Alexis[583] remarks to a friend who has
-come to visit him:
-
- You’ve come in the nick of time. I’m in a fix.
- Though walking up and down, like Plato, I’ve
- Found nothing clever: but my legs are tired.[584]
-
-Amphis, in his _Dexidemides_, said:
-
- Plato, all you can do is to frown, drawing up your eyebrows
- severely, like a shellfish.[585]
-
-The psychological yearning of the _Phaidon_, perpetually interrupted
-by cold currents of scepticism, must have found an echo in Plato’s
-school-teaching, as the following dialogues from Comedy show[585]:――
-
- _A._ My mortal frame grew dry:
- My deathless part rushed forth into the air.
- _B._ Why, bless us, are we in the school of Plato?
-
-And
-
- _A._ You’re a man, clearly, and have got a soul.
- _B._ Like Plato, I don’t know but I suspect it.[585]
-
-Of discipline in the Akademeia under Plato nothing is known: the
-following story[586] belongs to the school a little after his death. A
-certain Polemon agreed with some young friends of his, who attended
-the school, that he would rush into the room during the lesson, drunk
-and garlanded. This he carried out. But the teacher, Xenokrates, went
-calmly on with his lecture, which happened to deal with Sobriety. This
-conduct quite overcame Polemon, and he became a most diligent pupil,
-and finally succeeded Xenokrates as teacher.
-
-Of Plato’s affection for his pupils, his own poems afford sufficient
-proof. One of them was named Aster, or Star. One day, as the lad was
-studying the heavens, his master wrote the following epigram about
-him:――
-
- Star of my soul, thou gazest
- Upon the starry skies;
- I envy Heaven, that watches
- Thy face with countless eyes.
-
-And when he died, Plato wrote his epitaph:
-
- Thou wert the morning Star among the living,
- Ere thy fair light had fled:
- Now, being dead, thou art as Hesperus, giving
- New splendour to the dead.[587]
-
-Additional evidence is given by his efforts on behalf of Dionusios and
-Dion, which led him into so many perils in Sicily.
-
-Plato was teaching in Athens almost continually from 388 till 347. His
-pupils included, no doubt, many of the chief men of the day: Chabrias,
-Iphikrates, Hupereides, Phokion, Lukourgos, and Demosthenes are
-mentioned, besides the philosophers Speusippos, Xenokrates,
-Herakleides of Pontos, and Aristotle. But posterity ascribed pupils
-recklessly to all the great teachers of antiquity, so the catalogue
-carries little weight. It is interesting to observe that the school as
-a whole was attacked for producing tyrants: the bitter description of
-the miseries of tyranny in the _Republic_ are at once a sad reflection
-upon former pupils and a warning to those whom he was instructing at
-the time. But the Philosopher-king, who embodied Plato’s ideal form of
-Government, may well have had a corrupting influence upon the pupils.
-Dion, the philosopher and patriot who became a tyrant, is an
-interesting commentary upon the _Republic_.
-
-Teaching in the Akademeia was given gratuitously; but those who were
-so disposed might give presents to their teacher. Dionusios presented
-Plato with over 80 talents.[588]
-
-The school of Aristotle in the Lukeion differed little in its methods
-from the school of Plato in the Akademeia. He had been a pupil of
-Plato for twenty years before he began to teach on his own account. He
-used to give instruction walking up and down in the walks of the
-Lukeion. In his earlier period, at any rate, he seems to have taught
-rhetoric, and taught it in Isocratean fashion: we hear of him setting
-a theme, on which he and the pupils delivered harangues “in rhetorical
-fashion.” Later the school became a home of universal knowledge and
-research; in this respect Aristotle is the heir of the much-abused
-Sophists. He adopted Xenokrates’ custom of appointing one of the
-pupils to be Archon of the school for ten days, and then another: this
-system must have relieved him of much petty business.[589] He
-delivered two courses of lectures daily: one in the morning on
-abstruse subjects to picked pupils; and the other in the afternoon,
-open to all comers and more intelligible in matter and manner.[590]
-His fame as a teacher was sufficient to win him the honour of being
-chosen to be Alexander’s tutor, and he seems to have retained his
-pupil’s respect, if not perhaps his affection. Aristotle, dreaming of
-a tiny city-state, and Alexander, dreaming of a world-empire and
-carrying out his dream, are an ill-assorted pair. What would Plato
-have given for the chance of educating such a Philosopher-king?
-
-That there were bitter feuds between the various educational leaders
-in Athens, goes without saying. A Hellene could no more brook a rival
-than could an Italian of the Renaissance. Isokrates attacks
-Plato,[591] Plato Isokrates, and then their pupils take the quarrel on
-into the next generation. Both attack with equal animus the wandering
-Sophists and the Eristics, who retaliated with vigour. A would-be
-pupil must have found it hard to choose a professor under whom to
-study, when so much evil had been spoken of them all.[592]
-
- * * * * *
-
-The schools of Rhetoric and of Philosophy were only for the rich and
-the leisured classes: the poor had neither the time nor the money
-requisite for attending them. But they were not wholly debarred from
-the higher knowledge. There were still Sophists lecturing for
-advertisement in public places. Still more, there were books, which
-were beginning to be both numerous and cheap: every Athenian could
-read. How important a part books were beginning to take in national
-education may be seen from the works of Isokrates and Plato, who are
-both excessively indignant at the intrusion of such a rival.
-
-“I know that what is read has less power of persuasion than what is
-heard. It is universally believed that a speech, if actually
-delivered, deals with serious and important subjects; but if only
-written and never spoken, it is supposed to aim merely at effect and
-the fulfilment of a contract. This opinion is quite reasonable. For
-the written speech is deprived of the prestige of the author’s
-presence and of his voice and of the proper rhetorical delivery: it is
-read when the occasion which called it forth is past, and the points
-which it discusses are consequently less interesting. The slave who
-reads it aloud puts no character into it, but drones it out as though
-he were reckoning up the items of a bill.” Such is Isokrates’ view,
-somewhat freely translated, of “the written word,” which his shyness
-compelled him to use instead of the spoken, and he beseeches Philip of
-Macedon, whom he is addressing, to put aside the usual prejudice
-against writings.
-
-Plato regarded the written word with even greater contempt. To him it
-is the cause of forgetfulness; those who employ writing learn to rely
-on their notes, not on their memory, and are accustomed to register
-their impressions on tables of wax, not of the mind.[593] Again, it is
-impossible for an author to control the circulation of his works; they
-may reach those for whom they are not intended.[594] For Plato expects
-speaker and writer alike to express only what is suitable to their
-audience; the teacher must, by a study of psychology, know what
-arguments will do good and what will do harm to each particular pupil.
-But a book cannot impart knowledge, in the Platonic sense of the word,
-at all; for it is unable to answer questions or to explain its
-author’s meaning when the reader fails to follow.[595] Comprehension
-of a fact or of a statement made on a writer’s authority, without
-comprehension of the meaning and the explanation, is not
-knowledge.[596] Consequently, not even a lecture[597] or a sermon, far
-less a book whose author is absent or dead, can impart knowledge; to
-gain this, long study and a severe course of dialectic are essential.
-The possessor of true knowledge must be able to defend his view
-against any opposing arguments and to support it by discussion
-himself:[598] neither book nor lecture can give this intimate
-acquaintance with every point of view. Moreover, teaching is like
-agriculture. There are different soils and different minds. The seed
-of knowledge will bear different fruit in different soils, and there
-are types of minds in which some particular seeds must not be sown at
-all. Thus the same teacher will produce quite different philosophical
-results in different minds: just as Sokrates did with his various
-pupils. It is the development of the individual intellect and
-aptitudes of each pupil, not the inculcation of his own theories, that
-is the teacher’s true object.[599] Consequently, even a consistent
-scheme of dogmas is wrong for educational purposes; for it may suit
-the intellect of the teacher himself, but it cannot suit all his
-pupils.
-
-Hence, in order to be consistent with his own educational ideals,
-Plato makes his works inconsistent: they are not a body of rigid
-dogmas. Also, he provides in them just that discussion which he notes
-as lacking in most books; it is possible to ask his books a certain
-number of questions, for he anticipates and answers them himself in
-the dialogue. In this way he makes his words pass through the
-alembic[600] of each pupil’s brain, and come out according to the type
-of mind through which they have passed. There is no enforcement of
-authority in true Platonism.
-
-Plato refused to publish any philosophy in his own name. By speaking
-through the mouth of others, he could vary his attitudes just as he
-wished. The written word, he declares, must necessarily contain much
-trifling. Its composition is a good amusement for leisure hours.[601]
-Its one use is that it serves to remind the writer of what he knows
-already, when the forgetfulness of old age comes upon him. But the
-writer is quite worthless if he possesses nothing better in his mind
-than what he has written on paper,[602] “twisting words up and down,
-glueing them together and pulling them apart.”[603]
-
-Books, however, were already serious rivals to personal intercourse,
-as a means of education. The libraries founded by Peisistratos at
-Athens and by Polukrates at Samos were, it is true, almost certainly
-fabulous; for Euripides was satirised for possessing a collection of
-books, so it must have been a novelty in his time. Books were probably
-very rare before the Periclean age, but then they multiplied with
-great rapidity. The children used them in the schools. Schoolmasters
-were expected to possess them: Alkibiades beat one for not having a
-copy of Homer. The comic poet Alexis makes Herakles’ master, Linos,
-possess copies of Orpheus, Hesiod, the tragedians, Choirilos, Homer,
-Epicharmos, and all sorts of prose works, including a cookery-book. A
-cargo of books was wrecked at Salmudessos,[604] a fact which points to
-a large book-trade in Hellenic waters. Euthudemos, the companion of
-Sokrates, possessed a fine collection of the best-known poets and
-Sophists, including the works of Homer.[605] Sokrates suggests that he
-may be collecting his books in order to learn Medicine, on which
-subject there were many treatises, or Architecture or Geometry or
-Astronomy. This shows how handbooks dealing with all manner of
-subjects were multiplying.
-
-Xenophon’s treatise on _The Horse_ had been preceded by a similar work
-by Simon;[606] he himself also wrote on _Hunting_, on _The Duties of a
-Cavalry Officer_, on _The Management of a Farm_, and _The Constitution
-of Sparta_, besides his more definitely historical and philosophical
-works. His _Education of Kuros_ conceals a treatise on the duties of a
-general. The subjects are significant of the new movement; for earlier
-Hellenes had supposed that Homer and Hesiod taught the whole art of
-agriculture and generalship. Other agricultural treatises, containing
-much theory but very little practical knowledge, were also in
-circulation.[607] Later in the fourth century Aineias the Tactician
-contributed a manual for generals. Medical treatises emanated in great
-numbers from the school of Hippokrates, and probably from elsewhere.
-Chares and Apollodoros published works on Husbandry,[608] Mithaikos a
-_Sicilian Cookery-Book_,[609] Metrodoros a book of Homeric allegories.
-Books of travels and geography are also mentioned by Aristotle.[610]
-Handbooks on “Rhetoric” were first compiled by Korax and Tisias: they
-dealt with the subject of “arguments from probability.” Show pieces
-were written by Antiphon and Gorgias. A treatise by Polos upon the
-systematic arrangement of a speech was read by Sokrates. Thrasumachos
-published a work upon _Appeals to Compassion_.
-
-The prices were probably not high, for the labour of copying could be
-cheaply performed by means of slaves. Sokrates, in the Platonic
-Apology,[611] mentions that a copy of Anaxagoras could sometimes be
-picked up for a drachma; and there is no reason to suppose that
-Anaxagoras was particularly cheap. If this was an average price, books
-must have been within the reach of most Athenians.
-
-
- [529] Isokrates clearly felt them to be his educational
- rivals. See _Antid._ 310 A, and the end of the _Paneg._
-
- [530] There is a sketch of them in Isok. _Panath._ 236 C; to
- a lecture on Homer three or four of them had appended an
- attack upon Isokrates.
-
- [531] Isok. _Antid._ 99.
-
- [532] Isok. _Soph._ 10. 293 A.
-
- [533] Isok. _Soph._ 4. 291 D. Cp. the modern
- “caution-money.”
-
- [534] Isok. _Pan._ 26. 238 A.
-
- [535] Isok. _Antid._ 118. 265.
-
- [536] Isok. _Panath._ 238 D.
-
- [537] Isok. _Antid._ 118. 266.
-
- [538] _Ibid._ 118. 268.
-
- [539] Isok. _Antid._ 118. 268.
-
- [540] _Ibid._ 91.
-
- [541] Isok. letter to Alexander.
-
- [542] Isok. _Panath._ 275. It is noticeable how many of his
- pupils became historians――Ephoros, Theopompos, Androtion,
- Asklepiades.
-
- [543] See, for example, “On Slander “(_Antid._ 313 E), “On
- Speech” (115. 255).
-
- [544] Isok. _Antid._ 48.
-
- [545] For a complete analysis of it, see Jebb’s _Attic
- Orators_.
-
- [546] Isok. _ag. Soph._ 294 C; _Antid._ 91-93, etc.
-
- [547] _Ibid._ 294 E.
-
- [548] Isok. _Antid._ 121.
-
- [549] Isok. _ag. Soph._ 295 D.
-
- [550] Isok. _Areiop._ 151 B.
-
- [551] Isok. _Philip_, 85, 86.
-
- [552] Isok. _Antid._ 106.
-
- [553] _Ibid._ 318 C.
-
- [554] _Ibid._ 316 C.
-
- [555] Isok. _Antid._ 110.
-
- [556] _Ibid._ 62.
-
- [557] [Demos.] _Lakritos_, 15 and 42.
-
- [558] [Plutarch] _Ten Orators_, 837.
-
- [559] Isok. _Antid._ 129.
-
- [560] Isok. _Panath._ 239.
-
- [561] Plato, _Phaidr._ 227-228.
-
- [562] _Ibid._ 234 D.
-
- [563] The criticisms do not suit Lusias; they fit Isokrates
- much better.
-
- [564] Cicero, _Brutus_, xii. 46-47.
-
- [565] Aischines, _Timarch._ 171, 173.
-
- [566] _Ibid._ 171.
-
- [567] _Ibid._ 175.
-
- [568] Plato, _Gorg._ 484-486; end of _Euthud._; _Theait._
- 172-177; _Rep._ 496.
-
- [569] Diog. Laert. iv. 2. 6.
-
- [570] Athen. 419 d.
-
- [571] _Ibid._ 419 e and 55 d.
-
- [572] Athen. 186 b.
-
- [573] Diog. Laert. iii. 26.
-
- [574] _Ibid._ iii. 31.
-
- [575] See for this lecture Simplikios (on Aristot.
- _Physics_, p. 202 B, 36), and Aristoxenos, _Harmon_, beg. of
- Bk. ii. On one occasion, at least, it was delivered in the
- Peiraieus (Themist. _Orat._ 21. 245).
-
- [576] The popular attitude may be seen in Amphis’
- _Amphrikates_ (Diog. Laert. iii. 25): “I no more know what
- good you’ll get than I know what Plato’s Good is.”
-
- [577] Plato seems also to have recited his dialogues in
- public. Favonius asserted that Aristotle alone of the
- audience stayed to the end when Plato thus delivered the
- _Phaidon_ (Diog. Laert. iii. 25).
-
- [578] Diog. Laert. iii. 45, etc.
-
- [579] Epikrates (in Athen. 59 d, e).
-
- [580] Ephippos, _Shipwrecked Man_ (Athen. 509).
-
- [581] εὔρυθμος [eurythmos], probably a hit at Plato’s demand
- for “rhythm.”
-
- [582] Antiphanes, _Antaros_ (Athen. 545 a).
-
- [583] Alexis, _Meropis_ (Diog. Laert. iii. 22).
-
- [584] This walking up and down was characteristic of
- Hellenic teaching. Compare the _Peripatetics_, and Archutas
- in the temple-gardens at Tarentum (Athen. 545 b).
-
- [585] Diog. Laert. iii. 22.
-
- [586] _Ibid._ iv. 3. 1.
-
- [587] The first translation is my own, the second Shelley’s.
-
- [588] Saturos and Onetor in Diog. Laert. iii. 11.
-
- [589] The above details are mainly from Diog. Laert. v.
-
- [590] Aul. Gell. xx. 5. 4.
-
- [591] Plato had also his feuds with Antisthenes, who wrote a
- dialogue against him, calling him Satho, with Aristippos,
- and with Aischines the Sokratic (Diog. Laert. iii. 24).
-
- [592] Kriton feels this difficulty in _Euthud._ 306 D, E.
-
- [593] Plato, _Phaidr._ 275 A.
-
- [594] _Ibid._ 275 E.
-
- [595] Plato, _Phaidr._ 275 D; _Theait._ 164; _Protag._ 329
- A, and 347 E.
-
- [596] So book-knowledge is a hothouse plant which has sprung
- up unnaturally all in a moment, and very delicate when
- exposed to the open air of criticism (_Phaidr._ 276-7).
-
- [597] Plato, _Sophist_, 230 A.
-
- [598] Plato, _Menon_, 97; _Rep._ 534 B, C.
-
- [599] Plato, _Rep._ 518.
-
- [600] Plato, _Phaidr._ 277 A.
-
- [601] Plato, _Phaidr._ 276 D, E.
-
- [602] Plato apparently regarded his dialogues as mere
- trifles compared with what he taught to his inner circle.
-
- [603] Plato, _Phaidr._ 278 D.
-
- [604] Xen. _Anab._ vii. 5. 14.
-
- [605] Xen. _Mem._ iv. 2.
-
- [606] Xen. _Horsemanship_, i.
-
- [607] Xen. _Econ._ xvi.
-
- [608] Aristot. _Pol._ i. 11. 7.
-
- [609] Plato, _Gorg._ 518 B.
-
- [610] Aristot. _Pol._ ii. 3. 9.
-
- [611] Plato, _Apol._ 26 D.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII
-
-TERTIARY EDUCATION
-
-
-When he reached eighteen years, the young Athenian partly came of age.
-His property passed into his possession, if he had been a ward, and he
-could now prosecute his guardians if they had defrauded him. But he
-could not appear in any other sort of lawsuit, or take part in the
-National Assembly, nor could he be taxed, till he was twenty.
-
-First of all, his deme or parish had to examine him to see if he was
-of proper parentage and of the requisite age.[612] If they rejected
-him, the case came before the regular Court of Athens. In the event of
-being again rejected, if it was on the score of age, he returned to
-the ranks of the boys to wait a further trial, but if on the score of
-parentage, he might be sold as a slave and his price put into the
-Treasury. If his deme accepted him he was again examined by the Boule
-of 500 at Athens, who might rescind their decision.[613]
-
-When he had passed all these preliminary examinations, the boy was
-inscribed upon the roll of his deme, the ληξιαρχικὸν γραμματεῖον
-[lêxiarchikon grammateion], and became in the eyes of the law an
-ephebos. It was then incumbent upon him to take a solemn oath in the
-temple of Aglauros, in the following terms[614]:――
-
- “I will not disgrace my sacred weapons nor desert the
- comrade who is placed by my side. I will fight for things
- holy and things profane, whether I am alone or with others.
- I will hand on my fatherland greater and better than I found
- it. I will hearken to the magistrates, and obey the existing
- laws and those hereafter established[615] by the people. I
- will not consent unto any that destroys or disobeys the
- constitution, but will prevent him, whether I am alone or
- with others. I will honour the temples and the religion
- which my forefathers established. So help me Aglauros,
- Enualios, Ares, Zeus, Thallo, Auxo, Hegemone.”
-
-This oath and ceremony must be ancient. The orator Lukourgos[616]
-includes them among “the ancient laws and customs of the original
-founders,” and claims that the oath of the Hellenic army at Plataea in
-479 was imitated from the oath of the Athenian epheboi. By this solemn
-act the ephebos accepted the duties and responsibilities of an
-Athenian citizen. So in Plato’s dialogue, the _Kriton_,[617] where the
-Laws of Athens are introduced as pleading their cause, they say, “When
-any one has passed his examination, and has seen the constitution of
-the city and us, the Laws of Athens, we bid him, if he is dissatisfied
-with us, to take what is his and go whither he pleases. But if he
-stays, we consider that he has promised to obey us.” For there is good
-evidence, besides that which is afforded by the above passage, to show
-that Athenian boys were taught what the laws of their city were,
-before they promised to obey them. Thus Aischines says: “When any one
-is inscribed upon the muster roll of his deme and knows the laws of
-the city.”[618] Plato puts it even more definitely: “When the children
-leave school,[619] the city compels them to learn the laws.”[620] So
-the ephebos knew what he was doing when he swore to obey the law of
-the land.
-
-Meanwhile the tribes had met and each chosen three men of over forty
-years of age, from whom the assembled people elected one, to look
-after the epheboi of each tribe.[621] These supervisors were called
-Sophronistai or Moderators. That these Moderators probably dated back
-to Solonic times, and possessed a general, but rarely exercised,
-supervision over all education, I have endeavoured to show in Chapter
-II. Their province was the morality and discipline of the epheboi,
-whose military training was naturally controlled by the military
-officers, the Generals and Taxiarchoi; later, however, when the
-epheboi ceased to be a military body, these latter functionaries
-ceased to have any connection with them. Towards the close of the
-fourth century the people elected a single Kosmetes or Chancellor for
-the epheboi; he is first mentioned, if a probably spurious passage in
-the _Axiochos_ is rejected, in an inscription, in which he is
-associated with the epheboi and Moderators of the year in awarding a
-crown to Theophanes in the Archonship of Nikostratos (333-332
-B.C.).[622] But in 280 B.C., in the list of the officers and masters
-of the epheboi, the Kosmetes is mentioned, but no Sophronistai:[623]
-at that time the epheboi were too few to need an officer to each
-tribe.
-
-These newly appointed magistrates took the epheboi of their year in
-charge at once. The young recruits were first taken round the temples,
-and then put into garrison in Mounuchia and Peiraieus. They had
-masters and under-masters appointed for them by the Sophronistai to
-teach them the use of heavy arms, and also of the bow, javelin, and
-catapult. There were also two Paidotribai, for gymnastics. These
-masters, together with later introductions such as literary teachers,
-chaplains, doctors, and so forth, appear regularly in the inscriptions
-after 300 B.C.[624] The Sophronistai were paid a drachma a day for
-their services. They also received four obols for every ephebos in
-their tribe, out of which they had to provide the rations, etc.; the
-ephebos did not handle the money himself. Each tribe messed
-together.[625]
-
-Besides the Sophronistai and Kosmetes, the Council of the Areiopagos
-also kept a watch over the epheboi. Discipline seems to have been
-fairly strict: the _Axiochos_[626] talks of “rods and immensities of
-evils.” But there were plenty of amusements, and, apparently, plenty
-of vacations. There were a very large number of special festivals, in
-which the epheboi took part. There were also the torch-races at the
-feasts of Hephaistos and Prometheus, for teams of epheboi from each
-tribe, trained at the expense of a gumnasiarchos. The epheboi had also
-a special part of the theatre reserved for them.[627]
-
-No doubt a large part of the time of these epheboi was spent in severe
-physical exercise in the gymnasia. The analogy of the epheboi in
-Plato’s _Republic_ and _Laws_ would suggest this. The _Axiochos_
-mentions, as consequent upon enrolment in the epheboi, “the Lukeion
-and Akademeia,” _i.e._ practices in these gymnasia. Xenophon,[628]
-just before mentioning the “peripoloi” or epheboi in their second
-year, talks of “those who are ordered to practise gymnastic
-exercises,” clearly referring to this period. He suggests that their
-duties would be better and more cheerfully performed if they received
-a larger supply of rations than those who were training for
-torch-races; to these latter no doubt a liberal gumnasiarchos might
-serve out meals costing much more than four obols a day. Probably
-those who were physically inferior alone were told off for these
-compulsory gymnastics: Xenophon’s phrase seems to distinguish them
-from the epheboi selected for the torch-race, who would naturally be
-the physically fittest in the tribal contingent.
-
-At the end of their first year of training, the epheboi appeared in
-the theatre at the great Dionusia to show off their military
-evolutions and the drill which they had learned. After the review they
-received a spear and shield from the State.[629] The sons of those who
-had fallen in battle, being the wards of the State,[630] received a
-complete outfit of armour. These arms, which the epheboi received from
-the State, were considered to be sacred: consequently to throw away
-the shield in flight was regarded as a serious offence, almost an act
-of sacrilege.[631]
-
- [Illustration: PLATE IX.
-
- A RIDING LESSON――MOUNTING
-
- _Archaeologische Zeitung_, 1885, Plate 11. From a Kulix at Munich,
- attributed to Euphronios.]
-
-After receiving their arms from the State, the epheboi were marched
-out of Athens, and spent most of the next year patrolling the country
-and frontiers, and garrisoning the forts.[632] Attica was studded with
-these περιπόλια [peripolia], or patrol-stations, from Oinoé and Phulé
-on the north-western frontier to Anaphlustos and Thorikos in the
-south. The epheboi, like the κρυπτοί [kryptoi] in Plato’s _Laws_ and
-at Sparta, were shifted about from district to district, in order that
-they might acquire a thorough knowledge of their country’s
-geographical peculiarities. The tribal companies, into which they were
-divided, relieved one another in various stations. Thus in the course
-of 334-333 we know that both the Hippothontid and the Kekropid tribes
-were successively stationed at Eleusis, for the people of that
-district pass two separate votes of thanks to them for the excellent
-discipline which they had preserved.[633] There may also have been
-open-air camps: the Eleusinian inscriptions talk of ὑπαίθριοι
-[hypaithrioi].
-
-The epheboi seem to have been assisted in their patrol-duties by a
-mercenary force of foreigners. Thucydides[634] declares that
-Phrunichos was assassinated by a peripolos: the Athenian people,
-according to Lusias, rewarded Thrasuboulos of Kaludon as the slayer
-and recorded his name on a pillar.[635] If the historian had meant to
-dispute this award, he must have referred to it, for it was clearly
-the accepted version. He also states that the plot was arranged at the
-house of the captain of the peripoloi, and mentions an Argive as one
-of the accomplices: Lusias mentions a Megarian. Both these foreigners
-were probably peripoloi. But foreign youths cannot at this period have
-been permitted to serve with the tribal companies of epheboi. A
-legend, it is true, asserts that this privilege was granted to the
-young men of Kos, in honour of the great doctor Hippokrates; but even
-this only shows that all other states were excluded. Indeed,
-foreigners were not enrolled among the Athenian epheboi until a much
-later epoch, when the system was no longer military.
-
-What, then, was this “Foreign Legion”? M. Girard identifies it with
-the Mounted Archers, on the strength of a passage in Aristophanes’
-_Birds_. An unknown deity has invaded the territory of Cloud-Cuckoo
-town. Peisthetairos exclaims, “Why didn’t you despatch peripoloi after
-him at once?” To which the messenger replies, “We did send 30,000
-Mounted Archers.” The inscriptions at Eleusis also make a force of
-non-citizen troops serve under the captain of the peripoloi. These
-mercenary troops, having no civil duties, would naturally be used as a
-patrol. Moreover, to an Athenian, “archer” meant “policeman.” Athens
-was policed by foreign “Archers”: it would be natural for Attica to be
-policed in like manner, only by a mounted force, as a greater distance
-had to be covered.[636] But it is also possible that the non-Athenian
-peripoloi were the sons of μέτοικοι ἰσοτελεῖς [metoikoi isoteleis],
-who, being forced to serve as hoplites when grown up, would require
-some preliminary training; these alien hoplites are coupled by
-Thucydides[637] with the recruits and veterans, who garrisoned the
-Athenian walls and forts: they seem to have served as a perpetual
-patrol.
-
-The first three classes of Athenian citizens in wealth must all have
-passed through this training; for, although the two first were liable
-to cavalry service, they might also be called upon to serve as
-hoplites.[638] Rich young epheboi, who had plenty of time on their
-hands, would naturally learn both cavalry and infantry drill. The
-poorer Zeugitai would only have to learn their duties as heavy
-infantry, and were probably allowed to spend a good proportion of
-their time on their farms in Athens. But what about the fourth class,
-the Thetes? They were not liable to be called out as hoplites, but had
-to serve on land as light-armed troops or at sea as rowers. Did they
-also have a recruit course? Now the garrisons of the Athenian forts
-and walls were hoplites:[639] there is no trace of the Thetes here.
-But the patrol duties in the mountains can hardly have been performed
-by heavy troops: it is noticeable that in Xenophon light troops are
-suggested for this purpose, when Sokrates is developing an elaborate
-scheme for holding the frontiers of Attica against all invaders.[640]
-In the next century, at any rate, light troops were used for this
-purpose. In a later work Xenophon talks of “those who are ordered to
-occupy the forts and those who have to serve as peltasts and patrol
-the country,”[641] in a passage where he is clearly referring to the
-epheboi. Thus there are two classes, the garrisons, who would
-naturally be hoplites, and the patrols, who are peltasts, suitably
-equipped for mountaineering. But the peltasts only began to appear
-towards the close of the Peloponnesian War: the first mention of them
-is in Thucydides’ account of the army of Brasidas. Before this time,
-the light troops were archers and some slingers; thus, in the monument
-to those of the Erechtheid tribe who fell in the year 459, after the
-hoplites four archers are mentioned.[642] But they were a small force:
-there were only 1600 of them in 431 B.C. The majority of the Thetes
-served in the ships. In the _Birds_ of Aristophanes, which appeared in
-414, when it was a question of repelling a sudden raid, just after the
-peripoloi have been mentioned, Peisthetairos bids his immediate
-attendants arm themselves with slings and bows: these are clearly the
-weapons for a flying column despatched in pursuit of raiders.[643]
-
-The passage of Xenophon makes it clear that there were peltasts in the
-ephebic force in the fourth century; that of Aristophanes suggests the
-probability of archers and slingers among them in the fifth. But
-whether these light-armed troops consisted of enterprising Zeugitai
-who added this training to their hoplite drill, or were a small
-detachment of Thetes, cannot be fixed. Thetes must, at any rate, not
-have been numerous in the ephebic force, for they could not have
-spared the time necessary for such lengthy training.[644]
-
-As a rule, the epheboi were not expected to do more than guard the
-frontier and repel an occasional foray: even this, however, must have
-given them plenty of employment in war-time. But they shared in
-Muronides’ great victory in the Megarid in 458, when Athens had to use
-her reserves.[645] Either they or the “foreign legion” joined in a
-later invasion of Megara.[646] But as a rule they served for home
-defence only. Their recruit-course ended with their twentieth year:
-henceforth they were ordinary Athenian citizens and soldiers.
-
-In about 332 B.C., when Lukourgos delivered his speech against
-Leokrates, the old ephebic system seems still to have been in force.
-The suggestion that Leokrates might have evaded the ephebic oath is
-only rhetorical, for the orator immediately goes on to assume that he
-took it.[647] In 328, the probable date of Aristotle’s _Athenian
-Constitution_, it seems still to have been in existence, for the
-philosopher records it as part of the contemporary regime. The
-inscriptions support these authorities. A list of epheboi of the
-Kekropid tribe enrolled in 334 is given under the vote of thanks: the
-upper part of the list is gone, but the numbers were apparently
-large.[648] Some forty-four names can be inferred from the fragments,
-belonging to six or seven demes out of the twelve which composed the
-tribe; but apparently the smallest contingents are at the bottom, so
-there may well have been a hundred names in the tribe, and 1000
-epheboi altogether. Considering the impoverishment of Attica and the
-consequent decrease in the hoplite classes, this is probably a fair
-proportion of epheboi.[649] A tribal contingent is still large enough
-to serve as a garrison for Eleusis, and to act by itself.
-
-But in the next century the numbers drop down to twenty-nine and
-twenty-three. The service must have been voluntary. Moreover, brothers
-are found serving together, from which it may be inferred that the
-exact age qualification was no longer regarded.[650] Philosophy and
-literature become subjects of study; and a library, swollen by gifts
-from old epheboi, is collected. Foreigners begin to be enrolled in the
-second century, and in course of time outnumber the native Athenians.
-Although the old military service is preserved, no doubt in a
-mummified condition, the system of the epheboi develops into the
-Athenian university, where young Romans like Cicero’s son came to
-learn philosophy, though they had little to learn from Athens in
-military matters. The Sophronistai and Kosmetes become the Proctors
-and Chancellor, the special festivals the compulsory services, of the
-new University. The torch-races, the military duties, and the naval
-races[651] become its athletics. It is the old conscription system of
-Athens, not the schools of Plato or Isokrates, that gives birth to the
-first University.
-
-The system of epheboi was represented at Sparta by the κρυπτοί
-[kryptoi]. We hear of an archephebos at Argos, and a
-gumnasiarchos who manages the epheboi at Troizen.[652] In the
-Megarid and in Boiotia the epheboi were trained as cavalry,
-hoplites, or peltasts.[653] An ephebarchos can be traced in Teos.
-There were patrol-houses, and so possibly epheboi patrols in the
-territory of Syracuse.[654] This period of special training for
-military duties seems to have been general all over Hellas. Plato
-adopts it without demur in the _Republic_ and _Laws_.
-
-
- [612] Aristot. Ἀθ. Πολ. [Ath. Pol.] 42 for these
- examinations.
-
- [613] Luk. _ag. Leok._ 18. 76.
-
- [614] Pollux, viii. 105-106, etc.
-
- [615] κραίνοντες [krainontes]. Note the archaic word.
-
- [616] Luk. _ag. Leok_. 18. 75.
-
- [617] Plato, _Krit._ 51 D, E.
-
- [618] Aischin. _ag. Timarch._ 18.
-
- [619] I have already suggested that metrical versions may
- have been taught at the music-schools.
-
- [620] Plato, _Protag._ 326 D. Boys used to listen to cases
- in the law-courts. This would give them some idea of legal
- procedure. (Compare the custom at some English public
- schools of letting the boys go to hear the local assizes.)
- Demosthenes thus went with his paidagogos to hear the trial
- of Kallistratos.
-
- [621] Aristot. Ἀθ. Πολ. [Ath. Pol.] 42. 2.
-
- [622] _C.I.A._ IV. ii. 1571 B.
-
- [623] _C.I.A._ II. 316.
-
- [624] e.g. _C.I.A._ ii. 316. 338.
-
- [625] Aristot. Ἀθ. Πολ. [Ath. Pol.] 42. 3.
-
- [626] [Plato] _Axiochos_, 367 A.
-
- [627] Schol. on Aristoph. _Birds_, 794.
-
- [628] Xen. _Revenues_, iv. 52.
-
- [629] Aristot. Ἀθ. Πολ. [Ath. Pol.] 42. 4.
-
- [630] Thuc. ii. 46.
-
- [631] Lucias, x. 1, and Aristophanes anent Kleonumos,
- _passim_.
-
- [632] Properly speaking, it was only during his second year
- that the ephebos was a peripolos or patrol. Aischines,
- however, claims to have served two years as a peripolos. The
- term may have been used loosely, or else in times of crisis
- the epheboi may have been hurried off to the frontier as
- soon as they were enrolled.
-
- [633] _C.I.A._ IV. ii. 574 D, and 563 B.
-
- [634] Thuc. viii. 92.
-
- [635] Lusias, xiii. 71.
-
- [636] The force may also have included citizens, for the
- younger Alkibiades once served in it (Lus. xv. 6). But that
- was a special occasion, when the ordinary cavalry had
- refused to receive him.
-
- [637] Thuc. ii. 13. 6-7.
-
- [638] Lus. xvi. 13, xiv. 10.
-
- [639] Thuc. ii. 13. 6-7.
-
- [640] Xen. _Mem._ iii. 5. 27.
-
- [641] Xen. _Revenues_, iv. 52.
-
- [642] _C.I.A._ I. 143. Cp. _C.I.A._ I. 79 for
- citizen-archers.
-
- [643] It is noticeable that in Aristotle’s time the epheboi
- were taught by a “Teacher of Archery.” He may be a survival.
-
- [644] In Boiotia and the Megarid the epheboi served as
- cavalry, hoplites, or peltasts (_C.I.G._ Boiot. and Meg.
- 2715, 2717-21, 1747-48, etc.).
-
- [645] Thuc. i. 105.
-
- [646] _Ibid._ iv. 67.
-
- [647] Luk. _ag. Leok._ 76.
-
- [648] _C.I.A._ IV. ii. 563 b.
-
- [649] In 431 B.C. Athens had 13,000 hoplites of between
- twenty and forty years of age. On this average there would
- be perhaps about 1000 epheboi per year, or 2000
- altogether――the same number as here. The 16,000 of the
- reserve in 431 includes veterans and metics as well as
- epheboi.
-
- [650] The changes seem to have happened shortly before 305,
- for in an inscription of that year the numbers have dropped
- greatly and brothers serve together.
-
- [651] _C.I.A._ ii. 466, 470.
-
- [652] _C.I.G._ Pelop. 589, 749, 753.
-
- [653] See note 2 on p. 218.
-
- [654] Thuc. vi. 45, vii. 48.
-
-
-
-
-THE EPHEBIC INSCRIPTIONS OF THE FOURTH CENTURY
-
-(Dealing with Attica only)
-
-
-I. _C.I.A._ IV. ii. 574 d.
-
-“The epheboi of the Hippothontid tribe, who were enrolled when
-Ktesikles was Archon (334-333 B.C.), having been crowned by the Boule
-and Demos, offered this offering.”
-
-Then follows a mutilated vote of thanks from the people of Eleusis to
-the epheboi for the discipline which they had preserved while
-garrisoning the town, and to their Sophronistes, who is to receive a
-crown, and to have a front seat at local festivals.
-
-
-II. _C.I.A._ IV. ii. 563 b.
-
-Decrees in honour of the epheboi of the Kekropid tribe.
-
-(_a_) By the Kekropid tribe.
-
-“Kallikrates of Aixoné proposed. Whereas the epheboi of the Kekropid
-tribe, who were enrolled when Ktesikles was Archon (334-333 B.C.), are
-orderly and do everything that the laws enjoin upon them, and are
-obedient to the Sophronistes appointed by the people, we pass a vote
-of thanks to them and crown them with a golden crown of 500 drachmas
-for their excellent discipline and behaviour. We also pass a vote of
-thanks to the Sophronistes, Adeistos, son of Antimachos, and award him
-a golden crown of the aforesaid weight, for that he hath well and
-diligently directed the epheboi of the Kekropid tribe. This vote to be
-recorded on a stone pillar and set up in the shrine of Kekrops.”
-
-(_b_) Vote of the Athenian people.
-
-“Hegemachos, son of Chairemon, proposed. Whereas the epheboi of the
-Kekropid tribe stationed at Eleusis do well and diligently pay heed to
-the orders of the Boule and Demos, and do behave themselves orderly,
-we pass a vote of thanks to them for their good discipline and
-behaviour, and enact that each of them be crowned with an olive crown.
-We also pass a vote of thanks to their Sophronistes, Adeistos, son of
-Antimachos, and decree to him a crown of olive, when he has passed his
-scrutiny. This vote to be recorded on the offering which the epheboi
-of the Kekropid tribe offer.”
-
-(_c_) Vote of Eleusinians.
-
-“Protias proposed. Whereas the epheboi of the Kekropid tribe and their
-Sophronistes, Adeistos, son of Antimachos, do well and diligently
-garrison Eleusis, the people of the deme pass a vote of thanks to them
-and crown each of them with a crown of olive.”
-
-The vote to be recorded as before.
-
-(_d_) Similar vote of the Athmonian deme in honour of their
-fellow-demesman, Adeistos.
-
-With this is a list of the epheboi in question, much mutilated.
-
-
-III. _C.I.A._ IV. ii. 1571 b.
-
-“Theophanes, son of Hierophon, offered this to Hermes, having been
-crowned by the epheboi and Sophronistai and Kosmetai.”
-
-This is signed by the epheboi for the years 333-332, 332-331, and
-331-330.
-
-
-IV. _C.I.A._ IV. ii. 251 b.
-
-A vote of thanks from the Boule and Demos to the epheboi as a whole
-for their exemplary behaviour, and to their Kosmetes and Sophronistai
-and teachers. A mutilated list of epheboi follows. This belongs to the
-year 305-304 B.C.
-
-
-V. _C.I.A._ IV. ii. 565 b.
-
-A vote of thanks of the Pandionid tribe to Philonides, who had been
-elected by the people Sophronistes of their epheboi, and had performed
-his duty well.
-
-
-VI. Böckh, 214 (belonging to 320 B.C.).
-
-(Dug up at Aixoné.)
-
-An extract:――“We pass a vote of thanks to the Sophronistai and crown
-each of them with a crown of olive, namely, Kimon, son of Megakles,
-and Puthodoros, son of Putheas … for the zeal they showed in regard to
-the all-night revel.”
-
-The epheboi took part in a sacrifice and revel in honour of Hebe.
-Apparently, as a rule, they were noisy and gave trouble to the
-inhabitants of the neighbourhood. But this year they were kept in
-order by the Sophronistai. Hence the vote.
-
-
-
-
-PART II
-
-THE THEORY OF EDUCATION
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII
-
-RELIGION AND EDUCATION IN HELLAS
-
-
-The greater part of the religious instruction in Hellas was given
-outside the schools, in the home and in public life. The child learnt
-the current ritual observances proper to each particular deity or
-occasion by participating in them himself. His religious devotion was
-practised and stimulated by the festivals and sacred songs and dances
-which made up so large a part of Hellenic life. In a religion like the
-Hellenic, which was so largely a matter of forms and ceremonies, there
-was little dogma to be learnt by children; no catechism, no sectarian
-teaching was necessary. Such dogma as there was consisted in the myths
-which were current about the various deities and heroes; and of these
-myths there were so many varieties that heterodoxy about them became
-almost impossible.
-
-Such as it was, this dogma, consisting of manifold and often
-contradictory myths, was enshrined in the poetry of the race, so that
-most of the poems became sacred books, regarded by the orthodox as
-inspired. This sacred literature, as we have seen, was the chief
-object of study in the primary schools at Athens, where it was read,
-written, and learnt by heart. At Sparta almost the whole of literary
-and intellectual education consisted of sacred songs in honour of gods
-and heroes. The myths were the very essence of primary education in
-Hellas.
-
-In order to understand the attitude of the educational theorists
-towards these myths which run through most of the Hellenic poetry, it
-is necessary to realise the extraordinary authority which was given to
-the poets, and especially to Homer and Hesiod. Every word of them was
-regarded as inspired and strictly true: their authority was
-indisputable. At the beginning of the sixth century an interpolated
-line in the _Iliad_ was made the main support of the Athenian claim to
-the Island of Salamis. Gelon, the tyrant of Syracuse, according to the
-current legend, was refused the command of the Hellenic forces against
-Persia because, as the Spartan envoy put it, Agamemnon would groan if
-he heard of such a thing, and because Homer had said that an Athenian
-was the best man at drawing up and marshalling a host, for which cause
-the Athenians now claimed the command.[655] That such arguments could
-be employed shows in what veneration Homer was held. He was considered
-to be especially inspired.[656] His admirers asserted that he had
-educated Hellas, and that his works provided fit instruction for the
-whole conduct of life.[657] More specifically, it was said that “The
-divine Homer won his glory and renown from this, that he taught good
-things, drill, valour and the arming of troops.”[658] He was misquoted
-to support peculiar views, as in Plato.[659] People had their
-favourite texts: Sokrates’ was “In due proportion to thy means pay
-honour to the gods.” It was a not unheard-of accomplishment to know
-the whole _Iliad_ and _Odyssey_ by heart. Moral lessons were drawn
-from them. Thus the story of Kirké was a warning against
-self-indulgence. Kirké made the companions of Odusseus swine through
-their over-indulgence in the pleasures of the table; Odusseus himself,
-by Hermes’ advice and his own self-restraint in such matters, escaped
-this fate.[660]
-
-In time, however, the higher morality of the leading Hellenic thinkers
-revolted against the low morality, to say nothing more, of much of the
-mythology embodied in the poets. Xenophanes began the attack. “Homer
-and Hesiod,” he cries, “ascribed to the gods all that is considered
-disgraceful among men.” Herakleitos declared that Homer deserved a
-thrashing. Even the pious Pindar tried to alter some of the myths to
-suit his own morality, and Aeschylus fights hard for an underlying
-monotheism. In the next generation the storm broke: awakening
-intelligence, fostered by the Sophists and the philosophers, shrank
-away from the horrors of the _Theogony_. Tragedy, by bringing
-mythology before the eyes, had made its impossibility more apparent.
-The researches of the earlier historians in comparative mythology had
-undermined the bases of belief. Herodotos had found that a god named
-Herakles had been recognised in Egypt 17,000 years before his time;
-consequently the Hellenic Herakles, only six centuries before the
-historian’s age, must be only a man of the same name.[661] Rationalism
-began to master the mythology: Thucydides tried to apply scientific
-methods to the Trojan War, making, for example, its duration due to
-the difficulty of obtaining supplies for so large a force. The
-rationalism of Euripides is well known. Metrodoros, a pupil of
-Anaxagoras, made the gods natural forces and varieties of matter――a
-device already employed by Empedokles for poetical convenience. In
-this way Sokrates rationalises the Boreas-myth in the _Phaidros_,[662]
-where Plato states that the wise disbelieve such tales; but Sokrates
-was too busy studying his own personality to raise all these numerous
-questions, so he accepts the customary belief. The defenders of Homer,
-led by Metrodoros and Stesimbrotos,[663] tried to allegorise him,
-declaring that the worst myths had a moral meaning in the background.
-The allegories were often ludicrous: Plato rejects them wholly for
-educational purposes, as children always take the literal
-interpretation.
-
-But public opinion was still fiercely attached to the old deities, as
-the incident of the Hermai and the condemnation of Anaxagoras,
-Protagoras, and Sokrates showed. The deities could not be sacrificed:
-consequently it was the myths that had to go. The myths said that Zeus
-dethroned his own father and committed adultery: if the myth is true,
-since Zeus is Supreme God, these crimes are justifiable.[664]
-Therefore the myth must be untrue. Homer and Hesiod lied: their works
-are mainly a blasphemous fiction.[665] Isokrates[666] sums up this new
-attitude. “The poets,” he declares, “blasphemously represented the
-sons of the Immortals as having done and suffered worse deeds than the
-most impious of men: they spoke such things about the gods as no one
-would venture to allege of his worst enemy; not only do they make them
-steal, commit adultery, and fall into slavery to mortals, but even
-represent them as eating their children, mutilating their fathers, and
-binding their mothers in chains.… For this the poets did not go
-unpunished, but some of them were wanderers and begged their bread,
-some became blind, another was an exile all his life long, and
-Orpheus, who devoted himself especially to such stories, was torn in
-pieces.”[667]
-
-The greatest objection to these immoral legends was that they were
-taught in the nursery and the elementary school, at the most
-impressionable age.[668] Hence Plato wishes to lay down strict canons
-for the myths, legends, and fables which are to be taught to children.
-“For the beginning of everything is half the battle, especially in the
-case of what is young and tender. Young children are like soft wax,
-ready to take a clear and deep impression of any seal which is laid
-upon them. Hence the immense importance of the earliest stages of
-education, the myths and stories taught in the nursery and at school.…
-The compositions of Homer and Hesiod are fiction, and unlovely fiction
-at that; even if true, they had better not be told to the young and
-undiscerning.… The myths must be improving on the surface, not by
-allegory.”[669]
-
-Plato is not prepared to rewrite the Hellenic Bible: he will only draw
-up the canons which the poets must follow. It is to be noticed that
-these canons are peculiar, and would exclude not merely most of Homer
-and Hesiod, but a large part of the Old and some of the New Testament.
-The first canon is that God, being good, cannot be the cause or
-originator of any harm or evil to mankind; for these things some other
-cause must be discovered. The greater part of the human lot is evil:
-so God is not the cause of the majority of human events.
-
-This excludes Homer’s lines:
-
- Two butts of human fortunes by the gates of Heaven stood,
- One full of all things evil, and one of all things good.
- To whom God gives a mixture, his life is weal and woe,
- But to whom He gives of the evil alone, he lives as a beggar below.
-
-And
-
- Zeus is the world’s housekeeper, who serves out weal and woe.
-
-And Aeschylus’
-
- God plants the seed of sin among mankind,
- Whene’er He wills to bring a race to naught.
-
-If God is represented as the cause of misfortunes, the poet must say
-that the misfortunes were good for the sufferers, making them better
-and happier.[670]
-
-The second canon is that God is not a wizard, appearing now in one
-form, now in another. Why should He change? External forces are not
-likely to change Him: He would not change Himself, since it would
-necessarily be a transition to the less good and less beautiful, since
-He is perfect. So the lines――
-
- Disguised as human strangers, in many a changing guise,
- Gods roam about the cities, to spy iniquities,
-
-and the tales of Proteus and other metamorphoses, are false.
-Consequently mothers should not tell their children that a god may
-always be present in disguise, for it is a lie and is also likely to
-make the children cowardly. Lying is only useful in dealing with
-enemies, for managing lunatics, and for making a satisfactory
-explanation where certainty is impossible. God has no such reason for
-lying or deception.
-
-The character of the Deity having been thus purged of mythological
-accretions, Plato passes on to the treatment of the future state. This
-must not be described as in any way terrible, or the children will
-learn to prefer dishonourable life to honourable death. So reject――
-
- O better be a poor man’s serf, and share his scanty bread,
- Than be the crownèd king of all the nations of the dead.
-
-And
-
- From him his soul bewailing her hapless fortunes fled,
- Her youth and beauty leaving, to the kingdoms of the dead!
-
-All such passages must be expurgated from school editions; nor is it
-right to admit the fearful scenery of Hell, the rivers of Hate (Styx)
-and Wailing (Kokutos), ghosts, banshees, and other terrible words, for
-fear of making the children nervous.
-
-Then comes the discussion of the ideal man, in which Achilles falls
-from the pedestal which he had previously occupied as the ideal of
-Hellenic manhood. Great men must not indulge in immoderate
-lamentations for their dead friends. The lament of Achilles for
-Patroklos and of Priam for Hektor, when he rolled in the dust and the
-dungheap, must be rejected. “For if the young should take such stories
-seriously and not laugh them to scorn as contemptibly improbable, they
-would be most unlikely to consider such lamentations degrading, or to
-check themselves when they felt any impulse to act in such a way, but,
-without shame or restraint, they would whine out many dirges over tiny
-misfortunes.”[671]
-
-Nor must the heroes be made too fond of laughing. For immoderate
-laughter leads by reaction to immoderate grief. So reject――
-
- Then rose among the blessed gods a laugh unquenchable.
-
-The myths must instil self-control, obedience to rulers and elders and
-to the better instincts. This leads Plato to expurgate――
-
- Thou drunkard, shameless as a dog, and fearful as a deer:
-
-but commend――
-
- Good father, sit in silence, and hearken to what I say.
-
-Then Homer teaches gluttony, by making Odusseus, the wisest of men,
-say――
-
- Best thing in life I count it, a heavy-laden board, While in the
- goblets ceaselessly the good strong wine is poured.
-
-Still worse are the tales of the lusts of Zeus or of Ares and
-Aphrodite, and of the covetousness of the gods.
-
- Gifts win the heart of gods: gifts win the heart of kings.
-
-Nor must the heroes be allowed to blaspheme. “My respect for Homer
-makes me shrink from saying it, but it is impious to state or to
-believe that Achilles was ready to fight against the river, a god, or
-that he dragged Hektor’s body round Patroklos’ tomb or slaughtered
-captives upon it, or that he gave to the dead Patroklos the hair which
-he had dedicated to the river god Spercheios.”[672] Nor must poets say
-that wicked men are enviable, if they are not found out, or that
-justice does good to others but is a loss to oneself. On the contrary,
-they must invent myths to establish the opposite, whether it be true
-or not, because it is profitable.
-
-Plato cares very little for literal truth in mythology; he is only
-desirous that the fiction should be improving and in accordance with
-sound ethics. It is impossible to know the truth, he thinks, about
-things primeval and the gods, so it is necessary to invent stories as
-near the truth as possible and such that they will be improving. The
-majority of men, as Isokrates also noticed, prefer myths to anything
-else; for their intelligence can only grasp ethical and metaphysical
-truths when they are embodied in stories and parables and fables.[673]
-These fictions, however, are like powerful drugs: their concoction
-must only be entrusted to competent hands, or the result will be
-deadly. The rulers of the State, the philosophers, must construct the
-national mythology, not unskilled and irresponsible persons like
-poets.[674] Plato himself gives a good many instances of such
-profitable myths; he enshrines in them, as in a popular form, many of
-his deepest beliefs, his psychology,[675] his views of the immortality
-of the soul,[676] his political theory that all men are not
-equal.[677] In his opinion mythology was the proper food for the
-unenlightened many who were incapable of philosophic certainty; the
-philosopher, by the light of his exact knowledge of ethics and
-metaphysics, was to concoct this food.
-
-In pursuance of this theory an ideal character, in history or fiction,
-was required to personify and make real to the multitude the
-disembodied ideals of Ethics.[678] Achilles had been tumbled from his
-pedestal by philosophy. Who was to replace him? Plato tries to put an
-idealised Sokrates in this position, but he could not square the
-historical personality with the ideal man postulated in the
-_Republic_. Xenophon, also thinking that a pattern man is “an
-excellent invention for the study of morality,” proposes
-Agesilaos.[679] Prodikos tried to make Herakles the model of the
-young. Aristotle formulated the μεγαλόψυχος [megalopsychos], but never
-personified him. Stoicism sought for its Wise Man or Perfect Saint,
-but never found him; Epicureanism was satisfied with its founder. But
-the search for the personification of the ethical ideal becomes the
-central feature of Hellenic philosophy and religion from the time of
-Plato onwards.
-
-
- [655] Herod. vii. 159-161.
-
- [656] Plato, _Ion_, 24 C.
-
- [657] _Rep._ 606 E. So in Isokrates, _To Nikokles_, 530 B.
-
- [658] Aristoph. _Frogs_, 1034-1036.
-
- [659] Plato, _Rep._ 391 B.
-
- [660] Sokrates in Xenophon, _Mem._ i. 3, 7. The moralisation
- is quite un-Homeric.
-
- [661] Herod, ii. 43-46. This tendency culminated in
- Euhemeros, at the end of the fourth century, who claimed to
- have found inscriptions in Crete giving the careers of
- mortal kings named Ouranos, Kronos, and Zeus. He argued that
- the gods were distinguished men, deified by admiring
- posterity. His theory passed to Rome in Ennius’ translation
- and supported the imperial cult.
-
- [662] Plato, _Phaidr._ 229 C.
-
- [663] Plato, _Ion_, 530. Cp. Xen. _Banquet_, iii. 6, where
- Anaximandros is mentioned.
-
- [664] Cp. Aristoph. _Clouds_, 905, 1080, representing
- “Sophist” arguments.
-
- [665] Plato, _Rep._ 377 D.
-
- [666] Isok. _Bous._ 228 D.
-
- [667] Cp. the statement of Herodotos (ii. 53) that Homer and
- Hesiod created the details of Hellenic mythology, even the
- names and functions of the deities.
-
- [668] Plato, _Rep._ 377 B.
-
- [669] _Ibid._ 378.
-
- [670] Plato, _Rep._ 380.
-
- [671] Plato, _Rep._ 388 D.
-
- [672] _Ibid._ 391 B. Plato maligns Achilles. He only
- promised the hair to Spercheios on condition that he
- returned home alive, which he knew he would not do if he
- slew Hektor.
-
- [673] Compare Tennyson, _In Memoriam_, xxxvi.:
-
- For Wisdom dealt with mortal powers,
- Where truth in closest words shall fail,
- When truth embodied in a tale
- Shall enter in at lowly doors.
-
- [674] Plato, _Rep._ 389 C.
-
- [675] In the _Phaidros_.
-
- [676] In the _Republic_, and elsewhere.
-
- [677] _Rep._ 414-417, etc. For the use which Plato made of
- myths as popular expositions of his views, cp. _Laws_, 663,
- 664, 713, 714, 716.
-
- [678] Isokrates recognised this too, _Antid._ 105 C.
-
- [679] Xen. _Ag._ x. 2.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX
-
-ART, MUSIC, AND POETRY
-
-
-Since poetry, music, singing, and dancing were the chief components of
-a Hellenic boy’s education, the æsthetic canons by which these were
-regulated came to be of great importance in the moral history of
-Hellas, and were the objects of much thought and inquiry on the part
-of the educational theorists. It is hard for a modern reader to
-understand the attitude which Plato and Aristotle adopt towards
-poetry, art, and music, partly owing to the way in which these
-subjects are neglected in many modern schools, and still more owing to
-the immense changes which have taken place both in the subjects
-themselves and in their relations to the State as a whole.
-
-In ancient Hellas art, literature, and music were addressed to the
-whole citizen-body, not to a cultured upper class. The epics were
-recited to crowds that might number thousands. The choral lyrics were
-danced and sung by large choruses in the presence of a whole city.
-Tragedy and Comedy were acted before the whole Athenian populace,
-swollen by crowds from every part of Hellas. The great orations were
-spoken either to the national assembly, where every grown man might be
-present, or to a jury of several hundred citizens. So with Hellenic
-art. The statues and pictures were not created for private
-drawing-rooms, but for public temples, colonnades, or gymnasia.
-
-Thus it was national, not individual taste which was the standard of
-Hellenic art and literature: they had to follow the taste of the city,
-not of a clique. But every city in Hellas, as in the Italy of the
-Renaissance, had an intense individuality of its own, which dominated
-its poets, artists, and musicians. The art-schools of the islands, of
-Argos, of Athens were as distinct from one another as those of Venice,
-Florence, Perugia. The greater centres had types of music so far
-distinct that they required different instruments. Language,
-character, and politics in like manner presented a different aspect in
-each community. But underneath this ubiquitous local individuality lay
-the fundamental distinction between the Dorian, on the one hand, and
-the Ionian, with whom for æsthetic purposes may be classed the
-Aeolian, on the other. For Hellenism began to run its course in two
-distinct channels, the Doric and the Ionic.[680]
-
-The Doric characteristics were the sacrifice of the detail and the
-individual to the whole and the community, a love of terseness and
-simplicity, a strong sense of harmony, order, and proportion, a hatred
-of complexity, mystery, vagueness, and luxury, and a preference for
-the perfect body over the developed intellect. The Dorians were
-essentially one-sided, and lacking in imagination, intellect, and
-invention; they were strong conservatives, and any innovation was
-repugnant to them.
-
-The Ionians were a very different people. Individualism was strong in
-them from the first. They had a tendency to floridity, to exaggeration
-of detail, and to luxury. A quick-witted and imaginative race, they
-were fond of perpetual innovation. Versatility was characteristic of
-them. They preferred intellectual to physical success. Their
-imagination outran their powers of execution. They had none of the
-solidity of the less brilliant Dorian, none of his discipline,
-self-restraint, directness, or perseverance. They were his inferiors
-in most physical and ethical qualities, his superiors in all
-intellectual pursuits.
-
-Till the fifth century the two conflicting types exercise little
-influence upon one another. The Ionians produce a sensuous, dreamy,
-refined, and imaginative sculpture; the Dorians a series of physically
-excellent but wholly unintellectual athlete-statues. The Aeolians
-produce the personal lyrics of love and wine; the Dorians the choral
-poetry of athletic triumphs and gymnastic dances. The Dorians can
-claim the ethical and collectivist philosophy of Pythagoras; the
-Ionians the intellectual and individualist philosophy of the so-called
-Ionian schools.
-
-Athens during this period was purely Ionic, as her statues, the
-remains of which are now being recovered from the rubbish heaps where
-Xerxes threw them, abundantly testify. Further evidence comes from the
-style of dress shown in these statues and in other works of art of the
-period: it is almost oriental.[681] The statues reveal an excess of
-detail and over-refinement: the most common type was a draped woman.
-The Dorians, on the other hand, were most successful in the nude male
-type; and the great Aeginetan school quite failed to represent the
-goddess Athena.
-
-The same principle of differentiation applied to music as well as to
-art, in Hellas: the Dorian, the Ionian, the Aeolian, as well as the
-neighbouring Phrygian and Lydian, each produced a type of their own,
-or “harmony,” as it was called. Each “harmony” bore the mark of the
-“ethos,” or moral character, of the tribe or race which produced it,
-plainly and unmistakably. Music in early Hellas must have been of a
-primitive type, and an acute musical ear had not yet been developed by
-long training. Consequently, the average Hellenic audience was in the
-position of the utterly unmusical man of modern times: the complicated
-music of modern masters would have been wholly unintelligible to them,
-and the only meanings which they could extract from music were certain
-broad ethical impressions. The unmusical man is stirred by a good
-marching tune, moved to a certain depression by a dirge or dead march,
-enlivened and excited by a rollicking bacchanalian song, and reduced
-to a solemn and half-religious frame of mind by the tones of a great
-organ. So with the average Hellene: he extracted this amount of
-impressions from his music, and no more. Any idea of music as the
-voice of the unutterable was quite foreign to his mind; in fact, he
-disliked any music that was unaccompanied by singing: tunes without
-words were unknown in earlier Hellas.
-
-How these different harmonies were produced, by what combination of
-notes and scales each was regulated, may be left to the specialists:
-it is one of those questions which will probably never be settled
-conclusively. The fact remains that they existed, each with an
-unmistakable moral characteristic of its own. But what exactly the
-moral characteristic of each was, is rendered doubtful by the
-conflicting evidence of different writers; probably, as musical taste
-changed and developed, the same “harmony” came to cause a different
-impression. Plato’s ear, accustomed to the prevalent Dorian, found the
-Lydian doleful and depressing; Aristotle and his contemporaries, more
-used to softer music, praised it as valuable for educational
-purposes.[682] Herakleides of Pontos,[683] who made a special study of
-music, gives, in a fragment, a sketch of the old Hellenic “harmonies.”
-The Dorian, according to him, was manly, dignified, stern, and robust,
-not effeminate nor merry nor variegated nor versatile.[684] The
-Aeolic, afterwards called “Hypo-Dorian,” was haughty and pretentious,
-rather conceited, not, however, base in any way, but inflated and
-confident. It was the right music for “woman, wine, and song.” The
-Ionic, representing the old Ionic character before the race
-degenerated, was passionate, headstrong, contentious, showing no signs
-of benevolence or merriment, but revealing a certain hardness of heart
-and temperament. It was not florid nor cheerful, but austere and
-harsh, with a not ignoble dignity which fitted it to accompany
-Tragedy. Later, the race and the “harmony” seem to have degenerated,
-and are charged with being luxurious and effeminate. There used also
-to be a Locrian “harmony,” which was used by Pindar and Simonides, but
-afterwards it fell into contempt and died out.
-
-Besides these purely Hellenic types, there were two which came from
-barbarian races, the Lydian and the Phrygian. Of the Lydian there were
-several varieties. The Mixed-Lydian was doleful and suitable to
-dirges: it made the audience feel mournful and grave. The
-Syntono-Lydian was very similar. The pure Lydian is rejected as
-effeminate by Plato;[685] but Aristotle, resting on the musical
-experts, declares that it involves order and arrangement (κόσμος
-[kosmos]) and is well adapted for education. About the Phrygian
-opinion is still more divided. Plato commends it. According to him it
-suitably represents the notes and accents of a self-controlled man “in
-peaceful and unconstrained circumstances, trying to persuade some one
-or making a request, praying to a god or advising a man, or giving his
-attention to the request or advice or arguments of some one else; and
-if he attains his object, not puffed up, but in all things acting, and
-accepting the consequences of his actions, with moderation and
-self-control.” The philosopher then goes on to reject the flute, as
-suitable only to hysterical enthusiasm. But this, as Aristotle pointed
-out, was inconsistent. For the Phrygian harmony and the flute went
-hand in hand: the wild orgies of Dionusos and other worships of an
-enthusiastic nature were usually accompanied by the flute and could
-only be set to the Phrygian harmony. The dithyramb, for instance,
-could only be set in this way; when Philoxenos definitely tried to
-write one to the Dorian, he slid back without being able to prevent it
-into the Phrygian. Aristotle therefore, accounting it an enthusiastic
-harmony, reserves it as a “purge” (κάθαρσις [katharsis]), which, by
-providing under well-regulated conditions an occasional outlet for
-hysteria, will work such affections out of the system for a long
-period: at the end of which another dose will be required.[686]
-
-In Hellas music was held to be an efficacious medicine for the ills
-alike of body, soul, and mind. Even the grave and learned philosopher
-Theophrastos, the pupil of Aristotle, asserted that the Phrygian
-“harmony” on the flute was the proper means of curing lumbago.[687]
-Pindar states that Apollo “gives to men and women cures for grievous
-sickness, and invented the harp, and gives the Muse to whom he will,
-bringing warless peace into the heart”:[688] the god of medicine is
-the son of the god of the harp. The Pythagorean philosopher Kleinias,
-when he was in a bad temper, used to take up his harp, saying, “I am
-calming myself.”[689] He and his school regarded the harp as the true
-means of attaining that peace and solemn orderliness of soul which as
-true Dorian musicians they desired. Lukourgos produced at Sparta the
-state of mind necessary to enable his reforms to be carried, by
-sending from Crete a lyric poet named Thales, whose songs, by their
-calm and orderly tune and rhythm, were an incentive to discipline and
-concord: by this means the Spartans were imperceptibly calmed in
-character.[690] The Arcadians, according to their compatriot Polubios,
-from ancient times onwards “made music their foster-brother” from
-their cradles till they were thirty years of age, in order to
-counteract the brutalising tendencies of their rough life and harsh
-climate; and the inhabitants of one district, Kunaitha, which
-neglected this preventive, were notorious for their wickedness.[691]
-
-Thus music came to be regarded as the best means of forming character.
-It was only necessary to apply the right sort of “harmony” to the
-young and susceptible personality, and the right “ethos” would be
-produced. The Dorian was most in request for educational purposes: its
-merits were universally recognised. For it “suitably represented the
-notes and accents of a brave man in the presence of war or of any
-other violent action, going to meet wounds or death or fallen into any
-other misfortune, facing his fate with unflinching resolution.”[692]
-Of the others, as has been said, Plato preferred the Phrygian and
-Aristotle the Lydian.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Not only beautiful music, but beautiful art also, was believed to
-produce, by an unconscious but irresistible influence, beautiful
-characters in those who came into contact with it; while, on the other
-hand, bad art, as well as bad music, was the cause of vice and low
-moral ideals.[693] This, they naturally thought, was particularly true
-in the case of children, who are so sensitive to all external
-influences; moreover, it is the early impressions that make most
-difference in a man’s life. To serve this educational end, the
-Hellenes expected every statue and painting, as well as every poem and
-tune, to have ἦθος [êthos], that is, according to Aristotle’s
-definition,[694] to be such that its moral purpose was manifest to the
-average man. For this purpose Hellenic art had to become impersonal:
-the great statues represent a single trait of character. The smaller
-individualising traits are omitted: the single trait chosen is then
-idealised and carried to its utmost possible development. This
-produced a single and easily intelligible effect. The frieze on the
-Parthenon represented the perfect knight in various attitudes, not
-So-and-so and Somebody-else. The same idealised abstractions can be
-traced in the “Theseus” of the Pediment, and in most of the dramas of
-Sophocles.
-
-The realisation of this artistic ideal was made possible by the fusion
-of the two currents, Doric and Ionic. At the end of the sixth century
-a wave of Doricism passes over Athens, and the first competent
-athlete-sculptors arise there. A second wave came in the middle of the
-next century, in the period of Perikles. The Dorian characteristics
-now dominate Attic artists alike in poetry, sculpture, and
-vase-painting. Aeschylus had possessed the best traits of the Ionic
-temperament, chastened by the great crisis of the Persian wars: his
-imagination is half oriental, and he has often been compared to a
-Hebrew prophet. But the canons of Sophocles are purely Doric, as are
-those of Pheidias. The mixture of Doric ethics with Ionic imagination
-produces the great age of Hellenic art and literature. With art in
-such an educative condition, the effect of the great public buildings
-and temples, which adorned even quite humble villages, and of the
-glorious statues of which every temple, agora, and gymnasium formed a
-perfect treasure-house, must have been very great upon the Hellenes,
-who were probably the most susceptible of all peoples to artistic
-influences. Moderns vaguely realise that a great Gothic Cathedral does
-direct the emotions quite perceptibly. The more susceptible Athenians
-must have been much more strongly influenced by the Parthenon and the
-Propulaia. In fact, it is related that Epaminondas declared that his
-countrymen could never become great unless they removed these
-buildings bodily to Thebes. Strangers visiting Athens were so overcome
-by her architectural glories that they thought her the natural capital
-of the world――an effect which Perikles may well have intended. Great
-works of art produce great effects: it is not unnatural to suppose
-that smaller works produce a not inconsiderable, if smaller, effect.
-Modern theorists often declare that the pictures and wall-paper of the
-nursery ought to be in the best taste. Plato and Aristotle ruled that
-everything, however humble, which surrounds the growing child should
-be in accordance with the best canons of art, since art influenced
-morality so strongly. “Ought we not to keep an eye,” says Plato,[695]
-“on the craftsmen also, and prevent them from representing moral evil
-or disorderliness or bad taste or lack of grace or lack of harmony
-either in their imitations of animals or in their buildings or in any
-other object of their craft? If they are unable to carry out our
-directions in this matter, ought we not to expel them from the
-community, lest boys who are brought up in the bad pasture of these
-bad representations may pluck poison daily from everything around
-them, and little by little insensibly accumulate a large amount of
-evil in their souls? Must we not rather search for such craftsmen as
-are able, by their native genius, to discover what is beautiful and
-graceful? For in this way our children, dwelling in a region of
-health, will be influenced for good by every sound and every sight of
-these works of beauty, inhaling as it were a healthy breeze that blows
-to them from a goodly land.” Every article of furniture, every detail
-of architecture, is to take its part in educating the citizens. But if
-art and music are so potent a factor in education, they require to be
-carefully regulated: a depravation of popular taste, which will cause
-a depravation of the dependent artists, will by its educating
-influence increase the national decadence both of taste and of morals,
-in an ever-widening degree.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Poetry had at least an equally potent influence upon contemporary
-ethics. The works of the great poets were the chief medium of
-education, and large quantities of them were learned by heart in all
-the elementary schools.[696] What the boys learned, they then recited,
-with as much dramatic action as they were capable of: the rhapsodes
-provided them with models. Thus the boys really _acted_ the poets as
-far as they could. Acting was a new thing in Hellas in Solon’s time,
-and it was received with apprehension. When Thespis first acted one of
-his plays, Solon asked him if he was not ashamed to tell such lies in
-public, making himself out to be what he was not. Thespis replied that
-it was only in fun. Then Solon struck the ground with his stick and
-said, “We shall soon find this fun of yours invading our commercial
-transactions.” Later, when Peisistratos obtained the bodyguard, to
-which he owed his tyranny, by pretending to have been wounded by his
-enemies, Solon said the stratagem was a case of acting.[697] This
-objection was echoed by Plato, and is not wholly unjustified by the
-course of history. For the great vice of Hellenic life was its
-insincerity: it is impossible to tell how far a Hellene is in earnest.
-It is this vice which ruins their oratory; it is this which, in later
-times, made the “hungry little Greek” the type of a fawning liar in
-Roman opinion. It was not only in recitations that acting played a
-great part. The dances were essentially dramatic: it was this quality
-which enabled them to give birth to the drama. In the war-dance all
-the gestures and attitudes of attack and defence in actual battle were
-represented. The Dionysiac dances were originally the acts of devotees
-trying to assimilate themselves to the god in his sufferings and
-triumphs.
-
-How vividly a Hellene entered into the dramatisation may be seen from
-the case of the rhapsode Ion. When he recited Homer, his eyes filled
-with water and his hair stood on end; and his audience were in much
-the same condition. The effect in the “Mimetic” dances, where music,
-gestures, rhythm, and poetry all combined to produce a single
-impression, must have been greater still; the audience, as well as the
-performers, must often have been quite carried away. Such performances
-were very frequent. Is it unnatural to suppose that such frequent
-assimilation had an important effect on the Hellenes, with their
-artistic temperament and great susceptibility? At any rate, Plato,
-Aristotle, and Aristophanes, not to mention lesser names, believed
-that it had.
-
-Among these potent poetic influences, the drama must certainly not be
-forgotten. Sokrates regarded the _Clouds_ of Aristophanes as a far
-more deadly attack upon his career than anything that Anutos and
-Meletos could say. To Plato, the theatre plays the part of the “Great
-Sophist,” the educating influence which forms the opinion and the
-character of the young.
-
-It must be remembered that Hellenic poetry enshrined the religion of
-the race: this fact gave it an enormous influence. The characters in
-Aeschylus and Sophocles are divine or semi-divine; many of the
-audience in the theatre were wont to revere Agamemnon or Theseus; all
-paid worship to Athena and Apollo. The Athenian drama was sacred to a
-Hellene as is the play at Oberammergau to a Christian. Had Shakespeare
-dramatised the Bible, modern children might have recited his speeches
-and acted his plays with somewhat similar feelings to those with which
-Hellenic boys recited Homer or Aeschylus. Suppose Shakespeare had thus
-dramatised the story of Esau and Jacob, and an imaginative child was
-set to learn Jacob’s speeches and repeat them; suppose he was also in
-the habit of hearing them recited by a first-class actor who knew how
-to bring out the minuter traits of character.[698] Is it not, at any
-rate, quite rational to argue that the child would gradually absorb
-some of these traits of character, just as children often pick up the
-peculiarities of nurses and others with whom they have no hereditary
-connection? Might not underhand habits be reasonably attributed to
-frequent acting of the part of Jacob? Yet in ancient Hellas the
-influence was much stronger, for the people were more susceptible and
-the characters were believed to be half-divine.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Thus in ancient Hellas music, art, and poetry had an immense effect on
-the characters and morals of the race. This influence may well have
-been exaggerated by Hellenic thinkers. Damon the musician declared
-that every change in artistic standards produced a change in the tone
-and constitution of a State; and Plato agreed with him.[699] The
-danger of such innovations is a large part of the theme of the _Laws_,
-and, in a less degree, of the _Republic_. Sparta accepted this
-attitude and forbade all change. The opinion was certainly widely
-held, and must have rested on experience.
-
-Just as the thinkers were beginning to realise this principle, it
-happened that a very great change in the artistic canons did take
-place. Sophocles is succeeded by Euripides, Pheidias by Praxiteles:
-music suffers a similar transformation. Idealism gives way to realism:
-Sophocles and Pheidias had represented men as they ought to be,
-Euripides and Praxiteles represent them as they are. Poets and
-sculptors still pretend to be delineating deities, but in reality they
-are delineating contemporary life.[700] Their creations not only cease
-to be idealised, they cease to have only a single trait. The “Hermes”
-of Praxiteles is a dreamy but vigorous young Athenian who might have
-been met in the Akademeia or Lukeion; the “Herakles” of Euripides is
-now a homicidal maniac, now a reckless mercenary.[701] The characters
-become human by losing their divineness. In the next generation the
-divine names are dropped, and Menander can depict contemporary life
-without having to call his characters Orestes or Phaidra. Music also
-ceased to be so severely separated off into types. All manner of
-musical innovations arise, which it is very hard for a modern to
-grasp. But the result is clear enough. It became no longer possible to
-detect the ethical meaning of a tune: music was becoming complex, just
-as characters in drama and sculpture were becoming complex. It was
-also more homely in subject. It became daringly “mimetic” also,
-imitating all the sounds of nature. This was an age of daring
-experiments, and musicians shared the general movement.
-
-To the Conservative party in Hellas and to the educational theorists
-these changes naturally appeared ruinous. In their opinion, Euripides
-was practically parodying the Bible and making divine characters share
-all the follies and weaknesses, and use the homely language, of mere
-men. Boys, learning such poetry by heart, would cease to have ideals:
-everything would be commonplace to them. They would recite the most
-homely language, and act the most homely parts, under the idea that
-they were half-divine. Moreover, with the attack of the new school
-upon the old religion, the more immoral parts of Hellenic mythology
-were brought into undue prominence. Euripides seems to have chosen
-some questionable subjects; the dithyrambic poets were worse, and
-chose themes quite unsuitable for children to act or hear. And music
-ceased to have any ethical value; it was all trills and onomatopœia.
-Such changes meant a revolution in the results of education.
-
-The poet Aristophanes is the first to raise his voice against the
-change. A few months before the utter ruin of Athens, he produces the
-_Frogs_, which really repeats the attack of the _Clouds_, with
-Euripides instead of Sokrates for the defendant. The poet is attacked
-as at once the prophet of the new culture of the Sophists and of the
-new artistic standards. The following are some of the chief faults
-which Aristophanes finds with the new school represented by
-Euripides:[702] (1) an undignified style of music, worthy only of the
-bones as an accompaniment; (2) its habit of mixing all sorts of
-incongruous musical rubbish together, “lewd love-songs, drinking
-catches of Meletos, Karian flute-music, dirges, and dances”; (3) its
-trills or shakes, as in εἰειειειειλίσσετε [eieieieieilissete]; (4) its
-mixture of incongruous pictures, “dolphins, spiders, halcyons,
-prophet-chambers, and race-courses,” pathos and bathos, commonplace
-and solemnity; (5) bad metre, licenses of every sort, and frequent
-“resolved” feet. As a parody of its habitual incongruity Aristophanes
-gives:
-
- “O God of the sea, that’s what it is. O ye neighbours,
- behold yon monstrous deed: Gluke’s gone off with my cock.
- Nymphs, ye daughters of the hills! Mary Ann, lend a hand.”
-
-Aristophanes’ voice comes with a certain pathos, for the play is the
-last utterance of Periclean Athens, just at the point of falling and
-trying to find a scapegoat on whom to lay the responsibility of its
-ruin: and the scapegoat chosen is the new artistic and musical
-standard. The Ionic temperament had, in fact, broken away from all
-restraint. The Doric canons of order, symmetry, regularity, and
-solidity were thrown aside. Everything antique was treated with
-disdain; all authority was rejected with scorn. No standards, ethical
-or artistic, were tolerated. Perpetual change, daily novelty, became
-the one desire of Athens. The foundations of belief, the bases of the
-moral code, were broken down. The whole world seemed to be crumbling
-away, and nothing was arising to take its place. Spectators became
-dizzy with the eternal fluctuations. What wonder if they turned
-longing eyes towards the one centre of gravity in Hellas, towards the
-one place where politics, art, and ethics retained their old
-stability, towards Sparta? So Sparta becomes the philosopher’s ideal,
-and it is the Spartan canon that Plato tries to reimpose on Ionicism
-running riot.[703] The fault which he finds with contemporary art and
-music is that they simply try to please and amuse the audience, not to
-educate and improve it.[704] They are like parents who try to soothe a
-fractious child with sweetmeats when his health requires castor oil.
-But the poets and artists are the slaves of the mob which pays them.
-They must be freed from this control, and made the servants of the
-government. Strict canons must be drawn up, which they must follow on
-pain of being expelled from the State. The canons must be drawn up by
-a select body of experts; the mob is incapable of judging in such
-matters; the critic must guide their taste, not follow it.[705] Good
-music and art must bear the stamp of a good “ethos,” and, since men
-appreciate the character most which most resembles their own, it will
-be the good man who will most appreciate good music:[706] so the good
-man becomes the standard. In order to point his moral, Plato sketches
-the history of the Athenian drama, showing how its dependence on
-popular opinion ruined it[707]:――
-
-“At the time of the Persian wars Athens was a limited democracy, with
-the magistracies arranged according to a property qualification. The
-spirit of obedience and discipline prevailed in those days, and was
-strengthened by the dread of Persia. The populace willingly obeyed the
-laws that fixed the artistic and musical standards. By these
-regulations the different types of song and accompaniment, hymns or
-prayers to the gods, lamentations, pæans, dithyrambs, and so forth
-were kept quite distinct, no one being allowed to mix them together;
-the standard, too, was not fixed, as now, by the shouts and stampings
-and confused applause of the mob, but every one listened in silence
-until the end of the play, the educated classes from preference, and
-boys and their paidagogoi, and the mob generally, under the direction
-of the rod. Thus the mass of the citizens were ready to obey in an
-orderly manner, not venturing to make noisy criticisms. In course of
-time some poets, who ought to have known better, led the way in
-breaking down these laws. Frenzied and distracted by their desire for
-pleasure, they mixed lamentations with hymns and pæans with
-dithyrambs, they imitated the flute on the lyre, they confused
-everything with everything else. Blinded by ignorance, they lied and
-said that there was no question of accuracy of representation in
-music: the only standard was the pleasure of the hearer, whatever sort
-of man he might be. With such style of poetry, and arguments to match,
-they inspired the many with contempt for the laws of Art, and gave
-them the idea that they were capable of criticising it. So the
-audience was no longer silent but noisy, since it supposed that it
-knew what was good and what was bad. Art was no longer governed by
-good taste, but by the bad taste of the mob. Nor was this the worst of
-it. From Art the infection spread to other spheres, and every one
-began to think that he knew everything, and consequently to break the
-laws. For, thinking themselves wiser than the laws, they no longer
-feared them.… Next comes a refusal to obey the Archons, then contempt
-for the orders of parents and elders, then a desire to be free from
-the restraints of a constitution. The end is utter contempt for oaths
-and covenants and the gods.”
-
-It is the lack of order and system in contemporary music which Plato
-dislikes.[708] In modern dances, he complains, manly words are set to
-effeminate tunes or gestures, and the voices of men and beasts and
-instruments are mixed together into a confused and unintelligible
-hodgepodge.[709] Music without words is equally detestable. Music that
-runs on without the proper pauses and loves mere speed and meaningless
-clamour, using flutes and harps without words, is in the worst taste.
-The meaning must be quite plain.
-
-Music must also be good. Poets say much that is good, much that is
-bad: they are irresponsible beings.[710] The State ought to appoint
-censors who will reject all unsuitable poems and tunes and dances.
-Those which are already in existence must be selected and expurgated.
-If this ruins the poetry, never mind: moral tone is far more important
-than poetical skill. In fact, poetry ought to be written by moral
-citizens without any regard being paid to their poetical talents: it
-would also be well if they did not compose till they were fifty![711]
-A sketch of a Platonic Censor re-editing Homer is given in Books ii.
-and iii. of the _Republic_: his methods are drastic.
-
-But Plato’s chief denunciation is reserved for the “mimetic” or
-imitative aspect of poetry. The poet teaches “posing.” Homer, when he
-described the siege of Troy, is posing as a skilled tactician (as his
-admirers often claimed that he was), when really the silence of
-history proves that he was nothing of the sort. So too the painter who
-represents a plough is posing as an authority upon agriculture:
-question him, and he will prove to be completely ignorant of the
-subject. Both poetry and painting are a fraud and a deception; by
-their pretence of knowledge, they encourage the mind in the habit, to
-which it is so prone, of accepting vague opinions as certainties
-without testing their truth.[712] They foster that belief in the
-sense-perceptions which it is the object of Platonic education to
-destroy.
-
-But the poet not only poses himself: he makes his audience, his
-reader, his performer pose. The boy who recites the dying speech of
-Aias in Sophocles’ play is posing as Aias, pretending to be Aias, and
-adopting the tone and the traits of Aias. The boy who dances in the
-dithyramb _Semelé_ is trying to enter into Semelé’s feelings and
-moods, being helped by the music and the gestures and the words.[713]
-Such posing, if begun in early years, will invade the character and
-change it: the boy will become like the personages whom he is
-accustomed to act. Hence Plato lays down strict laws dealing with the
-recitations and dances of the young.[714] “If they speak in character,
-it must only be in the character of those who are, what they
-themselves must be when they are grown up, brave, temperate, pious
-gentlemen. They must have no skill in taking unsuitable characters,
-lest from their dramatic representation of what is vulgar and base
-they become infected with the reality of vulgarity and baseness. For
-imitation, if begun in early years and carried far, sinks into a boy’s
-habits and nature, and influences his voice, his gestures, and his
-ideas.… So boys must not be allowed to take the character of a woman,
-young or old, abusing her husband or blaspheming against the gods or
-uttering lamentations,――certainly not of a woman in sickness or in
-love or in pangs; nor the character of slaves performing slavish
-duties; nor of bad men, cowards, insulting or mocking one another,
-using foul language, drunk or sober; nor yet of madmen.”[715] It will
-be seen that this will exclude much of Hellenic drama, especially of
-the plays of Euripides and Aristophanes. Comedy, according to Plato,
-should only be acted by foreigners, and should serve as an awful
-warning of everything that a gentleman ought not to do. The new music
-is subjected to similar rules. “Boys must not imitate blacksmiths at
-the forge, or craftsmen occupied in any trade, or sailors rowing, or
-boatswains giving them orders, or anything of the sort; nor yet horses
-neighing, or bulls roaring, or the noise of rivers or the sea or
-thunder or wind or hail or chariot-wheels or pulleys or trumpets or
-flutes or pipes …; nor the sounds made by dogs and sheep and birds.”
-So the proper style of poetry for educational purposes will be mostly
-narrative, with occasional dramatisation of virtuous men. To accompany
-this simplified and purified poetry only the Dorian and Phrygian
-“harmonies” will be required: all the others may be rejected. Simple
-instruments alone will be wanted: many-stringed lyres and the flute
-can be banished. The seven-stringed lyre and the shepherd’s pipe will
-be left.
-
-Plato finds it too difficult to carry these principles into rhythm,
-since he is not an expert in the subject. But he thinks that the
-metres could be regulated in accordance with his canons; the expert
-Damon declared that some had a demoralising tendency.
-
-As a whole, Plato’s aim is to restore Doric standards, to combat
-amateurism and dabbling, by which boys were made Jacks-of-all-trades,
-and above all to insist that the refined few ought to set the standard
-of taste in matters musical, literary, and artistic, not the unrefined
-many. With his view may be contrasted Perikles’ boast to the Athenian
-people, “We can all criticise adequately, if we cannot all invent,”
-and Aristotle’s belief that a crowd judges better than an individual
-because its judgment is compounded of many judgments.
-
-But when we come to Aristotle the creative instinct of the Hellenic
-nation, apart from a few gifted individuals, is dead. To him and his
-contemporaries music and painting are no longer rendered necessary
-parts of education owing to the irresistible craving of an artistic
-temperament for expression. Listen to his theory. Painting gives boys
-an eye for beauty, and prevents them from being cheated in
-art-dealing: there is no inward compulsion to paint. Boys had better
-learn to sing and play, since children must needs make a noise. All
-they really need is the power of criticising professional music. This
-power, unluckily, cannot be acquired without personal study. But let
-them drop their music as soon as they can, or they might be mistaken
-for vulgar professionals. Such words could hardly have been addressed
-to a nation that was still musical and artistic. So Aristotle’s
-æsthetic criticism is really a study of the past, the discussion of a
-dead age. He has no natural affinity for such things himself: he
-prefers to sum up the opinions of experts. Consequently his remarks on
-the subject are scientific but no more; for a real appreciation of the
-Hellenic artistic and musical spirit it is necessary to go to Plato,
-who combated it so fiercely just because he was more in sympathy with
-it than suited his philosophic desires.
-
- [Illustration: PLATE X. A.
-
- IN A RIDING-SCHOOL
-
- From a Kulix by Euphronios, now in the Louvre. Hartwig’s
- _Meisterschalen_, Plate 53.]
-
- [Illustration: PLATE X. B.
-
- IN A RIDING-SCHOOL
-
- From a Kulix by Euphronios, now in the Louvre. Hartwig’s
- _Meisterschalen_, Plate 53.]
-
-
- [680] The characteristics are sketched in Thuc. i. 70. Cp.
- the difference between Florence and Venice in Renaissance
- Italy.
-
- [681] See also Thuc. i. 6; Athen. 512 B.C.
-
- [682] No doubt all the theorists had a fatal temptation to
- judge the harmony by the opinion which they held of the race
- which produced it. The Lydian may have recovered prestige
- during the fourth century, for it included Karian, and Karia
- became a great power under Mausolos.
-
- [683] Athen. 624 C.
-
- [684] It is the only true Hellenic harmony (Plato, _Lach._
- 188 D).
-
- [685] Plato’s opinion of the harmonies is in _Rep._ 398-399.
- Aristotle, who professes only to summarise the views of
- experts, discusses them in _Pol._ viii. 7.
-
- [686] Plato apparently accepts this principle with regard to
- the Korubantic dances (_Laws_, 790 D).
-
- [687] Athen. 624 b.
-
- [688] Pind. _P._ 5. 60-63. Cp. the story of Saul and David.
-
- [689] Athen. 624 a.
-
- [690] Plut. _Luk._ 4.
-
- [691] _Pol._ iv. 20. 2.
-
- [692] Plato, _Rep._ 399 A.
-
- [693] Londoners must devoutly hope that the Hellenic theory
- is false.
-
- [694] Aristot. _Rhet._ ii. 21. 16.
-
- [695] Plato, _Rep._ 401 B.
-
- [696] A poetical education probably develops the imagination
- at the expense of the logical mind. Plato is a good instance
- of this: his imagination, against his will, outweighs his
- reason. It may be this personal experience which gives so
- much bitterness to his attack on poetry.
-
- [697] Plut. _Solon_, 29. 30.
-
- [698] Children have a natural tendency to act, and need
- little inducement or instruction.
-
- [699] Plato, _Rep._ 424 C.
-
- [700] So in the later Renaissance the “Madonna” is the
- artist’s wife.
-
- [701] According to Dr. Verrall.
-
- [702] Aristoph. _Frogs_, 1301, 1340.
-
- [703] Ionicism = Herakleiteanism, πάντα ῥεῖ [panta rhei].
- Doricism = Parmenideanism, τὸ πᾶν μένει [to pan menei].
-
- [704] Plato, _Gorg._ 501-502; _Polit._ 288 C.
-
- [705] Plato, _Laws_, 657-659.
-
- [706] _Ibid._ 656.
-
- [707] _Ibid._ 698-701 C.
-
- [708] The essence of dancing is that it is _orderly_
- movement; of singing that it is _orderly_ sound (_Laws_,
- 654).
-
- [709] Plato, _Laws_, 669-70.
-
- [710] _Ibid._ 800-802.
-
- [711] _Ibid._ 829 c.
-
- [712] Consequently the painter and the poet are, in Plato’s
- opinion, allies of the Sophist.
-
- [713] This is true, in a less degree, of the audience. Cp.
- Plutarch’s account of the Spartans (_Lac. Inst._ 239 A):
- “They did not listen to tragedies or comedies, in order that
- neither in earnest nor in jest they might hear men
- gainsaying the laws.”
-
- [714] Plato, _Rep._ 395 ff.
-
- [715] Plato holds that no one likes to imitate his
- inferiors; so the good man will not care to imitate any but
- the good. He ascribes this attitude to the Deity.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X
-
-XENOPHON: “THE EDUCATION OF KUROS”
-
-
-The central figure in many parishes in England is a retired
-Major-General or Colonel. He constitutes the chief pillar of the
-neighbouring church, reads the Lessons on Sundays, teaches in the
-Sunday School, gives away the prizes at School-treats held in his own
-grounds, and heads every subscription list; while his leisure is given
-to the compilation of a military memoir or two, and perhaps, if he is
-very literary, of a few short stories. Just such a man was Xenophon.
-On retiring from active service, he withdrew to the little village of
-Skillous in Elis, where he owned a house and a park. The whole country
-swarmed with fish and game, so that he and his sons could have as much
-hunting as they pleased. Guests were numerous, for past his gates ran
-the great high-road from Lakedaimon to Olympia. In his grounds he
-built a chapel to Artemis, the expenses being defrayed from a tithe of
-the spoils he had taken in the heart of the Persian Empire. The tenth
-of the produce of his land was paid to the goddess, and once a year he
-gave a great sacrificial feast in her honour, to which all the
-neighbours were invited. In this way the retired General lived for
-twenty years, devoted to his religion, his hunting, and the
-composition of his books. Having two sons of his own, he naturally
-gave some attention to the problems of education. His treatise on the
-constitution of Lakedaimon is simply a sketch of the Spartan school
-system, no doubt intended for his boys, who were brought up at Sparta.
-A curious passage in his _Economics_[716] shows that he considered the
-most effective mode of teaching to be a series of appeals, by means of
-question and answer, to personal observation and common-sense.
-Ischomachos asks Sokrates whether he knows how to plant trees.
-Sokrates at first replies “No,” but when he is questioned point by
-point, whether on his excursions to Lukabettos, he has noticed the
-depth of the trenches in the orchards, and some similar details, and
-when his common-sense has shown him that plants grow quicker through
-soft than through hard soil, he finds that he is an expert nurseryman,
-and decides that questioning must be the way to teach.
-
-But the most important of Xenophon’s educational works is the
-_Education of Kuros_. In this he becomes the classical Miss Edgeworth
-and Henty combined. The book is really an historical novel, mostly
-fiction, embodying a moral story for the young, an ideal system of
-education, and a practical treatise on the whole duty of a general.
-The ideal system comes first, as a sort of preface, and presents a
-curious parallel to the rival schemes of his contemporary Plato.
-Xenophon makes the reader suppose that his system was practised in
-Persia in the time of Kuros’ boyhood, but there is no authority for
-his statement. Persia is in this case a convenient title for Utopia.
-
-The ordinary State, according to Xenophon, leaves its citizens to form
-their own characters; but the Persian system definitely aims at
-producing virtue. In every Persian city there is what is called the
-“Free Agora.”[717] This is an open square, like the ordinary
-market-place, but unlike it in being without shops or booths, for the
-vulgar bustle and clamour of buying and selling is forbidden here, as
-likely to disturb the peace and calm of the educated. Round it lie the
-royal palace and the State buildings, so that it would be a place of
-some architectural pretensions and not unlike the quadrangle of a
-College at an English University. The square is divided into four
-parts――one for the children, one for the epheboi, one for full-grown
-men, and one for the old; for men of all ages have their place in this
-College. Any Persian is at liberty to send his son to school here, but
-only the rich can afford to support their sons while they attend the
-classes: the poor man’s children, in Utopian Persia as in modern
-England, must needs work for their living at an early age. The schools
-are apparently only for boys: Xenophon has nothing to say here about
-feminine education, although he approves of the Spartan system.
-
-All boys under sixteen are ranged together in twelve companies,
-according to the number of Persian tribes; of arrangement in classes
-by age or intelligence nothing is said. They have to be in their
-quarter of the Free Agora at daybreak. Their education is under the
-control of twelve masters chosen from the elder men. What they learn
-in school is _Justice_, as boys elsewhere learn letters. The system is
-as curious as the subject. A sort of miniature law-court is
-constituted, where the masters act as judges and the boys accuse one
-another before them. The accusations must not be concocted for the
-occasion, for any one found guilty of bringing a false charge against
-a schoolfellow is severely punished. Smith Major has stolen Brown’s
-bow and arrows, or Jones has called Robinson various opprobrious
-names; the offenders are hauled up before the tribunal, duly tried,
-and, if convicted, flogged.[718] Ingratitude is regarded as a
-particularly heinous crime. It appears that promising pupils were
-allowed to act as judges sometimes. The boy Kuros tells his mother how
-he received this honour and once gave a wrong verdict, to his own
-discomfiture. “The case was like this, mother,” he is made to say. “A
-big boy wearing a small coat met a small boy wearing a big coat, and
-compelled him to exchange. I was told to decide the case, and said
-that it was best that each should have the coat which fitted him. Then
-the master flogged me. For the point was, To whom did the big coat
-belong? not, Whom did it fit best? It belonged to the boy who bought
-or made it, not to the boy who took it by force, breaking the law.”
-
-Besides “Justice,” the children were taught the properties of plants,
-in order that they might avoid those that were harmful and use those
-which were good.[719] This seems a curious anticipation of
-“Nature-study,” with a strictly utilitarian object, and Xenophon
-deserves credit for an original suggestion.
-
-The boys are assisted in the formation of good habits by the sight of
-their elders in the adjacent quarter of the Free Agora, setting them
-an example in temperance and obedience and self-restraint. They also
-learn not to be greedy, by taking their meals, when ordered, in the
-school, under supervision, off the very simple fare of bread, water,
-and a sort of seed resembling the modern mustard, which is all that
-they are allowed to bring with them from home for the purpose. What is
-more, this probably constituted the only meal which the children had
-on such days. It must have been a pretty stiff lesson in abstinence!
-How they would have hated a master who ordered it too often! For games
-and exercise they had shooting with the bow and hurling the
-javelin――that is, military training.
-
-The other three ages are also organised each under twelve masters in
-its own quarter of the Agora of Education. The epheboi, who in Utopia
-include all from sixteen to twenty-six, even sleep there, acting as a
-standing army and a police force to guard the palace and the State
-buildings. Xenophon thinks it well that the men of this age, who need
-more attention, in his opinion, than even the boys, should be always
-under the eye of the authorities. They are organised into twelve
-companies, one from each of the Persian tribes. Their time is largely
-occupied in police-work, such as catching brigands, and in hunting.
-Xenophon attaches great importance to hunting of all sorts, as being
-the best training for war.[720] For it involves exposure to heat and
-cold and other hardships, training in marching and running, and skill
-with bow and javelin;[721] it also requires courage, to meet the
-sudden charge of a panther; and long and patient strategy, to catch
-birds and hares.[722] So, several times a month, the king goes out
-hunting and takes six companies of the epheboi with him, armed with
-bows and arrows, a dagger, a light shield, and two spears――one for
-throwing and one for stabbing. When not engaged in hunting or in
-police-work, the epheboi revise what they learned as boys, and
-practise shooting, competing with one another; there are also public
-contests, with prizes. Prizes are also given to the officer in charge
-of the company which shows itself the most intelligent, courageous,
-and trustworthy; the master who taught this company in its school-days
-is also commended.
-
-The men from twenty-six to fifty occupy the third, and the elders the
-fourth, quarter of the Agora. The former act as a standing army of
-heavy infantry; the latter as a reserve force for home defence, as
-Judges, as the electors to the offices of State, and as the teachers
-of the children. The other offices are filled by the third age. Any
-freeborn Persian can climb this four-runged Ladder of Education to the
-very top; but no one may enter a higher class without having served
-his full time in those below it. To Xenophon, it appears, belongs the
-credit of being the first theorist to recognise the merits of this
-Thessalian custom of the “Free Agora,” the State-provided centre of
-culture, afterwards adopted so extensively in Alexandria, where the
-educated classes of all ages might meet in an intellectual atmosphere
-and amid beautiful surroundings, and provide that exchange and mart of
-ideas by personal intercourse which Newman considered to be the
-essence of a University. In the Free Agora of Utopian Persia all the
-educated spend their days, influencing one another by talk and
-example, exchanging and criticising ideas, competing in warlike
-exercises――and all in an atmosphere untainted by the vulgarity of
-money-making. On the other hand, culture there does not mean idleness;
-to Xenophon, as to Plato, education seemed to entail great
-responsibilities, and the educated classes provide the sole standing
-army of the State and have to give their countrymen the benefit of
-their intelligence by serving as Rulers and Judges.
-
-But Xenophon’s University provides only legal and military
-instruction; intellectual culture is not recognised in his “Persia.”
-The boys learn the principles of their national law; for, as Xenophon
-is careful to proclaim, the Justice which they are taught is no
-Platonic elaboration, but simple conformity to the law of the
-land.[723] Their other lessons aim solely at the soldier’s life: this
-is the object of their severe diet, their botany, and their training
-in arms. General morality is to be imbibed from contact in the Agora
-with their exemplary seniors, not by ethical contemplation. The system
-has the merit of being extremely practical, as would be expected from
-a man of Xenophon’s stamp. The boys are to be soldiers all their
-lives, and Rulers and Judges in their old age. Consequently they are
-to be taught only what is essential to this calling. The soldier must
-be well versed in the use of arms and capable of enduring hardships;
-so the boys are taught to use the bow and javelin and lead a sternly
-simple life. The chief essential to the Ruler and Judge is a sound
-knowledge of the national law: the boys are taught law from the first,
-in a highly practical way, and even learn to administer it, acting as
-judges to their schoolfellows. No better means could be devised for
-teaching boys the legal procedure of their native land than this of
-constituting them into a miniature Court.[724] It is a scheme,
-however, which would be repugnant to the whole idea of an English
-public school, where the boys are expected to fight their own battles
-and set their own tone without calling in the master’s assistance
-except in grave cases. But the Hellenic boy was never left without
-supervision: the paidagogos, or some elder, was always in
-attendance.[725] Probably the chief criticism which it would have
-occurred to an Athenian of that age to urge against Xenophon’s system
-would be, not that it encouraged tale-bearing, nor that it failed to
-teach self-reliance, but that his countrymen were quite sufficiently
-litigious already without any teaching. The absence of literature and
-music would also have seemed a fatal objection.
-
-The “Persian” schools are apparently open, free of charge, to any boy
-whose father chooses to send him. For the only expense which the
-parents are mentioned as incurring is the loss of any wages which
-their son might have been earning if set to a trade instead of being
-sent to school. Xenophon thus institutes free education without
-compulsion. Pupils may be withdrawn at any age; if they or their
-families have enough private means to enable them to live in leisure
-all their lives they can rise through the various stages to the
-highest offices of the State, provided that they are not rejected as
-unfit during their upward passage. Theoretically the educational
-ladder is open to all; practically it is closed to all but those who
-are well-to-do and fairly capable to boot. But the education provided
-is not a general culture, intellectually and morally good for all
-children, nor yet utilitarian knowledge, such as arithmetic or
-writing, which will serve as a useful, or even necessary, basis for a
-trade or profession: it is a strictly technical education in the work
-of War and Government. Few parents, therefore, would send their boys
-to Xenophon’s schools, at any rate for a longer period than would be
-required for learning just the rudiments of national law and morality,
-unless they designed them for a public career.
-
-Thus Xenophon, like his beloved Spartans, has made war the main object
-of education, and, like the Romans, uses law as the chief instrument
-of instruction. But he has seen the demerits of the Spartan
-“Mess-clubs,” and his boys take their meals and sleep, as a rule, at
-home; only the epheboi, as in Crete, dine and sleep always in the
-agora. His chief merit is that he recognised that an educational
-atmosphere, εὐκοσμία τῶν πεπαιδευμένων [eukosmia tôn pepaideumenôn],
-free from the associations of money-making, is essential to an
-educational establishment.
-
-After this deeply interesting sketch of Xenophon’s educational ideals,
-the _Education of Kuros_ becomes a historical novel with a purpose, an
-idealised Kuros acting as example throughout. In Book i. there is the
-description of him as the model boy, courteous to his elders, quick
-and eager to learn, brave, impetuous, loved by all, but rather a prig.
-The description is full of improving anecdotes and little sermons. The
-book concludes with a lecture on the duties of a general, dealing with
-tactics and the best means of training the army and providing
-supplies. Xenophon puts all his personal experience into this, and
-there is plenty of adventure to make the book palatable to his young
-readers.
-
-A few extracts will make the characteristics of this curious work
-plain.
-
-When quite young, Kuros went with his mother Mandané to stay with his
-grandfather Astuages, King of Media. The old man, thinking that the
-boy would be homesick and wishing to comfort him, sent for him at
-dinner the first evening and set all sorts of rich meats and sauces
-before him. Then Kuros said, “Grandfather, you must find it a great
-nuisance, if you have to help yourself to so many courses and taste so
-many kinds of food.” His grandfather replied, “Why, don’t you think
-this a much finer dinner than what you get at home?” “No,
-grandfather,” replied Kuros; “at home we satisfy our appetites by a
-short-cut, just bread and meat, but here, although your object is the
-same, you wind in and out so much on the way that it takes you ever so
-much longer to reach it.” “But, my boy, the delay is only so much
-pleasure, as you will see if you try.” Kuros, however, persisted in
-refusing the unwholesome dainties, so his grandfather compensated him
-by giving him an enormous help of meat. “Is all this meant for me,”
-asked Kuros, “to do what I like with?” “Yes, my boy.” Then Kuros took
-the meat and distributed it to the servants who were waiting at table,
-saying to one, “This is because you taught me to ride”; to another,
-“This is because you gave me a javelin”; to a third, “This is for
-waiting on my grandfather so nicely.” From this example the young
-reader doubtless learned not to desire too many courses or too rich
-sweets at table, and perhaps also to be grateful to every one, even
-servants. After this Kuros remained in Media, while his mother
-returned home. “He soon won the love of his schoolfellows, and quite
-charmed their parents when invited to their houses by the affection
-which he showed for their sons.” A good moral, this, for little boys
-who go out to parties.
-
-This model boy does not die young, but grows up. He had been rather a
-chatterbox when small (a warning to the young readers), but only owing
-to his desire for knowledge and his readiness to answer questions;
-besides, he chattered in such a nice way that it was a pleasure to
-hear him. But as he grew older, he grew more bashful. “He always
-blushed when he met his elders, and he talked in a quieter tone. When
-he played with his schoolfellows, he chose the games where he expected
-to be beaten, not those in which he expected to win; and he was always
-ready to lead the laugh against himself when beaten.” Model youth! Of
-course, he soon became the champion at every form of sport, just as in
-a modern book of the kind he would have won at least five “Blues.”
-
-Kuros next appears as a mighty hunter, and then at the age of fifteen
-takes a leading part in a battle against the Assyrians; in fact, it is
-his strategy and prowess that decide the day. What more could be
-wanted in a book for boys? The modern author would give him a grizzly
-bear, a lion, and a V.C.: Xenophon gives him the Persian equivalents.
-
-After this, little more is said of Kuros’ boyhood. He is next
-introduced as a man of twenty-six, just put into command of a Persian
-expedition to help Media against the Assyrians.[726] Henceforth
-Xenophon’s object is no longer to point a moral, but to instruct
-budding generals and princes in strategy and government. The remaining
-books are a “Handbook of Tactics, with hints on the proper treatment
-of inferiors”; so they fitly begin with a long lecture by Kuros’
-father on the whole duty of a general.[727] There is, however, a good
-deal of moral advice and occasional allegory interspersed amid the
-tactics. For instance, a certain Gobruas came to dine with the Persian
-army. “Seeing how plain the food was, he regarded the Persians as
-rather _bourgeois_. But then he observed what good manners the guests
-had. No educated Persian would allow himself to be seen staring at a
-dish, or helping himself hurriedly, or acting at table without proper
-deliberation. For they think it piggish to be excited by the presence
-of food or drink. He noticed, too, that they never asked one another
-questions which might cause pain, that their jests were never
-malicious nor their wit rude, that everything that they did was in the
-best taste, and that they never lost their tempers with one another.”
-And so on. “Manners for men,” we might call it, by Xenophon.
-
-A curiously interesting case of allegory, which well shows how
-imaginary most of the history is, may be found in the third book.[728]
-The son of the king of Armenia had had for a companion and tutor a
-certain Sophist, of whose wisdom he was very proud. But his father
-condemned the Sophist for corrupting[729] the boy. When he was being
-led to execution, the man showed what a saint and hero he was by
-calling the boy and saying, “Do not be angry with your father for
-putting me to death. For it is no wicked purpose which makes him do
-it, but only ignorance. All sins which men commit in ignorance I rank
-as involuntary errors.” Later, the father confesses that he put the
-Sophist to death for stealing away his son’s affections, “for I feared
-that my boy might love him more than he loved me.” Kuros admits that
-such jealousy is an explanation and regards it as pardonable.
-
-The analogy to Sokrates is obvious to any one. The half-apology for
-the Athenian people is very interesting in the mouth of the old
-Socratic companion Xenophon.
-
-But the object of the _Education of Kuros_ is, after all, to teach
-generalship. A couple of examples of the way in which this is done
-will suffice. On one occasion[730] Kuros orders the foot-cuirassiers
-to lead the way in a forced march, and kindly explains the object of
-such a manœuvre. “This command I give,” he says, “because they are the
-heaviest part of the army. When the heaviest part is in the van,
-obviously it is quite easy for the other arms, being lighter, to keep
-up. But if the quickest detachment is in front on a night march, it is
-not surprising if the army straggles, for the vanguard goes faster
-than the rest.” Again, Kuros could call all his officers by name, to
-their great surprise.[731] “For he thought it very absurd that
-tradesmen should know the names of all their tools, and yet a general
-should be so stupid as not to know the names of his officers whom he
-must use as his tools in the most serious emergencies. Soldiers who
-thought that their general knew their names would, he considered, be
-more eager to do heroic deeds in his presence, and less eager to play
-the coward. It seemed also to be foolish to be obliged to give orders,
-when he wanted something done, in the way some masters do in their
-households, ‘Fetch me some water, Somebody’; or ‘Cut some firewood,
-Someone.’ For when the order is addressed to no one in particular,
-each stands looking at his neighbour and expecting him to carry it
-out.”
-
-The military part is exceedingly well done. Xenophon was one of the
-few good strategists whom Hellas produced, and his remarks on tactics,
-the hygiene of an army, and discipline are sound and useful. What is
-more, his novel is interesting and occasionally witty: it is
-distinctly good reading. He has disguised his powder in the most
-appetising jam, and so has achieved with success the difficult task of
-writing a novel with a purpose. Had books been common then, his work
-would have been both popular and useful in Boys’ Libraries, and have
-done good service as a school prize. But from Plato it only provoked
-the malicious and not very deep criticism that it was unhistorical and
-unsound.[732] “Of Kuros,” he says, “I conjecture that, though he was a
-good general and a patriot, he had not come across the merest scrap of
-sound education, and never applied his mind to the art of managing a
-household.[733] For, being absent on campaigns all his life, he
-allowed the women to bring up his children. The women spoilt the boys,
-letting no one gainsay them, and made them effeminate, not teaching
-them the Persian habits or their father’s profession, but Median
-luxury. Hence the collapse of Persia under Kambuses.”
-
-
- [716] Xen. _Econ._ 19.
-
- [717] Aristotle (_Pol._ vii. 12) says that “Free Agoras”
- were customary in Thessaly. He adopts the system for his
- ideal state――a clear compliment to Xenophon.
-
- [718] Floggings were apparently to be frequent. “Tears are a
- master’s instruments of instruction” (ii. 2. 14).
-
- [719] viii. 8. 14.
-
- [720] Hence his treatise on hunting.
-
- [721] i. 2. 10.
-
- [722] i. 6. 39-40.
-
- [723] i. 3. 17.
-
- [724] Cp. the experiment which was, I believe, tried in an
- American school, where the boys learned the national
- constitution by themselves electing in due form a President,
- Congress, etc.
-
- [725] “The perpetual presence of masters,” according to
- Xenophon, “best inculcates proper modesty and discipline.”
-
- [726] i. 5. 5.
-
- [727] i. 6. 1-46.
-
- [728] iii. 1. 38.
-
- [729] διαφθείρειν [diaphtheirein], the word used in
- Sokrates’ accusation.
-
- [730] v. 3. 37.
-
- [731] v. 3. 46. Notice the Socratic comparison.
-
- [732] Plato, _Laws_, 694 C-D.
-
- [733] A hit at Xenophon’s _Economics_.
-
-
-
-
-PART III
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI
-
-CONCLUDING ESSAY: THE SCHOOLS OF HELLAS
-
-
-The preceding chapters have sufficiently established, as it seems to
-me, that Hellenic education alike at Sparta and at Athens, in theory
-and in practice, aimed at producing the best possible citizen, not the
-best possible money-maker; it sought the good of the community, not
-the good of the individual. The methods and materials of education
-naturally differed with the conception of good citizenship held in
-each locality, but the ideal object was always the same.
-
-The Spartan, with his schoolboy conception of life, believed that the
-whole duty of man was to be brave, to be indifferent to hardships and
-pain, to be a good soldier, and to be always in perfect physical
-condition; when his Hellenic instincts needed æsthetic satisfaction,
-he made his military drill into a musical dance and sang songs in
-honour of valour. Long speaking and lengthy meditation he regarded
-with contempt, for he preferred deeds to words or thoughts, and the
-essence of a situation could always be expressed in a single sentence.
-This Spartan conception of citizenship fixed the aim of Spartan
-education. Daily hardships, endless physical training, perpetual tests
-of pluck and endurance, were the lot of the Spartan boy. He did not
-learn to read or write or count; he was trained to speak only in
-single words or in the shortest of sentences, for what need had a
-Spartan of letters or of chattering? His imagination had also to be
-subordinated to the national ideal: his dances, his songs, his very
-deities, were all military.
-
-The Athenian’s conception of the perfect citizen was much wider and
-much more difficult of attainment. Pluck and harmony of physical
-development did not satisfy him: there must be equal training of mind
-and imagination, without any sacrifice of bodily health. He demanded
-of the ideal citizen perfection of body, extensive mental activity and
-culture, and irreproachable taste. “We love and pursue wisdom, yet
-avoid bodily sloth; we love and pursue beauty, yet avoid bad taste and
-extravagance,” proclaims Perikles in his summary of Athenian ideals.
-Consequently Athenian education was triple in its aims; its activities
-were divided between body, mind, and taste. The body of the young
-Athenian was symmetrically developed by the scientifically designed
-exercises of the palaistra. At eighteen the State imposed upon him two
-years of physical training at public cost. In after life he could
-exercise himself in the public gymnasia without any payment; there was
-no actual compulsion, except the perpetual imminence of military
-service, which, however, almost amounted to compulsion.
-
-As to mental instruction, every boy had to learn reading, writing,
-arithmetic, and gain such acquaintance with the national literature as
-these studies involved. The other branch of primary education, playing
-and singing, intended to develop the musical ear and taste, was
-optional, but rarely neglected. The secondary education given by the
-Sophists, rhetors, and philosophers was only intended for the
-comparatively few who had wealth and leisure.
-
-Taste and imagination were cultivated in the music- and art-schools,
-but the influences of the theatre, the Akropolis, the temples and
-public monuments, and the dances which accompanied every festival and
-religious occasion, were still more potent, and were exercised upon
-all alike. This æsthetic aspect of education was regarded as
-particularly important in Hellas owing to the prevalent idea that art
-and music had a strong influence over character.
-
-For the training of character was before all things the object of
-Hellenic education; it was this which Hellenic parents particularly
-demanded of the schoolmaster. So strongly did they believe that virtue
-could be taught, that they held the teacher responsible for any
-subsequent misdemeanour of his pupils. Alkibiades and Kritias had
-ruined Athens: they were Sokrates’ pupils: therefore execute Sokrates;
-this seemed perfectly logical to an Athenian. If a Sophist sued a
-defaulting pupil for an unpaid bill, he was regarded as ridiculous,
-for it was his business to teach justice, and if those who had learned
-under him behaved unjustly, it was clearly because his teaching had
-been worthless.
-
-Since the main object of the schools of Hellas was to train and mould
-the character of the young, it would be natural to suppose that the
-schoolmasters and every one else who was to come into contact with the
-boys were chosen with immense care, special attention being given to
-their reputation for virtue and conduct. At Sparta this principle was
-certainly observed. Education was controlled by a paidonomos, selected
-from the citizens of the highest position and reputation, and the
-teaching was given, not by hired foreigners or slaves, but by the
-citizens themselves under his supervision. But then the teaching at
-Sparta dealt mostly with the manners and customs of the State, or with
-bodily and military exercises, known to every grown man, and the
-citizens had plenty of leisure. The Athenians were in a more difficult
-position. There were more subjects for the boy to learn, and some of
-them the parents might have neither the capacity nor the time to
-teach. Owing also to the day-school system at Athens and the
-peculiarities of Hellenic manners, the boys needed some one always at
-hand to take them to and from school and palaistra. Thus both paid
-teachers and attendants were needed. But it was also necessary not to
-let education become too expensive, lest the poor should be unable to
-afford it. Consequently the paidagogoi came often to be the cheapest
-and most worthless slaves, and the schoolmasters as a class to be
-regarded with supreme contempt. No doubt careful parents chose
-excellent paidagogoi, schoolmasters, and paidotribai for their sons,
-and made the choice a matter of much deliberation: the teachers at the
-best schools and palaistrai were often men of position and repute. But
-that the class as a whole was regarded with contempt there can be
-little doubt. The children went into a school as they would have gone
-into any other shop, with a sense of superiority, bringing with them
-their pets, leopards and cats and dogs, and playing with them during
-lesson-times. Idlers and loungers came into the schools and
-palaistrai, as they came into the market-booths, to chatter and look
-on, seriously interrupting the work. The schoolmasters and paidotribai
-at Athens were, in fact, too dependent upon their public for
-subsistence to take a strong line, and, in spite of their power, often
-exercised, of inflicting corporal punishment, they seem to have been
-distinctly at the mercy of the pupils and their friends. The
-paidagogoi too, though they seem to have kept their pupils in order,
-were often not the right people to control a boy’s conduct; they were
-apt to have a villainous accent, and still more villainous habits. It
-must be confessed that the Athenians, in their desire to make
-education cheap, ran a very great risk of spoiling what in their
-opinion was its chief object, the training of character.
-
-Otherwise, they sought this end whole-heartedly. The games, physical
-exercises, and hardships of a boy’s life were meant to develop his
-pluck, fortitude, and endurance. For, according to the Hellenic view,
-now too much neglected in many quarters, the condition and treatment
-of the body had a very important effect both upon mental activities
-and upon character. It was for this reason that physical training
-formed at least half of every system of education practised in
-Hellenic states or recommended by Hellenic philosophers. A National
-School which trained the minds only, and neglected the bodies of the
-pupils, would have been inconceivable to a Hellene. It was not merely
-that physical infirmities interrupted the free exercise of thought, or
-led to peevishness and lack of decision. Man was a whole to the
-Hellenes, and one part of him could not be sound if the other parts
-were not. So strongly did they hold this opinion, that they more than
-half believed that physical beauty was a sign of moral beauty; it was
-this latent idea which added an additional significance to the
-exercises of the palaistra with their symmetrical development of the
-body, and to the competitions for manly beauty which were prevalent
-throughout the country; it lent, moreover, a nobler aspect to that
-passion for the outward loveliness of youth which the vases,
-sculpture, and literature of ancient Hellas reveal so surprisingly.
-But, besides this vaguer and more doubtful connection with character,
-bodily exercise and development were supposed to have a special and
-indubitable effect in strengthening the resolution and will-power. The
-object of physical training was only in a minor degree to keep the
-body in good condition; its main aim was to develop strength of
-character, determination, fortitude, endurance, pluck, and energy.
-But, in accordance with that Hellenic canon of “moderation in all
-things,” which was worked out so thoroughly by Aristotle, there might
-be too much, as well as too little, of all these ethical qualities.
-Consequently physical exercise must be taken only in due moderation,
-and carefully balanced by artistic and musical training, which
-militated in an opposite direction, leading, if pursued in excess, to
-weakness of character, indecision, effeminacy, cowardice, and sloth. A
-scientifically arranged symmetry between the two would produce the
-perfect character.
-
-In the literary and æsthetic schools there were two elements of the
-subjects taught, both with an ethical effect, matter and form. The
-literature studied in the schools was expected to be full of improving
-suggestions and life-histories of heroes worthy of imitation, couched
-in the form most attractive to young minds, in order that they might
-appreciate and love its teaching and examples. The music which the
-boys played or heard, the songs which they sang, the dances which they
-performed or watched, the art which they copied or observed, must be
-such as would influence their characters for good――mould them, that
-is, in accordance with the national ideal. For Hellenic morality was
-æsthetic; they followed the course which appealed to their imagination
-and sense of beauty. It was therefore the object of education to make
-the children see and feel beauty in virtue, and good art in good
-ethics, in order that they might find satisfaction for their æsthetic
-cravings――the dominant instinct of a Hellene――in living good and
-upright lives.
-
-For the unanimous feeling of Hellas based ethics not upon duty, but
-upon happiness――upon the satisfaction, that is, of the instincts. But
-this eudæmonistic attitude was qualified by an important consideration
-which is often forgotten. Owing to the solidarity of Hellenic life,
-the happiness which was sought was primarily not that of the
-individual but that of the community. The readiness of the average
-Hellene, during the best period of the country, to sacrifice
-everything on behalf of his city is very remarkable. The real, if
-unformulated, basis of his ethics came thus to be not personal
-pleasure, but duty to the State. When the individualism of the
-Socratic age overthrew this basis, the Hellenes fell back from the
-happiness of the State to the happiness of the self, and both
-patriotism and personal morality suffered from the change.
-
-It was the sense of duty to the State, the resolution to promote the
-happiness of the whole citizen-body, which made parents willing to
-undergo any sacrifice in order to have their sons educated in the way
-which would best minister to this ideal. The bills of the masters of
-letters and music and of the paidotribai, and the lengthy loss of the
-son’s services in the shop or on the farm in Attica, the break-up of
-family life at Sparta, must have been a sore trial to the parents and
-have involved many sacrifices. Yet there is no trace of grumbling. The
-Hellene felt that it was quite as much his duty to the State to
-educate her future citizens properly as it was to be ready to die in
-her cause, and he did both ungrudgingly. If the laws which made the
-teaching of letters compulsory at Athens fell into desuetude, it was
-only because the citizens needed no compulsion to make them do their
-duty. Nor had the State to pay the school bills; for every citizen,
-however poor, was ready to make the necessary sacrifices of personal
-luxuries and amusements in order to do his duty to the community by
-having his children properly taught. The State only interfered to make
-schooling as cheap and as easy to obtain as possible.
-
-The solidarity of Hellenic life, which converted eudæmonism into
-patriotism, was carefully encouraged by the educational system.
-Sparta, with this object, invented the boarding-school, where boys
-learnt from early years to sink their individualities in a community
-of character and interests. The Athenians and most of the other
-Hellenes, on the other hand, had day-schools. This fact might seem to
-militate against the principle which I have stated. But Hellenic
-custom qualified the system of day-schools in a particular way. There
-were no home-influences in Hellas. The men-folk lived out of doors.
-The young Athenian or Ephesian from his sixth year onwards spent his
-whole day away from home (excepting possibly for an interval for the
-mid-day meal), in the company of his contemporaries, at school or
-palaistra or in the streets. When he came home, there was no
-home-life. His father was hardly ever in the house. His mother was a
-nonentity, living in the women’s apartments; he probably saw little of
-her. His real home was the palaistra, his chief companions his
-contemporaries and his paidagogos. He learned to dissociate himself
-from his family and associate himself with his fellow-citizens. No
-doubt he lost much by this system, but the solidarity of the State
-gained.
-
-The duties of citizenship were also impressed upon the boys in other
-and more direct ways, especially its supreme duty, at any rate in
-those days, of military service. The schools of Sparta and Crete were
-one long training for war. The other States set apart two years of the
-boy’s life, those from eighteen to twenty, as a period of
-conscription, during which he was at the service of his city and under
-the orders of the military authorities, learning tactics and the use
-of arms, and being practised in the life of camps and forts. The young
-recruit took a solemn oath of allegiance to his country and its
-constitution: the sacredness of his civic duties was impressed upon
-him from the first. The first function of his new officers was to take
-him on a personally conducted tour, so to speak, of the national
-temples, that he might realise something of the religious life and
-history of his country. His weapons were solemnly presented to him in
-the theatre of Dionusos, before the assembled people; they were
-sacred, and to lose them in battle or disgrace them by cowardice was
-not only dishonourable, it was impious. Nor were the boys allowed to
-grow up in ignorance of the constitution of their city: the ephebos of
-eighteen had to be acquainted with the laws, some of which he had
-probably learnt in the music-school, set to a tune. Every means was
-taken of making the boys realise that they were members of a
-community, to whose prosperity and happiness their own advantage or
-pleasure must be subordinated. In this way grew up the strong Hellenic
-sense of an obligation of utter self-sacrifice on behalf of the State.
-
-But education had also to consult the happiness of the children as
-well as the happiness of the community, although in a lesser degree.
-This may seem a startling statement to make with regard to Spartan
-education. Nevertheless, I believe it to be strictly true. It must be
-remembered that all our accounts of the rigours and horrors of Spartan
-methods come from Athenian writers who in all probability had never
-been to Lakedaimon. Xenophon, who had his sons educated there, gives a
-much milder, and wholly eulogistic, account. The somewhat hedonistic
-Attic visitor must have watched Spartan games and exercises with much
-the feelings of a French visitor at an English public school; he found
-it difficult to realise that the boys underwent such hardships of
-their own free will. Then we must remember what the Spartan boys were.
-They were a picked breed of peculiar toughness, strength, and health;
-for centuries every invalid had been exposed at birth or rejected as
-incapable of the school-system. Generation after generation had been
-trained to be thick-skinned and stout-hearted; pluck and endurance
-were hereditary, and asceticism was a national characteristic. The
-whole system, with its perpetual fighting, its rough games, its
-hardships, its fagging and “roughing-it” in the woods, is just what
-boys of this sort might be expected to evolve for themselves because
-they liked it. I have already pointed out, in my account of the
-Spartan schools, how very similar are many of the customs which grew
-up at the older English public schools, mainly on the boys’ own
-initiative. If English boys, brought up on the whole much less
-roughly, evolved such customs of their own free will, the young
-Spartans may reasonably be supposed to have accepted them gladly. One
-significant token of this survives. The violent and sometimes fatal
-floggings of the epheboi at the altar of Artemis Orthia were entirely
-voluntary on the part of the victims; yet there was no lack of
-candidates even in Plutarch’s days. The Spartan school-system was, in
-fact, an exact expression of the national characteristics, and
-accordingly was entirely acceptable to the Spartan boys.
-
-That the Athenian system was designed to suit the wishes of the
-Athenian children is less difficult to establish. It is only necessary
-to think what the primary schools were like. When once the letters and
-rudiments of reading and writing had been mastered, the process
-perhaps being aided by metrical alphabets and dramatised spelling, the
-boys began to read, learn by heart, and write down the fascinating
-stories of adventure and the romantic tales of Homer. There was no
-grammar to be studied; that, when invented, came at a later age as a
-voluntary subject. There were no years wasted over “Primary Readers”
-consisting of dull and second-rate stories. The boys began at once
-upon the best and most attractive literature in their language, and it
-remained their study for many years, and was still remembered and
-loved in after life. Nor can it be doubted that the music- and
-art-schools were attractive to Athenian boys, sons of a people who
-filled their whole city with art, and made their year a round of
-musical festivals. A large part, too, of Athenian schooling was what
-now would be called play; for the Hellene recognised the importance of
-physical exercise in the upbringing of the young, and included it in
-his conception of education.
-
-The effect upon Hellenic culture of thus making education attractive
-was far-reaching. Instead of regarding with aversion or a bored
-indifference the subjects which they had studied at school, the
-Hellenes had an affection for them and continued to practise and
-improve themselves in them. Throughout their lives they were eager to
-hear recitations of Homer. At banquets they sang the songs and played
-the music on the lyre which they had learnt at school. Elderly men
-would return to a music-master, to improve their style, or rush off to
-hear a Sophist lecture on geography or astronomy. The exercises of the
-palaistra were pursued till old age made them impossible. Grown
-citizens retained throughout an affection for education, and went on
-educating themselves all their lives. Thus an Hellenic city formed a
-centre of widely diffused culture, a home where literature and art and
-music and research could flourish surrounded by appreciation and
-capable criticism. Children, too, seeing how much their elders were
-preoccupied with education, found it even more attractive than its
-designers had made it, since they were not constrained by
-nursery-logic to see in it one of the plagues of youth from which
-“grown-ups” were set free. No doubt the Hellenic schoolmaster was much
-assisted in his endeavour to make education attractive by the
-intellectual curiosity which was a feature of all those States where
-the intellect was systematically trained. The young Athenian or young
-Chian was exceedingly eager to learn. In fact, his eagerness was
-excessive; he was too much in a hurry; he desired to have his
-information given to him ready-made, not having the patience to think
-or to undertake researches on his own account. Hence the phenomenal
-success and educational unsoundness of those prototypes of the modern
-“crammer,” the Sophists, who supplied their pupils with a superficial
-knowledge of many subjects ready-made, and already dressed in striking
-phraseology. This intellectual appetite for the accumulation of facts
-made secondary education at Athens attractive without much effort on
-the part of the teachers, but it was not allowed to influence the
-primary schools; a sound and symmetrical development of mind and body,
-artistic taste and moral character, had to precede the accumulation of
-facts. This latter stage too was universally treated as optional. In
-unintellectual districts it found no place, and even in Athens it was
-only for those who felt a desire for it; it was not forced upon the
-unwilling and incapable. For education was regarded as the development
-of the latent powers of the individual personality, it was no vain
-attempt to excite or implant non-existent faculties. Every one had a
-body, which he must make as efficient as possible, for the service of
-the State; every one, in an æsthetic people, had a taste which could
-be developed; every one had enough intellect to learn his letters; and
-every one, above all, had a character to be formed. But not every one
-could be an international athlete or a first-class artist or musician,
-and not every one had sufficient mental gifts to combine the
-accumulation of facts with profit or enjoyment.
-
-In fact, Hellenic sentiment was distinctly adverse to great
-development in any one direction: the Hellenes had a reasonable horror
-of undue specialisation at school. The object of education was to make
-symmetrical, all-round men, sound alike in body, mind, character, and
-taste, not professional athletes who were mentally vacuous and without
-any appreciation of art, nor great thinkers of stunted physique, nor
-celebrated musicians who lacked brains. Opponents of the Spartan
-system tried to condemn it on this ground, as a specialisation
-intended only to produce good soldiers; but the pro-Spartans seemed to
-have claimed in return that it developed both character and good taste
-in judging art and music, even if it produced small capacity for
-painting or playing, while Laconian terseness involved a greater depth
-of mental exercise than Athenian verbosity.
-
-Thus Hellenic education was not intended to produce professional
-knowledge of a single subject; such technical instruction was deemed
-unworthy of the name of education, and was excluded from the schools.
-The subjects studied were for the most part a means, not an end. Just
-as a walk is sometimes taken not for the sake of reaching any
-particular place, but in order to keep the muscles of the body in good
-condition, so education in Hellas was meant to develop and exercise
-the muscles of mind, imagination, and character, not to inculcate
-so-called “useful” information. The literature read at school was
-imaginative poetry, like that of Homer or Simonides, not the practical
-prose treatises upon Agriculture and Economics which utilitarian
-motives would have demanded. For the poetry was both attractive to the
-boys and improving for their characters, while the handbooks, however
-excellent, only enhanced their financial prospects. The immediate
-future of the individual boy may, it is true, depend somewhat largely
-upon the utilitarian knowledge which he has learnt at school, although
-a sound education in the Hellenic sense of the word will prove more
-advantageous to him in the long run; but the future of a State depends
-upon the character of its citizens. Thus a truly national education
-like that of Sparta or of Athens seeks to train the characters of the
-future citizens; having formed their characters, it leaves them with
-well-justified confidence to gain what technical instruction they need
-for themselves. At a national crisis it was not skill in trade or
-profession, not good cobbling, nor good weaving, that Athens required
-of her citizens; but pluck, energy, self-sacrifice, obedience, and
-loyalty. Money was, it is true, required for building the triremes and
-for fortifying the city: it was therefore well that Athenian trade and
-manufactures should prosper. But Athens recognised, and rightly, that
-her financial resources would be better served if she trained her boys
-to be industrious and thrifty and ascetic, if she made it repugnant to
-their taste to fling their money away upon luxury and self-indulgence,
-than if she founded the finest system of technical instruction
-possible.
-
-But whether Sparta and Athens could have ignored technical and
-utilitarian subjects so wholly in their schools, if they had been
-educating the whole population of the State, is another question. It
-must be remembered that the Spartan and Athenian citizens who attended
-the schools were only a fraction of the inhabitants of Laconia and
-Attica. They corresponded pretty closely to the upper classes, the
-aristocracy and gentlemen, of a modern State. The bulk of the middle
-and lower classes in a Hellenic State were either foreign immigrants,
-who possessed no civic rights and did not usually attend the schools,
-or serfs and slaves. Athens, like mediæval Florence, was only a
-democracy in the very limited sense that her full citizens――a
-governing class, that is, and a mere fraction of the population――had
-equality of civic rights among themselves: the rest had no rights at
-all. Sparta was a “mixed constitution”; but that did not mean that the
-middle and lower classes, the Perioikoi and Helots, had any share in
-it whatever.
-
-Consequently education in Hellas is the education of a small upper
-class, not of the whole population of the State. The schools of Hellas
-were not necessarily for the wealthiest inhabitants of the country,
-for there were plenty of rich Metoikoi and poor citizens at Athens;
-not necessarily for the boys who had most leisure, for the
-sausage-seller goes to school as well as a Nikias or Alkibiades; but
-for a hereditary aristocracy of birth, for that is what Hellenic
-“citizenship” means. The boys who attended the lessons of Dionusios or
-Elpias were the sons and grandsons of a cultured class, no matter how
-humble their circumstances might be; their families had lived in
-Attica, they believed, from time immemorial, and were probably
-descended from the local deities. They had the views of an hereditary
-caste, including a certain preoccupation with physical and military
-activities, and a contempt for trade.
-
-For the duties of such an aristocracy did not consist in heaping up
-riches; their position was comparatively independent of their
-financial successes. Their work was, in brief, to govern and to fight.
-They composed the electorate of the State, which chose the
-magistrates; they alone were members of the public Assembly; they
-alone were eligible for office. They sat as dikastai――jurymen and
-justices in one――in the law-courts; they made the laws and they
-administered them. The national honour and morality lay in their
-hands, for they controlled alike the foreign and the home policy of
-the State. They formed, too, the cultured circle which governed
-natural taste; it was their criticism which shaped the art of the
-vase-painters, the architects, the sculptors, the bronze-makers, and
-the countless other artistic tradesmen, the style of the orators, the
-literature of dramatists and dithyrambists, the music of the choric
-composers. When governors and administrators were needed for the
-outlying districts of the Athenian or Spartan Empires, or if officers
-were required to lead local levies to battle, any citizen, rich or
-poor, might be sent. The citizens, too, formed the core of the fleets
-and armies in the best days of Hellas. The object of Hellenic
-education was to produce this type of citizen――a man capable of
-governing, of fighting, and of setting the taste and standards of his
-country.
-
-Thus the schools of Hellas correspond in England not to the national
-schools, but to the “public schools.” I do not mean to assert that the
-English public-school boy stands, in after life, in the position of
-the Hellenic citizen to the bulk of the population. English democracy
-rests on a wider basis than Athenian or Florentine, and, in theory at
-any rate, the exclusive power of the “upper classes” is at an end.
-None the less it is true that from among the boys educated at the
-public schools comes a very considerable part of the generals and
-military officers, of the clergy, of the squires, of the Justices of
-the Peace and other administrators of the law, of the governors and
-officials required by the Indian Empire and the various dependencies
-and Crown Colonies, of the members of Parliament and statesmen at
-home. If the influence of the public schools of England upon the
-governing and fighting of the nation is less than that which the
-schools of Hellas were able to exercise, their influence upon national
-taste and standards in art and culture and literature is probably in
-no way inferior. It is therefore their duty to train their pupils’
-characters, that they may be fit and able administrators, governors,
-and justices; and their tastes, that their criticism and demands may
-rightly direct the culture of the nation. In striving after these
-ends, the public schools of England may, I think, take not a few hints
-from the like-motived schools of Hellas.
-
-
-
-
-INDEX
-
-
- Abacus, illustrated, 104
-
- Aegina pediment, 5
-
- Aeolian harmony, 240, 241
-
- Aeschylus, 245
-
- Aesop, 49, 96
-
- Agesilaos, 13, 138, 236
-
- Aglauros, temple of, 210
-
- Aineias Tacticus, 208
-
- Aischines, father of, an usher, 83
-
- Akademeia, 125
- description of scene in, 134-142
- Plato’s teaching in the, 196-207
- Plato’s lectures in the, described by Epikrates, 199
- Plato’s lectures, reference by Ephippos and Antiphanes, 200
- Plato’s lectures in the, reference by Amphis, 201
- Plato’s lectures in the, references in Comedy, 201
- Plato’s lectures in the, reference by Alexis, 200-201
- Plato’s pupils described by Ephippos, 200
-
- Alexander, 2, 203
-
- Alexis, 207
- his catalogue of a school library, 95
- on the Akademeia, 200-201
-
- Alkibiades, 207, 277
- plays the flute, 111
- in the pankration, 133
-
- Alphabet, metrical, 88
-
- Amphis, on the Akademeia, 201
-
- Anaxagoras, 81, 158, 209, 230
-
- Angelo, Michel, 5
-
- Anthology, on wrestling, 132
-
- _Antidosis_ of Isokrates, 190
-
- Antigenes, palaistra of, 60
-
- Antipater, 192
-
- Antiphanes, on the Akademeia, 200
-
- Antiphon the Sophist, 172-173
-
- Apelles, 115
-
- Apollodoros, 208
-
- Apprenticeship, 44-45
-
- Arcadia, 243
-
- Archephebos, 220
-
- Archon Eponumos, 71 _n._
-
- _Areiopagitikos_ of Isokrates, 190
-
- Areiopagos, supervision of the young, 70
- and the epheboi, 213
-
- Ares, 211
-
- Argos, 12 _n._
- foot-races for girls at, 142
-
- Aristophanes, supports athleticism, 123
- criticism of Sophists in the _Clouds_, 166-167
- attacks new artistic standards, 251
-
- Aristotle, 202
- condemns professional athletes, 123
- at Plato’s lecture on “The Good,” 198
- his school in the Lukeion, 203
- views on art in education, 117, 258
-
- Aristoxenos, 171
-
- Arithmetic, teaching of, 100-107
-
- Arkadia, schools in, 77, 243
-
- Art, characteristics of Greek, 237-239
- teaching of, in primary schools, 114-117
-
- Artemis Koruthalia, 40
-
- Artemis Orthia, 29, 285
-
- Artistic education, 237-258
- Aristotle on, 117
-
- Art-schools, date of the rise of, 115
-
- Aster, Plato’s pupil, 201-202
-
- Astupalaia, school in, 77
-
- Athleticism at Sparta, 11-34
- in Crete, 36-38
- at Athens and the rest of Greece, 118-156
- revolt against excessive, 75
- excessive addiction to, 119-132
-
- Autokrator, 192
-
- Autolukos, 75-76
-
- Auxo, 211
-
- Axiothea, 197
-
-
- Barbitos, 108
-
- Bathing-room in the gymnasium, 137
-
- Boiotia, schools in, 76
-
- Books, use of, in education, 204-209
- Isokrates’ opinion of, 204
- Plato’s opinion of, 205
- rare before the Periclean age, 207
- trade in, 207
- prices of, 208-209
- variety of, 208
-
- _Bousiris_ of Isokrates, 185, 187, 195
-
- Boxing in the palaistra, 132-133
-
- Bribery, among professional athletes, 121
-
-
- Cavalry, training for, 143, 149-152
-
- Chabrias, 202
-
- Chancellor (Kosmetes) of the epheboi, 212-213
-
- Chares, 208
-
- Charondas, 62
-
- _Cheiron, Precepts of_, 96
-
- Chess (πεσσοί [pessoi]), 105
-
- Children, exposure of Spartan, 13
-
- Chios, Isokrates in, 181
- collapse of a school of letters in, 76
- girls wrestling in, 142
-
- Choirilos, 95, 207
-
- Choregia, description of, 148-149
-
- Choregos, 60, 148
-
- Competitions, local, 62-65
-
- Conscription, 283
- at Athens, 55-56
-
- Cookery-book, 207
- by Simos, 96
- by Mithaikos, 208
-
- Cookery-schools, 45
-
- Corporal punishment, 18, 29, 66, 68, 98-100, 262 and _n._, 285
-
- Crete, education at, 34-38
-
-
- Damon, a music-teacher, 113, 249
-
- Dancing at Sparta, 22, 30-32
- dithuramboi, 144-145
- religious aspect of, 143-144, 248
- dramatic aspects of, 144-145
- systems of, 145
- the War-dance, 146-147
- the Naked-dance, 31, 147
- universal throughout Hellas, 143
- educational importance of, 143
-
- Delphoi, educational endowments at, 62
-
- Demosthenes, 195, 202
-
- Derkulos, 71
-
- Diaulos, 133
-
- Dictation, 87
-
- Diodotos, 192
-
- Dion, 202
-
- Dionusia, epheboi at, 214
-
- Dionusios, Plato’s master, 158, 160
- Plato’s pupil, 202, 203
-
- Dionusodoros the Sophist, 173
-
- Dionusos, 144, 283
-
- Diskos in the palaistra, 134
-
- Dorian harmony, 240-241
-
- Douris, Vase of, 52, 86, 92
-
- Drama, influence of, in education, 248-249
-
- Drawing, teaching of, in primary schools, 114
-
- Dresden Gallery, 5
-
- Dusting-room in the gymnasium, 137
-
-
- Edgeworth, Maria, 74, 260
-
- Egypt, in Plato’s _Laws_, 102-103
-
- Eleusis, education at, 71
-
- Elgin marbles, 3, 5
-
- Elpias, school of, 83
-
- Empedokles, 230
-
- Enualios, 211
-
- Epaminondas, 245
-
- Ephebarchos, 220
-
- Ephebic inscriptions, 221-223
-
- Epheboi, 37, 263
- examination and oath, 210-211
- decline in number, 219-220
-
- Ephippos, on the Akademeia, 200
-
- Epicharmos, 95, 207
-
- Epikrates, on Plato’s lectures, 199
-
- Eponumos, Archon, 71 _n._
-
- Eretria, school in, 77
-
- Eros, 135
-
- Eruthrai, school in, 77
-
- Euagoras, 191
-
- Eudikos, son of Apemantos, 98
-
- Euenos of Paros, 168, 176
-
- Euhemeros, 229 _n._
-
- Euripides, his alphabetical puzzle, 90
- denunciation of athleticism, 122
- his rationalism, 230
-
- Euthudemos the Sophist, 173
-
- Euthudemos, companion of Sokrates, 207
-
- Eutuchides, 155
-
- Exposure of Spartan children on Taügetos, 13
-
-
- Fees, 62, 278, 281
- paid to schoolmasters, 81
- of the paidotribes, 134
- paid to Sophists, 168-169
- of permanent secondary teachers, 182
- in the Akademeia, 202-203
- to the Sophronistai, 213
-
- Festivals, school, 80-81
-
- Flute, teaching of, 110
- condemned by Pratinas, 110
- condemned by Plato, 242
- particulars of, 112
-
- Flute-girls, professional, 111
-
- “Foreign Legion,” 216, 218
-
-
- Gelon of Syracuse, 228
-
- Gesticulation, 129-130
-
- Girls at Sparta, 29-30
- wrestle at Chios, 142
- foot-races for, at Argos, 142
-
- Gorgias the Sophist, 168, 169, 174-176, 208
- his euphuistic style, 176
- his influence on later writers, 176
-
- Grammatistes, 50
-
- Gumnasiarchos, 213-214, 220
- excursus on, 154-156
-
- Gumnastes, distinct from paidotribes, 126 _n._
-
- Gumnopaidia, 31, 146-147
-
- Gymnasium, description of, 124
- cost, 124
- description of scene in, 134-142
- ἀποδυτήριον [apodytêrion], 135
- patron deities, 135
- the oil-room, 136
- the dusting-room, 137
- the bathing-room, 137
- the punch-ball room, 137
- Sophists’ lectures, 138
- central courtyard, 138-139
- the xustos, 141
-
- Gymnastics, excessive addiction to, 119-123
- professional, disadvantages of, 120
-
-
- Haltêres, 128
-
- Hegemone, 211
-
- _Helen_ of Isokrates, 185, 195
-
- Hellas, educator of the world, 2-3
-
- Hellenism, two currents of, 6
- spread by Alexander, Rome, and the Renaissance, 2-3
- spirit of, 3
- methods of teaching, 4, 275-291
-
- Henty, G. A., 260
-
- Hephaisteia, 155
-
- Herakleides of Pontos, 36 _n._, 198, 202, 241
-
- Herakleitos, 229
-
- Hermann, K. F., an emendation of, 125
-
- “Hermes” of Praxiteles, 5, 250
-
- Herondas, third Mime of, 98-100
-
- Hesiod, 207
- authority of, 228
- teaching of, in primary schools, 95
-
- Hestiaios, 198
-
- Hippias of Elis, 97, 168, 169, 172
-
- Hippokleides, 129
-
- Hippokrates, 208, 215
-
- Hippothontid tribe, 215
-
- Holidays, on festivals, 80-81
-
- Homer, 207
- teaching of, in primary schools, 93-95
- authority of, 228
-
- Horace, 2
-
- Hunting, 142-143, 259
-
- Hupereides, 202
-
- Hypo-Dorian harmony, 241
-
-
- Iliaca, Tabula, 84
-
- Ink, 85, 87
-
- Inscriptions, ephebic, 221-223
-
- Inukos, 168
-
- Ion, the rhapsode, 97
-
- Ionian harmony, 240-241
-
- Iphikrates, 202
-
- Isaios, 195
-
- Isokrates, 161
- pupil of Gorgias, 169
- his school near the Lukeion, 180
- teaching in Chios, 181
- on the theory of education, 182
- on the nature of philosophy, 184
- his school described, 185-195
- his methods, 186-190
- his pupils, 191, 192
- on theory of education, 192
- definition of the educated man, 192-193
- on religious myths, 230-231
-
-
- Javelin and spear throwing in the palaistra, 134
-
- Jiu-jitsu, 131
-
- Jump, long, in the palaistra, 133
-
-
- Kallias, his metrical alphabet, 88
- his spelling drama, 88-90
-
- Kameiros, in Rhodes, 53
-
- Karia, 241 _n._
-
- Karneia, 40
-
- Kekropid tribe, 215, 219
-
- Kikunna, 166
-
- Kitharistes, 50
-
- Klazomenai, 81
-
- Kleinias, 243
-
- Kleon, 113
-
- Knucklebones, 65, 99, 105
-
- Kolonos, 196
-
- Konnaros, 65
-
- Konnos, his music-school, 113
-
- Korax, 208
-
- Korubantic dances, 242 _n._
-
- Kôrukoi, 128, 137
-
- Kos, 215
-
- Kosmetes of the epheboi, 212-213
-
- Kottalos, in Herondas, 99-100
-
- Kritias, 63, 277
- plays the flute, 111
-
- Kunaitha, 243
-
- Kuretic dance in Crete, 36, 146
-
- _Kuros, The Education of_, 259-272
-
-
- Lampriskos, in Herondas, 99-100
-
- Lampros, a music-teacher, 113, 164
-
- Lastheneia, 197
-
- Laughter, statue of, in Sparta, 12
-
- Leap-frog in the palaistra, 130
-
- Lectures in primary schools, 97
-
- Leitourgiai, 60-61, 148
- excursus on gumnasiarchoi, 154-156
-
- Leokrates, 219
-
- Lesbos, schools in, 77
-
- Leschai at Sparta, 11
-
- Libanius, 178
-
- Libraries of Euthudemos, 207
- of Peisistratos at Athens, 207
- of Polukrates at Samos, 207
-
- Library, a school, 95
-
- Likumnios the Sophist, 176
-
- Linos, 207
-
- Literature, teaching of, in primary schools, 93-97
- in secondary schools, 161-162
-
- Logographoi, 180-181, 193
-
- Long jump in the palaistra, 133
-
- Lukeion, 125
- description of scene in, 134-142
-
- Lukourgos the orator, 202, 211
-
- Lusandros, 16
-
- Lusias, the logographos, 193
-
- Lusis, 54
-
- Lydian harmony, 240-242
-
- Lyre, and lyric-schools, 107-114
-
-
- Mantitheos, 60
-
- Marathon, 3
-
- Marriage customs, 48
-
- Mathematics, teaching of, 100-107
- in secondary schools, 159
-
- Meals, hours of, 80
-
- Medical beliefs, 243
-
- Menander, 250
-
- Menedemos, 196
-
- Metrodoros, 230
-
- Metrotimé, in Herondas, 98-100
-
- Michel Angelo, 5
-
- Mikkos, 138 n.
-
- Mithaikos, 208
-
- Mixed-Lydian harmony, 241
-
- Moderators (Sophronistai), 70, 212-213, 220
-
- Mounuchia, 213
-
- Mousaios, 164
-
- Mukalessos, schools at, 76
-
- Muronides, 218
-
- Music, 240-244
- in Crete, 36-37
- in primary schools, 107-114
-
- Music, Plato on the value of, 113
- Aristotle on the value of, 114
- characteristics of Greek, 240-244
- Greek views of the properties of, 243
- in Arkadia, 243
-
- Music-schools, experiments in, 110
-
-
- “Nature-study,” 262
-
- Nikeratos, 94
-
- Nikostratos, archonship of, 212
-
-
- Oberammergau, 249
-
- Oil-room in the gymnasium, 136
-
- Oinopides, 158
-
- Orpheus, 95, 164, 207
-
- Oxurhunchos, fragment on wrestling unearthed at, 131
-
-
- Paidagogos, 266, 278-279
- duties of, 66-69
-
- Paidonomos, 277
-
- Paidotribes, 50, 278
- duties of, 126
- his symbol of office, 128
- his fee, 134
-
- Painting, teaching of, in primary schools, 114
-
- Palaistra, distinct from gymnasium, 124
- life in the, 124-134
- teaching of gesticulation (τὸ χειρονομεῖν) [to cheironomein], 129
- wrestling (πάλη) [palê], 130-132
- leap-frog, 130
- rope-climbing, 130
- boxing, 132
- pankration, 132-133
- long jump, 133
- running, 133
- javelin and spear, 134
- diskos, 134
- fees of the paidotribes, 134
-
- Pamphilos the Macedonian, 115
-
- Panathenaic festival, 148, 152, 155
-
- _Panathenaikos_ of Isokrates, 187, 189
-
- Pankration in the palaistra, 132-133
-
- Parthenon, 244, 245
- the “Theseus” of the, 5
-
- Peiraieus, 213
-
- Peisistratos, 247
- popularisation of Homer by, 52
-
- Pencils, 84
-
- Perikles, 3, 246, 276
-
- Peripoloi, 214 and n., 215
-
- Permanent secondary schools, 179-209
- their natural growth at Athens, 179
- fees, 182
- of Isokrates, 185-195
-
- Phaüllos, 139
-
- Pheidias, 245, 250
-
- Pheiditia at Sparta, 13-15
-
- Pheidostratos, schoolroom of, 98
-
- Pherekrates, _The Slave-Teacher_, 45
-
- Philosophy, schools of, 195-207
- their feuds, 203-204
-
- Philoxenos, 242
-
- Phokion, 202
-
- Phrunichos, 215
-
- Phrunis, 12
-
- Phrygian harmony, 240
-
- Physical education, 279
- in Athens and the rest of Hellas, 118-156
- contemporary criticism of excess, 119-123
- dancing, 143-149
-
- Pindar, eulogy of athleticism, 121-122
-
- Pittalos, 45
-
- Plataea, oath of the army at, 211
-
- Plato, denounces excessive athleticism, 123
- criticism of Sophists, 174
- his teaching in the Akademeia, 196-207
- his teaching in the Akademeia described by Epikrates, 199
- teaching in the Akademeia: his affection for his pupils, 201-202
- teaching in the Akademeia: names of his pupils, 202
- teaching in the Akademia, gratuitous, 203
- on the theory of education, 205-206
- criticism of religious myths, 231-233
- on the value of myths, 235
- on the educative value of artistic environment, 246
- his excessive imagination, 247
- on the Athenian drama, 253
- criticism of art, 255-258
- on Xenophon’s Kuros, 272
-
- Playgrounds, 83
-
- Plecktron, 107
-
- Poetry, place of, in education, 247-249
-
- Polemon, 201
-
- Polos the Sophist, 168, 176, 208
-
- Polugnotos, 115
-
- Polybios, on Arcadian music, 243
-
- Pratinas, on the flute, 110
-
- Praxiteles, the “Hermes” of, 5, 250
-
- Prizes, 65
-
- Prodikos the Sophist, 168, 171-172
- _Choice of Herakles_, 96, 98, 171-172
-
- Propulaia, 245
-
- Protagoras the Sophist, 167-168, 170, 230
-
- Proverbs, Greek, 45, 57 _n._, 110, 111, 152
-
- Public schools, English, compared, 23, 212 _n._, 265
-
- Punch-ball, 137
-
- Pyrrhic dance, 36
-
-
- Raphael, 5
-
- Rationalism, spread of, 229-230
-
- Reading, teaching of, 87-92
-
- Religious education, 228-236
- Plato’s revision, 231-233
-
- Rhetoric in secondary schools, 160-161
- weaknesses of Greek, 174-175
-
- Riding, 143, 149-152
-
- Rope-climbing in the palaistra, 130
-
- Rowing, 143, 153-154
-
- Running, long-distance, 133
- in the palaistra, 133
-
-
- Salmudessos, 207
-
- Schoolmaster, status of, 81
-
- Secondary education, 157-209
- secondary classes in primary schools, 157-158
- Sophists, 157-178
- permanent schools, 179-209
- variety of subjects, 159
- rhetoric, 160-161
- literary subjects, 161
- the education voluntary, 163
-
- _Semelé_, 145, 256
-
- Shakespeare, 249
-
- Shelley, translation of epigram, 202
-
- Siburtios, palaistra of, 60
-
- Sicily, education in Chalcidian cities of, 62
-
- Sikinnos, 67
-
- Simon, 208
-
- Simos, his cookery-book, 96
-
- Sistine Chapel, 5
-
- Skias, council-chamber at Sparta, 12
-
- Skillous, 259
-
- _Slave-Teacher, The_, of Pherekrates, 45
-
- Sokrates, 167, 230, 270, 277
-
- Solon, 57, 247
- enactment on handicraft, 45
- regulations about paidagogoi, 67
- enactments to safeguard morality, 68-69
- archaic phrases in his laws, 95
- on courtiers, 104
- metrical version of Athenian laws, 109
- ? on gumnasiarchai, 155
-
- Sophists, 157-178, 286
- and mathematics, 102
- subjects taught, 165
- criticism of Aristophanes, 166
- criticism of Plato, 174
- scale of fees, 169
- secret of their power, 170
- their undemocratic influence, 177
- their rationalism, 177
- criticised by Isokrates, 182
-
- Sophokles, 3
-
- Sophronistai, 70, 212-213, 220
-
- Sparta, education at, 11-34
- character of people, 11
- importance of education at, 12
- details of Pheiditia, 13-15
- the State a military machine, 12
- conservatism of, 12
- strictness of discipline, 13
- Spartan nurses, 13
- system of State schools, 14
- Syssitia, 39-40
- ideals in education, 275
- educational methods, 285
-
- Spelling, teaching of, 88-90
-
- Spelling-book, terra-cotta fragment of, 89 _n._
-
- Speusippos, 202
-
- Stadion, 133
-
- Stesimbrotos, 230
-
- Swimming, 143, 152-153
-
- Syntono-Lydian harmony, 242
-
- Syssitia at Sparta, 39-40, 267
- at Crete, 40-41
-
-
- Tabula Iliaca, 84
-
- Taügetos, exposure of Spartan children on, 13
-
- Taureas, palaistra of, 60
-
- Technical instruction, 44-46
- of the logographoi, 180-181
-
- Teles, 115, 160
-
- Tennyson, quoted, 235
-
- Teos, 220
- educational endowments in, 62
- prizemen in competitions, 63
- recitations of boys at, 96
-
- Tertiary education, 210-223
-
- Thales (Cretan poet), 243
-
- Thallo, 211
-
- Thargelia, 148, 155
-
- Theodoros, 160, 176
-
- Theognis, 96
-
- Theophanes, 212
-
- Theophrastos, 243
-
- Theory of education, 227-272, 275-291
- Plato’s views on, 205-206
- Xenophon’s views on, 259-272
-
- Thermopylae, 3
-
- “Theseus,” of the Parthenon, 5, 245
-
- Thespis, 247
-
- Thrasuboulos of Kaludon, 215
-
- Thrasumachos, 177, 208
-
- Timeas, palaistra of, 60
-
- Timotheos, 12, 145
-
- Timotheos the general, 196
-
- Timotheos of Herakleia, 192
-
- Tisias, 208
-
- Tithenidia, 40
-
- Torch-race, 155
-
- Trade, Greek views on, 43
-
- Troizen, schools in, 77, 220
-
-
- Undressing-room in the gymnasium, 135
-
-
- Virgil, 2
-
-
- Wax, tablets of, 84
-
- Women, gymnastics for, at Sparta, 30
- seclusion of, 46
- duties of, 47
- excluded from athletics in Athens, 142
- admitted to the Akademeia, 197
- position of, 282
-
- Wrestling in the palaistra described, 130-132
-
- Writing, teaching of, 85-87
-
-
- Xenokrates, 196, 201, 202, 203
-
- Xenophanes, 229
-
- Xenophanes of Kolophon, criticises athleticism, 121
-
- Xenophon, treatise on _The Horse_, 208
- handbooks on educational subjects, 208
- _The Education of Kuros_, 259-272
- character of, 259-260
-
- Xerxes, 61, 239
-
- Xustos, in the gymnasium, 141
-
-
- Zeuxippos of Heraklea, 114
-
-
- ἄβακος [abakos], 104
-
- ἀγέλαι [agelai], 37
-
- ἀλειπτής [aleiptês], 126 _n._
-
- ἀνδρεῖα [andreia], 35
-
- ἀπεργάζεσθαι [apergazesthai], 116
-
- ἀπόδρομοι [apodromoi], 38
-
- ἀποδυτήριον [apodytêrion], 135
-
-
- γραμμαί [grammai], 86
-
- γραμματιστής [grammatistês], 165
-
- γυμνασιαρχεῖν [gymnasiarchein], 155
-
- γυμνοπαιδία [gymnopaidia], 146
-
-
- ἐλαιοθέσιον [elaiothesion], 136 _n._
-
- ἐξαλείφειν [exaleiphein], 116
-
- ἔπαικλον [epaiklon], 39
-
- ἐπίκροτος [epikrotos], 151
-
-
- ἦθος [êthos], 244
-
-
- κάθαρσις [katharsis], 242
-
- κατάστεγος δρόμος [katastegos dromos], 136
-
- κιθαριστής [kitharistês], 165
-
- κοπίδες [kopides], 40
-
- κρυπτοί [kryptoi], 215, 220
-
-
- ληξιαρχικὸν γραμματεῖον [lêxiarchikon grammateion], 210
-
-
- μεγαλόψυχος [megalopsychos], 236
-
- μειράκιον [meirakion], 53, 191
-
- μέτοικοι ἰσοτελεῖς [metoikoi isoteleis], 216
-
-
- ξηραλοιφεῖν [xêraloiphein], 136 _n._
-
-
- ὁμόνοια [homonoia], 172
-
- ὄρμος [hormos], 30 _n._
-
-
- παιδαγωγεῖον [paidagôgeion], 84
-
- παιδονόμος [paidonomos], 36
-
- πάλη [palê], 130-132
-
- πεμπάζειν [pempazein], 104
-
- περιγραφή [perigraphê], 116
-
- περιτόλια [peripolia], 215
-
- πεσσοί [pessoi], 105
-
- πλέξον [plexon], 131
-
-
- σκιαγραφία [skiagraphia], 116
-
- σοφιστής [sophistês], 164, 165
-
- στλεγγίς [stlengis], 142
-
- σχῆμα [schêma], 131
-
-
- ὑπαίθριοι [hypaithrioi], 215
-
- ὑπογραμμός [hypogrammos], 85
-
- ὑπογράφειν [hypographêin], 116
-
- ὑπογραφή [hypographê], 86
-
-
- φορβέια [phorbeia], 112, 128
-
-
- χειρονομεῖν [cheironomein], 129
-
- χυτλοῦσθαι [chytlousthai], 136 _n._
-
-
-
-
-
-THE END
-
-_Printed by_ R. & R. CLARK, LIMITED, _Edinburgh_.
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber’s Note
-
-Words and phrases in italics are surrounded by underscores, _like
-this_. Footnotes were renumbered sequentially and were moved to the
-end of the chapter in which related anchors occur. Dialect, obsolete
-words and misspellings were left unchanged. Final stops missing at
-the end of sentences were added. Transliterations of words and phrases
-in Greek follow within brackets.
-
-The following items were noted or changed:
-
- There are two anchors to Footnotes [28], [291], [449], [537], and
- [548]. Footnote [585] has 3 anchors.
- Unprinted “I.” added at the beginning of the list of Illustrations.
- In Footnote [513], reference letter after 384 is unclear; it could be
- either E or B.
- In Footnote [651], changed stop to comma in list: “… 466, 470”.
-
-
-
-
-
-End of Project Gutenberg's Schools of Hellas, by Kenneth John Freeman
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-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Schools of Hellas, by Kenneth John Freeman
-
-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: Schools of Hellas
- An Essay on the Practice and Theory of Ancient Greek
- Education from 600 to 300 B. C.
-
-Author: Kenneth John Freeman
-
-Editor: Montague John Rendall
-
-Release Date: November 5, 2020 [EBook #63644]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SCHOOLS OF HELLAS ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Carol Brown, Turgut Dincer and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This
-file was produced from images generously made available
-by The Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h1 class="h1head">SCHOOLS OF HELLAS</h1>
-
-<h3 class="h2head">AN ESSAY ON THE PRACTICE AND THEORY<br />
-OF ANCIENT GREEK EDUCATION</h3>
-</div><!--end chapter-->
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<div class="figcenter">
- <img src="images/logo.jpg"
- alt="Illustration: Printer’s Logo"
- title="Illustration: Printer’s Logo"
- />
-</div><!--end illustration-->
-
-<!--Blank Page-->
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px">
- <a name="frontis" id="frontis"></a>
- <img src="images/frontis.jpg"
- width="500" height="503"
- alt="Illustration: In a Riding-School"
- />
- <p class="caption">IN A RIDING-SCHOOL<br />
- From a Kulix by Euphronios, now in the Louvre.<br />Hartwig’s <cite lang="de" xml:lang="de">Meisterschalen</cite>, Plate 53.</p>
-</div><!--end illustration-->
-
-</div><!--end chapter-->
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="h2head">Schools of Hellas</h3>
-
-<p class="center larger">AN ESSAY ON THE PRACTICE AND THEORY
-OF ANCIENT GREEK EDUCATION</p>
-
-<p class="center smaller">FROM</p>
-
-<p class="center larger">600 TO 300 B.C.</p>
-
-<p class="p4 center smaller">BY</p>
-
-<h2 class="h2head no-break">KENNETH J. FREEMAN</h2>
-
-<p class="center smaller">SCHOLAR OF TRINITY COLLEGE, CAMBRIDGE; BROWNE UNIVERSITY SCHOLAR;
-CRAVEN UNIVERSITY SCHOLAR; SENIOR CHANCELLOR’S MEDALLIST, ETC.</p>
-
-<p class="p4 center smaller">EDITED BY</p>
-
-<h2 class="h2head no-break">M. J. RENDALL</h2>
-
-<p class="center smaller">SECOND MASTER OF WINCHESTER COLLEGE</p>
-
-<p class="p2 center">WITH A PREFACE BY A. W. VERRALL, <span class="sc"><abbr title="Doctor of Letters">Litt.Doc.</abbr></span></p>
-
-<p class="p4 center small"><span class="decoration">ILLUSTRATED</span></p>
-
-<p class="p4 center"><span class="black">London</span><br />
-MACMILLAN AND <abbr title="Company">CO.</abbr>, <span class="sc">Limited</span><br />
-<span class="small">NEW YORK: THE MACMILLAN COMPANY</span><br />
-1907</p>
-
-<p class="p2 center smaller"><span class="decoration">All rights reserved</span></p>
-</div><!--end chapter-->
-<!--Blank Page-->
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="p4 center larger"><ins title="PHILOKALOIS">ΦΙΛΟΚΑΛΟΙΣ</ins></p>
-
-<p class="center larger">ΚΑΙ</p>
-
-<p class="center larger"><ins title="PHILOSOPHOIS">ΦΙΛΟΣΟΦΟΙΣ</ins></p>
-</div><!--end chapter-->
-
-<!--Blank Page-->
-<div class="chapter">
-<a name="Page_vii" id="Page_vii"></a><span class="pageno">vii</span>
-<h3 class="h3head">PREFACE</h3>
-
-<p class="p2"><span class="sc">The</span> Dissertation here published was written by the late
-Mr. K. J. Freeman, in the course of the year following
-his graduation at Cambridge as a Bachelor of Arts, with
-a view to his candidature for a Fellowship of Trinity
-College, for which purpose the rules of the College
-require the production of some original work. In the
-summer of 1906, three months before the autumn
-election of that year, his brilliant and promising career
-was arrested by death.</p>
-
-<p>We have been encouraged to publish the work, as it
-was left, by several judgments of great weight; nor
-does it, in my opinion, require anything in the nature
-of an apology. It is of course, under the circumstances,
-incomplete, and it is in some respects immature. But,
-within the limits, the execution is adequate for practical
-purposes; and the actual achievement has a substantive
-value independent of any personal consideration. No
-English book, perhaps no extant book, covers the same
-ground, or brings together so conveniently the materials
-for studying the subject of ancient Greek education&mdash;education
-as treated in practice and theory during the
-most fertile and characteristic age of Hellas. It would
-be regrettable that this useful, though preliminary,
-labour should be lost and suppressed, only because it
-was decreed that the author should not build upon his
-own foundation.</p>
-
-<p>Novelty of view he disclaimed; but he claimed,
-<a name="Page_viii" id="Page_viii"></a><span class="pageno">viii</span>
-with evident truth, that the work is not second-hand,
-but based upon wide and direct study of the sources,
-which are made accessible by copious references.</p>
-
-<p>The subject is in one respect specially appropriate to
-a youthful hand. Perhaps at no time is a man more
-likely to have fresh and living impressions about
-education than when he has himself just ceased to be
-a pupil, when he has just completed the subordinate
-stages of a long and strenuous self-culture. It will be
-seen, in more than one place, that the author is not
-content with the purely historical aspect of his theme,
-but suggests criticisms and even practical applications.
-It may be thought that these remarks upon a matter of
-pressing and growing importance are by no means the
-less deserving of consideration because the writer, when
-he speaks of the schoolboy and the undergraduate, is
-unquestionably an authentic witness.</p>
-
-<p>But, as I have already said, the work will commend
-itself sufficiently to those interested in the topic, if only
-as a conspectus of facts, presented with orderly arrangement
-and in a simple and perspicuous style.</p>
-
-<p>It is not my part here to express personal feelings.
-But I cannot dismiss this, the first and only fruit of
-the classical studies of Kenneth Freeman, without a
-word of profound sorrow for the premature loss of a
-most honourable heart and vigorous mind. He was one
-whom a teacher may freely praise, without suspicion of
-partiality; for, whatever he was, he was no mere product
-of lessons, as this, his first essay, will sufficiently
-show. It is not what he would have made it; but it
-is his own, and it is worthy of him.</p>
-
-<p class="r1">A. W. VERRALL.</p>
-
-<p class="indent1"><span class="sc">Trinity College, Cambridge</span>,</p>
-<p class="pneg indent3"><span class="time">January</span> 1907.</p>
-</div><!--end chapter-->
-
-<div class="chapter"><a name="Page_ix" id="Page_ix"></a><span class="pageno">ix</span>
-
-<h3 class="p4 h3head">EDITOR’S STATEMENT</h3>
-
-<p><span class="sc">It</span> has fallen to my lot to edit this essay, the first, and
-last, work of Kenneth John Freeman, a brilliant young
-Scholar of Winchester College and Trinity College,
-Cambridge, whose short life closed in the summer of
-1906.</p>
-
-<p>He was born in London on June 19, 1882, and
-died at Winchester on July 15, 1906,&mdash;a brief span of
-twenty-four years, the greater part of which was spent
-in the strenuous pursuit of truth and beauty, both in
-literature and in the book of Nature, but above all
-among the Classics.</p>
-
-<p>Scholarly traditions and interests he inherited in
-no small measure: he was the son of Mr. G. Broke
-Freeman, a member of the Chancery Bar, and a Classical
-graduate of Trinity College, Cambridge, and the grandson
-of Philip Freeman, Archdeacon of Exeter, himself
-a Scholar of the same great Foundation, Craven
-University Scholar and Senior Classic in 1839. He
-was also a great-grandson of the Rev. Henry Hervey
-Baber, for many years Principal Librarian of the British
-Museum, and Editor of the <span class="decoration" lang="la" xml:lang="la">editio princeps</span> of the <cite>Codex
-Alexandrinus</cite>. From them he inherited a passion for
-Classical study, a keen sense of form, and a determined
-pursuit of knowledge, which nothing could daunt, not
-<a name="Page_x" id="Page_x"></a><span class="pageno">x</span>
-even the recurrent shadow of a long and distressing
-illness.</p>
-
-<p>Through his mother, a daughter of Dr. Horace
-Dobell, of Harley Street, London, he was also a great-nephew
-of the poet Sydney Dobell; and thus he
-may well have derived that poetic feeling which distinguished
-a number of verses found among his papers,
-since printed for private circulation.</p>
-
-<p>His School and University career was uniformly
-successful. At Winchester he won prizes in many
-subjects and several tongues, and carried off the
-Goddard Scholarship, the intellectual blue ribbon, at
-the age of sixteen.</p>
-
-<p>At Cambridge he was Browne University Scholar
-in 1903, and in the first “division” of the Classical
-Tripos in 1904, in which year he also won the Craven
-Scholarship. The senior Chancellor’s medal fell to
-him in the following year.</p>
-
-<p>There is no need to enumerate his other distinctions,
-but the epigram with which he won the Browne Medal
-in 1903 is so beautiful in itself and so true an epitome of
-the boy and the man, that I am tempted to quote it here:</p>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="i0"><ins title="xeine, kalon to zên katagôgion estin hapasin,">ξεῖνε, καλὸν τὸ ζῆν καταγώγιόν ἐστιν ἅπασιν</ins></div>
- <div class="i2"><ins title="nêpytious gar homôs nyktiplaneis te philei,">νηπυτίους γὰρ ὅμως νυκτιπλανεῖς τε φιλεῖ,</ins> </div>
- <div class="i0"><ins title="dôra charizomenon philias kai terpnon erôta">δῶρα χαριζόμενον φιλίας καὶ τερπνὸν ἔρωτα</ins></div>
- <div class="i2"><ins title="kai ponon euandron phrontida t’ ouranian;">καὶ πόνον εὔανδρον φροντίδα τ’ οὐρανίαν·</ins></div>
- <div class="i0"><ins title="trychomenous d’ êdê koima ton akêraton hypnon">τρυχομένους δ’ ἤδη κοιμᾷ τὸν ἀκήρατον ὕπνον</ins></div>
- <div class="i2"><ins title="pempei d’ hôste lathein oikad’ elêlythotas.">πέμπει δ’ ὥστε λαθεῖν οἰκάδ’ ἐληλυθότας.</ins></div>
-</div><!--end poem-->
-</div><!--end container-->
-
-<p>He was always an optimist, who regarded life as a
-“fair Inn,” which provided much good cheer. Shyness
-and ill-health limited sadly the range of his friends, but
-not his capacity and desire for “friendship.” “Manly
-toil,” both physical and intellectual, was dear to his
-<a name="Page_xi" id="Page_xi"></a><span class="pageno">xi</span>
-soul: thus, though no great athlete, he was an ardent
-Volunteer both at School and College, and declared
-that, had he not chosen the teacher’s profession, he
-would have wished to be a soldier: he writes of Sparta
-and Xenophon with evident sympathy. Also he fought
-and won many an intellectual battle against great
-odds; to quote one instance, he wrote the papers for
-his Craven Scholarship while convalescent in his old
-nursery. His poems, to complete the parallel, may
-justly be described as the “aspiring thoughts” of a
-singularly pure and reverent heart.</p>
-
-<p>It is a simple, uneventful record: six happy years as
-a Winchester Scholar; three as a Scholar of Trinity
-College, Cambridge; one year of travel and study,
-mainly devoted to the subject of Education, which
-always had a special attraction for him; and lastly,
-one year, the happiest of his life, when he returned to
-teach at his old school.</p>
-
-<p>All appeared bright and promising; he was doing the
-work he desired at the school of his choice, health and
-vigour seemed fully restored, and a strenuous life as a
-Winchester Master lay before him, when an acute attack
-of the old trouble, borne with perfect patience, cut him
-off in the prime of his promise.</p>
-
-<p>Then, to quote his own translation of his epigram:</p>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="i0">When I was aweary, last and best</div>
- <div class="i0">They gave me dreamless rest;</div>
- <div class="i0">And sent me on my way that I might come</div>
- <div class="i0">Unknown, unknowing, Home.</div>
- </div><!--end poem-->
-</div><!--end container-->
-
-<p>The work itself was never finished for the press;
-indeed, some chapters, dealing with Sokrates, Plato, and
-Aristotle, did not appear sufficiently complete to justify
-publication: these, therefore, we have withheld. But
-<a name="Page_xii" id="Page_xii"></a><span class="pageno">xii</span>
-this book is in substance what he left it, and he was
-fully aware that the omitted chapters were in need of
-further revision.</p>
-
-<p>In any case, it would have been a labour of
-love to me to edit this dissertation; but the labour
-has been lightened at every turn by the ungrudging
-help and friendship of many Scholars. Dr. Verrall,
-besides contributing a Preface, has contributed much
-advice in general and in detail; Dr. Sandys has revised
-the proofs and given me the benefit of his comprehensive
-knowledge of the subject; Dr. Henry Jackson
-went through some of the later chapters and discussed
-points of general interest. The original Essay or the
-proofs have in addition been revised, from different
-points of view, by Mr. Edmund D. A. Morshead,
-late Fellow of New College, Oxford, and Mr. F. M.
-Cornford, Fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge.
-Mr. G. S. Freeman (brother of the author) is responsible
-for the Index; while Mr. W. R. H. Merriman
-has spent much pains upon verifying the numerous
-quotations. In a few cases Dr. F. G. Kenyon’s erudition
-came to the rescue. To all these my best thanks are
-due. Mr. A. Hamilton Smith of the British Museum
-was most helpful in identifying the vases from which
-the illustrations are derived. The author, who was a
-considerable draughtsman, had drawn scenes from
-Greek vases with his own hand; but of course our
-illustrations are derived from published reproductions,
-with two exceptions. The two British Museum vase-scenes
-(Illustrations <abbr title="Three">III.</abbr> and <abbr title="Four">IV.</abbr>) were specially drawn
-for this book: they have never been carefully reproduced
-before. I must thank the Syndics of the Pitt
-Press at Cambridge for their kind permission to reproduce
-their print of Douris’ Educational Vase from
-<a name="Page_xiii" id="Page_xiii"></a><span class="pageno">xiii</span>
-Dr. Sandys’ <cite>History of Classical Scholarship</cite>. The
-design which appears on the cover of this volume is
-also adapted from this vase.</p>
-
-<p>It remains to add a few sentences from a Statement
-which the author himself drew up:</p>
-
-<p>“I have,” he says, “confined my attention very
-largely for several years to original texts and eschewed
-the aid of commentaries.” This will be patent to the
-reader.</p>
-
-<p>“As to accepted interpretations, I have, purposely
-and on principle, neither read nor heard much of them,
-since I wished, in pursuance of the bidding of Plato
-himself, not to receive unquestioningly the authority of
-those whom to hear is to believe, but to develop views
-and interpretations of my own. For I have always
-believed that education suffers immensely from the
-study of books about books, in preference to the study
-of the books themselves. M. Paul Girard’s book in
-French (<cite lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">L’Éducation Athénienne</cite>) and Grasberger’s in
-German (<cite lang="de" xml:lang="de">Erziehung und Unterricht im klassischen
-Alterthum</cite>), the latter of which I have only read in
-part, have set me on the track of authorities whom I
-should otherwise have missed, but I believe that my
-acknowledgments in the text and in the notes fully
-cover my direct obligations to them in other respects,
-although my indirect obligations to M. Girard’s stimulating
-book, which are great, remain unexpressed.</p>
-
-<p>“An apology is, perhaps, needed for the peculiar, and
-not wholly consistent, spelling of the Greek words. I
-had meant to employ the Latinised spelling. But when
-I came to write Lyceum, Academy, and pedagogue, my
-heart failed me. For I did not wish to suggest modern
-music-halls, modern art, and, worst of all, modern
-‘pedagogy.’ In adopting the ancient spelling I had
-<a name="Page_xiv" id="Page_xiv"></a><span class="pageno">xiv</span>
-Browning on my side. But again, when I wrote Thoukudides,
-my heart sank, for I could hardly recognise an
-old friend in such a guise. So I decided, perhaps
-weakly, to steer a middle course, and preserve the
-Latinised forms in the case of the more familiar words.
-Thus I put Plato, not Platon, but Menon and
-Phaidon.” We have adhered to this principle in the
-main; we need hardly say that Lakedaimon is the
-transliteration of a Greek word: Lacedaemonian is
-an English adjective. So a citizen of Troizen is a
-Troezenian, and of Boiotia a Boeotian. “I have,” the
-author concludes, “preferred <em>Hellas</em> and <em>Hellene</em> to
-<em>Greece</em> and <em>Greek</em>. For a rose by any other name does
-not always smell as sweet.”</p>
-
-<p class="r1">M. J. RENDALL.</p>
-
-<p class="indent1"><span class="sc">Winchester College</span>,</p>
-<p class="pneg indent3"><span class="time">March</span> 1907.</p>
-</div><!--end chapter-->
-
-<div class="chapter"><a name="Page_xv" id="Page_xv"></a><span class="pageno">xv</span>
-
-<h3 class="p4 h3head">CONTENTS</h3>
-
-<table summary="">
-<colgroup>
- <col span="1" style="width: 25em;" />
- <col span="1" style="width: 5em;" />
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td class="right muchsmaller" colspan="2">PAGE</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="lefthang"><span class="sc">Bibliography</span></td>
- <td class="right"><a href="#Page_xvii">xvii</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="lefthang"><span class="sc">Introduction</span></td>
- <td class="right"><a href="#Page_1">1</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="center" colspan="2"><br />PART I</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="center" colspan="2">THE PRACTICE OF EDUCATION</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="center" colspan="2">CHAPTER I</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="lefthang"><span class="sc">Sparta and Crete</span></td>
- <td class="right"><a href="#Page_11">11</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="center" colspan="2">CHAPTER II</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="lefthang"><span class="sc">Athens and the Rest of Hellas: General Introduction</span></td>
- <td class="right"><a href="#Page_42">42</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="center" colspan="2">CHAPTER III</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="lefthang"><span class="sc">Athens, etc.: Primary Education</span></td>
- <td class="right"><a href="#Page_79">79</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="center" colspan="2">CHAPTER IV</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="lefthang"><span class="sc">Athens, etc.: Physical Education</span></td>
- <td class="right"><a href="#Page_118">118</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="center" colspan="2">CHAPTER V</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="lefthang"><span class="sc">Athens, etc.: Secondary Education&mdash;<abbr title="One">I.</abbr> The Sophists</span></td>
- <td class="right"><a href="#Page_157">157</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="center" colspan="2">CHAPTER VI
-<a name="Page_xvi" id="Page_xvi"></a><span class="pageno">xvi</span></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="lefthang"><span class="sc">Athens, etc.: Secondary Education&mdash;<abbr title="Two">II.</abbr> The Permanent
- Schools</span></td>
- <td class="right"><a href="#Page_179">179</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="center" colspan="2">CHAPTER VII</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="lefthang"><span class="sc">Athens, etc.: Tertiary Education&mdash;The Epheboi and the
- University</span></td>
- <td class="right"><a href="#Page_210">210</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="center" colspan="2"><br />PART II</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="center" colspan="2">THE THEORY OF EDUCATION</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="center" colspan="2">CHAPTER VIII</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="lefthang"><span class="sc">Religion and Education in Hellas</span></td>
- <td class="right"><a href="#Page_227">227</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="center" colspan="2">CHAPTER IX</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="lefthang"><span class="sc">Art, Music, and Poetry</span></td>
- <td class="right"><a href="#Page_237">237</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="center" colspan="2">CHAPTER X</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="lefthang"><span class="sc">Xenophon</span></td>
- <td class="right"><a href="#Page_259">259</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="center" colspan="2"><br />PART III</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="center" colspan="2">CHAPTER XI</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="lefthang"><span class="sc">General Essay on the Whole Subject</span></td>
- <td class="right"><a href="#Page_275">275</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td><br /></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="lefthang">INDEX</td>
- <td class="right"><a href="#Page_293">293</a></td></tr>
-</table>
-
-</div><!--end chapter-->
-
-<div class="chapter"><a name="Page_xvii" id="Page_xvii"></a><span class="pageno">xvii</span>
-
-<h3 class="p4 h3head">ILLUSTRATIONS</h3>
-
-<table summary="">
-<colgroup>
- <col span="1" style="width: 4.5em;" />
- <col span="1" style="width: 25em;" />
- <col span="1" style="width: 5em;" />
-</colgroup>
-
-<tr><td class="right" colspan="3"><span class="sc muchsmaller">AFTER PAGE</span></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="right" colspan="2">Vase by Euphronios, Louvre (centre of <abbr title="Ten">X.</abbr> <span class="sc lowercase">A</span> and <abbr title="Ten">X.</abbr> <span class="sc lowercase">B</span>)&mdash;Mounted
- Ephebos in Riding-School</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="right" colspan="3"><a href="#frontis"><span class="decoration">Frontispiece</span></a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="rightt"><abbr title="One">I.</abbr> <span class="sc lowercase">A.</span></td>
- <td class="lefthang">Kulix by Douris, Berlin (<abbr title="number">No.</abbr> 2285)&mdash;The Flute-Lesson
- and Writing-Lesson</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="rightt"><abbr title="One">I.</abbr> <span class="sc lowercase">B.</span></td>
- <td class="lefthang">Kulix by Douris, Berlin (<abbr title="number">No.</abbr> 2285)&mdash;The Lyre-Lesson
- and Poetry-Lesson</td>
- <td class="right"><a href="#i01a">52</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td><br /></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="rightt"><abbr title="Two">II.</abbr></td>
- <td class="lefthang">Kulix by Hieron, now at Vienna&mdash;A Flute Lesson:
- The Boy’s Turn</td>
- <td class="right"><a href="#i02">70</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td><br /></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="rightt"><abbr title="Three">III.</abbr></td>
- <td class="lefthang">Hudria in British Museum (E 171)&mdash;Music-School
- Scenes</td>
- <td class="right"><a href="#i03">104</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td><br /></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="rightt"><abbr title="Four">IV.</abbr></td>
- <td class="lefthang">Hudria in British Museum (E 172)&mdash;In a Lyre-School</td>
- <td class="right"><a href="#i04">108</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td><br /></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="rightt"><abbr title="Five">V.</abbr> <span class="sc lowercase">A.</span></td>
- <td class="lefthang">Kulix attributed to Euphronios, at Munich&mdash;Scenes
- in a Palaistra</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="rightt"><abbr title="Five">V.</abbr> <span class="sc lowercase">B.</span></td>
- <td class="lefthang">Kulix attributed to Euphronios, at Munich&mdash;Scenes
- in a Palaistra</td>
- <td class="right"><a href="#i05a">120</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td><br /></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="rightt"><abbr title="Six">VI.</abbr> <span class="sc lowercase">A.</span></td>
- <td class="lefthang">Wrestlers, etc., in the Palaistra</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="rightt"><abbr title="Six">VI.</abbr> <span class="sc lowercase">B.</span></td>
- <td class="lefthang">Boxers, etc., in the Palaistra</td>
- <td class="right"><a href="#i06a">128</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td><br /></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="rightt"><abbr title="Seven">VII.</abbr></td>
- <td class="lefthang">The Stadion at Delphi</td>
- <td class="right"><a href="#i07a">132</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td><br /></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="rightt"><abbr title="Eight">VIII.</abbr></td>
- <td class="lefthang">Kulix signed by Euphronios, at Berlin&mdash;Scenes in
- the Palaistra</td>
- <td class="right"><a href="#i08">174</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td><br /></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="rightt"><abbr title="Nine">IX.</abbr></td>
- <td class="lefthang">Vase attributed to Euphronios, at Munich&mdash;A Riding-Lesson:
- Mounting</td>
- <td class="right"><a href="#i09">214</a>
-<a name="Page_xviii" id="Page_xviii"></a><span class="pageno">xviii</span></td></tr>
-<tr><td><br /></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="rightt"><abbr title="Ten">X.</abbr> <span class="sc lowercase">A.</span></td>
- <td class="lefthang">Kulix by Euphronios, now in the Louvre&mdash;Scene in
- a Riding-School</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="rightt"><abbr title="Ten">X.</abbr> <span class="sc lowercase">B.</span></td>
- <td class="lefthang">Kulix by Euphronios, now in the Louvre&mdash;Scene in
- a Riding-School</td>
- <td class="right"><a href="#i10a">258</a></td></tr>
-</table>
-</div><!--end chapter-->
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<a name="Page_xix" id="Page_xix"></a><span class="pageno">xix</span>
-
-<h3 class="p4 h3head">SELECT BIBLIOGRAPHY</h3>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="sc">Dittenberger, W.</span> <span lang="la" xml:lang="la">De Ephebis Atticis Dissertatio.</span> Dieterich,
-Göttingen, 1863.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="sc">Dumont, A.</span> <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Essai sur l’Éphébie Attique.</span> 2 <abbr title="volumes">vols.</abbr> Didot, Paris,
-1875-76.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="sc">Girard, P.</span> <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">L’Éducation Athénienne au vᵉ et au ivᵉ siècle avant
-J.-C.</span> Hachette, Paris, 1889.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="sc">Grasberger, L.</span> <span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Erziehung und Unterricht im klassischen
-Alterthum.</span> 3 <abbr title="volumes">vols.</abbr> Würzburg, 1864-81.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="sc">Laurie, S. S.</span> Historical Survey of Pre-Christian Education.
-2nd Edition. Longmans, London, 1900.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="sc">Mahaffy, J. P.</span> Old Greek Education. Kegan Paul, 1883.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="sc">Müller, K. O.</span> Dorians. Edition 1824. English translation;
-Oxford, 1830.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="sc">Nettleship, H.</span> In <cite>Hellenica.</cite> 2nd Edition. Longmans, 1898.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="sc">Sidgwick, A.</span> Essay in <cite>Teachers’ Guild Quarterly</cite>, <abbr title="number">No.</abbr> 8.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="sc">Ussing, J. L.</span> (Danish.) German translation. <span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Erziehung bei
-den Griechen (und Römern).</span> Altona, 1870.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="sc">Wilkins, A. S.</span> National Education in Greece (Hare Prize,
-Cambridge). Isbister, London, 1873.</p>
-</div><!--end chapter-->
-
-<!--blank page-->
-<div class="chapter"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1"></a><span class="pageno">1</span>
-
-<h3 class="p4 h3head">INTRODUCTION</h3>
-
-<p>The meeting-place of two streams has always a curious
-fascination for the traveller. There is a strange charm
-in watching the two currents blend and lose their
-individuality in a new whole. The discoloured, foam-flecked
-torrent, swirling on remorselessly its pebbles
-and minuter particles of granite from the mountains,
-and the calm, translucent stream, bearing in invisible
-solution the clays and sands of the plains through
-which its slow coils have wound, melt into a single
-river, mightier than either, which has received and
-will carry onward the burdens of both and lay them
-side by side in some far-off delta, where they will form
-“the dust of continents to be.”</p>
-
-<p>To the student of history or of psychology the
-meeting-place of two civilisations has a similar charm.
-To watch the immemorial culture of the East, slow-moving
-with the weight of years, dreamy with centuries
-of deep meditation, accept and assimilate, as in a
-moment of time, the science, the machinery, the restless
-energy and practical activity of the West is a fascinating
-employment; for the process is big with hope of some
-glorious product from this union of the two. Those
-who live while such a union is in progress cannot estimate
-its value or its probable result; they are but
-<a name="Page_2" id="Page_2"></a><span class="pageno">2</span>
-conscious of the discomforts and confusion arising from
-the ending of the old order that passes away, and can
-hardly presage the glories of the new, to which it is
-yielding place. It is in past history, not in the contemporary
-world, that such combinations must be
-studied.</p>
-
-<p>The chief historical instance of two distinct civilisations
-blending into one is the Renaissance, that mighty
-union of the spirit of ancient Hellas and her pupil
-Rome with the spirit of medieval Europe, which has
-hardly been perfected even now. But it is often forgotten
-that there were at least two dress-rehearsals for
-the great drama of the Renaissance, in the course of
-which Hellenism learnt its own charm and adapted
-itself to the task of educating the world. Alexander
-carried the arts, the literature, and the spirit of Hellas
-far into the heart of Asia; and, though his great experiment
-of blending West with East was interrupted
-by his early death and the consequent disruption of his
-world-empire, yet, even so, something of his object was
-effected in the Hellenistic culture of Alexandria, Syria,
-and Asia Minor. Within a century of his death began
-the second dress-rehearsal, this time in the West.
-Conquered Hellas led her fierce conqueror captive, and
-the strength of Rome bowed before the intellect and
-imagination of the Hellene. Once more the great
-man who designed to unite the two currents into one
-stream without loss to either was cut off before his
-plans could be carried out, and the murder of Julius
-Cæsar caused incalculable damage to this earlier Renaissance,
-for the education of Rome, the second
-scholar of Hellas, was not too wisely conducted. Yet
-the schooling produced Virgil and Horace and that
-Greco-Roman civilisation in which the Teutonic nations
-<a name="Page_3" id="Page_3"></a><span class="pageno">3</span>
-of the North received their first lessons in culture.
-After several premature attempts, medieval Europe
-rediscovered ancient Hellas and her pupil Rome at
-the time of the Renaissance. Since that time the influence
-exerted by Hellenism upon modern civilisation
-has been continuous and incalculable. How much of
-that influence remains unassimilated, how far it is still
-needed, may perhaps be realised best by passing straight
-from the Elgin marbles or a play of Sophocles to a
-modern crowd or to modern literature.</p>
-
-<p>Hellas has thus been the educator of the world to
-an extent of which not even Perikles ever dreamed.
-How then, it may naturally be asked, did the teacher
-of the nations teach her own sons and daughters? If
-so many peoples have been at school to learn the
-lessons of Hellenism, what was the nature of the
-schools of ancient Hellas? How did those wonderful
-city-states, which produced in the course of a few
-centuries a wealth of unsurpassed literature, philosophy
-and art, whose history is immortalised by the names
-of Thermopylae and Marathon, train their young
-citizens to be at once patriots and art-critics, statesmen
-and philosophers, money-makers and lovers of
-literature? They must have known not a little about
-education, those old Hellenes, it is natural to suppose.
-Have the schools, like the arts and literature and
-spirit, of Hellas any lesson for the modern world?
-These are the questions which the present work will
-attempt in some measure to answer.</p>
-
-<p>In some measure only; for the spirit of Hellas
-cannot be caught at second hand: it consists in just
-those subtler elements of refined taste and perfect
-choice of expression which cannot but be lost in a
-translation or a photograph. In like manner, the
-<a name="Page_4" id="Page_4"></a><span class="pageno">4</span>
-secret of Hellenic education cannot be reproduced by
-any mere accumulation of bald facts and wiseacres’
-deductions. It is easy for the modern theorist to give
-an exact account of his ideal school; he has only to
-tabulate the subjects which are to be studied, the books
-which are to be read, and the hours at which his
-mechanical children are to be stuffed with the required
-mass of facts. But the Hellenic schoolmaster held
-that education dealt not with machines but with
-children, not with facts but with character. His
-object was to mould the taste of his pupils, to make
-them “love what is beautiful and hate what is ugly.”
-And because he wished them to love what is beautiful
-in art and literature, in nature and in human life, he
-sought to make his lessons attractive, in order that the
-subjects learnt at school might not be regarded with
-loathing in after life. Education had to be charming
-to the young; its field was largely music and art and
-the literature which appeals most to children, adventure
-and heroism and tales of romance expressed in verse.
-The music is all but gone, and of the art only a
-few fragments remain; the primary schools of Hellas
-have left to modern research only portions of their
-literature. Their attractiveness must be judged from
-the poems of Homer. But the charm of education
-lies mainly in the methods of the teacher; and of these
-posterity can know little. Scholars may piece together
-the books which were read and the exercises which
-were practised, but of the method in which they were
-taught, of their order and arrangement and respective
-quantities, nothing can be known. There is the raw
-material, the human boy, and of the tools wherewith the
-masters fashioned him, some relics are left; but of the
-way in which the artist used those tools, of the true
-<a name="Page_5" id="Page_5"></a><span class="pageno">5</span>
-inwardness of his handicraft and skill, not all the diligence
-of Teutonic research can recover a trace. The
-young art-student will learn little of Michel Angelo or
-Raphael, if he focusses his attention simply on the
-materials and the tools which they employed: to
-grasp their spirit he must go to the Sistine Chapel or
-to the Dresden Gallery, and contemplate their masterpieces.
-In like manner the student of Hellenic education
-ought to consider not its materials and tools, but
-rather its results and ideals. He must look with his
-own eyes and imagination upon the Aegina pediment or
-the “Hermes” of Praxiteles, if he wishes to comprehend
-the objects of the Doric and Ionic schools. This he must
-do for himself, since no book can do it for him. All
-that this work can hope to do is to furnish some few
-ideas about the tools wherewith the Hellenic schoolmasters
-tried to fashion the boys at their disposal into
-the masterpieces bodied forth in the “Hermes” and the
-Aeginetan figures: the skilled fingers and the imaginative
-brains which used the tools are for ever beyond the
-reach of the scholar and the archæologist.</p>
-
-<p>The “Hermes,” with his physical perfection and his
-plenitude of intellect, with the features of an artist and
-the brow of a thinker, may be taken as the ideal of the
-fully developed Athenian education of the early fourth
-century <span class="sc">B.C.</span> The Aeginetan figures stand in the same
-relation to the Spartan and Cretan schools; these heroic
-figures have the bodily harmoniousness, the narrow if
-deep thought, the hardness of the Dorian temper.
-Perhaps it is not fanciful to see in the so-called
-“Theseus” of the Parthenon an earlier ideal of
-Athenian training, when it aimed at rather less of
-dreamy contemplation, at a less sensuous and more
-strenuous mode of life. If this be so, that glorious
-<a name="Page_6" id="Page_6"></a><span class="pageno">6</span>
-figure bodies forth the very ideal of Periclean and
-Imperial Athens at her grandest moment, before the
-ruin caused by the long war with Sparta.</p>
-
-<p>The stream of Hellenism ran in two currents.
-Underlying the local diversity, which made every little
-town ethically and artistically distinct from its neighbour,
-was the fundamental difference between Dorian
-and Ionian. Clearly marked in every aspect of life,
-this difference was most marked in the schools. Sparta
-and Crete on the one hand, and Athens, followed
-closely by her Ionian and Aeolic allies and at a greater
-distance by the rest of civilised Hellas, on the other,
-develop totally different types of education. The
-young Spartan is enrolled at a fixed age in a boarding-school:
-everything he learns or does is under State-supervision.
-Perfect grace and harmony of body is
-his sole object: he is hardly taught his letters or
-numbers. The young Athenian goes to school when
-and where his parents like; learns, within certain wide
-limits, what they please; ends his schooling when they
-choose. He learns his letters and arithmetic, studies
-literature and music, and, at a later date, painting,
-besides his athletic exercises, at a day-school. When
-he grows older, he may add rhetoric or philosophy or
-science or any subject he pleases to this earlier course.
-The State interferes only to protect his morals, and to
-enforce upon him two years of military training between
-the ages of eighteen and twenty.</p>
-
-<p>The superficial differences between the Athenian and
-the Spartan type of school are so striking that at first
-sight they appear to have no one principle in common.
-It will therefore be necessary to keep the two types apart
-at first and discuss their details separately. But the
-Hellenic thinkers recognised certain deep-seated similarities
-<a name="Page_7" id="Page_7"></a><span class="pageno">7</span>
-beneath the superficial contradictions, and it
-became the object of educational philosophy to blend
-the two types into a perfect system. As soon as a
-deeper study has been made of the theory of education
-in Hellas, the distinctions of practice begin to vanish
-away and the similarities of ideal and aim become more
-and more apparent. When the survey of both practice
-and theory, which is the object of this work, has been
-completed, it should be possible to grasp and estimate
-the common principles, which, amid much variety of
-detail, governed the schools of Hellas.</p>
-
-</div><!--end chapter-->
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<!--blank page 8-->
-<a name="Page_8" id="Page_8"></a><span class="pageno">8</span><br />
-<a name="Page_9" id="Page_9"></a><span class="pageno">9</span>
-
-<h3 class="p4 h3head">PART I</h3>
-
-<p class="p2 center muchlarger strong">THE PRACTICE OF EDUCATION</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter"><!--blank page--><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10"></a><span class="pageno">10</span><br />
-<a name="Page_11" id="Page_11"></a><span class="pageno">11</span>
-
-<h3 class="p4 h3head">CHAPTER I</h3>
-
-<h4 class="h4head">EDUCATION AT SPARTA AND IN CRETE</h4>
-
-<p><span class="sc">According</span> to a current legend, which Herodotos,
-owing to his Ionian patriotism, is eager to contradict,
-Anacharsis the Scythian, on his return from his travels,
-declared that the Spartans seemed to him to be the only
-Hellenic people with whom it was possible to converse
-sensibly, for they alone had time to be wise.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_1" id="fnanchor_1"></a><a href="#footnote_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a></span>
-The
-full Spartan citizen certainly had abundant leisure. He
-was absolutely free from the cares of money-making,
-for he was supported by an hereditary allotment which
-was cultivated for him by State-serfs. He had no
-profession or trade to occupy him. His whole time
-was spent in educating himself and his younger
-countrymen in accordance with Spartan ideas, and
-in practising the Spartan mode of life. The Spartans
-divided their day between various gymnastic and
-military exercises, hunting, public affairs, and “leschai”
-or conversation-clubs, at which no talk of business
-was permitted; the members discussed only what was
-honourable and noble, or blamed what was cowardly
-and base.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_2" id="fnanchor_2"></a><a href="#footnote_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a></span>
-They were on the whole a grave and silent
-people, but they had a terse wit of their own, and there
-<a name="Page_12" id="Page_12"></a><span class="pageno">12</span>
-was a statue of Laughter in their city. They were
-always in a state of perfect training, like the “wiry
-dogs” of Plato’s Republic. They were strong conservatives;
-innovation was strictly forbidden. The
-unfortunate who made a change in the rules of the
-Ball-game was scourged. In the Skias or Council-chamber
-still hung in Pausanias’ time the eleven-stringed
-lyre which Timotheos had brought to Sparta, only to
-have it broken;<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_3" id="fnanchor_3"></a><a href="#footnote_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a></span>
-and the nine-stringed lyre of Phrunis
-met the same fate. Having once accepted the seven-stringed
-lyre from Terpander, the Spartans never permitted
-it to be changed. They had also a talent for
-minute organisation; both their army and their
-children were greatly subdivided. Every one at Sparta
-was a part of a beautifully organised machine, designed
-almost exclusively for military purposes.</p>
-
-<p>In this strangely artificial State, it was essential
-that the future citizens should be saturated with
-the spirit of the place at an early age. There were
-practically no written laws. Judges and rulers acted
-on their own discretion.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_4" id="fnanchor_4"></a><a href="#footnote_4" class="fnanchor">[4]</a></span>
-This was only possible if a
-particular stamp of character, a particular outlook
-and attitude, were impressed upon every citizen.
-Consequently, education was the most important thing
-at Sparta. It was both regulated and enforced by the
-State. It was exactly the same for all. The boys were
-taken away from home and brought up in great
-boarding-schools, so that the individualising tendencies
-of family life and hereditary instincts might be stamped
-out, and a general type of character, the Spartan type,
-alone be left in all the boys. For boarding-schools
-have admittedly this result, that they impose a recognisable
-<a name="Page_13" id="Page_13"></a><span class="pageno">13</span>
-stamp, a certain similarity of manner and attitude,
-upon all the boys who pass through them.</p>
-
-<p>Therefore, as soon as a child was born at Sparta, it
-was taken before the elders of the tribe to which its
-parents belonged.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_5" id="fnanchor_5"></a><a href="#footnote_5" class="fnanchor">[5]</a></span>
-If they decided that it was likely
-to prove sickly, it was exposed on Mount Taügetos,
-there to die or be brought up by Helots or Perioikoi.
-Sparta was no place for invalids. If the infant was
-approved, it was taken back to its home, to be brought
-up by its mother. Spartan women were famous for
-their skill in bringing up children. Spartan nurses
-were in great demand in Hellas. They were eagerly
-sought after for boys of rank and wealth like Alkibiades.
-The songs which they sang to their charges and the
-rules which they enforced made the children “not
-afraid of the dark” or terrified if they were left alone;
-not addicted “to daintiness or naughty tempers or
-screaming”; in fact, “little gentlemen” in every way.</p>
-
-<p>No doubt the discipline of the children was strict,
-but then the parents lived just as strictly themselves.
-There were no luxuries for any one at Sparta: the
-houses and furniture were as plain as the food. But
-there is a charming picture of Agesilaos riding on a
-stick to amuse his children; and the Spartan mothers,
-if stern towards cowardice, seem to have been keenly
-interested in their children’s development; they were
-by no means nonentities like Athenian ladies.</p>
-
-<p>The children slept at home till they were seven;
-but at an early age were taken by their fathers to
-the “Pheiditia” or clubs where the grown men spent
-those hours during which they stayed indoors and took
-their meals. About fifty men attended each of these
-clubs. The children sat on the floor near their fathers.
-<a name="Page_14" id="Page_14"></a><span class="pageno">14</span>
-Each member contributed monthly a “medimnos” of
-barley-meal, eight “choes” of wine, five “mnai” of
-cheese, two and a half “mnai” of figs,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_6" id="fnanchor_6"></a><a href="#footnote_6" class="fnanchor">[6]</a></span>
-and some very
-cheap relish; if he sacrificed to a god, he gave part of
-the victim to his “mess,” and if he was successful in
-hunting (which was a frequent occupation), he brought
-his spoils to the common table. There was also the
-famous black broth, made by the hereditary guild of
-State cooks, which only a life of Spartan training and
-cold baths in the Eurotas could make appetising; yet
-elderly Spartans preferred it to meat. Perhaps a
-fragment of Alkman represents a high-day at one of
-these clubs: “Seven couches and as many tables, brimming
-full of poppy-flavoured loaves, and linseed and
-sesamum, and in bowls honey and linseed for the
-children.”<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_7" id="fnanchor_7"></a><a href="#footnote_7" class="fnanchor">[7]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>A Spartan who became too poor to pay his contribution
-to his club lost his rights as a citizen, and so could
-not have his children educated in the State-system.
-But as long as the allotments were not alienated, such
-cases were not common. The contribution was <ins title="kata kephalên">κατὰ
-κεφαλήν</ins>,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_8" id="fnanchor_8"></a><a href="#footnote_8" class="fnanchor">[8]</a></span>
-that is, the fixed quantity of provisions had
-to be supplied for every member of the family who
-attended a club, <span class="decoration">i.e.</span> for every male, since the women
-took their meals at home. There is no reason whatever
-for supposing that the boys, either before or after
-they went to the boarding-schools, were fed at the
-expense of the State. It is expressly stated that the
-number of foster-children, who accompanied their
-benefactors’ sons to school, varied according to the
-extent of their patron’s means.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_9" id="fnanchor_9"></a><a href="#footnote_9" class="fnanchor">[9]</a></span>
-Parents must therefore
-<a name="Page_15" id="Page_15"></a><span class="pageno">15</span>
-have paid something for their boys while they were
-at school. The teaching involved no expenses; hence
-it must have been the food for which they paid.
-Thus, only those boys could attend the Spartan schools
-whose parents could afford to pay the customary subscription
-in kind for their own and their children’s food
-at the common meals. Xenophon, the admirer of all
-things Spartan, adopts the same system in his State,
-since he makes the children of the poor drop out
-automatically from the public schools. It must be
-remembered that at Sparta families were always small,
-and the population tended to decrease steadily; the
-number of males for whom subscriptions had to be paid
-by the head of the family can rarely have been large.</p>
-
-<p>Generally speaking, therefore, the Spartan schools
-were only for the sons of “Peers” (<ins title="hómoioi">ὅμοιοι</ins>),<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_10" id="fnanchor_10"></a><a href="#footnote_10" class="fnanchor">[10]</a></span>
-that
-is, those who paid the subscriptions. But a certain
-number of other boys were admitted, provided that
-their food was paid for. A rich Spartan might, if he
-chose, select certain other boys to be educated with his
-own son or sons, and pay their expenses meanwhile.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_11" id="fnanchor_11"></a><a href="#footnote_11" class="fnanchor">[11]</a></span>
-The number of these school-companions depended on
-the number of contributions in kind which he was
-capable of supplying. The school-companions could
-thus attend the Spartan schools; but they did not
-become citizens when they grew up, unless they revealed
-so much merit that the Spartan State gave them the
-franchise.</p>
-
-<p>From what classes were these school-companions
-drawn? Sometimes they were foreigners, sons either
-of distinguished guest-friends of leading Spartans, or
-of refugee-settlers in Laconia. Thus Xenophon’s
-<a name="Page_16" id="Page_16"></a><span class="pageno">16</span>
-two sons were educated at Sparta. These foreign boys
-were called <ins title="tróphimoi">τρόφιμοι</ins> or Foster-children. Xenophon
-mentions “foreigners from among the <ins title="tróphimoi">τρόφιμοι</ins>.”<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_12" id="fnanchor_12"></a><a href="#footnote_12" class="fnanchor">[12]</a></span>
-If these Foster-children, when grown up, remained in
-Sparta they possessed no civic rights. A passage in
-Plato refers to the difficulty which was experienced
-in getting these Foster-children to accept this humble
-position.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_13" id="fnanchor_13"></a><a href="#footnote_13" class="fnanchor">[13]</a></span>
-It is interesting to note that Sparta thus
-precedes Athens as an educational centre to which boys
-from foreign cities came to receive their schooling.</p>
-
-<p>More often Spartan parents chose Helots to be
-school-companions of their sons. Thus Plutarch
-speaks of “two of the foster-brothers of Kleomenes,
-whom they call Mothakes.”<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_14" id="fnanchor_14"></a><a href="#footnote_14" class="fnanchor">[14]</a></span>
-The name Mothax was
-applied to these educated Helots. They seem to have
-been notorious for the way in which they presumed
-upon their position, if we may assume a connection
-between Mothax and Mothon, a term which is used
-for the patron deity of impudence in Aristophanes, and
-elsewhere is the name of a vulgar dance.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_15" id="fnanchor_15"></a><a href="#footnote_15" class="fnanchor">[15]</a></span>
-They were
-not enfranchised when their school-days were over, and
-had to settle down to slavish duties, unless they showed
-peculiar merit. But several of the most distinguished
-Spartans, including Lusandros, were enfranchised
-Mothakes.</p>
-
-<p>Xenophon, in a passage which has already been
-quoted, mentions “gentlemen-volunteers of the
-Perioikoi and certain foreigners of the so-called
-Foster-children and bastards of the Spartiatai, very
-goodly men and not without share in the honourable
-things in the State.”<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_16" id="fnanchor_16"></a><a href="#footnote_16" class="fnanchor">[16]</a></span>
-If most of the authorities are
-<a name="Page_17" id="Page_17"></a><span class="pageno">17</span>
-right in regarding “the honourable things”<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_17" id="fnanchor_17"></a><a href="#footnote_17" class="fnanchor">[17]</a></span>
-as a
-Spartan phrase for their educational system&mdash;and there
-is good ground for this view&mdash;then this passage shows
-that illegitimate sons, and perhaps eminent Perioikoi,
-passed through the public schools at Sparta although,
-however, neither were called Foster-children, a name
-reserved for distinguished foreigners. The Helots
-who shared the education were known as Mothakes,
-and sometimes as <ins title="syntrophoi">σύντροφοι</ins>, school-companions; but
-they do not seem to have been called <ins title="trophimoi">τρόφιμοι</ins>,
-“Foster-children.”</p>
-
-<p>During the best period of Spartan history, none of
-these extra pupils, <ins title="trophimoi">τρόφιμοι</ins>, Mothakes, illegitimate
-children, and eminent Perioikoi, were enfranchised
-unless they showed peculiar merit. At a later date,
-perhaps, any one who passed through the schools became
-a Spartan citizen. Plutarch makes this a part of
-Lukourgos’ system; but that is improbable. Such a
-custom would only arise in the days of Spartan decay
-and depopulation. On the other hand, any Spartan
-boys who flinched before the hardships of their national
-education, lost their status, and were disfranchised, if
-they did not persevere.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_18" id="fnanchor_18"></a><a href="#footnote_18" class="fnanchor">[18]</a></span>
-</p>
-
-<p>Till they were seven, the boys were taken to
-their fathers’ clubs: the girls had all their meals with
-their mothers at home, for the women did not have
-dining-clubs. By seeing the hardships which their
-fathers endured, and hearing their discussions on
-political subjects and their terse humour, the boys were
-already being trained in the Spartan mode of life; for
-the clubs served as an elementary school. There, too,
-they learnt to play with their contemporaries, and to
-<a name="Page_18" id="Page_18"></a><span class="pageno">18</span>
-exchange rough jests without flinching. To take a
-jest without annoyance was part of the Spartan character;
-but if the jester went too far for endurance, he
-might be asked to stop.</p>
-
-<p>At seven the boys were taken away from home, and
-organised in a most systematic way into “packs” and
-“divisions.” These were the “ilai,” which probably
-contained sixty-four boys, and the “agelai,” whose
-numbers are unknown.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_19" id="fnanchor_19"></a><a href="#footnote_19" class="fnanchor">[19]</a></span>
-These packs fed together,
-slept together on bundles of reeds for bedding, and
-played together. The boys had to go barefoot always,
-and wore only a single garment summer and winter
-alike. They were all under the control of a
-“Paidonomos” or “Superintendent of the boys,”
-a citizen of rank, repute, and position, who might at
-any moment call them together, and punish them
-severely if they had been idle: he had attendants who
-bore the ominous name of Floggers.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_20" id="fnanchor_20"></a><a href="#footnote_20" class="fnanchor">[20]</a></span>
-So, as Xenophon
-grimly remarks, a spirit of discipline and obedience
-prevailed at Sparta. In order that the boys might not
-be left without control, even when the Paidonomos was
-absent, any citizen who might be passing might order
-them to do anything which he liked, and punish them
-for any faults which they committed. The most
-sensible and plucky boy in each pack was made a
-Prefect over it, and called the Bouâgor, or “Herd-leader”;
-the rest obeyed his orders and endured his
-punishments.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_21" id="fnanchor_21"></a><a href="#footnote_21" class="fnanchor">[21]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19"></a><span class="pageno">19</span>
-The elder men stirred up quarrels among the boys
-in order to see who was plucky. Over every school
-was set one of the young men over twenty who had a
-good reputation both for courage and for morality.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_22" id="fnanchor_22"></a><a href="#footnote_22" class="fnanchor">[22]</a></span>
-He was called the Eiren. He kept an eye on their
-battles, and used them as servants at home for his
-supper; he ordered the bigger boys to bring him
-firewood, and the smaller to collect vegetables. The
-only way by which such supplies could be obtained was
-by stealing them from the gardens and the men’s
-dining-clubs. Apparently, then, the boys dined with
-him in his house;<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_23" id="fnanchor_23"></a><a href="#footnote_23" class="fnanchor">[23]</a></span>
-they were supplied with a scanty
-meal by their parents to eat there, and were encouraged
-to make up the deficiency by stealing. “When the
-Eiren had finished supper, he ordered one of the boys
-to sing, and to another he propounded some question
-which needed a thoughtful answer, such as, ‘Who is
-the best of the grown-ups?’ For such particular
-questions are more stimulating than generalities like
-‘What is virtue?’ or ‘What is a good citizen?’
-The answer had to be accompanied by a concise reason;
-failure was punished by a bite on the hand. Elder
-men watched, saying nothing at the time, but rebuking
-the Eiren severely afterwards if he was too strict or
-too lenient.”</p>
-
-<p>Thus we find at Sparta a prefect-system and fagging.
-But the sense of responsibility produced in the elder boys
-at English public schools and the practice which they
-acquire in exercising authority were prevented at Sparta
-by the perpetual presence of grown men, which made
-Laconian schools more like French Lycées. There is
-no class of professional schoolmasters; the Eiren, the
-<a name="Page_20" id="Page_20"></a><span class="pageno">20</span>
-Paidonomos, and any elder who chooses, give the instruction
-freely and gratuitously. Education, being so
-simple, cost nothing at Sparta.</p>
-
-<p>From Plutarch’s mention of stealing from the <em>men’s</em>
-dining-clubs it may safely be inferred that boys of this
-age dined apart. Whether it was always in the Eiren’s
-house cannot be ascertained. After the age of sixteen
-they must have come into the men’s syssitia; for
-Xenophon implies that the visitor to Sparta could see
-lads of that age at dinner and ask them questions: and
-a visitor would certainly not have dined in a dining-room
-meant only for boys. Whether the election of
-members took place at that age, or whether they still
-went to their fathers’ clubs, is unknown.</p>
-
-<p>The education was almost entirely physical. Plutarch,
-it is true, says that they learnt “letters, because they
-were useful.”<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_24" id="fnanchor_24"></a><a href="#footnote_24" class="fnanchor">[24]</a></span>
-This may have been a later introduction,
-or perhaps the amount learnt was so little as to
-justify Isokrates in saying that the Spartans “do not
-even learn their letters, which are the means to a knowledge
-of the past, as well as of contemporary events”;<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_25" id="fnanchor_25"></a><a href="#footnote_25" class="fnanchor">[25]</a></span>
-
-he also thought it highly improbable that even “the
-most intelligent of them would hear of his speeches,
-unless they found some one to read them aloud.”<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_26" id="fnanchor_26"></a><a href="#footnote_26" class="fnanchor">[26]</a></span>
-They
-had, indeed, little reason to learn to read. Their written
-laws were very few, and these they learnt by heart, set
-to a tune. They had nothing to do with commerce or
-even with accounts; very few of them knew how to
-count.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_27" id="fnanchor_27"></a><a href="#footnote_27" class="fnanchor">[27]</a></span>
-Hippias, the Sophist, found that all they cared
-to listen to, were “genealogies of men and heroes,
-foundations of cities, and archæology generally.”
-Probably, like the Dorian philosopher Pythagoras, and
-<a name="Page_21" id="Page_21"></a><span class="pageno">21</span>
-like Plato, the admirer of all things Dorian, they held
-that memory was all-important, and that the use of
-writing weakened it.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_28" id="fnanchor_28"></a><a href="#footnote_28" class="fnanchor">[28]</a></span>
-Besides the State-laws set to
-music there were songs which praised dead heroes and
-derided cowards: the diction was plain and simple, the
-subjects grave and moral; many of them were war-marches;
-all were incentive to pluck and energy.</p>
-
-<p>Rhetoric was, of course, utterly forbidden: a young
-man who learnt it abroad and brought it home was
-punished by the Ephors.<span class="lock"><a href="#footnote_28" class="fnanchor">[28]</a></span>
-Spartans learned to be silent as
-a rule; when they spoke, their remarks were short and
-much to the point, for they thought it wrong to waste
-a word.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_29" id="fnanchor_29"></a><a href="#footnote_29" class="fnanchor">[29]</a></span>
-This was definitely taught to the boys, as has
-been shown above. “If you converse with quite an
-ordinary Laconian,” says Plato,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_30" id="fnanchor_30"></a><a href="#footnote_30" class="fnanchor">[30]</a></span>
- “at first he seems a
-mere fool; then suddenly, at the critical point, he flings
-forth a pithy saying, and his companions seem no better
-than children compared with him.” This epigrammatic
-wisdom Plato ironically ascribes to the fact that
-Laconians really attend Sophists on the sly, and are
-greater philosophers than any one knows. Many echoes
-of their terse and grim humour have come down to
-modern times: such as Leonidas’ remark to his troops
-at Thermopylae, “Breakfast here: supper in Hades”;
-and the Spartan’s description of Athens, “All things
-noble there,” by which he meant that nothing, however
-base, was counted ignoble.</p>
-
-<p>The Spartans must not be regarded as wholly averse
-to literature. They knew Homer, and thought him the
-best poet of his class, although the manner of life he
-inculcated was Ionic, not Doric.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_31" id="fnanchor_31"></a><a href="#footnote_31" class="fnanchor">[31]</a></span>
-Alkman spent his
-<a name="Page_22" id="Page_22"></a><span class="pageno">22</span>
-life at Sparta, and has left one splendid song for a
-chorus of Laconian girls. Aristophanes could put a
-fine chorus into the mouths of Laconians, though its
-subject is noticeably warlike. For it was war-poems
-that the Spartans liked. “They care naught for the
-other poets,” says the Athenian orator, Lukourgos,
-“but for Turtaios they care so exceedingly that they
-made a law to summon every one to the king’s tent,
-when they are on a campaign, to hear the poems of
-Turtaios, considering that this would make them most
-ready to die for their country.”<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_32" id="fnanchor_32"></a><a href="#footnote_32" class="fnanchor">[32]</a></span>
-</p>
-
-<p>After all, the objects of the Spartan education
-were not intellectual acuteness and the accumulation of
-knowledge, but discipline, endurance, and victory in
-war. Discipline was taught by the perpetual presence
-of authority, and by very severe punishments. Spartan
-boys were practically never left to their own devices:
-perhaps that is the secret of the moral failure of nearly
-every Spartan who was given a position of authority
-outside Lakedaimon; for responsibility requires practice.
-Endurance was taught by their whole mode of life.
-They went barefooted, with a single garment, played
-and danced naked under the hot Laconian sun;<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_33" id="fnanchor_33"></a><a href="#footnote_33" class="fnanchor">[33]</a></span>
-there
-were no ointments or luxurious baths for their bodies,
-only the Eurotas for a swim, and a bundle of reeds for
-a bed. The food which the boys received was very
-scanty: often they were turned out into the country in
-the early morning to provide food for themselves for
-the whole day by stealing.</p>
-
-<p>This organised stealing was a feature of Spartan
-education. At an early age, as we have seen, the
-<a name="Page_23" id="Page_23"></a><span class="pageno">23</span>
-small boys were sent out to steal firewood and vegetables
-for the Eiren who had charge of them. Later
-they were driven out into the country, to forage for
-themselves at the expense of the farms. There was a
-definite age at which it was customary to begin stealing.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_34" id="fnanchor_34"></a><a href="#footnote_34" class="fnanchor">[34]</a></span>
-The articles which might be stolen were fixed by
-law, and the legal limits might not be transgressed.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_35" id="fnanchor_35"></a><a href="#footnote_35" class="fnanchor">[35]</a></span>
-It must be remembered that much property in
-Laconia was held in common. Any one, for instance,
-who was belated while hunting might take what food he
-pleased from a country house, and even break open seals
-to get at provisions. The Spartans also used one
-another’s dogs and horses freely, without permission.
-It is therefore absurd to say that the system taught the
-boys to be dishonest. If the State agrees to declare certain
-articles to be common property, it is no longer stealing
-if one citizen removes them from the house of another:
-he is no more dishonest than a man who picks blackberries
-or buttercups in England. At one of the English
-public schools, tooth-mugs used to be a recognised
-article of plunder. The small fags were expected to
-keep their particular dormitory supplied with them, at
-the expense of others. They were punished by the
-wronged dormitory if caught in the act of removing
-them: but ingenuity in such thefts was regarded as
-praiseworthy. There was a certain number of these
-mugs belonging to the whole house; they were common
-property, and could therefore be purloined without
-dishonesty.</p>
-
-<p>Moreover, this system of legalised robbery had a
-valuable educational object at Sparta. It was excellent
-training in scouting, laying ambushes, and foraging, all
-of which it is very important that a future soldier
-<a name="Page_24" id="Page_24"></a><span class="pageno">24</span>
-should learn. Xenophon, a soldier himself, notices this,
-and in the <cite>Anabasis</cite>, when he needs a clever strategist, he
-selects a Spartan because he has been educated in this
-way. Since this was the object of the system, the boys,
-if caught, were flogged, not for stealing, but for stealing
-clumsily. Isokrates declares that skill in robbery was
-the road to the highest offices at Sparta. “If any
-one can show that this is not the branch of education
-which the Lacedaemonians regard as the most important,”
-he adds, “I admit that I have not spoken a
-word of truth in my life.”<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_36" id="fnanchor_36"></a><a href="#footnote_36" class="fnanchor">[36]</a></span>
-</p>
-
-<p>These foraging expeditions of the boys prepared
-them for the similar, if more arduous, duties of “Secret
-Service”<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_37" id="fnanchor_37"></a><a href="#footnote_37" class="fnanchor">[37]</a></span>
-which awaited them between eighteen and
-twenty. Young men of this age were sent in bands
-to the different districts of Laconia for long periods,
-during which they hid in the woods, slept on the ground,
-attended to their own wants without a servant, and
-wandered about the country by day and night.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_38" id="fnanchor_38"></a><a href="#footnote_38" class="fnanchor">[38]</a></span>
-When
-it appeared good to them or their chiefs they made
-sudden attacks on the Helots, and slaughtered those
-who seemed ambitious enough to be dangerous, the
-Ephors declaring war on their serfs yearly in order that
-there might be no blood-guiltiness attached to these
-assassinations.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_39" id="fnanchor_39"></a><a href="#footnote_39" class="fnanchor">[39]</a></span>
-There was a regular officer set over this
-secret police, who no doubt directed where the particular
-youths should go.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_40" id="fnanchor_40"></a><a href="#footnote_40" class="fnanchor">[40]</a></span>
-At a critical moment of the Peloponnesian
-War, 2000 of the bravest and most ambitious
-Helots suddenly “disappeared,” probably by this means.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_41" id="fnanchor_41"></a><a href="#footnote_41" class="fnanchor">[41]</a></span>
-But Plato recognised the educational value of such a
-<a name="Page_25" id="Page_25"></a><span class="pageno">25</span>
-system, if the murders were omitted. In his <cite>Laws</cite><span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_42" id="fnanchor_42"></a><a href="#footnote_42" class="fnanchor">[42]</a></span>
-
-he institutes a force of <ins title="kryptoi">κρυπτοί</ins>, 720 in number, who
-patrol the whole country, taking the twelve districts in
-turn, so as to gain a complete acquaintance with it.
-They have all the farm-servants and beasts at their disposal,
-for digging trenches, making fortifications, roads,
-embankments, and reservoirs, for irrigation works and
-the like. The similarity of name suggests similarity
-of functions, but how much of this the <ins title="kryptoi">κρυπτοί</ins> at
-Sparta did cannot be fixed. Probably their chief work
-was to keep watch over the subject populations,
-Perioikoi and Helots, who were otherwise left almost
-entirely to their own devices.</p>
-
-<p>In their institutions of the foraging parties and
-Secret Service, the Spartans show a clear appreciation of
-boy-nature, as well as a keen eye for methods of military
-training. Moderns are beginning to realise that the
-average boy has so much of the primitive and natural
-man in him that, unless he is permitted to “go wild”
-and live the savage life at intervals, he is apt to become
-riotous and lawless. Hence in recent days the institution
-of camps for boys in England and “Seton Indians”
-in America. The Spartans, alone of Hellenes, fully
-recognised this peculiarity of boys, and met it with the
-foraging expeditions and secret service. The Athenian
-boy was not thus provided for until he became an
-ephebos; hence the Athenian streets were full of
-young Hooligans, while the aristocratic lads developed
-more refined, if more vicious, methods of giving vent
-to their instincts. In these country-expeditions alone
-the Spartan boys had an opportunity of escaping from
-<a name="Page_26" id="Page_26"></a><span class="pageno">26</span>
-the presence of their elders and developing habits of
-self-reliance and responsibility. Had Sparta made better
-use of these opportunities, the fate of her Empire after
-Aigospotamoi might have been different.</p>
-
-<p>A frequent occupation of all ages at Sparta was
-hunting. This, too, they recognised to be an excellent
-training for soldiers, since it involved courage
-in meeting wild beasts, skill and ingenuity in tracking
-them, and hardships of all sorts in the forests and on
-the mountains. Laconia was full of game, and
-Laconian hounds were famous. The successful huntsman
-gave what he had killed to enrich the meals of
-his dining-club, and so won much popularity.</p>
-
-<p>Spartan boys must also have learnt to ride, for they
-had to go in procession on horseback at the festival of
-Huakinthos.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_43" id="fnanchor_43"></a><a href="#footnote_43" class="fnanchor">[43]</a></span>
-They were taught to swim, too, by
-their daily plunge in the Eurotas. A great part of
-their time was spent in gymnastics, under the close
-inspection of their elders. Boxing and the pankration
-were forbidden to the young Spartan, probably because
-they developed a few particular muscles at the expense
-of the others.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_44" id="fnanchor_44"></a><a href="#footnote_44" class="fnanchor">[44]</a></span>
-For wrestling no scientific trainers
-were allowed; the Spartan type depended solely on
-strength and activity, not on technical skill; so a Spartan,
-when beaten by a wrestler from another country, said
-his opponent was not a better man, but only a cleverer
-wrestler.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_45" id="fnanchor_45"></a><a href="#footnote_45" class="fnanchor">[45]</a></span>
-Gladiators, such as those mentioned in
-Plato’s <cite>Laches</cite> as teaching the use of arms, were not
-permitted at Sparta; these, however, seem to have been
-unpractical theorists, quite useless in battle, as General
-Laches shows by a funny anecdote about one of
-<a name="Page_27" id="Page_27"></a><span class="pageno">27</span>
-them.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_46" id="fnanchor_46"></a><a href="#footnote_46" class="fnanchor">[46]</a></span>
-No lounging spectators were permitted in
-Spartan gymnasia; the rule was “strip or withdraw.”<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_47" id="fnanchor_47"></a><a href="#footnote_47" class="fnanchor">[47]</a></span>
-The eldest man in each gymnasium had to see that
-every one took sufficient exercise to work off his food
-and prevent him from becoming puffy.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_48" id="fnanchor_48"></a><a href="#footnote_48" class="fnanchor">[48]</a></span>
-The physical
-condition of the boys was inspected every ten days by
-the Ephors,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_49" id="fnanchor_49"></a><a href="#footnote_49" class="fnanchor">[49]</a></span>
-while the competitions of the epheboi
-seem to have been controlled by a special board, the
-Bidiaioi, who figure in inscriptions.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_50" id="fnanchor_50"></a><a href="#footnote_50" class="fnanchor">[50]</a></span>
-Aristotle says
-of the whole Spartan discipline that it made the boys
-“beast-like,”<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_51" id="fnanchor_51"></a><a href="#footnote_51" class="fnanchor">[51]</a></span>
-but admits that it did not produce the
-one-sided athlete, so common in Hellas, who looked
-solely to athletics, and was too much specialised to be
-good for anything else. Xenophon<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_52" id="fnanchor_52"></a><a href="#footnote_52" class="fnanchor">[52]</a></span>
-says that it would
-be hard to find anywhere men with more healthy or
-more serviceable bodies than the Spartiatai. The most
-beautiful man in the Hellenic army at Plataea was a
-Spartan.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_53" id="fnanchor_53"></a><a href="#footnote_53" class="fnanchor">[53]</a></span>
-The Spartan boys’ manners were in some
-ways surprisingly maidenlike. When they went along
-the highway, they kept their hands under their coat,
-and walked in silence, keeping their eyes fixed on the
-ground before their feet. They spoke as rarely as a
-statue and looked about them less than a bronze
-figure: they were as modest as a girl. When they
-came into the mess-room, you could rarely hear them
-even answer a question.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_54" id="fnanchor_54"></a><a href="#footnote_54" class="fnanchor">[54]</a></span>
-</p>
-
-<p>Fighting was encouraged at all ages; there were
-organised battles, somewhat resembling football matches,
-for the epheboi, in a shady playing-field surrounded by
-<a name="Page_28" id="Page_28"></a><span class="pageno">28</span>
-rows of plane trees and encircled by streams, access
-to it being given by two bridges. After a night
-spent in sacrifice, two teams of epheboi proceeded
-to this field. When they came near it, they drew
-lots, and the winners had the choice of bridges
-by which to enter the ground, selecting no doubt in
-accordance with the direction of sun and wind, as a
-modern football captain, who has won the toss, selects
-the end of the ground from which he will start playing.
-The epheboi fought with their hands, kicked, bit, and
-even tore out one another’s eyes, in the endeavour to
-drive the opposing team back into the water.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_55" id="fnanchor_55"></a><a href="#footnote_55" class="fnanchor">[55]</a></span>
-</p>
-
-<p>The grown men were also encouraged to fight
-by the following device. The Ephors selected three
-of them, who were called Hippagretai. Each of these
-three selected one hundred companions, giving a public
-explanation in each case why he chose one man
-and rejected the others. So those who had been
-rejected became foes to those who were selected, and
-kept a close watch over them for the slightest breach
-of the accepted code of honour. Each party was
-always trying to increase its strength or perform some
-signal service to the State, in order to strengthen its
-own claims. The rivals also fought with their fists
-whenever they met.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_56" id="fnanchor_56"></a><a href="#footnote_56" class="fnanchor">[56]</a></span>
-</p>
-
-<p>This systematised pugnaciousness at Sparta presents
-an interesting parallel to the German University duels
-and to the fights which used to be almost daily
-occurrences in the life of an English schoolboy. Most
-of the older English public schools can still show the
-special ground which was the recognised scene of these
-battles.</p>
-
-<p>Floggings were exceedingly common at Sparta.
-<a name="Page_29" id="Page_29"></a><span class="pageno">29</span>
-Any elder man might flog any boy. It was not
-etiquette for boys to complain to their parents in these
-cases; if they did so, they received a second thrashing.
-But the triumph of this system was the flogging of the
-“epheboi” yearly at the altar of Artemis Orthia, in
-substitute for human sacrifice. Entrance for the competition
-was quite voluntary, but competitors seem
-always to have been forthcoming even down to
-Plutarch’s days. They began by practice of some sort
-in the country.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_57" id="fnanchor_57"></a><a href="#footnote_57" class="fnanchor">[57]</a></span>
-The altar was covered with blood; if
-the floggers were too lenient to some “ephebos” owing
-to his beauty or reputation, the statue, according to the
-legend, performed a miracle in order to show its displeasure.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_58" id="fnanchor_58"></a><a href="#footnote_58" class="fnanchor">[58]</a></span>
-The competitors were often killed on the
-spot; but they never uttered a groan.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_59" id="fnanchor_59"></a><a href="#footnote_59" class="fnanchor">[59]</a></span>
-The winner
-was called the “altar-victor” (<ins title="bômonikês">βωμονίκης</ins>) and an
-inscription still records such a victory.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_60" id="fnanchor_60"></a><a href="#footnote_60" class="fnanchor">[60]</a></span>
-</p>
-
-<p>The girls at Sparta were also organised into agelai
-or “packs.”<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_61" id="fnanchor_61"></a><a href="#footnote_61" class="fnanchor">[61]</a></span>
-They took their meals at home, but
-otherwise lived a thoroughly outdoor life. They had
-to train their bodies no less than the boys, in order that
-they might bear strong children, so they took part in
-contests of strength as well as of speed.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_62" id="fnanchor_62"></a><a href="#footnote_62" class="fnanchor">[62]</a></span>
-They shared
-in the gymnasia and in the musical training. Among
-their sports were wrestling, running, and swimming;
-they were exposed to sun and dust and toil.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_63" id="fnanchor_63"></a><a href="#footnote_63" class="fnanchor">[63]</a></span>
-They
-learned to throw the diskos and the javelin;<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_64" id="fnanchor_64"></a><a href="#footnote_64" class="fnanchor">[64]</a></span>
-they
-wore only the short Doric “chiton” with split sides.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_65" id="fnanchor_65"></a><a href="#footnote_65" class="fnanchor">[65]</a></span>
-<a name="Page_30" id="Page_30"></a><span class="pageno">30</span>
-They went in procession at festivals like the boys; at
-certain festivals they danced and sang in the presence of
-the young men, praising the brave among them and
-jeering at the cowards. At the Huakinthia the maidens
-raced on horseback. Theokritos makes a band of 240
-maidens, “all playmates together, anoint themselves
-like men and race beside the Eurotas.”<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_66" id="fnanchor_66"></a><a href="#footnote_66" class="fnanchor">[66]</a></span>
-That passage
-also gives wool-work to Laconian maidens (which is
-probably untrue, being contradicted by Plato),<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_67" id="fnanchor_67"></a><a href="#footnote_67" class="fnanchor">[67]</a></span>
-and
-lyre-playing, which is contradicted by a Laconian in
-Plutarch, who says that “such rubbish is not Laconian.”
-The result of all this outdoor training was great
-physical perfection: Lampito, the Spartan woman in
-Aristophanes’ <cite>Lusistrata</cite>, is greatly admired by the
-women from other cities for her beauty, her complexion,
-and her bodily condition: “she looks as though she
-could throttle a bull.” She ascribes it to her gymnastics
-and vigorous dancing.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_68" id="fnanchor_68"></a><a href="#footnote_68" class="fnanchor">[68]</a></span>
-The girls till they married
-wore no veil, and mixed freely with the young men;
-in fact, there was one dance where they met in modern
-fashion; first the youth danced some military steps,
-and then the maiden danced some of a suitable sort.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_69" id="fnanchor_69"></a><a href="#footnote_69" class="fnanchor">[69]</a></span>
-Consequently love-matches were far more possible at
-Sparta than elsewhere in Hellas. After marriage
-the women had to wear veils, and remained at home;
-gymnastics, dances, and races ceased.</p>
-
-<p>The Spartans were intensely fond of dancing, but it
-must be remembered that they often called dancing
-what moderns would call drill. For war was almost a
-form of dance; they marched or charged into battle to
-<a name="Page_31" id="Page_31"></a><span class="pageno">31</span>
-the notes of the flute, crowned and wearing red cloaks.
-The march tunes were in frequent use in Sparta, no
-doubt at military exercises. Every day the epheboi
-were drawn up in ranks, one behind the other, and
-went through military evolutions and dancing figures
-alternately, while a flutist played to them and beat time
-with his foot.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_70" id="fnanchor_70"></a><a href="#footnote_70" class="fnanchor">[70]</a></span>
-This is simply musical drill. The
-great national festival of the Gumnopaidia was very
-similar. Three great battalions, consisting respectively
-of old men, young men, and boys, drawn up in rank
-and file, exhibited various movements, chiefly of a
-gymnastic sort, singing the songs of Thaletas and
-Alkman and Dionusodotos the while and indulging in
-impromptu jesting at one another’s expense, after the
-fashion of a rustic revel-chorus in Attica. Sometimes
-the battalions appeared one by one, and were “led out”
-like an army, by the Ephors.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_71" id="fnanchor_71"></a><a href="#footnote_71" class="fnanchor">[71]</a></span>
-On other occasions all
-three were drawn up in crescent formation side by side,
-with the boys in the middle. The festival must have
-closely resembled the public parades of the gymnastic
-clubs in Switzerland. There were posts of honour and
-dishonour, as in battle, cowards usually receiving the
-latter. But Agesilaos, the king, once received an
-inferior station after his victory at Corinth, and turned
-the insult by a jest, “Well thought of, chorus-leader:
-that’s the way to give honour to the post.”<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_72" id="fnanchor_72"></a><a href="#footnote_72" class="fnanchor">[72]</a></span>
-Then
-there was the war-dance, imitating all the actions of
-battle, a sort of manual and bayonet exercise, but
-accompanied by much acting and by music. Every
-Spartan boy began to learn this as soon as he was five.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_73" id="fnanchor_73"></a><a href="#footnote_73" class="fnanchor">[73]</a></span>
-It was done in quick time, if we may judge by the
-“Pyrrhic” or war-dance foot ( <sub>˘ ˘</sub> ). There was also
-<a name="Page_32" id="Page_32"></a><span class="pageno">32</span>
-a wrestling-dance,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_74" id="fnanchor_74"></a><a href="#footnote_74" class="fnanchor">[74]</a></span>
-and most gymnastics were done
-to the accompaniment of the flute. In fact, chorus-dancing
-was a regular part of the education of Spartans
-and Cretans: the only experience of singing which
-most of them possessed was acquired in this way.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_75" id="fnanchor_75"></a><a href="#footnote_75" class="fnanchor">[75]</a></span>
-It is
-true that elegiacs were sung as solos before the king’s
-tent on campaigns, and at meals, when the victor got
-a particularly good slice of meat; but probably this
-accomplishment was confined to a few. Aristotle asserts
-that the Laconians did not learn songs, but claimed
-nevertheless to be able to distinguish good from bad.</p>
-
-<p class="center">* * * * *</p>
-
-<p>Such was the Spartan system of education. To an
-Englishman their schools have a greater interest than
-those of any other ancient State. Sparta produced the
-only true boarding-schools of antiquity. The “packs”
-of the Spartan boys, like the English public schools,
-formed miniature States, to whose corporate interests
-and honour each boy learned to make his own wishes
-subservient. Spartan boys, too, like our own, had
-the smaller traits of individuality rubbed off them by
-the publicity and perpetual intercourse with others
-involved in the boarding-school system, in order that
-the racial characteristics might the more emerge in
-them. They, too, learnt endurance by hardship, and
-were early trained both to rule and to obey by means
-of the institution of prefects and fagging. But here
-the resemblance stops short. The Spartans, like most
-other nations, were not prepared to pay the price at
-which alone an education in responsibility can be
-obtained, the price which lies in the possible ruin of
-all the boys who are not strong enough to be a law
-to themselves. They very rarely left the boys to
-<a name="Page_33" id="Page_33"></a><span class="pageno">33</span>
-themselves without grown men to look after them.
-They were always interfering and supervising, instead
-of leaving the prefects to exercise their authority. And
-so, when Spartans were sent abroad to govern cities
-or command armies, having had no practice in responsibility,
-they failed shamefully and ignominiously.
-But this is equally true of the Athenians and of other
-Hellenes. The Spartans deserve all credit for their
-experiments with the boarding-school system.</p>
-
-<p>But the system which they adopted had many
-faults, besides that which has already been noticed.
-There was no individual attention for the boys.
-The hardships were excessive and brutalising. While
-the boys’ bodies were developed and trained almost to
-perfection, their minds were almost entirely neglected:
-hence the stupidities of Spartan policy and the
-lack of imagination which their statesmen showed.
-It was impossible to over-eat or over-drink under the
-Spartan system, so the young Spartan had no experience
-in self-restraint.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_76" id="fnanchor_76"></a><a href="#footnote_76" class="fnanchor">[76]</a></span>
-The gymnasia and dining-clubs
-caused a great deal of quarrelling (which the Spartan
-authorities welcomed), and of immorality (which was
-very strictly forbidden); the Spartan gymnasia erred
-less, however, in this latter respect than the Athenian.
-In war the Spartans were only invincible so long as
-they were the only trained troops in Hellas; the rise
-of professional armies ruined them, for they could not
-adapt themselves to new circumstances. They produced
-no art and very little literature, if any. But their
-whole State was as much a work of art as a Doric
-temple, and of very much the same order, with its
-symmetry and regularity, its sacrifice of detail to the
-whole, its strength and restraint. It was also the
-<a name="Page_34" id="Page_34"></a><span class="pageno">34</span>
-inspiration of at least one great piece of literature,
-Plato’s <cite>Republic</cite>.</p>
-
-<p>If courage was their sole object, as perhaps it was,
-they succeeded in obtaining it. The coward was a
-rare, and a most unhappy bird at Sparta. Mothers on
-several occasions killed sons who returned home from
-a campaign disgraced. “No one would mess with a
-coward, or consort with him. When rival teams were
-chosen for the game of ball, he was omitted. In dances
-he received the post of dishonour. He was avoided in
-the streets. No one would sit next to him. He could
-not find a husband for his daughters or a wife for
-himself,” and was punished for these offences. “He
-was beaten if he imitated his betters in any way.”<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_77" id="fnanchor_77"></a><a href="#footnote_77" class="fnanchor">[77]</a></span>
-If the Hellenes were a nation of children, as the old
-Egyptian called them, the Spartans were at least a
-manly sort of schoolboy. They deified the schoolboy
-virtues, pluck and endurance. If we wish to see how
-far their education, in its best days, enabled them to
-prove true to their ideals, let us consider those 300
-at Thermopylae waiting, with jests on their lips, for
-the onset of Oriental myriads, and remember that
-finest of all epitaphs, of which English can give no
-rendering, written upon their memorial in the pass in
-honour of their obedience unto <span class="lock">death&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="i0">Go tell the Spartans, thou that passest by,</div>
- <div class="i0">That here, obedient to their laws, we lie.</div>
- </div><!--end poem-->
-</div><!--end container-->
-
-<p class="center">* * * * *</p>
-
-<p>The Cretan system of education was very similar
-in many ways to the Spartan. In both localities the
-teaching was given by any elder member of the
-community who chose, not by a professional and paid
-class of masters. But in Crete education cost the
-<a name="Page_35" id="Page_35"></a><span class="pageno">35</span>
-parent even less than at Sparta; for the boys were
-fed largely at public cost.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_78" id="fnanchor_78"></a><a href="#footnote_78" class="fnanchor">[78]</a></span>
-But so was every other
-Cretan, male and female alike. Each community possessed
-large public estates, cultivated by public serfs.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_79" id="fnanchor_79"></a><a href="#footnote_79" class="fnanchor">[79]</a></span>
-The revenues thus accruing to the State were applied
-to the expenses of government, which were small, and to
-the food-supply of all citizens. Thus men, women,
-and children were all fed mainly at public cost. It
-may be noted, however, that there is no question of
-providing the children of improvident parents with
-meals at the expense of more provident citizens. Moreover,
-the heads of families, who each possessed an
-allotment, as at Sparta, had to contribute a tenth of the
-produce of their estates.</p>
-
-<p>The women-folk took their meals at home,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_80" id="fnanchor_80"></a><a href="#footnote_80" class="fnanchor">[80]</a></span>
-although
-the cost of their food was mainly defrayed by the
-public revenues. The men took their meals in dining-clubs
-(<ins title="andreia">ἀνδρεῖα</ins>). The whole population of each community
-was divided into clubs of this sort, apparently
-on the family basis, so that two or three families made
-up a club between them, to which their children and
-descendants would in turn belong. All the males of
-the family attended these meals; small children, boys,
-and young men as well as elders are all mentioned as
-being present at the same dinners.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_81" id="fnanchor_81"></a><a href="#footnote_81" class="fnanchor">[81]</a></span>
-The club is only
-an enlarged family party. The small children sat on the
-ground behind their fathers; they waited on themselves
-and on their elders, but the general superintendence of
-cooking and attendance was in the hands of a woman
-with three or four public slaves and some underlings
-in her control.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_82" id="fnanchor_82"></a><a href="#footnote_82" class="fnanchor">[82]</a></span>
-As they grew older, the sons sat
-<a name="Page_36" id="Page_36"></a><span class="pageno">36</span>
-beside their fathers. Boys ordinarily received half
-what their parents had; but orphans were allowed the
-full quantity at their dead father’s club.</p>
-
-<p>Thus the Cretan club was an amalgamation of
-several families into a sort of clan, whose male
-members all dined together. All the boys of the
-clan formed one boarding-school. They all slept
-in one room, perhaps attached to the dining-hall;
-there was always a dormitory attached to each of these
-buildings for visitors from other cities, so it would
-be natural to expect a dormitory for the children also.
-The boys took their meals in the club dining-hall, in
-the presence of their elders, by whose improving
-conversations upon politics and morals they were
-supposed to be educated. These elder members elected
-one of their number to serve as <ins title="paidonomos">παιδονόμος</ins> or “Superintendent
-of the boys” of their club.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_83" id="fnanchor_83"></a><a href="#footnote_83" class="fnanchor">[83]</a></span>
-Under his
-directions the boys learned letters “in moderation”:
-they were constantly practised in gymnastics, in the
-use of arms, especially the bow, which was a great
-Cretan weapon, and in the war-dances, the Kuretic and
-Pyrrhic, both indigenous in Crete. They learned the
-laws of their country set to a sort of tune, in order
-that their souls might be drawn by the music, and also,
-that they might more easily remember them. In this
-way, if they did anything which was forbidden, they
-had not the excuse of ignorance.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_84" id="fnanchor_84"></a><a href="#footnote_84" class="fnanchor">[84]</a></span>
-Besides this, they
-were taught hymns to the gods, and praises of good
-men. The favourite metre for these purposes was the
-Cretic (&ndash; <sub>˘</sub> &ndash;), which was regarded as “severe” and
-so suitable for teaching courage and restraint.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_85" id="fnanchor_85"></a><a href="#footnote_85" class="fnanchor">[85]</a></span>
-The
-<a name="Page_37" id="Page_37"></a><span class="pageno">37</span>
-Pæan was their chief national form of song. Cretan
-boys were also practised in that terse and somewhat
-humorous style of speaking which we have already
-seen at Sparta.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_86" id="fnanchor_86"></a><a href="#footnote_86" class="fnanchor">[86]</a></span>
-</p>
-
-<p>Cretan boys were always fighting either single
-combats or combined battles against the boys of
-another club-school. They were taught endurance by
-many hardships. They wore only a short coat in
-summer and winter alike. They learnt to despise
-heat and cold and mountain paths and the blows which
-they received in gymnasia and in fighting.</p>
-
-<p>They remained in the club-schools till their
-seventeenth year,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_87" id="fnanchor_87"></a><a href="#footnote_87" class="fnanchor">[87]</a></span>
-when they became epheboi and celebrated
-their escape from the garb of childhood by a
-special festival.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_88" id="fnanchor_88"></a><a href="#footnote_88" class="fnanchor">[88]</a></span>
-Like their contemporaries at Athens,
-the epheboi took a special oath of allegiance to the
-State and hatred towards its enemies. A fragment
-still survives of the oath taken by the epheboi of
-Dreros, near Knossos.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_89" id="fnanchor_89"></a><a href="#footnote_89" class="fnanchor">[89]</a></span>
-At seventeen the epheboi were
-collected into “packs” (<ins title="agelai">ἀγέλαι</ins>) by private enterprise.
-A rich and distinguished young ephebos would gather
-round him as large a pack of his contemporaries as he
-could; their numbers no doubt depended partly on his
-wealth, and still more on his personal popularity. The
-aristocratic element in this arrangement is very noticeable,
-as in all the institutions of Crete as contrasted
-with Sparta. The father of this young chief usually
-acted as leader of the pack (<ins title="agelatês">ἀγελάτης</ins>); he possessed
-full authority over them and could punish them as he
-pleased. He led them out on hunting expeditions and
-to the “Runs” (<ins title="dromoi">δρόμοι</ins>), that is, the gymnasia of the
-<a name="Page_38" id="Page_38"></a><span class="pageno">38</span>
-epheboi. Cretans who had not yet entered a pack of
-epheboi were excluded from these runs (<ins title="apodromoi">ἀπόδρομοι</ins>);
-when they entered, they were called “members of
-packs” (<ins title="agelastoi">ἀγέλαστοι</ins>).<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_90" id="fnanchor_90"></a><a href="#footnote_90" class="fnanchor">[90]</a></span>
-The pack-leader could collect
-his followers where he pleased;<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_91" id="fnanchor_91"></a><a href="#footnote_91" class="fnanchor">[91]</a></span>
-very possibly the
-epheboi did not attend the club dinners ordinarily, but
-fed or slept either at their patron’s house (whence the
-need of a rich pack-leader) or in some special room.
-They thus corresponded closely to the Spartan boys of
-a younger age under their Eiren. Their food was
-supplied, like that of all Cretans, largely out of the
-public revenues. On certain fixed days “pack” joined
-battle with “pack” to the sound of the lyre and flutes
-and in regular time, as was the custom in war; fists,
-clubs, and even weapons of iron might be used. It
-was a regular institution, half dance, half field-day, with
-fixed rules and imposed by law. These battles must
-have closely resembled the contests of the Spartan
-epheboi in the shady playing-fields. The life of the
-boys was surrounded with a military atmosphere
-throughout. They wore military dress and counted
-their weapons their most valuable possessions. Young
-Cretans remained in the packs till after marriage.
-Then they returned to their homes and the clubs.</p>
-
-<p>Of the practical results of Cretan education nothing
-can be said. From the day when Idomeneus sets sail
-from Troy, Crete almost disappears from Hellenic
-history. Too strong to be attacked by their neighbours,
-too much weakened by intestine feuds to assume the
-aggressive, the Cretans remained aloof from their
-compatriots on the mainland and in the archipelago
-till the close of the period of Hellenic independence.
-<a name="Page_39" id="Page_39"></a><span class="pageno">39</span></p>
-</div><!--end chapter-->
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h4 class="h4head">APPENDIX A</h4>
-
-<p class="center">SPARTAN SYSSITIA</p>
-
-<p class="p2"><span class="sc">These</span> dining-clubs were organised like “diminutive states.”<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_92" id="fnanchor_92"></a><a href="#footnote_92" class="fnanchor">[92]</a></span>
-It was enacted who was to recline in the most important
-place, who in the second, and so on, and who was to sit on the
-footstool, which was the place of dishonour, usually assigned
-only to children. “Each man is given a portion to himself,
-which he does not share with any one. They have as much
-barley bread as they like, and there is an earthenware cup of
-wine standing by each man, for him to put his lips to when he
-feels disposed. The chief dish is always the same for all,
-boiled pork. There is plenty of Spartan broth, and some olives,
-cheese, and figs.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_93" id="fnanchor_93"></a><a href="#footnote_93" class="fnanchor">[93]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Each contributes to his mess about 18 gallons of barley
-meal, 60 or 70 pints of wine, and a small quantity of figs and
-cheese, and 10 Aeginetan obols for extras.” This contribution
-no doubt covered expenses, for the quantity sent by an absentee
-king, probably representing the average consumption of an
-individual, falls well within this estimate (<abbr title="compare Herodotos six">cf. Herod. <abbr title="six">vi.</abbr> </abbr> 57).
-After the regular meal<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_94" id="fnanchor_94"></a><a href="#footnote_94" class="fnanchor">[94]</a></span>
-an <ins title="epaiklon">ἔπαικλον</ins> or extra meal might be
-served. It would be provided by a member of the mess,
-consisting either of the results of hunting or the produce
-of his farm, for nothing might be bought. The ordinary
-components of such a meal were pigeons, geese, fieldfares,
-blackbirds, hares, lambs, and kids, and wheaten bread, a
-welcome change from the usual barley loaves. The cooks
-proclaimed the name of the giver, so that he might get the
-credit. <ins title="epaikla">ἔπαικλα</ins> were often exacted as fines for offences from
-rich members; the poor had to pay laurel leaves or reeds.
-There was also a special sort of <ins title="epaiklon">ἔπαικλον</ins> designed for the
-children, barley meal soaked in olive oil&mdash;a sort of porridge, in
-<a name="Page_40" id="Page_40"></a><span class="pageno">40</span>
-fact. According to Nicocles the Laconian, this was swallowed
-in laurel leaves&mdash;which does not sound very inviting.</p>
-
-<p>There were also banquets independent of the messes.
-These were called <ins title="kopides">κοπίδες</ins>.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_95" id="fnanchor_95"></a><a href="#footnote_95" class="fnanchor">[95]</a></span>
-Tents were set up in the sacred
-enclosure round the temple of the deity in whose honour the
-feast was given. Heaps of brushwood covered with carpets
-served for couches. The food consisted of slices of meat,
-round buns, cheese, slices of sausage, and for dessert dried figs
-and various beans.</p>
-
-<p>At the Tithenidia, or Nurses’ Feast, a <ins title="kopis">κοπίς</ins> was given at
-the temple of Artemis Koruthalia by the stream Tiassos.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_96" id="fnanchor_96"></a><a href="#footnote_96" class="fnanchor">[96]</a></span>
-The
-nurses brought the boy-babies to it. The sacrifice was a
-sucking pig, and baked loaves were served. The <ins title="kopides">κοπίδες</ins> were
-evidently a feature of Spartan life: Epilukos makes his “laddie”
-(<ins title="kôraliskos">κωράλισκος</ins>) remark, “I will go to the <ins title="kopis">κοπίς</ins> in Amuklai at
-Appellas’ house, where will be buns and loaves and jolly good
-broth”: which shows that the children’s parties at Sparta were
-regarded as attractive.</p>
-
-<p>The Karneia, the great Spartan festival, was an imitation
-of camp-life.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_97" id="fnanchor_97"></a><a href="#footnote_97" class="fnanchor">[97]</a></span>
-The sacrificial meal was served in tents, each
-containing nine men, and everything was done to the word of
-command.</p>
-</div><!--end chapter-->
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h4 class="h4head">APPENDIX B</h4>
-
-<p class="center">CRETAN SYSSITIA</p>
-
-<p class="p2"><span class="sc">The</span> chief authorities for the attendance at these meals are the
-two historians, Dosiades and Purgion, quoted in Athenaeus (143).
-Dosiades states that an equal portion is set before each man
-present, but to the younger members is given a half portion of
-meat, and they do not touch any of the other things. Purgion
-says: “To the sons, who sit on lower seats by their fathers’
-chairs, they give a half portion of what is supplied to the
-men; orphans receive a full share.” The comparison of the
-<a name="Page_41" id="Page_41"></a><span class="pageno">41</span>
-two passages shows that the “younger members” mentioned
-by Dosiades are what Purgion calls the orphans, and that
-they are not yet full-grown men. Thus they must be either
-the boys or the epheboi. It is not, however, at all likely
-that the epheboi, who were of military age and engaged in
-violent exercises, would be given only half rations, so these
-younger members are the boys not yet included in the <ins title="agelai">ἀγέλαι</ins>.
-Dosiades continues: “On each table is set a drinking vessel,
-of weak wine. This all who sit at the common table share
-equally. The children have a bowl to themselves,” that is,
-the boys who sat beside their fathers but not at the table.
-“After supper first they discuss the political situation, and
-then recall feats in battle, and praise those who have distinguished
-themselves, encouraging the youngers to heroism.”
-The quotation shows that not merely the small children are
-in question, but boys of an age to understand politics and war.</p>
-
-<p class="p2 footnote"> <a name="footnote_1" id="footnote_1"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_1"><span class="muchsmaller">[1]</span></a>
-Herodotos, 4. 77.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_2" id="footnote_2"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_2"><span class="muchsmaller">[2]</span></a>
-Plutarch, <cite>Lukourgos</cite>, 25. Kratinos (<abbr title="Athenaeus">Athen.</abbr> 138) ridicules these clubs and says
-that the attraction of them was that sausages hung there on pegs to be nibbled.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_3" id="footnote_3"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_3"><span class="muchsmaller">[3]</span></a>
-Pausanias, 3. 12. A similar event happened at Argos. Plutarch, <cite>On Music</cite>, 37.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_4" id="footnote_4"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_4"><span class="muchsmaller">[4]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Aristotle">Aristot.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Politics">Pol.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="two">ii.</abbr> 9, 10.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_5" id="footnote_5"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_5"><span class="muchsmaller">[5]</span></a>
-Plutarch, <cite><abbr title="Lukourgos">Luk.</abbr></cite> 16.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_6" id="footnote_6"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_6"><span class="muchsmaller">[6]</span></a>
-Say, 1½ bushels of meal, 5 gallons of wine, 5 lbs. of cheese, and 2½ lbs. of figs.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_7" id="footnote_7"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_7"><span class="muchsmaller">[7]</span></a>
-Smyth, <cite>Melic Poets</cite>, “Alkman,” 26, if the emendation <ins title="paidessi">παίδεσσι</ins> be correct.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_8" id="footnote_8"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_8"><span class="muchsmaller">[8]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Aristotle">Aristot.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Politics">Pol.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="two">ii.</abbr> 9.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_9" id="footnote_9"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_9"><span class="muchsmaller">[9]</span></a>
-Phularchos (<abbr title="Athenaeus">Athen.</abbr> <abbr title="six">vi.</abbr> 271).</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_10" id="footnote_10"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_10"><span class="muchsmaller">[10]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Xenophon">Xen.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Anabasis">Anab.</abbr> </cite> <abbr title="four">iv.</abbr> 6. 14; <abbr title="Aristotle">Aristot.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Politics">Pol.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="two">ii.</abbr> 9. 31.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_11" id="footnote_11"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_11"><span class="muchsmaller">[11]</span></a>
-Phularchos (<abbr title="Athenaeus">Athen.</abbr> <abbr title="six">vi.</abbr> 271 e).</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_12" id="footnote_12"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_12"><span class="muchsmaller">[12]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Xenophon">Xen.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Hellenica">Hellen.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="volume">v.</abbr> 3. 9.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_13" id="footnote_13"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_13"><span class="muchsmaller">[13]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite><abbr title="Republic">Rep.</abbr></cite> 520 <span class="sc lowercase">D</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_14" id="footnote_14"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_14"><span class="muchsmaller">[14]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Plutarch">Plut.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Kleomenes">Kleom.</abbr></cite> 8.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_15" id="footnote_15"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_15"><span class="muchsmaller">[15]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Aristophanes">Aristoph.</abbr> <cite>Knights</cite>, 635, 695 (with <abbr title="Scholia">Schol.</abbr> on 697, <ins title="phortikon orchêseôs eidos">φορτικὸν ὀρχήσεως εῖδος</ins>);
-<abbr title="Euripides">Eurip.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Bacchae">Bacch.</abbr></cite> 1060.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_16" id="footnote_16"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_16"><span class="muchsmaller">[16]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Xenophon">Xen.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Hellenica">Hellen.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="volume">v.</abbr> 3. 9.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_17" id="footnote_17"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_17"><span class="muchsmaller">[17]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Xenophon">Xen.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Contitution of the Lacedaemonians">Constit. of Lak.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="three">iii.</abbr> 3; <cite><abbr title="Hellenica">Hellen.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="volume">v.</abbr> 4. 32.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_18" id="footnote_18"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_18"><span class="muchsmaller">[18]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Xenophon">Xen.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Contitution of the Lacedaemonians">Constit. of Lak.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="three">iii.</abbr> 3.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_19" id="footnote_19"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_19"><span class="muchsmaller">[19]</span></a>
-“Agelai” of young men are mentioned by inscriptions at Miletos and Smurna
-[Böckh, 2892, 3326]; there may have been boarding-schools somewhat resembling
-those of Sparta at these towns for young men.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_20" id="footnote_20"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_20"><span class="muchsmaller">[20]</span></a>
-<ins title="mastigophoroi">μαστιγόφοροι</ins>. <abbr title="Xenophon">Xen.</abbr>
- <cite><abbr title="Contitution of the Lacedaemonians">Constit. of Lak.</abbr></cite>
- <abbr title="two">ii.</abbr> 2. Aristotle calls Paidonomoi an aristocratic
-institution. They existed in Crete, and inscriptions mention them in Karia,
-Teos, and many other places.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_21" id="footnote_21"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_21"><span class="muchsmaller">[21]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Plutarch">Plut.</abbr> <cite>Lukourgos</cite>, 16. Hesychius declares that the Bouâgor was a boy, so the
-word cannot mean the Eiren, who was over twenty.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_22" id="footnote_22"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_22"><span class="muchsmaller">[22]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Plutarch">Plut.</abbr> <cite>Lukourgos</cite>, 17; <abbr title="Xenophon">Xen.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Contitution of the Lacedaemonians">Constit. of Lak.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="two">ii.</abbr> 11.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_23" id="footnote_23"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_23"><span class="muchsmaller">[23]</span></a>
-In which case the Eiren corresponds closely to the Cretan Agelates.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_24" id="footnote_24"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_24"><span class="muchsmaller">[24]</span></a>
-<cite>Lukourgos</cite>, 16; <cite><abbr title="Laconica">Lac.</abbr> Institutions</cite>, 247.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_25" id="footnote_25"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_25"><span class="muchsmaller">[25]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Isokrates">Isok.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Panathenaikos">Panath.</abbr></cite> 276 <span class="sc lowercase">D</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_26" id="footnote_26"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_26"><span class="muchsmaller">[26]</span></a>
-<cite><abbr title="Panathenaikos">Panath.</abbr></cite> 285 <span class="sc lowercase">C</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_27" id="footnote_27"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_27"><span class="muchsmaller">[27]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite>Hippias <abbr title="Major">Maj.</abbr></cite> 285 <span class="sc lowercase">C</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_28" id="footnote_28"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_28"><span class="muchsmaller">[28]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Sextus Empiricus … Mathematicos">Sext. Empir. <cite>Mathem.</cite></abbr> 2, § 21.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_29" id="footnote_29"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_29"><span class="muchsmaller">[29]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Plutarch">Plut.</abbr> <cite>Lukourgos</cite>, 19-20.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_30" id="footnote_30"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_30"><span class="muchsmaller">[30]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite><abbr title="Protagoras">Protag.</abbr></cite> 342 <span class="sc lowercase">E</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_31" id="footnote_31"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_31"><span class="muchsmaller">[31]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite>Laws</cite>, 680 <span class="sc lowercase">D</span>. Crete repudiated Homer altogether.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_32" id="footnote_32"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_32"><span class="muchsmaller">[32]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Lukourgos">Luk.</abbr> <cite>against Leokrates</cite>, 107. The Polemarchos was judge in these singing
-competitions, and the winner received a bit of meat (Philochoros in <abbr title="Athenaeus">Athen.</abbr> 630 f.).</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_33" id="footnote_33"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_33"><span class="muchsmaller">[33]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite>Laws</cite>, 633 <span class="sc lowercase">E</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_34" id="footnote_34"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_34"><span class="muchsmaller">[34]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Plutarch">Plut.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Apophthegmata">Apoph.</abbr></cite></p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_35" id="footnote_35"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_35"><span class="muchsmaller">[35]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Xenophon">Xen.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Anabasis">Anab.</abbr> </cite> <abbr title="four">iv.</abbr> 6. 14.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_36" id="footnote_36"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_36"><span class="muchsmaller">[36]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Isokrates">Isok.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Panathenaikos">Panath.</abbr></cite> 277.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_37" id="footnote_37"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_37"><span class="muchsmaller">[37]</span></a>
-<ins title="krypteia, kryptê">κρυπτεία, κρυπτή</ins>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_38" id="footnote_38"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_38"><span class="muchsmaller">[38]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite>Laws</cite>, 633 <span class="sc lowercase">C</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_39" id="footnote_39"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_39"><span class="muchsmaller">[39]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Plutarch">Plut.</abbr> <cite>Lukourgos</cite>, 28. Isokrates merely mentions that the Ephors could kill as
-many Helots as they liked (<cite><abbr title="Panathenaikos">Panath.</abbr></cite> 271 <span class="sc lowercase">B</span>).</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_40" id="footnote_40"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_40"><span class="muchsmaller">[40]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Plutarch">Plut.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Kleomenes">Kleom.</abbr></cite> 28.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_41" id="footnote_41"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_41"><span class="muchsmaller">[41]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Thucidides">Thuc.</abbr> <abbr title="four">iv.</abbr> 80.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_42" id="footnote_42"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_42"><span class="muchsmaller">[42]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite>Laws</cite>, 763 <span class="sc lowercase">B</span>. Some have supposed that <ins title="kryptoi">κρυπτοί</ins> is an interpolation. If
-so, the resemblance must have been close enough to strike a commentator who knew
-Lakedaimon, in spite of the fact that the ages in the two systems are different.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_43" id="footnote_43"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_43"><span class="muchsmaller">[43]</span></a>
-Polukrates (in <abbr title="Athenaeus">Athen.</abbr> 139 e).</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_44" id="footnote_44"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_44"><span class="muchsmaller">[44]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Aristotle">Aristot.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Politics">Pol.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="eight">viii.</abbr> 4; <abbr title="Plutarch">Plut.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Lukourgos">Luk.</abbr></cite> 19.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_45" id="footnote_45"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_45"><span class="muchsmaller">[45]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Plutarch">Plut.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Apophthegmata">Apoph.</abbr></cite> 233 <span class="sc lowercase">E</span>. Plato adopts the Spartan views about wrestling in the
-<cite>Laws</cite>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_46" id="footnote_46"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_46"><span class="muchsmaller">[46]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite>Laches</cite>, 183 <span class="sc lowercase">D</span>, <span class="sc lowercase">E</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_47" id="footnote_47"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_47"><span class="muchsmaller">[47]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite><abbr title="Theaitetos">Theait.</abbr></cite> 162 <span class="sc lowercase">B</span> and 169 <span class="sc lowercase">B</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_48" id="footnote_48"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_48"><span class="muchsmaller">[48]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Xenophon">Xen.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Contitution of the Lacedaemonians">Constit. of Lak.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="volume">v.</abbr> 8.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_49" id="footnote_49"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_49"><span class="muchsmaller">[49]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Athenaeus">Athen.</abbr> <abbr title="twelve">xii.</abbr> 550 d. Their dress and bedding was inspected at the same time.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_50" id="footnote_50"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_50"><span class="muchsmaller">[50]</span></a>
- <abbr title="Pausanias">Pausan.</abbr> 11 2. <ins title="bideos">βίδεος</ins>, Böckh, 1241, 1242; <ins title="bidyos">βίδυος</ins>, 1254.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_51" id="footnote_51"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_51"><span class="muchsmaller">[51]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Aristotle">Aristot.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Politics">Pol.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="eight">viii.</abbr> 4. 1.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_52" id="footnote_52"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_52"><span class="muchsmaller">[52]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Xenophon">Xen.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Contitution of the Lacedaemonians">Constit. of Lak.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="five">v.</abbr> 9.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_53" id="footnote_53"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_53"><span class="muchsmaller">[53]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Herodotos">Herod.</abbr> <abbr title="nine">ix.</abbr> 72.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_54" id="footnote_54"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_54"><span class="muchsmaller">[54]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Xenophon">Xen.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Contitution of the Lacedaemonians">Constit. of Lak.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="two">ii.</abbr> 4.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_55" id="footnote_55"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_55"><span class="muchsmaller">[55]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Pausanias three">Paus.iii.</abbr> 14. 2.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_56" id="footnote_56"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_56"><span class="muchsmaller">[56]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Xenophon">Xen.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Contitution of the Lacedaemonians">Constit. of Lak.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="four">iv.</abbr></p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_57" id="footnote_57"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_57"><span class="muchsmaller">[57]</span></a>
-Hesychius, <ins title="Phouaxir">Φούαξιρ</ins>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_58" id="footnote_58"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_58"><span class="muchsmaller">[58]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Pausanias three">Paus. iii.</abbr> 16. 11.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_59" id="footnote_59"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_59"><span class="muchsmaller">[59]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Plutarch">Plut.</abbr> <cite>Lukourgos</cite>, 18; Cicero, <cite> <abbr title="Tusculanae Disputationes">Tusc. Disp.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="five">v.</abbr> 27.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_60" id="footnote_60"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_60"><span class="muchsmaller">[60]</span></a>
-Böckh, 1364.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_61" id="footnote_61"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_61"><span class="muchsmaller">[61]</span></a>
-Pindar, <cite><abbr title="fragment">Frag.</abbr> Hyporch.</cite> 8 <ins title="Lakaina parthenôn agela">Λάκαινα παρθένων ἀγέλα</ins>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_62" id="footnote_62"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_62"><span class="muchsmaller">[62]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Xenophon">Xen.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Contitution of the Lacedaemonians">Constit. of Lak.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="one">i.</abbr> 4.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_63" id="footnote_63"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_63"><span class="muchsmaller">[63]</span></a>
-Cicero, <cite> <abbr title="Tusculanae Disputationes">Tusc. Disp.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="two">ii.</abbr> 15.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_64" id="footnote_64"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_64"><span class="muchsmaller">[64]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Plutarch">Plut.</abbr> <cite>Lukourgos</cite>, 14.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_65" id="footnote_65"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_65"><span class="muchsmaller">[65]</span></a>
-Whence they were called <ins title="phainomêrides">φαινομήριδες</ins>. This chiton may be seen in the
-conventional statues of Artemis.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_66" id="footnote_66"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_66"><span class="muchsmaller">[66]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Theokritos">Theok.</abbr> <cite>Idyll</cite> 18. 23.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_67" id="footnote_67"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_67"><span class="muchsmaller">[67]</span></a>
-<cite>Laws</cite>, 806 <span class="sc lowercase">A</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_68" id="footnote_68"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_68"><span class="muchsmaller">[68]</span></a>
-<cite>Lusistrata</cite>, l. 80 onwards. In the play Lampito is married. Aristophanes has
-either made a mistake or the gymnastics are meant to be in the past only.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_69" id="footnote_69"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_69"><span class="muchsmaller">[69]</span></a>
-The <ins title="ormos">ὄρμος</ins> dance. Compare the dance at the end of the <cite>Lusistrata</cite>, where
-“man stands by woman, and woman by man.”</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_70" id="footnote_70"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_70"><span class="muchsmaller">[70]</span></a>
-Lucian, <cite>Dancing</cite>, 274.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_71" id="footnote_71"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_71"><span class="muchsmaller">[71]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Xenophon">Xen.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Hellenica">Hellen.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="six">vi.</abbr> 4. 16.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_72" id="footnote_72"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_72"><span class="muchsmaller">[72]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Xenophon">Xen.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Agesilaus">Ag.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="two">ii.</abbr> 17.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_73" id="footnote_73"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_73"><span class="muchsmaller">[73]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Athenaeus">Athen.</abbr> 630 a.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_74" id="footnote_74"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_74"><span class="muchsmaller">[74]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Athenaeus">Athen.</abbr> 678 b.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_75" id="footnote_75"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_75"><span class="muchsmaller">[75]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite>Laws</cite>, 666 <span class="sc lowercase">D</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_76" id="footnote_76"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_76"><span class="muchsmaller">[76]</span></a>
-<cite>Laws</cite>, 634-635.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_77" id="footnote_77"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_77"><span class="muchsmaller">[77]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Xenophon">Xen.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Contitution of the Lacedaemonians">Constit. of Lak.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="nine">ix.</abbr> 5.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_78" id="footnote_78"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_78"><span class="muchsmaller">[78]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Aristotle">Aristot.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Politics">Pol.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="two">ii.</abbr> 10. 8.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_79" id="footnote_79"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_79"><span class="muchsmaller">[79]</span></a>
-Additional revenues for the same objects were derived from the taxes paid by
-Perioikoi and serfs (<abbr title="Athenaeus">Athen.</abbr> 143 a, b).</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_80" id="footnote_80"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_80"><span class="muchsmaller">[80]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite>Laws</cite>, 781 <span class="sc lowercase">A</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_81" id="footnote_81"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_81"><span class="muchsmaller">[81]</span></a>
-Historians quoted by <abbr title="Athenaeus">Athen.</abbr> 143 e.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_82" id="footnote_82"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_82"><span class="muchsmaller">[82]</span></a>
-<cite>Ibid.</cite></p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_83" id="footnote_83"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_83"><span class="muchsmaller">[83]</span></a>
-Strabo, <abbr title="ten">x.</abbr> 4. 483 (on authority of Ephoros), and Herakleides Pont. <abbr title="three">iii.</abbr> (who
-provide most of the details about Crete).</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_84" id="footnote_84"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_84"><span class="muchsmaller">[84]</span></a>
-Aelian, <cite>True History</cite>, <abbr title="two">ii.</abbr> 39.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_85" id="footnote_85"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_85"><span class="muchsmaller">[85]</span></a>
-Strabo, <abbr title="ten">x.</abbr> 4. 480.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_86" id="footnote_86"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_86"><span class="muchsmaller">[86]</span></a>
-Sosikrates (in <abbr title="Athenaeus">Athen.</abbr> 261 e), speaking of Phaistos.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_87" id="footnote_87"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_87"><span class="muchsmaller">[87]</span></a>
-Hesychius, <ins title="apagelos">ἀπάγελος</ins>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_88" id="footnote_88"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_88"><span class="muchsmaller">[88]</span></a>
-<ins title="ekdysia">ἐκδύσια</ins>, Antoninus Liberalis, 18.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_89" id="footnote_89"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_89"><span class="muchsmaller">[89]</span></a>
-Mahaffy, <abbr title="page">p.</abbr> 81; Grasberger, <abbr title="three">iii.</abbr> 61.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_90" id="footnote_90"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_90"><span class="muchsmaller">[90]</span></a>
-Eustathius on <cite><abbr title="Iliad">Il.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="nine">ix.</abbr> 518.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_91" id="footnote_91"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_91"><span class="muchsmaller">[91]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Herakleides of Pontos three">Herakl. Pont. iii.</abbr> 3.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_92" id="footnote_92"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_92"><span class="muchsmaller">[92]</span></a>
-Persaeus <cite><abbr title="apud">ap.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="Athenaeus">Athen.</abbr> 140 f.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_93" id="footnote_93"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_93"><span class="muchsmaller">[93]</span></a>
-Dicaearchus <cite><abbr title="apud">ap.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="Athenaeus">Athen.</abbr> 141 a.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_94" id="footnote_94"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_94"><span class="muchsmaller">[94]</span></a>
-Sphaerus <cite><abbr title="apud">ap.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="Athenaeus">Athen.</abbr> 141 c, d.; and Molpis, <cite>ibid.</cite></p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_95" id="footnote_95"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_95"><span class="muchsmaller">[95]</span></a>
-Polemon <cite><abbr title="apud">ap.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="Athenaeus">Athen.</abbr> 56 a, and 138-139.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_96" id="footnote_96"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_96"><span class="muchsmaller">[96]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Compare">Cp.</abbr> the crèche temples in Plato’s <cite>Laws</cite>, 794 <span class="sc lowercase">A</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_97" id="footnote_97"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_97"><span class="muchsmaller">[97]</span></a>
-Demetrius of Scepsis (<cite><abbr title="apud">ap.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="Athenaeus">Athen.</abbr> 141 e).</p>
-</div><!--end chapter-->
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<a name="Page_42" id="Page_42"></a><span class="pageno">42</span>
-
-<h3 class="p4 h3head">CHAPTER II</h3>
-
-<h4 class="p2 h4head">ATHENS AND THE REST OF HELLAS:<br />
-GENERAL INTRODUCTION</h4>
-
-<p class="p2"><span class="sc">Laconia</span> and Crete were mainly agricultural countries
-that had little concern with trade or manufactures.
-Their citizens comprised a landed aristocracy, supported
-by estates which were cultivated for them by a subject
-population; there was no necessity, therefore, for them
-to prepare their boys for any profession or trade, or
-even to instruct them in the principles of agriculture.
-The young Spartan or Cretan no more needed professional
-or technical instruction of any sort than the richer
-absentee Irish landlords of the present day. He could
-give the whole of his school-time, without any sacrifice
-of his financial prospects, to the training of his body
-and of his character.</p>
-
-<p>But the rest of Hellas was for the most part the
-scene of busy manufactures and extensive trade. It
-would be natural to expect that great commercial
-peoples, like the Athenians or the Ionians of Asia
-Minor, would have set great store by the commercial
-elements of education, and to assume that business
-methods and utilitarian branches of study would have
-occupied a large place in their schools. But this was
-very far from being the case. To a Hellene education
-<a name="Page_43" id="Page_43"></a><span class="pageno">43</span>
-meant the training of character and taste, and the
-symmetrical development of body, mind, and imagination.
-He would not have included under so honourable
-a name either any course of instruction in which the
-pupils mastered their future trade or profession, or any
-accumulation of knowledge undertaken with the object
-of making money. Consequently technical training of
-all sorts was excluded from Hellenic schools and passed
-over in silence by Hellenic educationalists. Information
-concerning it must be pieced together from stray facts
-and casual allusions, and the whole idea of “utilitarian”
-instruction, in the modern sense of the word, must be
-carefully put aside during any consideration of Hellenic
-schools.</p>
-
-<p>For the Hellenes as a nation regarded all forms of
-handicraft as <em>bourgeois</em> (<ins title="banausos">βάναυσος</ins>) and contemptible.
-Herodotos says that they derived this view from the
-surrounding peoples, who all held it.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_98" id="fnanchor_98"></a><a href="#footnote_98" class="fnanchor">[98]</a></span>
-To do anything
-in order to extract money from some one else
-was, in their opinion, vulgar and ungentlemanly. The
-lyric poets and the Sophists were alike blamed for taking
-fees. The cheapness and abundance of serf- or slave-labour
-made it possible for a large proportion of the
-free population to live in idleness, and devote their time
-to the development of the body by physical exercises,
-of the mind by perpetual discussions, and of the
-imagination by art and music. Citizenship required
-leisure, in the days before representative government
-came into vogue. It was owing to this principle that
-the Athenian received pay for a day’s attendance in the
-Law Courts or the Assembly, for by this means the
-poorest citizen obtained an artificial leisure for the performance
-of his duties. Otherwise true citizenship was
-<a name="Page_44" id="Page_44"></a><span class="pageno">44</span>
-impossible. Plato regards a tradesman as unfit to be an
-acting citizen.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_99" id="fnanchor_99"></a><a href="#footnote_99" class="fnanchor">[99]</a></span>
-Aristotle rejects as unworthy of a free
-man all trades which interfere with bodily development
-or take time which ought to be devoted to mental improvement.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_100" id="fnanchor_100"></a><a href="#footnote_100" class="fnanchor">[100]</a></span>
-Xenophon explains the reason of this
-attitude. The discredit which attaches to the <em>bourgeois</em>
-occupations is quite natural; for they ruin the physical
-condition of those who practise them, compelling them
-to sit down and live in the shade, and in some cases to
-spend their day by the fire. The body thus becomes
-effeminate, and the character is weakened at the same
-time. Tradesmen, too, have less leisure for serving
-their friends and the State. In some communities,
-especially the most warlike, the citizens are not allowed
-to practise sedentary trades.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_101" id="fnanchor_101"></a><a href="#footnote_101" class="fnanchor">[101]</a></span>
-The owner of a factory
-or a farm worked by slave-labour was exempt from
-corrupting influences: it was only actual work which
-was degrading.</p>
-
-<p>A large number, however, from among the poorer
-classes were compelled to work with their own hands;
-so these, as well as the slaves, required technical instruction.
-Some indications survive as to the manner in
-which this was imparted. Trades were mostly hereditary;
-“the sons of the craftsmen learn their fathers’
-trade, so far as their fathers and their friends of the
-same trade can teach it.”<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_102" id="fnanchor_102"></a><a href="#footnote_102" class="fnanchor">[102]</a></span>
-But others might also learn.
-Xenophon mentions such cases. “When you apprentice
-a boy to a trade,” he says, “you draw up a statement
-of what you mean him to be taught,”<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_103" id="fnanchor_103"></a><a href="#footnote_103" class="fnanchor">[103]</a></span>
-and the fees were
-not paid unless this agreement was carried out. The
-<cite>Kleitophon</cite><span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_104" id="fnanchor_104"></a><a href="#footnote_104" class="fnanchor">[104]</a></span>
-mentions as the two functions of the
-<a name="Page_45" id="Page_45"></a><span class="pageno">45</span>
-builder or the doctor the practising of their profession
-and the teaching of pupils. The <cite>Republic</cite><span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_105" id="fnanchor_105"></a><a href="#footnote_105" class="fnanchor">[105]</a></span>
-says: “If
-owing to poverty a craftsman is unable to provide the
-books and other requisites of his calling, his work will
-suffer, and his sons and any others whom he may be
-teaching will not learn their trade so well.” The
-teaching of building is mentioned in the <cite>Gorgias</cite>.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_106" id="fnanchor_106"></a><a href="#footnote_106" class="fnanchor">[106]</a></span>
-In the <cite>Republic</cite><span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_107" id="fnanchor_107"></a><a href="#footnote_107" class="fnanchor">[107]</a></span>
-Plato states that the <ins title="paides">παῖδες</ins> of the
-potters&mdash;a word which will include both sons and
-apprentices&mdash;act as servants and look on for a long time
-before they are allowed to try their hands themselves at
-making pots. “To learn pot-making on a wine-jar”
-was a proverb for beginning with the most difficult part
-of a subject. The pupils of a doctor named Pittalos are
-mentioned in the <cite>Acharnians</cite> of Aristophanes.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_108" id="fnanchor_108"></a><a href="#footnote_108" class="fnanchor">[108]</a></span>
-The
-comic poets of the early third century contain several
-references to cookery-schools. Sosipater makes one
-cook say that his pupils must learn astrology, architecture,
-and strategy before they come to him, just as Plato
-had exacted a preliminary knowledge of mathematics
-from his disciples. Euphron gives ten months as the
-minimum length of a course of cookery. Aristotle
-mentions a man at Syracuse who taught slaves how to
-wait at table, and perform their household duties: perhaps
-the play of Pherekrates<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_109" id="fnanchor_109"></a><a href="#footnote_109" class="fnanchor">[109]</a></span>
-entitled <cite>The Slave-Teacher</cite>
-may have dealt with a similar case. From
-these fragments a picture can be drawn of a regular
-system of apprenticeship by which the knowledge of the
-trades was handed down. Solon, wishing to encourage
-Athenian manufactures, had enacted that if a father
-did not have his son taught some trade, he could not
-<a name="Page_46" id="Page_46"></a><span class="pageno">46</span>
-legally demand to be supported in his old age.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_110" id="fnanchor_110"></a><a href="#footnote_110" class="fnanchor">[110]</a></span>
-But
-the general opinion of Hellas still maintained that
-“technical instruction and all teaching which aimed only
-at money-making was vulgar and did not deserve the
-name of education. True education aimed solely at
-virtue, making the child yearn to be a good citizen,
-skilled to rule and to obey.”<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_111" id="fnanchor_111"></a><a href="#footnote_111" class="fnanchor">[111]</a></span>
-For all the gold on the
-earth and under it, according to Plato, could not pay
-the price of virtue, or deserve to be given in exchange
-for a man’s soul. Thus the Spartans and Cretans did
-not stand alone, but had the support of all Hellas, in
-banishing from their schools any idea of technical or
-professional instruction.</p>
-
-<p class="center">* * * * *</p>
-
-<p>But in one notable point their idea of education
-differed from that which was prevalent in most of the
-Hellenic States. The regular course of education in
-Athens and in most Hellenic States was for boys alone:
-no girls need apply. The women lived in almost
-Oriental seclusion;<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_112" id="fnanchor_112"></a><a href="#footnote_112" class="fnanchor">[112]</a></span>
-the duty of an Athenian mother
-was, according to Perikles,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_113" id="fnanchor_113"></a><a href="#footnote_113" class="fnanchor">[113]</a></span>
-to live so retired a life
-that her name should never be mentioned among
-the men either for praise or blame. Listen to the
-description which an Athenian country gentleman
-gives of his wife.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_114" id="fnanchor_114"></a><a href="#footnote_114" class="fnanchor">[114]</a></span>
- “What was she likely to know
-when I married her? Why, she was not yet fifteen
-when I introduced her to my house, and she had
-been brought up always under the strictest supervision;
-as far as could be managed, she had not been
-allowed to see anything, hear anything, or ask any
-questions. Don’t you think that it was all that could
-<a name="Page_47" id="Page_47"></a><span class="pageno">47</span>
-be expected of her, if she knew how to take raw wool
-and make it into a cloak, and had seen how wool-work
-is served out to handmaidens?” Sokrates, however, to
-whom this question is addressed, seems to think that
-she might have learnt “from her father and mother the
-duties which would belong to her in after life.” These,
-however, in this case her husband had to teach her.
-He explains to her that she must see that everything
-has a place to itself and is always put there; she must
-also give out the stores, teach the slaves their duties and
-nurse them when they are ill, and tend the young
-children. The summary of the explanation is that
-Heaven has appointed a fair division of labour between
-husband and wife: the wife manages everything indoors
-and the husband everything out of doors. A stay-at-home
-husband or a gad-about wife equally offend
-against respectability. As a rule, apparently, the
-women simply sat in the house, “like slaves,” as it
-seemed to the ordinary athletic Hellene. Xenophon’s
-model husband suggests that his wife should take exercise
-by walking about the house to see how the supplies
-were given out, to inspect the arrangements of the
-cupboards, and to watch the washing and the wringing-out
-of the clothes: this exercise will give her health and
-an appetite. But Xenophon was an admirer of Spartan
-customs and the athletic Spartan women: probably
-these ideas would not have occurred to the ordinary
-Athenian husband.</p>
-
-<p>Another picture may be quoted from Hellenic
-literature to show the extent of education which an
-ordinary woman received.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_115" id="fnanchor_115"></a><a href="#footnote_115" class="fnanchor">[115]</a></span>
-A certain Aristarchos
-comes to Sokrates in great distress. A number of
-female relatives, quite destitute, have been thrown upon
-<a name="Page_48" id="Page_48"></a><span class="pageno">48</span>
-his hands owing to various circumstances, and he must
-support them; but he has not the requisite means.
-Sokrates naturally suggests that he should make them
-work for their living. But they do not know how to,
-says Aristarchos. However, by dint of questioning,
-Sokrates elicits the fact that they can make men’s and
-women’s garments, and also pastry and bread. These,
-then, were apparently the accomplishments which an
-ordinary girl in Hellas, brought up without any idea of
-having to earn her own living, would acquire. Plato
-also mentions weaving and cooking as the provinces in
-which women excel,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_116" id="fnanchor_116"></a><a href="#footnote_116" class="fnanchor">[116]</a></span>
-and describes the women of Attika
-as “living indoors, managing the household and superintending
-the loom and wool-work generally.”<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_117" id="fnanchor_117"></a><a href="#footnote_117" class="fnanchor">[117]</a></span>
-</p>
-
-<p>Thus the Athenian girl spent her time indoors,
-learning to be a regular “Hausfrau,” skilled in weaving,
-cooking, and household management. She had her
-special maid to wait on her,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_118" id="fnanchor_118"></a><a href="#footnote_118" class="fnanchor">[118]</a></span>
-as her brothers had their
-paidagogos. She would, as a rule, be married young,
-and would naturally be very shy after such an upbringing;
-the marriage was arranged between the
-bridegroom and the parents, and, owing to the seclusion
-of the women at Athens, love-matches were well-nigh
-impossible. The match was mainly a question of the
-dowry. Xenophon<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_119" id="fnanchor_119"></a><a href="#footnote_119" class="fnanchor">[119]</a></span>
-gives a vivid picture of one of
-these girl-wives gradually “growing accustomed to her
-husband and becoming sufficiently tame to hold conversation
-with him.” To keep their beauty under such
-conditions they employed rouge and white, and high-heeled
-shoes. Such mothers would be quite incapable
-of giving any literary or musical education to their
-children; hence the boys went away to school as soon
-<a name="Page_49" id="Page_49"></a><span class="pageno">49</span>
-as possible. Their school-life usually began when they
-were about six years old, the exact age being left to the
-parents’ choice.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_120" id="fnanchor_120"></a><a href="#footnote_120" class="fnanchor">[120]</a></span>
-Before this, they learnt in the nursery
-the various current fables and ballads, and the national
-mythology.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_121" id="fnanchor_121"></a><a href="#footnote_121" class="fnanchor">[121]</a></span>
- “As soon as the child understands what
-is said, the nurse and the mother and the paidogogos,
-yes, and the father himself, strive with one another in
-improving its character, in every word and deed showing
-it what is just and what is unjust, what is beautiful and
-what is ugly, what is holy and what is unholy. It is
-always ‘Do this’ and ‘Don’t do that.’ If a child is
-disobedient, it is corrected with threats and blows.”<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_122" id="fnanchor_122"></a><a href="#footnote_122" class="fnanchor">[122]</a></span>
-Besides this purely moral training there might, no
-doubt, be a certain amount of technical or of literary
-instruction at home,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_123" id="fnanchor_123"></a><a href="#footnote_123" class="fnanchor">[123]</a></span>
-and bits of poetry might be learnt.
-Up to this age boys and girls lived together.</p>
-
-<p>The sons of rich parents apparently went to school
-earliest: their poorer fellow-citizens went later.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_124" id="fnanchor_124"></a><a href="#footnote_124" class="fnanchor">[124]</a></span>
-This
-was natural. The poor could not keep their sons at
-school for a long time, for they wanted their services in
-the shop or on the farm, and the fees were a burden:
-so they did not send them till they were old enough to
-pick up instruction quickly. The rich, on the other
-hand, to whom money was no object, sent their boys to
-school at an early age, when they could do little more
-than look on, while their elders worked. Aristotle
-commends this custom, and imposes two years of such
-“playing at school” upon the boys of his ideal State.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_125" id="fnanchor_125"></a><a href="#footnote_125" class="fnanchor">[125]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50"></a><span class="pageno">50</span>
-The ordinary system of primary education at Athens
-consisted of three parts, presided over respectively by
-the “grammatistes,” “kitharistes,” and “paidotribes.”<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_126" id="fnanchor_126"></a><a href="#footnote_126" class="fnanchor">[126]</a></span>
-The grammatistes taught reading, writing, and some
-arithmetic, and made his pupils read and learn by heart
-the great poets, Homer and Hesiod and others. The
-kitharistes taught the boys how to play the seven-stringed
-lyre and sing to it the works of the lyric
-poets, which they would incidentally have to learn.
-The paidotribes presided over their physical development
-in a scientific way; he taught them wrestling,
-boxing, the pankration, running, jumping, throwing the
-diskos and javelin, and various other exercises; his
-school-room was the palaistra. To this triple system
-some boys added drawing and painting;<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_127" id="fnanchor_127"></a><a href="#footnote_127" class="fnanchor">[127]</a></span>
-but this
-subject seems to have been an extra till late in the
-fourth century. Literature, music, and athletics composed
-the ordinary course at Athens.</p>
-
-<p>Which of the three branches of education began
-first? Probably they were all taught simultaneously.
-The order in which they are usually mentioned does
-not point to a fixed sequence. Letters were naturally
-mentioned first, because all citizens alike learned this
-subject. Gymnastics were put last, because, owing to
-the public gymnasia, these exercises were carried on
-long after the other schooling had ceased. Moreover,
-most of the recognised exercises of the palaistra were
-not taught to small boys; from the nature of the
-exercises and from the pictures on the vases it may be
-<a name="Page_51" id="Page_51"></a><span class="pageno">51</span>
-deduced that the average boy did not learn them till
-his twelfth year at the earliest. But physical training
-of an easier sort of course commenced much earlier,
-and boys seem to have attended a palaistra from their
-sixth year onwards to receive it. Both Plato and
-Aristotle demand that it should begin several years
-before any intellectual instruction; and Plato, making
-athletics such as shooting and riding begin at six, defers
-letters till ten and lyre-playing till thirteen. Gymnastics
-would naturally occupy a part of the day for a
-healthy young Hellene during the whole time from
-his sixth year till manhood. It is thus that the
-<cite>Charmides</cite> mentions “quite tiny boys” as present in
-the palaistra, as well as older lads and young men.</p>
-
-<p>Lyre-playing may have been deferred, as a harder
-subject, till the boy had learned letters for several
-years; but the seven-stringed lyre, with the simple
-old Hellenic music, was probably not a very difficult
-instrument to master. The chief factor which determined
-the arrangement of subjects in an ordinary
-family was no doubt the paidagogos. If there was
-only one son, he could go to whatever school his
-parents pleased; but if there were several, elders and
-youngers had all to go to the same school at the same
-time, for there was only one paidagogos to a whole
-family as a rule, and he could never allow any of his
-charges to go out of his sight.</p>
-
-<p>That the three subjects were usually taught simultaneously
-may be inferred from a passage of Xenophon.
-“In every part of Hellas except Sparta,” he says, “those
-who claim to give their sons the best education, as soon
-as ever the child understands what is said to him, at
-once make one of their servants his paidagogos, and at
-once send him off to school to learn letters and music
-<a name="Page_52" id="Page_52"></a><span class="pageno">52</span>
-and the exercises of the Palaistra.”<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_128" id="fnanchor_128"></a><a href="#footnote_128" class="fnanchor">[128]</a></span>
-The emphasis
-upon the word “at once” certainly implies that the
-three subjects began simultaneously.</p>
-
-<p>On the vases letters and music are seen being taught
-side by side in the same school; this was a convenient
-and natural arrangement. Writing-tablets and rulers
-are also seen suspended on the walls of music-schools
-and palaistrai, and lyres on the walls of letter-schools<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_129" id="fnanchor_129"></a><a href="#footnote_129" class="fnanchor">[129]</a></span>;
-which suggests that the boys went from one building to
-another in the day, taking their property with them.
-Plato states that three years apiece was a reasonable time
-for learning letters and the lyre.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_130" id="fnanchor_130"></a><a href="#footnote_130" class="fnanchor">[130]</a></span>
-The eight years
-between six and fourteen, the ordinary time devoted at
-Athens in the fourth century to the primary triple
-course, would give space for these six years, with two
-years to spare for elaboration. Gymnastics are meant
-to go on during the whole period in Plato, and so do
-not require a special allowance of time to themselves.</p>
-
-<p>This system of primary education at Athens may
-reasonably be traced back to the beginning of the sixth
-century. Solon is credited with a regulation which
-made letters compulsory, and with certain moral enactments
-dealing with existing schools and palaistrai.
-The much-disputed popularisation of Homer at Athens
-by Peisistratos was probably connected with the growth
-of the Schools of Letters. Of the existence of music-schools
-at this date there is evidence from a sixth-century
-vase in the British Museum,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_131" id="fnanchor_131"></a><a href="#footnote_131" class="fnanchor">[131]</a></span>
-which represents
-a youth amusing himself with a dog, behind a seated
-man who is playing a lyre. This might not seem very
-conclusive in itself; but now compare it with the two
-“amphorai” of the fifth century,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_132" id="fnanchor_132"></a><a href="#footnote_132" class="fnanchor">[132]</a></span>
-which undoubtedly
-<!--Blank Page-->
-<!--Blank Page-->
-<a name="Page_53" id="Page_53"></a><span class="pageno">53</span>
-represent scenes in a music-school. The situation is
-almost identical; each alike shows the boy playing with
-the animal behind his master’s chair. Curiously enough,
-all three vases come from Kameiros in Rhodes, although
-they are of Athenian manufacture. Thus the music-school
-may also be traced back well into the sixth
-century, in company with the school of letters and the
-palaistra; and the antiquity of the system of Primary
-Education is thus established.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter together" style="width: 500px">
-<p class="captionleft">PLATE <abbr title="One">I.</abbr> <span class="sc lowercase">A</span>.</p>
- <a name="i01a" id="i01a"></a>
- <img src="images/1a.jpg"
- width="500" height="269"
- alt="Illustration: The Flute Lesson"
- />
- <p class="caption">THE FLUTE LESSON, THE WRITING LESSON (ABOVE A WRITING-ROLL, A FOLDED TABLET, A RULING SQUARE, ETC.)<br />
-From the Kulix of Douris, now at Berlin (<abbr title="number">No.</abbr> 2285).<br />
-<cite lang="it" xml:lang="it">Monumenti dell’ Instituto</cite>, <abbr title="nine">ix.</abbr> Plate 54.</p>
-</div><!--end illustration-->
-
-<div class="figcenter together" style="width: 500px">
-<p class="captionleft">PLATE <abbr title="One">I.</abbr> <span class="sc lowercase">B</span>.</p>
- <a name="i01b" id="i01b"></a>
- <img src="images/1b.jpg"
- width="500" height="276"
- alt="Illustration: The Lyre Lesson"
- />
- <p class="caption">THE LYRE LESSON, AND THE POETRY LESSON (ABOVE IS AN ORNAMENTAL MANUSCRIPT BASKET)<br />
-From a Kulix by Douris, now in Berlin (<abbr title="number">No.</abbr> 2285).<br />
-<cite lang="it" xml:lang="it">Monumenti dell’ Instituto</cite>, <abbr title="nine">ix.</abbr> Plate 54.</p>
-</div><!--end illustration-->
-
-<p>In earlier days this primary course had no doubt
-sometimes lasted till the boy was eighteen: but towards
-the end of the fifth century a secondary stage of education
-arose, occupying the years immediately preceding
-eighteen. This secondary stage is recognised in the
-pseudo-Platonic <cite>Axiochos</cite> and in the fragment of
-Teles quoted by Stobaeus. More important evidence
-is supplied by Plato. In the <cite>Republic</cite> he assigns
-an elaborate system of mathematics to the age just
-before <ins title="ephêbeia">ἐφηβεία</ins>, which he sets at seventeen or eighteen,
-the natural age varying with the individual, while the
-legal age remained fixed.</p>
-
-<p>When did this Secondary Education begin? Aristotle,
-counting back from <ins title="ephêbeia">ἐφηβεία</ins>, assigns three years to it.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_133" id="fnanchor_133"></a><a href="#footnote_133" class="fnanchor">[133]</a></span>
-He has just commended the arrangement of education,
-not on hard and fast lines, but in accordance with the
-natural growth of the individual: so he must mean his
-<ins title="ephêbeia">ἐφηβεία</ins> to vary from seventeen to eighteen.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_134" id="fnanchor_134"></a><a href="#footnote_134" class="fnanchor">[134]</a></span>
-Thus he
-puts the beginning of secondary education at fourteen
-or fifteen, the average age of <ins title="hêbê">ἥβη</ins> in Hellas, as in Rome.
-From <ins title="hêbê">ἥβη</ins> till twenty-one the young Athenian was a
-<ins title="meirakion">μειράκιον</ins>. Thus in point of age the <ins title="pais">παῖς</ins> of the
-primary schools corresponds to the Roman “impubes,”
-and the <ins title="meirakion">μειράκιον</ins> to the “adolescens”; but <ins title="meirakion">μειράκιον</ins>
-<a name="Page_54" id="Page_54"></a><span class="pageno">54</span>
-and <ins title="pais">παῖς</ins> are used very loosely, and the former word is
-often replaced by <ins title="neaniskos">νεανίσκος</ins>. We shall, as a rule, call
-the pupils of the primary schools boys, and those of the
-secondary lads.</p>
-
-<p>Fourteen did not, however, represent an exact point
-at which it was compulsory to leave the primary school.
-Sons of the poor left earlier; rich or unoccupied
-Athenians might remain later: Sokrates even attended
-a lyre-school among the boys when he was middle-aged.
-The primary schoolmasters started advanced
-classes in astronomy and mathematics to suit elder
-pupils.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_135" id="fnanchor_135"></a><a href="#footnote_135" class="fnanchor">[135]</a></span>
-In the palaistrai there were separate classes
-of boys and lads, who were only supposed to meet on
-feast-days;<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_136" id="fnanchor_136"></a><a href="#footnote_136" class="fnanchor">[136]</a></span>
-in the <cite>Charmides</cite>, however, grown men,
-lads, boys, and quite tiny boys are all exercising
-together.</p>
-
-<p>Many lads, especially in earlier times, did not attend
-the schools at all, but gave their time to gymnastics and
-whatever else they pleased.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_137" id="fnanchor_137"></a><a href="#footnote_137" class="fnanchor">[137]</a></span>
-Xenophon relates this as
-one of the demerits of the Athenian system.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_138" id="fnanchor_138"></a><a href="#footnote_138" class="fnanchor">[138]</a></span>
-</p>
-
-<p>The mental attainments of a lad who is apparently
-but little over fourteen are sketched in Plato’s <cite>Lusis</cite>.
-The lad Lusis knows how to read and write, and how
-to string and play the lyre. He recognises a quotation
-from Homer, and has even come across the “prose
-treatises of the very wise, who say that like must
-always be friendly to like; these are the men who
-reason and write about the Universe and Nature.”<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_139" id="fnanchor_139"></a><a href="#footnote_139" class="fnanchor">[139]</a></span>
-</p>
-
-<p>This secondary education, beginning soon after
-fourteen, was only for the rich: the poor could not
-afford to keep their sons away from the farm or trade
-<a name="Page_55" id="Page_55"></a><span class="pageno">55</span>
-any longer. It might be scattered over the whole of
-the next six or seven years; but there was a serious
-interruption, which usually terminated it. At eighteen
-the young Athenian became in the eye of the law an
-ephebos and was called out to undergo two years of
-military training. During this period of conscription
-it was no doubt possible, especially in the laxer days of
-the fourth century, to do some intellectual work; but
-Plato is probably only accepting the usual custom when
-he frees the epheboi of his State from all mental studies
-and makes them give their whole energies to military
-and gymnastic training. And when the ephebos returned
-to civil life, he was a full citizen and was hardly
-likely to return to school; he might attend an occasional
-lecture or so, but that was all.</p>
-
-<p>Thus secondary education usually occupied the years
-between fourteen and eighteen, although the latter limit
-was in no way definitely fixed, and the same subjects
-might be studied at any age. In earlier days no doubt
-lads spent their time in continuing their musical
-studies: primary education could be conducted in a
-more leisurely fashion when there was still little to
-be learnt, and the lyre may have been deferred till
-this age, as Plato in similar circumstances defers
-it in the <cite>Laws</cite>. But in the days of Perikles knowledge
-began to increase and boys had more to learn.
-So the lyre was crowded into the first period of education,
-and a new series of secondary subjects arose. It
-was these years which were usually devoted to the four
-years’ course which was customary in the school of
-Isokrates. Before this date the time was, as a rule,
-spent in attending the lectures of the wandering
-Sophists or in picking up a smattering of philosophy.
-Among the subjects which thus formed a part of
-<a name="Page_56" id="Page_56"></a><span class="pageno">56</span>
-secondary education were mathematics of various
-kinds, more advanced literary criticism, a certain
-amount of natural history and science, a knowledge of
-the laws and constitution of Athens, a small quantity
-of philosophy, ethical, political, and metaphysical, and
-above all, rhetoric. Plato in his <cite>Republic</cite>, developing
-this Athenian system of secondary education, assigns
-to the years immediately preceding eighteen the theory
-of numbers, geometry, plane and solid, kinetics and
-harmonics, and expressly excludes dialectic as more
-suitable to a later age;<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_140" id="fnanchor_140"></a><a href="#footnote_140" class="fnanchor">[140]</a></span>
-in the <cite>Laws</cite>, prescribing
-for the whole population, not for a few selected intellects,
-he orders practical arithmetic, geometry, and
-enough astronomy to make the calendar intelligible.
-The pseudo-Platonic <cite>Axiochos</cite><span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_141" id="fnanchor_141"></a><a href="#footnote_141" class="fnanchor">[141]</a></span>
-ascribes to Prodikos
-the statement that “when a child grows older, he
-endures the tyranny of mathematicians, teachers of
-tactics, and ‘critics.’” These last are the professors
-of that curious criticism of poetry which is found, for
-instance, in the <cite>Protagoras</cite> as a subject of the lectures
-of that Sophist as well as of Hippias.</p>
-
-<p>At eighteen the young Athenian partially came of
-age. He then had to submit to a two years’ course of
-military training, of which the first year was spent in
-Athens and the second in the frontier forts and in
-camp. During this period he probably had little time
-for intellectual occupations. But when the military
-power of Athens collapsed under the Macedonian
-dominion, the military duties of the epheboi became
-voluntary, and their training was replaced by regular
-courses of philosophy and literature. The military
-system became a University, attended by a few young
-<a name="Page_57" id="Page_57"></a><span class="pageno">57</span>
-men of wealth and position and a good many foreigners.
-As the forerunner of the first University, the two
-years’ training of the epheboi may fitly receive the
-name of Tertiary Education, in spite of the fact that till
-the third century it involved only military instruction.</p>
-
-<p>Thus we have Athenian education divided into
-three stages: Primary from six to fourteen, Secondary
-from fourteen to eighteen, and Tertiary from eighteen
-to twenty; while gymnastic training extended over the
-whole period.</p>
-
-<p class="center">* * * * *</p>
-
-<p>Of these three stages the third alone was compulsory
-and provided by the State. The second was entirely
-voluntary, and only the richest and most leisured boys
-applied themselves to it. Gymnastics of some sort
-were rendered almost obligatory by the liability of every
-citizen to military and naval service at a moment’s
-notice; but they needed little encouragement. Of the
-primary subjects, letters were probably compulsory by
-law, and music was almost invariably taught. An old
-law, ascribed to Solon,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_142" id="fnanchor_142"></a><a href="#footnote_142" class="fnanchor">[142]</a></span>
-enacted that every boy should
-learn swimming and his letters; after which, the poorer
-might turn their attention to trade or farming, while
-the richer passed on to learn music, riding, gymnastics,
-hunting, and philosophy. In the <cite>Kriton</cite> of Plato the
-personified Laws of Athens, recounting to Sokrates the
-many services which they had done him, mention that
-they had “charged his father to educate him in Music
-and Letters.”<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_143" id="fnanchor_143"></a><a href="#footnote_143" class="fnanchor">[143]</a></span>
-But the Laws in Hellas include the
-customs, as well as the constitution, of a State. It was
-certainly customary for nearly every citizen at Athens to
-<a name="Page_58" id="Page_58"></a><span class="pageno">58</span>
-learn some music; but it was not compulsory. We
-meet no Athenian in literature who is ignorant of his
-letters; we meet several who know no music. In
-Aristophanes, Demosthenes and Nikias are on the lookout
-for the most vulgar and low-class man in Athens,
-in order that he may oust Kleon from popular favour,
-by outdoing him in vulgarity. They find a sausage-seller.
-But even this man knows his letters, though
-not very well.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_144" id="fnanchor_144"></a><a href="#footnote_144" class="fnanchor">[144]</a></span>
-Of music, however, he is ignorant,
-and he has never attended the lessons of a paidotribes,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_145" id="fnanchor_145"></a><a href="#footnote_145" class="fnanchor">[145]</a></span>
-though Kleon seems to expect him to have done so.
-Kleon, who is represented as an utter boor, is yet said
-to have attended a lyre-school.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_146" id="fnanchor_146"></a><a href="#footnote_146" class="fnanchor">[146]</a></span>
-In the <cite>Theages</cite><span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_147" id="fnanchor_147"></a><a href="#footnote_147" class="fnanchor">[147]</a></span>
-literature and lyre-playing and athletics are mentioned
-as the ordinary education of a gentleman. In fiercely
-democratic Athens every parent was eager to bring up
-his sons as gentlemen, and no doubt sent them through
-the whole course if he could possibly afford it. But the
-State attitude towards education, as distinct from the
-voluntary customs of the citizens, may be summarised
-in the words of Sokrates to Alkibiades: “No one, so
-to speak, cares a straw how you or any other Athenian
-is brought up.”<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_148" id="fnanchor_148"></a><a href="#footnote_148" class="fnanchor">[148]</a></span>
-</p>
-
-<p>The schoolmasters opened their schools as private
-enterprises, fixing for themselves the fees and the subjects
-taught. The parents chose what they thought
-a suitable school, according to their means and the
-subjects which they wished their sons to learn. Thus
-Sokrates says to his eldest son, Lamprokles,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_149" id="fnanchor_149"></a><a href="#footnote_149" class="fnanchor">[149]</a></span>
- “When
-<a name="Page_59" id="Page_59"></a><span class="pageno">59</span>
-boys seem old enough to learn anything, their parents
-teach them whatever they themselves know that is
-likely to be useful to them; subjects which they think
-others better qualified to teach they send them to
-school to learn, spending money upon this object.”
-This suggests that the poor may frequently have passed
-on their own knowledge of letters to their sons without
-the expense of a school. But all this was a private
-transaction between parent and teacher. The State
-interfered with the matter only so far as to impose
-certain moral regulations on the schools and the
-gymnasia, to fix the hours of opening and closing, and
-so forth, and to suggest that every boy should be
-taught his letters.</p>
-
-<p>The teaching of the elementary stages of Letters,
-that is, the three R’s, was, as will be shown later on,
-cheaply obtained, and was within the reach of the
-poorest. Music and athletics would naturally be more
-expensive, for they required much greater study and
-talents upon the part of their teachers. The State
-did take some steps to make these branches of education
-cheaper, and so throw them open to a larger number.</p>
-
-<p>Gymnasia and palaistrai were built at public expense,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_150" id="fnanchor_150"></a><a href="#footnote_150" class="fnanchor">[150]</a></span>
-that any one might go and exercise himself without
-charge. These buildings were also open to spectators,
-so that any one could acquire at any rate a rudimentary
-knowledge of boxing, wrestling, and the other branches
-of athletics, by watching his more proficient fellow-citizens
-practising them. The epheboi received instruction
-in athletic exercises at the cost of the State. But
-the children, so far as they received physical training
-in schools, must have received it in private palaistrai;
-their lessons are described as taking place “in the
-<a name="Page_60" id="Page_60"></a><span class="pageno">60</span>
-house of the paidotribes,” <ins title="en paidotribou">ἐν παιδοτρίβου</ins>&mdash;an idiom
-which always implies ownership or special rights; and
-the majority of palaistrai were private buildings, called
-by their owners’ names. Thus we hear of the palaistrai
-of Siburtios, of Taureas,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_151" id="fnanchor_151"></a><a href="#footnote_151" class="fnanchor">[151]</a></span>
-and so forth: Siburtios and
-Taureas were no doubt the paidotribai who taught
-there. In a later age, when the boys of different
-palaistrai ran torch races against one another, the
-palaistra of Timeas is victorious on two occasions, that
-of Antigenes once.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_152" id="fnanchor_152"></a><a href="#footnote_152" class="fnanchor">[152]</a></span>
-</p>
-
-<p>By the system of leitourgiai rich citizens were made
-chargeable for the expenses of the epheboi of their tribe
-who were training for the torch races. These races
-seem to have been the only branch of athletics which
-was thus endowed; however, they were numerous, even
-in the smaller country districts, so that many epheboi
-must have profited by this free training.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_153" id="fnanchor_153"></a><a href="#footnote_153" class="fnanchor">[153]</a></span>
- “Leitourgiai”
-also provided free instruction in chorus-dancing (which
-included singing as well as dancing) for such boys as
-were selected for competition. The rich “choregos”
-appointed for the year had to produce a chorus of boys
-belonging to his tribe for some festival, paying all the
-expenses of teaching and training them himself.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_154" id="fnanchor_154"></a><a href="#footnote_154" class="fnanchor">[154]</a></span>
-It
-is to this free school that the Solonic law refers when
-it mentions the “joint attendance of the boys and the
-dithyrambic choruses”; for it goes on to state that
-the ordinance with regard to this matter was that the
-“choregos” should be over forty.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_155" id="fnanchor_155"></a><a href="#footnote_155" class="fnanchor">[155]</a></span>
-In Demosthenes,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_156" id="fnanchor_156"></a><a href="#footnote_156" class="fnanchor">[156]</a></span>
-a certain Mantitheos, who had not been acknowledged
-by his father at the usual time, “attended school among
-<a name="Page_61" id="Page_61"></a><span class="pageno">61</span>
-the boys of the Hippothontid tribe to learn chorus-dancing”:
-had he been acknowledged, he would have
-gone to the Acamantid, his father’s tribe. No doubt,
-if the choregos was keen about gaining a victory, he
-would give a trial to more than the fifty boys required
-for a dithyrambic contest. In any case, provided that
-all the tribes competed, this one contest (and there
-were several in the course of a year) gave a free
-education to 500 boys. Xenophon notices that it
-was the “demos,” the poor majority, who mainly got
-the advantage of free training under gumnasiarchoi
-and choregoi:<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_157" id="fnanchor_157"></a><a href="#footnote_157" class="fnanchor">[157]</a></span>
-the rich naturally preferred to send
-their boys to more select schools.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_158" id="fnanchor_158"></a><a href="#footnote_158" class="fnanchor">[158]</a></span>
-</p>
-
-<p>Thus the more elementary stages of letters alone
-were compulsory at Athens, but music and gymnastics
-were almost universally taught, and the cost of instruction
-in these subjects was reduced in various ways by
-State action: the greater part might be learned for
-nothing. But parents needed little compulsion or
-encouragement to get their children taught. So much
-did the Hellenes regard education as a necessity for
-their boys, that when the Athenians were driven from
-their homes by Xerxes, and their women and children
-crossed over to Troizen, the hospitable Troizenians
-provided their guests with schoolmasters, so that not
-even in such a crisis might the boys be forced to take
-a holiday.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_159" id="fnanchor_159"></a><a href="#footnote_159" class="fnanchor">[159]</a></span>
-And when Mitulene wished to punish her
-<a name="Page_62" id="Page_62"></a><span class="pageno">62</span>
-revolted allies in the most severe way possible, she
-prevented them from teaching their children letters
-and music.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_160" id="fnanchor_160"></a><a href="#footnote_160" class="fnanchor">[160]</a></span>
-</p>
-
-<p>Of State action with regard to education in Hellas
-elsewhere than in Sparta, Crete, and Athens, little is
-known. But the Chalcidian cities in Sicily and Italy
-are said to have provided literary education at public
-expense and under public supervision.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_161" id="fnanchor_161"></a><a href="#footnote_161" class="fnanchor">[161]</a></span>
-The law enacting
-this is ascribed to the great lawgiver, Charondas,
-and, although he is a somewhat shadowy figure,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_162" id="fnanchor_162"></a><a href="#footnote_162" class="fnanchor">[162]</a></span>
-there
-must have been some foundation for the story, at
-any rate at a later date. During the Macedonian
-period kings and other rich men often bequeathed large
-sums of money to their favourite cities, in order to
-endow the educational system. We hear of this
-happening in Teos and at Delphi: in these places
-the parents, if they paid any fees at all, cannot have
-paid much. But there is no authority for any such
-endowments during the period which we are considering.</p>
-
-<p class="center">* * * * *</p>
-
-<p>But if education was neither enforced nor assisted
-to any considerable degree by the State, it was certainly
-encouraged by the prizes which were offered. Every
-city, and probably most villages, had local competitions
-annually, and in many cases more frequently
-still, in which some of the “events” were reserved for
-citizens, while others were open to all comers. There
-were separate prizes for different ages; the ordinary
-division was into boys and grown men, an intermediate
-class of “the beardless” being sometimes added. But
-in some Attic inscriptions the boys are divided into
-<a name="Page_63" id="Page_63"></a><span class="pageno">63</span>
-three groups, and in Chios the epheboi were so
-distributed.</p>
-
-<p>These competitions were no doubt largely athletic.
-But music was usually provided for as well, and in
-many places there were literary competitions also. At
-Athens the different <ins title="phratriai">φρατρίαι</ins> seem to have offered
-prizes annually on the Koureotis day of the Apatouria
-to the boys who recited best, the piece for recitation
-being chosen by each competitor. Kritias took part in
-the competition when ten years old.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_163" id="fnanchor_163"></a><a href="#footnote_163" class="fnanchor">[163]</a></span>
-From Teos we
-have a list of prizemen, belonging, it is true, to a later
-date; but it may be quoted, to give some idea of what
-the subjects might be.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_164" id="fnanchor_164"></a><a href="#footnote_164" class="fnanchor">[164]</a></span></p>
-
-<table summary="" class="small ">
-<tr><td class="center"><span class="decoration">Senior Class</span> (<span class="decoration">by age</span>).</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="left">For rhapsody, Zoïlos, son of Zoïlos.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="left">For reading, Zoïlos, son of Zoïlos.</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="center"><span class="decoration"><br />Middle Class.</span></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="left">For rhapsody, Metrodoros, son of Attalos.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="left">For reading, Dionusikles, son of Metrodoros.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="left">For general knowledge, Athenaios, son of Apollodoros.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="left">For painting, Dionusios, son of Dionusios.</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="center"><span class="decoration"><br />Junior Class.</span></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="left">For rhapsody, Herakles.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="left">For reading.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="left">For caligraphy.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="left">For torch race.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="left">For playing lyre with fingers.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="left">For playing lyre with plektron.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="left">For singing to lyre.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="left">For reciting tragic verse (tragedy).</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="left">For reciting comedy.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="left">For reciting lyric verse.</td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>From Chios we have the following<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_165" id="fnanchor_165"></a><a href="#footnote_165" class="fnanchor">[165]</a>:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<p class="blockquote">When Hermesileos, Dinos, and Nikias were gumnasiarchoi,
-the following boys and epheboi were victorious in the competitions
-and offered libations to the Muses and Herakles from
-the sums which were given to them in accordance with the
-decree of the people, when Lusias was taster of the offerings:&mdash;</p>
-<a name="Page_64" id="Page_64"></a><span class="pageno">64</span>
-
-<table summary="" class="small">
-<colgroup>
- <col span="1" style="width: 10em;" />
- <col span="1" style="width: 10em;" />
-</colgroup>
-
-<tr><td class="left" colspan="2">For reading, Agathokles.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="left" colspan="2">For rhapsody, Miltiades.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="left" colspan="2">For playing lyre with fingers, Xenon.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="left" colspan="2">For playing lyre, Kleoites.</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="center" colspan="2"><span class="decoration">Long Distance Race</span> (varied from<br />2¼ miles to about ¾ mile).</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="left">Boys</td>
- <td class="left">Asklepiades.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="left">Junior epheboi</td>
- <td class="left">Dionusios.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="left">Middle &emsp;”</td>
- <td class="left">Timokles.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="left">Senior &thinsp;&emsp;”</td>
- <td class="left">Moschion.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="left">Men &emsp;&emsp;”</td>
- <td class="left">Aischrion.</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="center" colspan="2"><span class="decoration"><br />Stadion</span> (200 yards).</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="left">Boys</td>
- <td class="left"><span class="person">Athenikon</span>.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="left">Junior epheboi</td>
- <td class="left">Hestiaios.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="left">Middle &emsp;”</td>
- <td class="left"><span class="person">Apollonios</span>.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="left">Senior &thinsp;&emsp;”</td>
- <td class="left">Artemon.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="left">Men &emsp;&emsp;”</td>
- <td class="left">Metrodoros.</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="center" colspan="2"><span class="decoration"><br />Diaulos</span> (400 yards).</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="left">Boys</td>
- <td class="left"><span class="person">Athenikon</span>.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="left">Junior epheboi</td>
- <td class="left">Hubristos.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="left">Middle &emsp;”</td>
- <td class="left">Melantes.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="left">Senior &thinsp;&emsp;”</td>
- <td class="left"><span class="person">Apollonios</span>.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="left">Men &emsp;&emsp;”</td>
- <td class="left">Menis.</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td></td>
- <td class="lefthang">(Apollonios seems to have been so
-good that, though a middle ephebos,
-he competed in and won the
-senior ephebos’ race here, unless
-there were two boys of the same
-name.)</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="center" colspan="2"><span class="decoration"><br />Wrestling.</span></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="left">Boys</td>
- <td class="left"><span class="person">Athenikon</span>.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="left">Junior epheboi</td>
- <td class="left">Demetrios.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="left">Middle &emsp;”</td>
- <td class="left">Moschos.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="left">Senior &thinsp;&emsp;”</td>
- <td class="left">Theodotos.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="left">Men &emsp;&emsp;”</td>
- <td class="left">Apellas.</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="center" colspan="2"><span class="decoration"><br />Boxing.</span></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="left">Boys</td>
- <td class="left">Herakleides.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="center" colspan="2">(The rest is wanting.)</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="lefthang" colspan="2">(Notice the three victories of the boy Athenikon.)</td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>At Thespiai in Boiotia<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_166" id="fnanchor_166"></a><a href="#footnote_166" class="fnanchor">[166]</a></span>
-there were prizes for senior
-and junior boys in the various races, and in boxing,
-wrestling, pankration, and pentathlon, besides open
-prizes for poetry and music of all kinds. Attic inscriptions
-arrange the events thus<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_167" id="fnanchor_167"></a><a href="#footnote_167" class="fnanchor">[167]</a></span>:&mdash;</p>
-
-<table summary="" class="small together">
-<tr><td class="center" colspan="2"><span class="decoration">Stadion.</span></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="left">Junior</td>
- <td class="left">Boys.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="left">Middle</td>
- <td class="left">Boys.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="left">Senior</td>
- <td class="left">Boys.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="left">Boys</td>
- <td class="left">Open.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="center" colspan="2">Men.</td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<table summary="" class="small together">
-<tr><td class="center" colspan="2"><span class="decoration">Diaulos.</span></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="left">Junior</td>
- <td class="left">Boys.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="left">Middle</td>
- <td class="left">Boys.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="left">Senior</td>
- <td class="left">Boys.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="left">Boys </td>
- <td class="left">Open.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="center" colspan="2">Men.</td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<table summary="" class="small together">
-<tr><td class="center" colspan="2"><span class="decoration">Fighting in Heavy Arms.</span></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="left">Junior</td>
- <td class="left">Boys.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="left">Middle</td>
- <td class="left">Boys.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="left">Senior</td>
- <td class="left">Boys.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="left">Epheboi.</td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<a name="Page_65" id="Page_65"></a><span class="pageno">65</span>
-<p>The Olympian and Pythian festivals, however, had
-only a single series of contests for <span class="lock">boys:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<table summary="" class="small together">
-<tr><td></td>
- <td class="center"><span class="decoration">Olympia.</span></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="right">Boys.</td>
- <td class="left">Stadion (<abbr title="Pindar Olympian 14">Pind. <cite>Ol.</cite> xiv.</abbr>).</td></tr>
-<tr><td></td><td class="left">Boxing (<abbr title="Pindar Olympian 10, 11">Pind. <cite>Ol.</cite> x., xi.</abbr>).</td></tr>
-<tr><td></td><td class="left">Wrestling (<abbr title="Pindar Olympian 8">Pind. <cite>Ol.</cite> viii.</abbr>).</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="right">(only in 628 <span class="sc">B.C.</span>)</td>
- <td class="left">Pentathlon.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="right">(not till 200 <span class="sc">B.C.</span>)</td>
- <td class="left">Pankration.</td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<table summary="" class="small together">
-<tr><td></td>
- <td class="center"><span class="decoration">Pythia.</span></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="right">Boys.</td>
- <td class="left">Long Distance Race.</td></tr>
-<tr><td></td><td class="left">Diaulos (400 yards) (<abbr title="Pindar Pythian 10">Pind. <cite>Puth.</cite> x.</abbr>).</td></tr>
-<tr><td></td><td class="left">Stadion (200 yards) (<abbr title="Pindar Pythian 11">Pind. <cite>Puth.</cite> xi.</abbr>).</td></tr>
-<tr><td></td><td class="left">Boxing.</td></tr>
-<tr><td></td><td class="left">Wrestling (Bacchul. <abbr title="11">xi.</abbr>).</td></tr>
-<tr><td></td><td class="left">Pankration (not till 346 <span class="sc">B.C.</span>).</td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="unindent">But at Nemea both
-pentathlon<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_168" id="fnanchor_168"></a><a href="#footnote_168" class="fnanchor">[168]</a></span>
-and pankration<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_169" id="fnanchor_169"></a><a href="#footnote_169" class="fnanchor">[169]</a></span>
-for
-boys had already been established by Pindar’s time, as
-well as the more usual contests.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_170" id="fnanchor_170"></a><a href="#footnote_170" class="fnanchor">[170]</a></span>
-</p>
-
-<p>How far individual schoolmasters, as distinct from
-the State, gave prizes to their pupils, is little known;
-an epigram in the <cite>Anthology</cite> supplies the only evidence,
-by narrating that “Konnaros received eighty knucklebones
-because he wrote beautifully, better than the
-other boys.”<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_171" id="fnanchor_171"></a><a href="#footnote_171" class="fnanchor">[171]</a></span>
-But probably as a general rule the task
-of rewarding merit was left to the public contests.</p>
-
-<p class="center">* * * * *</p>
-
-<p>Thus the State did much to encourage, if it did
-little to assist or enforce, education. With such
-splendid rewards before them, boys were probably
-quite eager to attend school, or at any rate the palaistra.
-As soon as they were old enough to go to school,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_172" id="fnanchor_172"></a><a href="#footnote_172" class="fnanchor">[172]</a></span>
-they
-<a name="Page_66" id="Page_66"></a><span class="pageno">66</span>
-were entrusted to an elderly slave,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_173" id="fnanchor_173"></a><a href="#footnote_173" class="fnanchor">[173]</a></span>
-who had to follow
-his master’s boys about wherever they went and never
-let them go out of his sight.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_174" id="fnanchor_174"></a><a href="#footnote_174" class="fnanchor">[174]</a></span>
-This was the paidagogos&mdash;a
-mixture of nurse, footman, chaperon, and tutor&mdash;who
-is so prominent a figure on the vases and in the
-literature of classical Hellas. There was only one for
-the family, so that all the boys had to go about together
-and to attend the same schools and the same palaistrai
-at the same time.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_175" id="fnanchor_175"></a><a href="#footnote_175" class="fnanchor">[175]</a></span>
-He waited on them in the house,
-carried their books or lyres to school, sat and watched
-them in the schoolroom, and kept a strict eye upon
-their manners and morality in the streets and the
-gymnasia. Thus, for instance, in Plato, Lusis and
-Menexenos have their paidagogoi in attendance at the
-palaistra, who come and force them away from the
-absorbing conversation of Sokrates, when it is time for
-them to go home.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_176" id="fnanchor_176"></a><a href="#footnote_176" class="fnanchor">[176]</a></span>
-On a vase these attendants may
-be seen sitting on stools behind their charges, in the
-schools of letters and music, with long and suggestive
-canes in their hands.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_177" id="fnanchor_177"></a><a href="#footnote_177" class="fnanchor">[177]</a></span>
-A careful parent would, of
-course, see that a slave who was to occupy so responsible
-a position was worthy of it: but great carelessness
-seems often to have been shown in this matter. The
-paidagogoi of Lusis and Menexenos, boys of rank and
-position, had a bad accent, and on a festival day, it is
-true, were slightly intoxicated.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_178" id="fnanchor_178"></a><a href="#footnote_178" class="fnanchor">[178]</a></span>
-Plutarch notices that
-<a name="Page_67" id="Page_67"></a><span class="pageno">67</span>
-in his time parents often selected for this office slaves
-who were of no use for any other purpose.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_179" id="fnanchor_179"></a><a href="#footnote_179" class="fnanchor">[179]</a></span>
-Xenophon,
-feeling the demerits of the Athenian custom, commends
-the Spartans, who entrust the boys not to slaves, but
-to public officials of the highest rank.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_180" id="fnanchor_180"></a><a href="#footnote_180" class="fnanchor">[180]</a></span>
-But in well-regulated
-households the paidagogos was often a most
-worthy and valuable servant. Sikinnos, who attended
-the children of Themistokles in this capacity, was
-entrusted by his master with the famous message to
-Xerxes, which brought on the battle of Salamis; he
-was afterwards rewarded with his freedom, the citizenship
-of Thespiai, and a substantial sum of money.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_181" id="fnanchor_181"></a><a href="#footnote_181" class="fnanchor">[181]</a></span>
-The custom of employing these male-nurses dated back
-to early times at Athens: for Solon made regulations
-about them.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_182" id="fnanchor_182"></a><a href="#footnote_182" class="fnanchor">[182]</a></span>
-</p>
-
-<p>Boys were entrusted to paidagogoi as soon as they
-went to school at six. This tutelage might last till
-the boy was eighteen<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_183" id="fnanchor_183"></a><a href="#footnote_183" class="fnanchor">[183]</a></span>
-and came of age; but more
-frequently it stopped earlier. Xenophon,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_184" id="fnanchor_184"></a><a href="#footnote_184" class="fnanchor">[184]</a></span>
-in his wish
-to disparage everything not Spartan, declares that in
-all other States the boys were set free from paidagogoi
-and schoolmasters as soon as they became <ins title="meirakia">μειράκια</ins>,
-<span class="decoration">i.e.</span> at about fourteen or fifteen. The conjunction of
-schoolmasters suggests the explanation of the variations
-in age. When an elder brother ceased to attend
-school, and his younger brothers were still pursuing
-their studies, there being only one paidagogos, he had
-to be left unattended. But in cases where there was
-only one son, or where the eldest of several stayed on
-<a name="Page_68" id="Page_68"></a><span class="pageno">68</span>
-at school until he came of age, he would have the
-paidagogos to attend him until he was his own master.</p>
-
-<p>The life of such an attendant must have been an
-anxious one in many cases. Plato compares his relations
-towards his charges with the relations of an
-invalid towards his health: “He has to follow the
-disease wherever it leads, being unable to cure it, and
-he spends his life in perpetual anxiety with no time for
-anything else.”<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_185" id="fnanchor_185"></a><a href="#footnote_185" class="fnanchor">[185]</a></span>
-With unruly boys of different ages,
-and consequently of different tastes and desires, the
-slave must have been often in a difficult position.
-He had, however, the right of inflicting corporal
-punishment.</p>
-
-<p>The chief object of the paidagogos was to safeguard
-the morals of his charges. Boys were expected to be
-as modest and quiet in their whole behaviour, and as
-carefully chaperoned, as young girls. Parents told
-the schoolmasters to bestow much more attention upon
-the boy’s behaviour than upon his letters and music.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_186" id="fnanchor_186"></a><a href="#footnote_186" class="fnanchor">[186]</a></span>
-This attitude was characteristic of Athens from
-the first. The school laws of Solon, as quoted by
-Aischines, deal wholly with morality. He gives the
-following account of them<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_187" id="fnanchor_187"></a><a href="#footnote_187" class="fnanchor">[187]</a>:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<p class="blockquote">“The old lawgivers stated expressly what sort of
-life the free boy ought to lead and how he ought to
-be brought up; they also dealt with the manners of
-lads and men of other ages.” “In the case of the
-schoolmasters, to whom we are compelled to entrust
-our children, although their livelihood depends upon
-their good character, and bad behaviour is ruinous to
-them, yet the lawgiver obviously distrusts them. For
-he expressly states, first, the hour at which the free
-<a name="Page_69" id="Page_69"></a><span class="pageno">69</span>
-boy ought to go to school; secondly, how many other
-boys are to be present in the school; and then at what
-hour he is to leave. He forbids the schoolmasters to
-open their schools and the paidotribai their palaistrai
-before sunrise, and orders them to close before sunset,
-being very suspicious of the empty streets and of the
-darkness. Then he dealt with the boys who attended
-schools, as to who they should be and of what ages;
-and with the official who is to oversee these matters.
-He dealt too with the regulation of the paidagogoi, and
-with the festival of the Muses in the schools and of
-Hermes in the palaistrai. Finally, he laid down
-regulations about the joint attendance of the boys and
-the round of dithyrambic dances; for he directed that
-the Choregos should be over forty.”</p>
-
-<p class="blockquote">“No one over the age of boyhood might enter
-while the boys were in school, except the son, brother,
-or son-in-law of the master: the penalty of infringing
-this regulation was death. At the festival of Hermes
-the person in charge of the gymnasium<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_188" id="fnanchor_188"></a><a href="#footnote_188" class="fnanchor">[188]</a></span>
-was not to
-allow any one over age to accompany the boys in any
-way: unless he excluded such persons from the
-gymnasium, he was to come under the law of corrupting
-free boys.”</p>
-
-<p>It will be noticed that these regulations are entirely
-concerned with morality: they safeguard an existing
-system. They prescribe neither the methods nor the
-subjects of education; for with such matters the
-Athenian government did not interfere. But over
-the question of morals it becomes unexpectedly
-tyrannous, and makes the most minute regulations
-worthy of the strictest bureaucracy. It interfered on
-<a name="Page_70" id="Page_70"></a><span class="pageno">70</span>
-this point in other ways also. The solemn council on
-the Areiopagos had a special supervision over the
-young, from Solon’s time onward; this was partially
-taken away from it by Ephialtes and Perikles, but
-the <cite>Axiochos</cite> shows that, though in abeyance, it continued
-to exist; in the middle of the fourth century,
-however, Isokrates laments that it had fallen into disuse.</p>
-
-<p>The <cite>Axiochos</cite> also states that the ten Sophronistai,
-elected to guard the morals of the epheboi, exercised
-control over lads also. These officials probably took
-their rise in the days of Solon: the regulation that
-they must be over forty harmonises with the other
-enactments of those days; and, although they died out
-at the end of the fourth century, they were revived under
-the Roman Empire. Now it is most unlikely that
-the archaistic legislators of imperial times would have
-revived an office which had only existed during the
-closing decades of the fourth century. Solon is known
-to have appointed a magistracy specially to deal with
-the children;<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_189" id="fnanchor_189"></a><a href="#footnote_189" class="fnanchor">[189]</a></span>
-and, if these magistrates were not the
-Sophronistai, all trace of his creation has been lost,
-which is most unlikely to have happened. So the
-Sophronistai probably date from early times. Their
-duty was a general supervision of the morals of the
-young; their chief function would be to prosecute,
-on behalf of the State, parents and schoolmasters
-who infringed Solon’s moral regulations. But such
-prosecutions would usually be undertaken by private
-individuals concerned in the case, and so this magistracy
-tended to become a sinecure. It may even have ceased
-to exist after the fall of the Areiopagos. But it
-seems to have revived under the restored democracy
-<!--Blank Page-->
-<a name="Page_71" id="Page_71"></a><span class="pageno">71</span>
-for a while (if the <cite>Axiochos</cite> belongs to Aischines the
-Sokratic), to sink again in the middle of the century.
-At the close of the century it revives once more with
-the changes in the ephebic system, and finally perishes
-when the epheboi became too few to need ten officers to
-supervise their morals. An account of the Sophronistai
-of this later period will be given in connection with the
-epheboi.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter together" style="width: 500px">
-<p class="captionleft">PLATE <abbr title="Two">II.</abbr></p>
- <a name="i02" id="i02"></a>
- <img src="images/2.jpg"
- width="500" height="263"
- alt="Illustration: Flute Lesson, Boy's Turn'"
- />
- <p class="caption">THE FLUTE LESSON&mdash;THE BOY’S TURN<br />
-<cite lang="de" xml:lang="de">Wiener Vorlegeblätter</cite>, Series C, Plate 4.<br />
-From a Kulix by Hieron, now at Vienna.</p>
-</div><!--end illustration-->
-
-<p>The strategoi<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_190" id="fnanchor_190"></a><a href="#footnote_190" class="fnanchor">[190]</a></span>
-exercised a superintendence over the
-epheboi during their two years’ training as recruits, as
-would naturally be expected. Late in the fourth century
-they appear also to have been connected with the local
-schools in Attica; an inscription at Eleusis, which
-Girard assigns to 320 <span class="sc">B.C.</span>, thanks the strategos
-Derkulos for the diligence which he had shown in
-supervising the education of the children there.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_191" id="fnanchor_191"></a><a href="#footnote_191" class="fnanchor">[191]</a></span>
-Whether they exercised such functions in the days
-when their military duties were more important, is
-more than doubtful. But any Athenian magistrate
-could interest himself in the schools, no doubt, and
-intervene to check abuses.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_192" id="fnanchor_192"></a><a href="#footnote_192" class="fnanchor">[192]</a></span>
-</p>
-
-<p class="center">* * * * *</p>
-
-<p>In the period of juvenile emancipation and increasing
-luxury and indulgence for children which marked
-the closing decades of the fifth century, it became
-customary for conservative thinkers to look back with
-longing, and no doubt idealising, eyes to the “good
-old times.” The sixth and early fifth centuries came,
-probably unjustly, to be regarded as the ideal age of
-education, when children learned obedience and morality,
-and were not pampered and depraved; when they were
-<a name="Page_72" id="Page_72"></a><span class="pageno">72</span>
-beautiful and healthy, not pale-faced, stunted, and over-educated.</p>
-
-<p>Listen to Aristophanes,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_193" id="fnanchor_193"></a><a href="#footnote_193" class="fnanchor">[193]</a></span>
-yearning for “the good old
-style of education, in the days when Justice still prevailed
-over Rhetoric, and good morals were still in fashion.
-Then children were seen and not heard; then the boys
-of each hamlet and ward walked in orderly procession
-along the roads on their way to the lyre-school,&mdash;no
-overcoats, though it snowed cats and dogs. Then,
-while they stood up square&mdash;no lounging&mdash;the master
-taught them a fine old patriotic song like ‘Pallas,
-city-sacker dread,’<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_194" id="fnanchor_194"></a><a href="#footnote_194" class="fnanchor">[194]</a></span>
-or ‘A cry that echoes afar,’<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_195" id="fnanchor_195"></a><a href="#footnote_195" class="fnanchor">[195]</a></span>
-set
-to a good old-fashioned tune. If any one tried any
-vulgar trills and twiddles and odes where the metre
-varies, such as Phrunis and Co. use nowadays, he got
-a tremendous thrashing for disrespect to the Muses.”
-While being taught by the paidotribes, too, they
-behaved modestly, and did not spend their time ogling
-their admirers. “At meals children were not allowed
-to grab up the dainties or giggle or cross their feet.”
-“This was the education which produced the heroes
-of Marathon.… This taught the boys to avoid the
-Agora, keep away from the Baths, be ashamed at what
-is disgraceful, be courteous to elders, honour their
-parents, and be an impersonation of Modesty&mdash;instead
-of running after ballet-girls. They passed their days
-in the gymnasia, keeping their bodies in good condition,
-not mouthing quibbles in the Agora. Each spent his
-time with some well-mannered lad of his own age,
-running races in the Akademeia under the sacred olives,
-amid a fragrance of smilax and leisure and white
-poplar, rejoicing in the springtide when plane-tree and
-<a name="Page_73" id="Page_73"></a><span class="pageno">73</span>
-elm whisper together.” All the voices of generations
-of boys, bound down to indoor studies when wood and
-field and river are calling them, the complaint of ages
-of fevered hurry and bustle, looking back with regret on
-the days of “leisure” and “springtide,” seem to echo in
-Aristophanes’ lament for the ways that were no more.</p>
-
-<p>“This education,” he goes on, “produced a good
-chest, sound complexion, broad shoulders, small tongue;
-the new style produces pale faces, small shoulders,
-narrow chest, and long tongue, and makes the boy
-confuse Honour with Dishonour: it fills the Baths,
-empties the Palaistra.”</p>
-
-<p>The next witness to be called is Isokrates. He is
-somewhat prejudiced by his dream of restoring the
-Areiopagos to its old power, but he is an educational
-expert and his evidence is supported by that of many
-others. In the days when the Areiopagos had the
-superintendence of morals, he says,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_196" id="fnanchor_196"></a><a href="#footnote_196" class="fnanchor">[196]</a></span>
-“the young did
-not spend their time in the gambling dens, and with
-flute-girls and company of that sort, as they do now,
-but they remained true to the manner of life which was
-laid down for them.… They avoided the Agora
-so much, that, if ever they were compelled to pass
-through it, they did so with obvious modesty and self-control.
-To contradict or insult an elder was at that
-time considered a worse offence than ill-treatment of
-parents is considered now. To eat or drink in a tavern
-was a thing that not even a self-respecting servant
-would think of doing then; for they practised good
-manners, not vulgarity.”</p>
-
-<p>Call Plato next.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_197" id="fnanchor_197"></a><a href="#footnote_197" class="fnanchor">[197]</a></span>
-“In a democratic state the schoolmaster
-is afraid of his pupils and flatters them, and the
-pupils despise both schoolmaster and paidagogos. The
-<a name="Page_74" id="Page_74"></a><span class="pageno">74</span>
-young expect the same treatment as the old, and contradict
-them and quarrel with them. In fact, seniors
-have to flatter their juniors, in order not to be thought
-morose old dotards.”</p>
-
-<p>The counts of the indictment are luxury, bad
-manners, contempt for authority, disrespect to elders,
-and a love for chatter in place of exercise. The old
-regime had strictly forbidden luxury. Warm baths
-had been regarded as unmanly, and were even coupled
-with drunkenness by Hermippos.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_198" id="fnanchor_198"></a><a href="#footnote_198" class="fnanchor">[198]</a></span>
-The boys had only
-worn a single garment, the sleeveless chiton, a custom
-which survived till late times in Sparta and Crete; but
-at Athens they began to wear the <ins title="himation">ἱμάτιον</ins> or overcoat as
-well. Xenophon, blaming parents “in the rest of
-Hellas” (<span class="decoration">i.e.</span> elsewhere than in Sparta), says: “They
-make their boy’s feet soft by giving him shoes, and
-pamper his body with changes of clothes; they also
-allow him as much food as his stomach can contain.”<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_199" id="fnanchor_199"></a><a href="#footnote_199" class="fnanchor">[199]</a></span>
-Children began to be the tyrants, not the slaves, of
-their households. They no longer rose from their
-seats when an elder entered the room; they contradicted
-their parents, chattered before company, gobbled
-up the dainties at table, and committed various offences
-against Hellenic tastes, such as crossing their legs.
-They tyrannised over the paidagogoi and schoolmasters.
-Alkibiades even smacked a literature-master. A similar
-change came over the position of children in England
-during the latter half of the nineteenth century. If
-Maria Edgeworth could have met a modern child, she
-would have uttered quite Aristophanic diatribes against
-the decay of good manners.</p>
-
-<p>With this change went a more serious matter, a
-change of tone. Whether the old days were as moral
-<a name="Page_75" id="Page_75"></a><span class="pageno">75</span>
-as the conservatives supposed, may be doubted; but
-the atmosphere of Periclean and Socratic Athens, as
-represented by all its literary lights, was certainly most
-unsuitable for the young. Perhaps general morality
-was no worse, but the immorality was no longer concealed
-from the children. The old laws which had
-excluded unsuitable company from the schools and
-palaistrai were neglected, and these educational buildings
-became the resort of all the fashionable loungers
-of Athens.</p>
-
-<p>The preference given to conversation over exercise
-was a feature of the age. In part, it was a preference
-for intellectual as against purely physical education.
-The free discussion with children of ethical subjects
-probably ceased with the death of Sokrates; this can
-hardly be regretted, if Plato’s evidence as to the nature
-of Socratic dialogues is to be believed. From the
-importance which Plato gives to gymnastics as a
-corrective to exclusive <ins title="mousikê">μουσική</ins> even in the education of
-his highly intellectual Philosopher-Kings, we may suspect
-that the revolt against excessive athletics at Athens, of
-which Euripides had been the leader, had gone too far,
-and that a reaction was needed. Certainly the Athenians
-do not distinguish themselves for pluck or energy in
-the fourth century: in Platonic phrase, the temper
-of their resolution had been melted away by their
-exclusive devotion to intellectual and artistic pursuits.</p>
-
-<p>Let me close this subject, however, with a more
-pleasing picture of that <ins title="aidôs">αἰδώς</ins> or modesty at which the
-older education had aimed. It is taken from the midst
-of that brilliant but corrupt Socratic Athens.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_200" id="fnanchor_200"></a><a href="#footnote_200" class="fnanchor">[200]</a></span>
-Young
-Autolukos had won the boys’ contest for the pankration
-at the great Panathenaic festival. As a treat,
-<a name="Page_76" id="Page_76"></a><span class="pageno">76</span>
-Kallias, a friend of his father, had taken him to the
-horse-races, and afterwards invited him out to dinner
-with his father Lukon: such a dignity was rarely
-accorded to an Athenian boy.</p>
-
-<p>The boy sits at table, while the grown men recline.
-Some one asked him what he was most proud of&mdash;“Your
-victory, I suppose?” He blushed and said, “No, I’m
-not.” Every one was delighted to hear his voice, for
-he had not said a word so far. “Of what then?”
-some one asked. “Of my father,” replied the boy,
-and cuddled up against him.</p>
-
-<p>These shy, blushing boys were a feature of the age.
-The stricter parents, knowing the dangers which surrounded
-their sons, tried to keep them entirely from
-any knowledge or experience of the world.</p>
-
-<p class="center">* * * * *</p>
-
-<p>As far as can be discovered from the somewhat
-fragmentary evidence, the Athenian type of education
-was prevalent throughout the civilised Hellenic world,
-with the exception of Crete and Lakedaimon, which
-had systems of their own. Xenophon, in praising the
-Spartan system and contrasting it with that which was
-prevalent in neighbouring countries, ascribes to what he
-calls “the rest of Hellas” educational customs and
-arrangements exactly similar to those which are found
-to have existed at Athens. His statement is borne
-out by other evidence. Chios certainly had a School
-of Letters before 494 <span class="sc">B.C.</span>; for a building of this
-sort collapsed in that year, destroying all but one of
-the 120 pupils.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_201" id="fnanchor_201"></a><a href="#footnote_201" class="fnanchor">[201]</a></span>
-Boiotia, byword for stupidity, had
-schools even in the smaller towns. A small place like
-Mukalessos had more than one; for a detachment of
-wild Thracian mercenaries in the pay of Athens fell
-<a name="Page_77" id="Page_77"></a><span class="pageno">77</span>
-upon the town at daybreak one morning during the
-Peloponnesian War, and entering “the largest school
-in the place,” killed all the boys.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_202" id="fnanchor_202"></a><a href="#footnote_202" class="fnanchor">[202]</a></span>
-Arkadia had an
-equally bad reputation; yet, according to Polubios,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_203" id="fnanchor_203"></a><a href="#footnote_203" class="fnanchor">[203]</a></span>
-in
-every Arcadian town the boys were compelled by law
-to learn to sing. Troizen must have had schools in
-480, when she provided them for her Athenian guests.
-Aelian vouches for schools in Lesbos,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_204" id="fnanchor_204"></a><a href="#footnote_204" class="fnanchor">[204]</a></span>
-Pausanias<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_205" id="fnanchor_205"></a><a href="#footnote_205" class="fnanchor">[205]</a></span>
-for a
-school of sixty boys in Astupalaia in 496 <span class="sc">B.C.</span> The
-poet Sophocles dined with a master of letters whose
-school was either in Eretria or Eruthrai.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_206" id="fnanchor_206"></a><a href="#footnote_206" class="fnanchor">[206]</a></span>
-The
-inscriptions show that before the third century there
-were flourishing schools in most of the islands.</p>
-
-<p>Gymnastic education must have gone on in every
-Hellenic city, for the athletic victors at the great games
-come from every part. Musical training too was
-required for the dancing and singing which were
-universal throughout Hellas; but how far the lyre was
-taught must remain doubtful. In Boiotia the flute
-replaced the lyre in the schools. But it may be taken
-for granted that letters, some sort of music, and gymnastics
-were taught in every part of civilised Hellas,
-with the possible exception that letters may not have
-been taught at Sparta.</p>
-
-<p>Secondary Education, as long as it was supplied by
-the Sophists, reached every village in the Hellenic
-world; later, it had a tendency to be confined to the
-large towns. The Tertiary system of military training
-and special gymnastics for the epheboi would seem, from
-the scanty evidence of the inscriptions, to have been
-well-nigh universal.</p>
-
-<p>I will now proceed to give a more detailed account
-<a name="Page_78" id="Page_78"></a><span class="pageno">78</span>
-of the several branches of this widespread educational
-system. As the evidence comes almost entirely from
-Athens, my description will deal in the main with
-Athenian education; but, as the same type prevailed
-throughout the greater part of Hellas, the description
-may be taken as applying to the other cities also.</p>
-
-<p class="p2 footnote"> <a name="footnote_98" id="footnote_98"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_98"><span class="muchsmaller">[98]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Herodotos">Herod.</abbr> <abbr title="two">ii.</abbr> 167. Corinth was an exception.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_99" id="footnote_99"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_99"><span class="muchsmaller">[99]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite>Laws</cite>, 846 <span class="sc lowercase">D</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_100" id="footnote_100"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_100"><span class="muchsmaller">[100]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Aristotle">Arist.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Politics">Pol.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="eight">viii.</abbr> 2. 4.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_101" id="footnote_101"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_101"><span class="muchsmaller">[101]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Xenophon">Xen.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Economics">Econ.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="four">iv.</abbr> 3. Sitting was regarded as a slavish attitude, since the free citizen
-mostly stood or lay down. <abbr title="Xenophon">Xen.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Economics">Econ.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="four">iv.</abbr> 3.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_102" id="footnote_102"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_102"><span class="muchsmaller">[102]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite><abbr title="Protagoras">Protag.</abbr></cite> 328 <span class="sc lowercase">A</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_103" id="footnote_103"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_103"><span class="muchsmaller">[103]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Xenophon">Xen.</abbr> <cite>Revenues</cite>, <abbr title="two">ii.</abbr> 2.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_104" id="footnote_104"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_104"><span class="muchsmaller">[104]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite>Kleitophon</cite>, 409 <span class="sc lowercase">B</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_105" id="footnote_105"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_105"><span class="muchsmaller">[105]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite><abbr title="Republic">Rep.</abbr></cite> 421 <span class="sc lowercase">E</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_106" id="footnote_106"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_106"><span class="muchsmaller">[106]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite><abbr title="Gorgias">Gorg.</abbr></cite> 514 <span class="sc lowercase">B</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_107" id="footnote_107"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_107"><span class="muchsmaller">[107]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite><abbr title="Republic">Rep.</abbr></cite> 467 <span class="sc lowercase">A</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_108" id="footnote_108"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_108"><span class="muchsmaller">[108]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Aristophanes">Aristoph.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Acharnians">Acharn.</abbr></cite> 1032.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_109" id="footnote_109"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_109"><span class="muchsmaller">[109]</span></a>
-The fifth-century comic poet.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_110" id="footnote_110"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_110"><span class="muchsmaller">[110]</span></a>
-Plutarch, <cite>Solon</cite>, 22.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_111" id="footnote_111"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_111"><span class="muchsmaller">[111]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite>Laws</cite>, 643 <span class="sc lowercase">E</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_112" id="footnote_112"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_112"><span class="muchsmaller">[112]</span></a>
-Except possibly in Chios and Lokris, and of course in Sparta.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_113" id="footnote_113"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_113"><span class="muchsmaller">[113]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Thucidides">Thuc.</abbr> <abbr title="two">ii.</abbr> 45. 4.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_114" id="footnote_114"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_114"><span class="muchsmaller">[114]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Xenophon">Xen.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Economics">Econ.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="seven">vii.</abbr> 5.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_115" id="footnote_115"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_115"><span class="muchsmaller">[115]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Xenophon">Xen.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Memorabilia">Mem.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="two">ii.</abbr> 7.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_116" id="footnote_116"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_116"><span class="muchsmaller">[116]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite><abbr title="Republic">Rep.</abbr></cite> 455 <span class="sc lowercase">C</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_117" id="footnote_117"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_117"><span class="muchsmaller">[117]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite>Laws</cite>, 805 <span class="sc lowercase">E</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_118" id="footnote_118"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_118"><span class="muchsmaller">[118]</span></a>
-As in Lusias, <cite><abbr title="against">ag.</abbr> Diogeiton</cite>, 32. 28.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_119" id="footnote_119"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_119"><span class="muchsmaller">[119]</span></a>
-In the <cite><abbr title="Economics">Econ.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="seven">vii.</abbr> 10.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_120" id="footnote_120"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_120"><span class="muchsmaller">[120]</span></a>
-Thus the <cite>Axiochos</cite> (366 <span class="sc lowercase">D</span>) puts seven years as the age at which grammatistai
-and paidotribai began. Plato (<cite>Laws</cite>, 794) says six; Aristotle (<cite><abbr title="Politics">Pol.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="seven">vii.</abbr> 17) about
-five; Xenophon (<cite><abbr title="Contitution of the Lacedaemonians">Constit. of Lak.</abbr></cite> ii.) “as soon as the children begin to understand.”</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_121" id="footnote_121"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_121"><span class="muchsmaller">[121]</span></a>
-Aesop was popular then, as now. This is the <ins title="mousikê">μουσική</ins> anterior to <ins title="gymnastikê">γυμναστική</ins>,
-so keenly criticised in the <cite>Republic</cite>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_122" id="footnote_122"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_122"><span class="muchsmaller">[122]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite><abbr title="Protagoras">Protag.</abbr></cite> 325 <span class="sc lowercase">C-E</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_123" id="footnote_123"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_123"><span class="muchsmaller">[123]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Xenophon">Xen.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Memorabilia">Mem.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="two">ii.</abbr> 2. 6.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_124" id="footnote_124"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_124"><span class="muchsmaller">[124]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite><abbr title="Protagoras">Protag.</abbr></cite> 326 <span class="sc lowercase">C</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_125" id="footnote_125"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_125"><span class="muchsmaller">[125]</span></a>
-Aristotle, <cite><abbr title="Politics">Pol.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="seven">vii.</abbr> 17. 7.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_126" id="footnote_126"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_126"><span class="muchsmaller">[126]</span></a>
-The three in this order in Plato, <cite><abbr title="Protagoras">Protag.</abbr></cite> 312
- <span class="sc lowercase">B</span>, 325-326; <cite><abbr title="Charmides">Charmid.</abbr></cite> 159 <span class="sc lowercase">C</span>;
- <cite><abbr title="Kleitophon">Kleitoph.</abbr> </cite> 407 <span class="sc lowercase">C</span>;
- <abbr title="Xenophon">Xen.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Contitution of the Lacedaemonians">Constit.
- of Lak.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="two">ii.</abbr> 1; <abbr title="Isokrates">Isok.</abbr>
- <cite><abbr title="Antidemocracy">Antid.</abbr></cite> 267. The first two in this
- order in <cite><abbr title="Charmides">Charmid.</abbr></cite> 160
- <span class="sc lowercase">A</span>; <cite>Lusis</cite>, 209 <span class="sc lowercase">B</span>;
- inverted in <cite><abbr title="Euthydemus">Euthud.</abbr> </cite> 276 <span class="sc lowercase">A</span>. <abbr title="Aristotle">Aristot.</abbr>
- (<cite><abbr title="Politics">Pol.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="eight">viii.</abbr> 3)
- gives <ins title="grammata, gymnastikê, mousikê">γράμματα, γυμναστική, μουσική</ins>.
- Plato in the <cite>Laws</cite> 810 <span class="sc lowercase">A</span> makes
-<ins title="kitharistikê">κιθαριστική</ins> follow <ins title="grammatikê">γραμματική</ins>;
- Aristophanes mentions the paidotribes just after
- the <ins title="kitharistês">κιθαριστής</ins>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_127" id="footnote_127"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_127"><span class="muchsmaller">[127]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Aristotle">Aristot.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Politics">Pol.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="eight">viii.</abbr> 3. 1.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_128" id="footnote_128"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_128"><span class="muchsmaller">[128]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Xenophon">Xen.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Contitution of the Lacedaemonians">Constit. of Lak.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="two">ii.</abbr></p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_129" id="footnote_129"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_129"><span class="muchsmaller">[129]</span></a>
-See <abbr title="Illustrations">Illustr.</abbr> <a href="#i01a">Plates <abbr title="One">I.</abbr> <span class="sc lowercase">A</span></a> and <a href="#i01b"><abbr title="One">I.</abbr> <span class="sc lowercase">B</span></a>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_130" id="footnote_130"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_130"><span class="muchsmaller">[130]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite>Laws</cite>, 810 <span class="sc lowercase">A</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_131" id="footnote_131"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_131"><span class="muchsmaller">[131]</span></a>
-Vase B 192.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_132" id="footnote_132"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_132"><span class="muchsmaller">[132]</span></a>
-Vases E 171, 172; see <a href="#i03">Plates <abbr title="Three">III.</abbr></a> and <a href="#i04"><abbr title="Four">IV.</abbr></a></p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_133" id="footnote_133"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_133"><span class="muchsmaller">[133]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Aristotle">Aristot.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Politics">Pol.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="eight">viii.</abbr> 4. 9.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_134" id="footnote_134"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_134"><span class="muchsmaller">[134]</span></a>
-<cite>Ibid.</cite> <abbr title="eight">viii.</abbr> 1. 2.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_135" id="footnote_135"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_135"><span class="muchsmaller">[135]</span></a>
-[Plato] <cite>Rivals</cite>, 132 <span class="sc lowercase">A</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_136" id="footnote_136"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_136"><span class="muchsmaller">[136]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite>Lusis</cite>, 206 <span class="sc lowercase">D</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_137" id="footnote_137"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_137"><span class="muchsmaller">[137]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite>Laches</cite>, 179 <span class="sc lowercase">A</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_138" id="footnote_138"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_138"><span class="muchsmaller">[138]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Xenophon">Xen.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Contitution of the Lacedaemonians">Constit. of Lak.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="three">iii.</abbr></p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_139" id="footnote_139"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_139"><span class="muchsmaller">[139]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite>Lusis</cite>, 214 <span class="sc lowercase">B</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_140" id="footnote_140"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_140"><span class="muchsmaller">[140]</span></a>
-Rhetoric is, of course, banished from a Platonic state.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_141" id="footnote_141"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_141"><span class="muchsmaller">[141]</span></a>
-[Plato] <cite>Axiochos</cite>, 366 <span class="sc lowercase">E</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_142" id="footnote_142"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_142"><span class="muchsmaller">[142]</span></a>
-See Petit, <cite>Leges Atticae</cite>, <abbr title="two">ii.</abbr> 4, compiled with great ingenuity out of many authors.
-Hence the proverbs <ins title="ho mête nein mête grammata epistamenos">
-ὁ μήτε νεῖν μήτε γράμματα ἐπιστάμενος</ins>, of utter dunce, and
-<ins title="prôton kolymban deuteron de grammata">
-πρῶτον κολυμβᾶν δεύτερον δὲ γράμματα</ins>. The spelling-riddles of the tragedians
-imply a whole nation interested in spelling.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_143" id="footnote_143"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_143"><span class="muchsmaller">[143]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite>Kriton</cite>, 50 <span class="sc lowercase">D</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_144" id="footnote_144"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_144"><span class="muchsmaller">[144]</span></a>
-Aristophanes, <cite>Knights</cite>, 189.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_145" id="footnote_145"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_145"><span class="muchsmaller">[145]</span></a>
-<cite>Ibid.</cite> 1235-1239.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_146" id="footnote_146"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_146"><span class="muchsmaller">[146]</span></a>
-<cite>Ibid.</cite> 987-996.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_147" id="footnote_147"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_147"><span class="muchsmaller">[147]</span></a>
-[Plato] <cite>Theages</cite>, 122 <span class="sc lowercase">E</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_148" id="footnote_148"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_148"><span class="muchsmaller">[148]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite>Alkibiades</cite>, <abbr title="one">i.</abbr> 122 <span class="sc lowercase">B</span>. The Athenian State, however, from the time of
-Solon onwards, supported and educated at public expense the sons of those who fell
-in battle. The endowed systems in Teos and at Delphoi belong to the third
-century; it is impossible to say whether such existed earlier.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_149" id="footnote_149"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_149"><span class="muchsmaller">[149]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Xenophon">Xen.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Memorabilia">Mem.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="two">ii.</abbr> 2. 6.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_150" id="footnote_150"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_150"><span class="muchsmaller">[150]</span></a>
-[<abbr title="Xenophon">Xen.</abbr>] <cite><abbr title="Constitution">Constit.</abbr> of Athens</cite>, <abbr title="two">ii.</abbr> 10.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_151" id="footnote_151"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_151"><span class="muchsmaller">[151]</span></a>
-Plutarch, <cite><abbr title="Alcibiades">Alkib.</abbr> </cite> 3; Plato, <cite>Charmides</cite>, 153 <span class="sc lowercase">A</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_152" id="footnote_152"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_152"><span class="muchsmaller">[152]</span></a>
-<cite><abbr title="Corpus Inscriptionun Atticarum">C.I.A.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="two">ii.</abbr> 1. 444, 445, 446.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_153" id="footnote_153"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_153"><span class="muchsmaller">[153]</span></a>
-See Excursus on <ins title="gymniasiarchoi">γυμνιασιαρχοί</ins>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_154" id="footnote_154"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_154"><span class="muchsmaller">[154]</span></a>
-He could, and had to, use compulsion in collecting boys. This suggests that a
-parent could always, if he wished, get this free education for his son.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_155" id="footnote_155"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_155"><span class="muchsmaller">[155]</span></a>
-This rule fell into abeyance.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_156" id="footnote_156"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_156"><span class="muchsmaller">[156]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Demosthenes">Dem.</abbr> <cite>against <abbr title="Boiotia">Boiot.</abbr></cite> 1001.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_157" id="footnote_157"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_157"><span class="muchsmaller">[157]</span></a>
-[<abbr title="Xenophon">Xen.</abbr>] <cite><abbr title="Constitution">Constit.</abbr> of Athens</cite>, <abbr title="one">i.</abbr> 13.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_158" id="footnote_158"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_158"><span class="muchsmaller">[158]</span></a>
-On the strength of the passages quoted from the law, and from Demosthenes,
-and of Aristophanes, <cite>Clouds</cite>, 964, some have maintained a theory that the Athenian
-tribes provided free education in dancing, and perhaps in other subjects, to all free
-boys, exclusive of competitions. But the quotation in Aischines, except for the
-actual law, which is a later interpolation, certainly refers only to the choregoi, and
-the passage in Demosthenes is concerned only with chorus-dancing for competitions.
-In Aristophanes the boys of the same neighbourhood naturally attend the same
-school, that is all.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_159" id="footnote_159"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_159"><span class="muchsmaller">[159]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Plutarch">Plut.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Themistokles">Themist.</abbr></cite> 10.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_160" id="footnote_160"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_160"><span class="muchsmaller">[160]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Aelian">Ael.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Vera Historia">Var. Hist.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="seven">vii.</abbr> 15.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_161" id="footnote_161"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_161"><span class="muchsmaller">[161]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Diodotos">Diod.</abbr> Sic. <abbr title="twelve">xii.</abbr> 42.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_162" id="footnote_162"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_162"><span class="muchsmaller">[162]</span></a>
-Probably lived <span class="decoration">circa</span> 500 <span class="sc">B.C.</span></p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_163" id="footnote_163"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_163"><span class="muchsmaller">[163]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite><abbr title="Timaeus">Tim.</abbr></cite> 21 <span class="sc lowercase">B</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_164" id="footnote_164"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_164"><span class="muchsmaller">[164]</span></a>
-Böckh, 3088.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_165" id="footnote_165"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_165"><span class="muchsmaller">[165]</span></a>
-<cite>Ibid.</cite> 2214. I have omitted patronymics.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_166" id="footnote_166"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_166"><span class="muchsmaller">[166]</span></a>
-<cite><abbr title="Corpus Inscriptionum Graecarum">C.I.G.</abbr> <abbr title="Boeotia">Boeot.</abbr></cite> 1760-1766.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_167" id="footnote_167"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_167"><span class="muchsmaller">[167]</span></a>
-Böckh, 232, 245.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_168" id="footnote_168"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_168"><span class="muchsmaller">[168]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Pindar">Pind.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Nemean">Nem.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="seven">vii.</abbr></p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_169" id="footnote_169"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_169"><span class="muchsmaller">[169]</span></a>
-Bacchul. <abbr title="thirteen">xiii.</abbr>, <abbr title="Pindar">Pind.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Nemean">Nem.</abbr></cite> v.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_170" id="footnote_170"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_170"><span class="muchsmaller">[170]</span></a>
-Wrestling, <abbr title="Pindar">Pind.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Nemean">Nem.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="four">iv.</abbr>, <abbr title="six">vi.</abbr> </p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_171" id="footnote_171"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_171"><span class="muchsmaller">[171]</span></a>
-<cite><abbr title="Anthology">Anthol.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="edition">ed.</abbr> Jacobs, <abbr title="six">vi.</abbr> 308.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_172" id="footnote_172"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_172"><span class="muchsmaller">[172]</span></a>
-Sometimes earlier. Plato, <cite><abbr title="Protagoras">Protag.</abbr></cite> 325 <span class="sc lowercase">C</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_173" id="footnote_173"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_173"><span class="muchsmaller">[173]</span></a>
-Elderly, as in the picture of Medeia and her children given in Smith’s <cite>Smaller
-Classical Dictionary</cite> under “Medea,” and on Douris’ Kulix, <a href="#i01a">Plates <abbr title="One">I.</abbr> <span class="sc lowercase">A</span></a> and <a href="#i01b"><abbr title="One">I.</abbr> <span class="sc lowercase">B</span></a> (if
-those are paidagogoi), and on other vases.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_174" id="footnote_174"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_174"><span class="muchsmaller">[174]</span></a>
-So Fabius Cunctator was called Hannibal’s paidagogos, because he followed
-him about everywhere.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_175" id="footnote_175"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_175"><span class="muchsmaller">[175]</span></a>
-There is only one for Lusis and his brothers (Plato, <cite><abbr title="Lusis">Lus.</abbr></cite> 223 <span class="sc lowercase">A</span>), for Medeia’s
-two children (<abbr title="Euripides">Eur.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Medeia">Med.</abbr></cite>), for two boys in <cite>Lusis</cite>, 223 <span class="sc lowercase">A</span>, and for Themistocles’
-children (<abbr title="Herodotos">Herod.</abbr> <abbr title="eight">viii.</abbr> 75).</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_176" id="footnote_176"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_176"><span class="muchsmaller">[176]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite><abbr title="Lusis">Lus.</abbr></cite> 208 <span class="sc lowercase">C</span>. He is referred to as <ins title="hode">ὅδε</ins>, showing that he is present.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_177" id="footnote_177"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_177"><span class="muchsmaller">[177]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Illustrations">Illustr.</abbr> <a href="#i01a">Plates <abbr title="One">I.</abbr> <span class="sc lowercase">A</span></a> and <a href="#i01b"><abbr title="One">I.</abbr> <span class="sc lowercase">B</span></a>. Perhaps only the walking-stick carried by all
-Athenians.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_178" id="footnote_178"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_178"><span class="muchsmaller">[178]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite><abbr title="Lusis">Lus.</abbr></cite> 223 <span class="sc lowercase">A</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_179" id="footnote_179"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_179"><span class="muchsmaller">[179]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Plutarch">Plut.</abbr> <cite>Education of Boys</cite>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_180" id="footnote_180"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_180"><span class="muchsmaller">[180]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Xenophon">Xen.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Contitution of the Lacedaemonians">Constit. of Lak.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="two">ii.</abbr> 2.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_181" id="footnote_181"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_181"><span class="muchsmaller">[181]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Herodotos">Herod.</abbr> <abbr title="eight">viii.</abbr> 75.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_182" id="footnote_182"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_182"><span class="muchsmaller">[182]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Aischines">Aisch.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="against Timarchos">ag. Timarch.</abbr></cite> 35. 10.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_183" id="footnote_183"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_183"><span class="muchsmaller">[183]</span></a>
-In the guardian’s accounts given by Lusias, <cite><abbr title="against">ag.</abbr> Diogeiton</cite>, 32. 28, a paidagogos is
-paid for till the boy is eighteen; but there was a younger brother, for whom he may
-have been required, so the elder may have been free earlier. In Plautus (<cite><abbr title="Bacchae">Bacch.</abbr></cite> 138)
-we find a paidogogos in attendance till his charge was twenty.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_184" id="footnote_184"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_184"><span class="muchsmaller">[184]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Xenophon">Xen.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Contitution of the Lacedaemonians">Constit. of Lak.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="three">iii.</abbr> 1.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_185" id="footnote_185"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_185"><span class="muchsmaller">[185]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite><abbr title="Republic">Rep.</abbr></cite> 406 <span class="sc lowercase">A</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_186" id="footnote_186"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_186"><span class="muchsmaller">[186]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite><abbr title="Protagoras">Protag.</abbr></cite> 325 <span class="sc lowercase">D</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_187" id="footnote_187"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_187"><span class="muchsmaller">[187]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Aischines">Aischin.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="against Timarchos">ag. Timarch.</abbr></cite> 9.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_188" id="footnote_188"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_188"><span class="muchsmaller">[188]</span></a>
-<ins title="gymnasiarchês">γυμνασιαρχής</ins>. See Excursus on <ins title="gymnasiarchoi">γυμνασιαρχοί</ins>. This law was totally
-neglected in Socratic Athens. See Plato’s <cite>Lusis</cite>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_189" id="footnote_189"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_189"><span class="muchsmaller">[189]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Aischines">Aischin.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="against Timarchos">ag. Timarch.</abbr></cite> 10. The word <ins title="sôphronistês">σωφρονιστής</ins>, in a general sense, occurs
-three times in Thucydides.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_190" id="footnote_190"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_190"><span class="muchsmaller">[190]</span></a>
-Deinarchos, <cite><abbr title="against">ag.</abbr> Philokles</cite>, 15.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_191" id="footnote_191"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_191"><span class="muchsmaller">[191]</span></a>
-Girard, <cite lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">L’Éducation Athénienne</cite>, <abbr title="pages">pp.</abbr> 51, 52.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_192" id="footnote_192"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_192"><span class="muchsmaller">[192]</span></a>
-The Archon Eponumos had the control of orphans and probably intervened
-if their education was neglected.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_193" id="footnote_193"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_193"><span class="muchsmaller">[193]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Aristophanes">Aristoph.</abbr> <cite>Clouds</cite>, 960 <abbr title="and following">ff.</abbr></p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_194" id="footnote_194"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_194"><span class="muchsmaller">[194]</span></a>
-By Lamprokles (476 <span class="sc">B.C.</span>).</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_195" id="footnote_195"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_195"><span class="muchsmaller">[195]</span></a>
-By Kudides (? = Kudias. Smyth, <cite>Melic Poets</cite>, <abbr title="page">p.</abbr> 347).</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_196" id="footnote_196"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_196"><span class="muchsmaller">[196]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Isokrates">Isok.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Areiopagitikos">Areiop.</abbr></cite> 149 <span class="sc lowercase">C</span>, <span class="sc lowercase">D</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_197" id="footnote_197"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_197"><span class="muchsmaller">[197]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite><abbr title="Republic">Rep.</abbr></cite> 563 <span class="sc lowercase">A</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_198" id="footnote_198"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_198"><span class="muchsmaller">[198]</span></a>
-<cite>Floruit</cite> 432 <span class="sc">B.C.</span> (in <abbr title="Athenaeus">Athen.</abbr> 18 <span class="sc lowercase">C</span>).</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_199" id="footnote_199"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_199"><span class="muchsmaller">[199]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Xenophon">Xen.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Contitution of the Lacedaemonians">Constit. of Lak.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="two">ii.</abbr> 1.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_200" id="footnote_200"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_200"><span class="muchsmaller">[200]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Xenophon">Xen.</abbr> <cite>Banquet</cite>, <abbr title="three">iii.</abbr> 13.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_201" id="footnote_201"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_201"><span class="muchsmaller">[201]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Herodotos">Herod.</abbr> <abbr title="six">vi.</abbr> 27.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_202" id="footnote_202"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_202"><span class="muchsmaller">[202]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Thucidides">Thuc.</abbr> <abbr title="seven">vii.</abbr> 29.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_203" id="footnote_203"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_203"><span class="muchsmaller">[203]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Politics">Pol.</abbr> <abbr title="four">iv.</abbr> 20. 7.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_204" id="footnote_204"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_204"><span class="muchsmaller">[204]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Aelian">Ael.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Vera Historia">Var. Hist.</abbr></cite> 7. 15.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_205" id="footnote_205"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_205"><span class="muchsmaller">[205]</span></a>
- <abbr title="Pausanias">Pausan.</abbr> <abbr title="six">vi.</abbr> 9. 6.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_206" id="footnote_206"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_206"><span class="muchsmaller">[206]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Athenaeus">Athen.</abbr> 604 a-b.</p>
-</div><!--end chapter-->
-
-<div class="chapter"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79"></a><span class="pageno">79</span>
-<h3 class="p4 h3head">CHAPTER III</h3>
-
-<h4 class="p2 h4head">ATHENS AND THE REST OF HELLAS:<br />
-PRIMARY EDUCATION</h4>
-
-<p class="p2"><span class="sc">We</span> have seen that Primary Education in Hellas consisted
-of letters and music, with a contemporary training
-in gymnastics; to which triple course was added, late in
-the fourth century, drawing and painting. How the day
-was divided between mental and physical training is
-unknown&mdash;probably, like everything else, this varied
-with the taste of the individual&mdash;but the following
-sketch from Lucian,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_207" id="fnanchor_207"></a><a href="#footnote_207" class="fnanchor">[207]</a></span>
-although it belongs to a much
-later date, may perhaps give some idea of a schoolboy’s
-day:<span class="lock">&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<p class="blockquote">“He gets up at dawn, washes the sleep from his
-eyes, and puts on his cloak. Then he goes out from
-his father’s house, with his eyes fixed upon the ground,
-not looking at any one who meets him. Behind him
-follow attendants and paidagogoi, bearing in their hands
-the implements of virtue, writing-tablets or books containing
-the great deeds of old, or, if he is going to a
-music-school, his well-tuned lyre.</p>
-
-<p class="blockquote">“When he has laboured diligently at intellectual
-studies, and his mind is sated with the benefits of the
-school curriculum, he exercises his body in liberal
-<a name="Page_80" id="Page_80"></a><span class="pageno">80</span>
-pursuits, riding or hurling the javelin or spear. Then
-the wrestling-school with its sleek, oiled pupils, labours
-under the mid-day sun, and sweats in the regular athletic
-contests. Then a bath, not too prolonged; then a
-meal, not too large, in view of afternoon school. For
-the schoolmasters are waiting for him again, and the
-books which openly or by allegory teach him who was
-a great hero, who was a lover of justice and purity.
-With the contemplation of such virtues he waters the
-garden of his young soul. When evening sets a limit
-to his work, he pays the necessary tribute to his stomach
-and retires to rest, to sleep sweetly after his busy day.”</p>
-
-<p>The school hours were naturally arranged to suit the
-times of Hellenic meals, for which the boys returned
-home. The ordinary arrangement was a light breakfast
-at daybreak, a solid meal at mid-day, and supper at
-sunset. So the schools opened at sunrise.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_208" id="fnanchor_208"></a><a href="#footnote_208" class="fnanchor">[208]</a></span>
-Solon
-enacted that they should not open earlier. They closed
-in time to allow the boys to return home to lunch,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_209" id="fnanchor_209"></a><a href="#footnote_209" class="fnanchor">[209]</a></span>
-opened again in the afternoon, and closed before sunset.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_210" id="fnanchor_210"></a><a href="#footnote_210" class="fnanchor">[210]</a></span>
-How many of the intermediate hours were spent in
-work,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_211" id="fnanchor_211"></a><a href="#footnote_211" class="fnanchor">[211]</a></span>
-and what intervals there were, is unknown.
-There was, of course, no weekly rest on Sundays; but
-festivals, which were whole holidays, were numerous
-throughout Hellas, and, in Alexandria at any rate, on
-the 7th and 20th of every month the schools were closed,
-these days being sacred to Apollo.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_212" id="fnanchor_212"></a><a href="#footnote_212" class="fnanchor">[212]</a></span>
-There were also
-special school festivals, such as that of the Muses, and
-<a name="Page_81" id="Page_81"></a><span class="pageno">81</span>
-holidays in commemoration of benefactors; thus Anaxagoras
-left a bequest to Klazomenai, on condition that
-the day of his death should be celebrated annually by a
-holiday in the schools.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_213" id="fnanchor_213"></a><a href="#footnote_213" class="fnanchor">[213]</a></span>
-It must also be remembered
-that one of the three branches of Primary Education in
-Hellas would be called play in England: an afternoon
-spent in running races, jumping, wrestling, or riding
-would not be regarded as work by an English schoolboy.
-Music, too, is usually learned during play-hours in an
-English school. Even Letters, when the elementary
-stage was past, meant reciting, reading, or learning by
-heart the literature of the boy’s own language, and most
-of it not stiff literature by any means, but such fascinating
-fairy-tales as are found in Homer. There is little
-trace of Hellenic boys creeping unwillingly to school:
-their lessons were made eminently attractive.</p>
-
-<p>Of the fees which were paid to schoolmasters little
-is known. An amusing passage in Lucian,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_214" id="fnanchor_214"></a><a href="#footnote_214" class="fnanchor">[214]</a></span>
-dealing
-with the under-world, describes those who had been
-kings or satraps upon earth as reduced in the future
-state “to beggary, and compelled by poverty either to
-sell kippers or to teach the elements of reading and
-writing.” From this it may be inferred that elementary
-schoolmasters did not make much money by
-their fees. This inference is supported by the fact that
-even the poorest Athenians managed to send their sons
-to such schools. Plato in the <cite>Laws</cite> reserves the
-profession for foreigners, thus suggesting that it was
-neither well paid nor highly esteemed. To call a man
-a schoolmaster was almost an insult; Demosthenes,
-abusing Aischines, says, “You taught letters, I went
-to school.”<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_215" id="fnanchor_215"></a><a href="#footnote_215" class="fnanchor">[215]</a></span>
-The weakness of the masters’ position may
-<a name="Page_82" id="Page_82"></a><span class="pageno">82</span>
-be seen too from the extreme contempt with which their
-pupils seem to have treated them. The boys bring
-their pets&mdash;cats and dogs and leopards&mdash;into school,
-and play with them under the master’s chair. Theophrastos,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_216" id="fnanchor_216"></a><a href="#footnote_216" class="fnanchor">[216]</a></span>
-in describing the characteristics of the mean
-man, says that “he does not send his children to school
-all the month of Anthesterion” (that is, from the middle
-of February to the middle of March) “on account of
-the number of feasts.” The school-bills were paid by
-the month, and, since boys did not go to school on the
-great festivals, and Anthesterion contained many such
-days, the mean parent thought he would not get his
-money’s worth for this particular month, and so withdrew
-his boys while it lasted.</p>
-
-<p>Mean parents also deducted from the fees in
-proportion, if their sons were absent from school owing
-to ill-health for a day or two;<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_217" id="fnanchor_217"></a><a href="#footnote_217" class="fnanchor">[217]</a></span>
-but this was not
-usually done. The bills were paid on the 30th of each
-month.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_218" id="fnanchor_218"></a><a href="#footnote_218" class="fnanchor">[218]</a></span>
-Schoolmasters apparently had some difficulty
-in getting their bills paid at all; according to
-Demosthenes’ statement, his bills were never paid,
-owing to the fraudulent behaviour of his guardian
-Aphobos.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_219" id="fnanchor_219"></a><a href="#footnote_219" class="fnanchor">[219]</a></span>
-</p>
-
-<p>No doubt the fees varied according to the merits
-of the school, for the schools at Athens seem to have
-differed greatly. Demosthenes, when boasting of his
-career, in his speech <cite>On the Crown</cite>, says that he
-went as a boy to the <em>respectable</em> schools;<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_220" id="fnanchor_220"></a><a href="#footnote_220" class="fnanchor">[220]</a></span>
-the quality
-and quantity of the teaching must have been varied
-to suit the parent’s pocket. For the poor there would
-probably be schools where only the elements of reading
-<a name="Page_83" id="Page_83"></a><span class="pageno">83</span>
-and writing were taught. In the higher class of school
-these elements would be taught by under-masters,
-frequently slaves; but free citizens might also be
-reduced by poverty to take such a post. This may be
-seen from the case of the father of Aischines, the
-orator.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_221" id="fnanchor_221"></a><a href="#footnote_221" class="fnanchor">[221]</a></span>
-Impoverished and exiled like many democrats
-by the Thirty Tyrants, he returned with the Restoration
-a ruined man. To earn his living, he became an usher
-at the school of one Elpias, close to the Theseion,
-and taught letters: his son Aischines seems to have
-begun his life by assisting his father in this occupation.
-His opponent, Demosthenes, takes advantage of the
-contempt with which these ushers were regarded to
-declare that the father was a slave of Elpias,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_222" id="fnanchor_222"></a><a href="#footnote_222" class="fnanchor">[222]</a></span>
-“wearing
-big fetters and a collar,” and the son was employed in
-“grinding the ink and sponging the forms and sweeping
-out the schoolroom (<ins title="paidagôgeion">παιδαγωγεῖον</ins>), the work of a
-servant, not of a free boy.”</p>
-
-<p>No doubt letters and music were often taught at
-the same school, in different rooms. Such an arrangement
-would be natural and convenient. The vases
-suggest it, but their evidence is uncertain. The school
-buildings seem often to have been surrounded by playgrounds.
-A passage in Aelian<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_223" id="fnanchor_223"></a><a href="#footnote_223" class="fnanchor">[223]</a></span>
-shows us the boys,
-just let out of school, playing at tug-of-war. No
-doubt in these places they played with their hoops
-and tops, and amused themselves with pick-a-back and
-the stone- and dice-games which corresponded to our
-marbles. In villages these playgrounds probably did
-duty as palaistrai.</p>
-
-<p>The headmaster of the school sat on a chair with a
-<a name="Page_84" id="Page_84"></a><span class="pageno">84</span>
-high back; under-masters and boys had stools without
-backs, but cushions were provided. For lessons in
-class there were benches.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_224" id="fnanchor_224"></a><a href="#footnote_224" class="fnanchor">[224]</a></span>
-There was a high reading-desk
-for recitations. Round the walls hung writing-tablets,
-rulers, and baskets or cases containing manuscript
-rolls labelled with the author’s name, composing the
-school library; the rolls might also hang by themselves.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_225" id="fnanchor_225"></a><a href="#footnote_225" class="fnanchor">[225]</a></span>
-Masters were expected to possess at any rate a copy of
-Homer&mdash;Alkibiades thrashed one who did not. Sometimes
-they emended their edition themselves.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_226" id="fnanchor_226"></a><a href="#footnote_226" class="fnanchor">[226]</a></span>
-In the
-music-schools hung lyres and flutes and flute-cases.
-The (<ins title="paidagôgeion">παιδαγωγειον</ins>) mentioned by Demosthenes may have
-been an anteroom where the paidagogoi sat, but more
-probably the word is only a rhetorical variant for
-“schoolroom.” There were often busts of the Muses
-round the walls,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_227" id="fnanchor_227"></a><a href="#footnote_227" class="fnanchor">[227]</a></span>
-which were also decorated with vases,
-serving for domestic purposes, and, perhaps, illustrating
-with their pictures the books which the boys were
-reading. At a later date, at any rate, a series of
-cartoons, illustrating scenes in the <cite>Iliad</cite> and <cite>Odyssey</cite>,
-were sometimes hung upon the walls: the “Tabula
-Iliaca,” now in the Capitoline Museum, has been
-recognised as a fragment of such a series.</p>
-
-<p>The first stage was to learn to read and write.
-Instead of a slate, boys in Hellas had tablets of wax,
-usually made in two halves, so as to fold on a hinge
-in the middle, the waxen surfaces coming inwards and
-so being protected. Sometimes there were three pieces,
-forming a triptych, or even more. For pencil, they
-<a name="Page_85" id="Page_85"></a><span class="pageno">85</span>
-had an instrument with a sharp point at one end,
-suitable for making marks on the wax, and a flat
-surface at the other, which was used to erase what had
-been written, and so make the tablets ready for future
-use. These tablets are shown in the school-scenes on the
-fifth-century vases.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_228" id="fnanchor_228"></a><a href="#footnote_228" class="fnanchor">[228]</a></span>
-At a later period, when parchment
-and papyrus became more common, these materials were
-used in the schools. Lines could be ruled with a lump
-of lead, and writing done either with ink and a reed pen
-or with lead; for erasures a sponge was employed.</p>
-
-<p>The early stages of learning to write are described
-in the <cite>Protagoras</cite> of Plato.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_229" id="fnanchor_229"></a><a href="#footnote_229" class="fnanchor">[229]</a></span>
-“When a boy is not
-yet clever at writing, the masters first draw lines, and
-then give him the tablet and make him write as the
-lines direct.” The passage has been variously interpreted.
-Some regard the master as merely writing a
-series of letters which the boy is to copy underneath.
-The word used in Greek for the master’s writing is
-<ins title="hypograpsantes">ὑπογράψαντες</ins>, and it is significant that the word for
-a “copy” in this sense is a derivative of this word,
-<ins title="hypogrammos">ὑπογραμμός</ins>. Such a copy, corresponding to the
-phrases like “England exports engines” or “Germany
-grows grapes,” which are employed in English schools
-for this purpose, is extant.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_230" id="fnanchor_230"></a><a href="#footnote_230" class="fnanchor">[230]</a></span>
-It is a nonsense sentence
-designed to contain all the letters of the alphabet
-<ins title="marpte sphinx klôps zbychthêdon">μάρπτε σφὶγξ κλὼψ ζβυχθηδόν</ins>. If this rendering is
-correct, the master wrote a sentence of this sort on
-the tablets, and the boy copied it underneath. Others
-interpret the lines which the master draws on the
-tablet as parallel straight lines, within which the boy
-<a name="Page_86" id="Page_86"></a><span class="pageno">86</span>
-had to write. Just such a device is often employed
-in English copy-books. The word used for “lines,”
-<ins title="grammai">γραμμαί</ins>, usually means “straight lines,” which supports
-this interpretation. But <ins title="hypographê">ὑπογραφή</ins>, on the other hand,
-a derivative of <ins title="hypographein">ὑπογράφειν</ins>, is used for irregular traces,
-<span class="decoration">e.g.</span> a footstep,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_231" id="fnanchor_231"></a><a href="#footnote_231" class="fnanchor">[231]</a></span>
-and <ins title="hypographein">ὑπογράφειν</ins> itself is a technical
-term in Hellenic art for “sketching in” what is afterwards
-to be finished in detail. Consequently a third
-rendering of the passage makes the master draw a
-faint, rough outline of the various letters, and the boy
-has to go over them with his pen, marking the grooves
-in the wax deeper and filling in the details. For
-example, in England, the master might draw |·| and
-the boy go over the two vertical lines and draw in
-the other two, M. Thus all three interpretations are
-sensible and rest on good authority. But surely the
-master may be regarded as adopting all three processes,
-according to the intelligence of the pupils. For the
-beginner he would outline the whole letter, and leave
-him only the task of going over it again. Then he
-would gradually give less and less help, till the boy was
-capable of writing the letters with the assistance of the
-parallel lines alone. Finally these would be withdrawn,
-and the boy would be left to write his imitation of the
-copy without assistance. The phrase in Plato is purposely
-vague, and will include the whole of this process.</p>
-
-<p>The letters were written in lines horizontal and
-vertical, so that they fell beneath one another. No
-stops or accents were inserted, and no spaces were left
-between words. The writing-master probably ruled
-both the horizontal and the vertical lines on the tablet
-for his pupil. On the Vase of Douris,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_232" id="fnanchor_232"></a><a href="#footnote_232" class="fnanchor">[232]</a></span>
-an under-master
-is represented as writing with his pen on
-<a name="Page_87" id="Page_87"></a><span class="pageno">87</span>
-a wax tablet, while a boy stands in front of him. He
-is probably meant either to be writing a copy or else
-correcting his pupil’s exercise. Over his head hangs a
-ruler, for marking out the guiding lines on the tablet.
-Behind the boy sits a bearded man with a staff, who is
-probably the paidagogos. The boys in the class are
-clearly coming up one by one to receive their copies or
-have their exercises corrected, while the rest are doing
-their writing. It will be noticed that there is no desk
-or table: the Hellenes wrote with their tablets on their
-knees.</p>
-
-<p>As soon as the boy had acquired a certain facility in
-writing, he entered the dictation class. The master read
-out something, and the boys wrote it down.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_233" id="fnanchor_233"></a><a href="#footnote_233" class="fnanchor">[233]</a></span>
-At first,
-of course, very simple words would be dictated, and
-there would not be much to write. But, later on, the
-boys would write at his dictation passages of the poets
-and other authors. For this purpose, ink and parchment
-may sometimes have been employed: Aischines
-seems to have “ground ink”<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_234" id="fnanchor_234"></a><a href="#footnote_234" class="fnanchor">[234]</a></span>
-for a writing-school.
-Various “elaborations in the way of speed and beauty”
-of writing seem to have been customary in the case of
-more advanced pupils.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_235" id="fnanchor_235"></a><a href="#footnote_235" class="fnanchor">[235]</a></span>
-Possibly they learnt to make
-flourishes and ornamental letters. Speed would naturally
-be taught, for it was usual to take notes at the lectures
-of Sophists and Philosophers, and speed is required
-for this purpose. This must have involved the use
-of the cursive letters, which otherwise were not needed,
-for the Hellene had not very much writing to do,
-unless he became a clerk to a public body.</p>
-
-<p>Learning to read must have been a difficult business
-in Hellas, for books were written in capitals at this
-<a name="Page_88" id="Page_88"></a><span class="pageno">88</span>
-time. There were no spaces between the words, and no
-stops were inserted. Thus, the reader had to exercise
-much ingenuity before he could arrive at the meaning
-of a sentence. Still more difficult for the boys to grasp
-was the Attic accent, upon which the masters set a great
-importance. So difficult was it, that few foreigners
-ever acquired it, and a born Athenian, if he went abroad
-for a few years, often lost the power of speaking with
-the Attic intonation. The first step in learning to read
-is to acquire the alphabet. The Hellenes, wishing, as
-usual, to make learning as easy as possible, seem to have
-put the alphabet into verse. A metrical alphabet,
-ascribed to Kallias, a contemporary of Perikles, is still
-extant, but in a mutilated form, which has been restored
-in several not very convincing ways. Probably it has
-been adapted to suit different alphabets, for there were
-several current in different parts of Hellas. The following
-is a conjectural <span class="lock">restoration:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="i0"><ins title="est’ alpha, bêta, gamma, delta t’, ei te, kai">ἔστ’ ἄλφα, βῆτα, γάμμα, δέλτα τ’, εἶ τε, καί</ins></div>
- <div class="i0"><ins title="zêt’, êta, thêt’, iôta, kappa, labda, mu,">ζῆτ’, ἦτα, θῆτ’, ἴωτα, κάππα, λάβδα, μῦ,</ins></div>
- <div class="i0"><ins title="nu, xei, to ou, pei, rhô, to sigma, tau, to u,">νῦ, ξεῖ, τὸ οὖ, πεῖ, ῥῶ, τὸ σίγμα, ταῦ, τὸ ὖ,</ins></div>
- <div class="i0"><ins title="paronta phei te chei te tô psei eis to ô.">πάροντα φεῖ τε χεῖ τε τῷ ψεῖ εἰς τὸ ὦ</ins>.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_236" id="fnanchor_236"></a><a href="#footnote_236" class="fnanchor">[236]</a></span></div>
- </div><!--end poem-->
-</div><!--end poem container-->
-
-<p>This complete alphabet of twenty-four letters, which
-appears in modern Greek Grammars, was not adopted
-for official purposes at Athens till 403 <span class="sc">B.C.</span>, “but it is
-clear that it was in ordinary use at Athens considerably
-earlier.”<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_237" id="fnanchor_237"></a><a href="#footnote_237" class="fnanchor">[237]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>This metrical alphabet formed the prologue to what
-may be called a spelling-drama, in which the whole
-process of learning to spell was expressed either in
-iambic lines or in choral songs. Since its author,
-Kallias, is coupled with Strattis, the comic poet,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_238" id="fnanchor_238"></a><a href="#footnote_238" class="fnanchor">[238]</a></span>
-it
-<a name="Page_89" id="Page_89"></a><span class="pageno">89</span>
-may be inferred that the play was a comedy, not a
-tragedy; the chorus would then be twenty-four in
-number. Each member of the chorus represented one
-of the twenty-four letters. In the first choric song the
-letters were put together in pairs, in the fashion of a
-spelling class. The first strophé runs as <span class="lock">follows:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<table summary="" class="together">
-
-<tr><td class="left">Beta</td>
- <td class="left">Alpha</td>
- <td class="left">BA</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="left">Beta</td>
- <td class="left">Ei</td>
- <td class="left">BĔ</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="left">Beta</td>
- <td class="left">Eta</td>
- <td class="left">BĒ</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="left">Beta</td>
- <td class="left">Iota</td>
- <td class="left">BI</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="left">Beta</td>
- <td class="left">Ou</td>
- <td class="left">BŎ</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="left">Beta</td>
- <td class="left">U</td>
- <td class="left">BU</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="left">Beta</td>
- <td class="left">O</td>
- <td class="left">BŌ<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_239" id="fnanchor_239"></a><a href="#footnote_239" class="fnanchor">[239]</a></span></td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="unindent">In the corresponding antistrophé Gamma was similarly
-coupled with the seven vowels, and so on apparently
-through the alphabet. During the song, which was set
-to excellent music, the members of the chorus, dressed
-to represent the letters quite clearly, and no doubt
-posturing in the right attitude, would form themselves
-into the required pairs. Thus, during the first line
-Beta and Alpha would come together, during the second
-Beta and Ei, and so on. After this song came a lecture
-on the vowels, in iambic verse, the chorus being told to
-repeat them one by one after the speaker. There seems
-to have been a plot of some sort in this extraordinary
-drama, but the main interest was, no doubt, the spelling.
-Opportunities were also taken for describing the shapes
-of the letters, the audience having to guess what letter
-was intended. This kind of alphabetical puzzle seems to
-have caught the popular fancy at Athens, for Euripides,
-<a name="Page_90" id="Page_90"></a><span class="pageno">90</span>
-Agathon, and Theodektes all employed it. In each
-case the concealed word was “Theseus.”</p>
-
-<p>Euripides’ description, if it be his, may be rendered
-<span class="lock">thus:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="i0">First, such a circle as is measured out</div>
- <div class="i0">By compasses, a clear mark in the midst.</div>
- <div class="i0">The second letter is two upright lines,</div>
- <div class="i0">Another joining them across their middles.</div>
- <div class="i0">The third is like a curl of hair. The fourth,</div>
- <div class="i0">One upright line and three crosswise infixed.</div>
- <div class="i0">The fifth is hard to tell: from several points</div>
- <div class="i0">Two lines run down to form one pedestal.</div>
- <div class="i0">The last is with the third identical.</div>
- </div><!--end poem-->
-</div><!--end container-->
-
-<p>In the same spirit, Sophocles, in his satyric drama
-<cite>Amphiaraos</cite>, introduced an actor who represented
-the shapes of the letters by his dancing.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_240" id="fnanchor_240"></a><a href="#footnote_240" class="fnanchor">[240]</a></span>
-Periclean
-Athens seems to have taken a very keen interest in
-matters of spelling: the audience must all have known
-their letters, or such devices could never have become
-so popular.</p>
-
-<p>Kallias’ play is the ancestor of such books as
-<cite>Reading without Tears</cite>. His dramatic presentation
-of the process of spelling must have caught the imagination
-and impressed the memory of many Athenian boys.
-It may even be suspected that his method was adopted
-in enterprising schools, and spelling lessons were conducted
-to a tune, perhaps even accompanied by dancing.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_241" id="fnanchor_241"></a><a href="#footnote_241" class="fnanchor">[241]</a></span>
-The tunes of Kallias were highly praised, and were, no
-doubt, very different from the monotonous drone which
-announces to the outside world the presence of a Board
-School.</p>
-
-<p><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91"></a><span class="pageno">91</span>
-To return to more prosaic methods. Plato gives an
-interesting sketch<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_242" id="fnanchor_242"></a><a href="#footnote_242" class="fnanchor">[242]</a></span>
-of a reading class. “When boys
-have just learnt their letters, they recognise any of them
-readily enough in the shortest and easiest syllables, and
-are able to give a correct answer about them. But in
-the longer and more difficult syllables they are not
-certain, but form a wrong opinion and answer wrongly.
-Then the best way is to take them back to the syllables
-in which they recognise the same letters and then compare
-them with those in which they made mistakes, and,
-putting them side by side, show that in both combinations
-the same letters have the same meaning.”</p>
-
-<p>Take an English example. The master writes
-<span class="sc lowercase">SCRAPE</span> on the blackboard and asks the boys to tell
-him what letters it contains. The class fail to recognise
-the letters: the word is too long and difficult. The
-master then writes beside it consecutively <span class="sc lowercase">APE</span>, <span class="sc lowercase">RAPE</span>,
-<span class="sc lowercase">CAPE</span>, in all of which the boys recognise the letters
-correctly. Then <span class="sc lowercase">CRAPE</span> and <span class="sc lowercase">SCRAP</span>. From these
-he passes on to <span class="sc lowercase">SCRAPE</span>, which they now recognise by
-analogy from the words which they know already.
-“Finally, they learn always to give the same name to
-the same letter whenever it comes.”<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_243" id="fnanchor_243"></a><a href="#footnote_243" class="fnanchor">[243]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The methods by which boys learn to spell are the
-same in all ages. “When boys come together to learn
-their letters, they are asked what letters there are in
-some word or other.”<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_244" id="fnanchor_244"></a><a href="#footnote_244" class="fnanchor">[244]</a></span>
-A certain amount of mental
-arithmetic seems to have been included in this stage
-of spelling: the pupils were asked <em>how many</em> letters
-there were in a word, as well as the order in which
-they were arranged.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_245" id="fnanchor_245"></a><a href="#footnote_245" class="fnanchor">[245]</a></span>
-But this will be discussed
-later.</p>
-
-<p><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92"></a><span class="pageno">92</span>
-While the boys were still unable to read, and often
-afterwards owing to the comparative scarcity of books,
-the master dictated to them the poetry which he intended
-them to learn by heart, and they repeated it
-after him.</p>
-
-<p>The Kulix of Douris gives an interesting picture of
-either a reading or a repetition lesson.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_246" id="fnanchor_246"></a><a href="#footnote_246" class="fnanchor">[246]</a></span>
-On a high-backed
-chair sits an elderly master, holding a roll in
-his hand. On it is inscribed what is clearly meant to
-be an hexameter line from some epic poet, but Douris
-was not very well educated, and so the line is misspelt
-and will not scan. In front of the master stands a boy,
-behind whom sits an elderly man who is probably, as in
-the writing scene, a paidagogos. The master may be
-dictating the poem while the boy learns it by heart after
-him, or he may be hearing him say it. But very
-possibly the scene represents a reading-lesson. The
-attitudes of boy and master are not very convenient, if
-both are reading out of the same book; but this was
-unavoidable, for, owing to the canons of vase-painting,
-the figures could only be full-faced or in profile, and
-the front of the manuscript had to be turned in such a
-way as to be legible.</p>
-
-<p>On the walls of the school hang a manuscript rolled
-up and tied with a string, and an ornamental basket.
-These baskets were used as bookcases, to hold the
-manuscript rolls. They may sometimes be seen on
-vases suspended over the heads of reading figures, as in
-the British Museum vase,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_247" id="fnanchor_247"></a><a href="#footnote_247" class="fnanchor">[247]</a></span>
-which represents a woman
-reading a scroll. The paidagogos, we may notice, is
-revealing his humble origin by crossing his feet, a
-serious offence against good manners in Hellas.</p>
-
-<p>“When the boys knew their letters and were
-<a name="Page_93" id="Page_93"></a><span class="pageno">93</span>
-beginning to understand what was written, the masters
-put beside them on the benches the works of good poets
-for them to read, and made them learn them by heart.
-They chose for this purpose poets that contained many
-moral precepts, and narratives and praises of the heroes
-of old, in order that the boy might admire them and
-imitate them and desire to become such a man himself.”<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_248" id="fnanchor_248"></a><a href="#footnote_248" class="fnanchor">[248]</a></span>
-It is noteworthy that Hellenic boys began at once
-with the very best literature to be found in their
-language: there was no preliminary course of childish
-tales. Grammar, when invented, was taught at a later
-stage: the boys plunged straight into literature.</p>
-
-<p>The schoolmasters at Athens differed as to which
-was the best way of introducing boys to their national
-literature. The great majority held that a properly
-educated boy ought to be saturated in all poetry, comic
-and serious, hearing much of it in the reading class, and
-learning much of it&mdash;in fact, whole poets&mdash;by heart.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_249" id="fnanchor_249"></a><a href="#footnote_249" class="fnanchor">[249]</a></span>
-A minority would pick out the leading passages,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_250" id="fnanchor_250"></a><a href="#footnote_250" class="fnanchor">[250]</a></span>
-the
-“purple patches,” and certain whole speeches,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_251" id="fnanchor_251"></a><a href="#footnote_251" class="fnanchor">[251]</a></span>
-and put
-them together and have them committed to memory.
-Plato argued in favour of expurgated editions of passages
-carefully selected according to a very strict standard,
-since much in literature was good and much bad.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_252" id="fnanchor_252"></a><a href="#footnote_252" class="fnanchor">[252]</a></span>
-</p>
-
-<p>Homer, of course, played the largest part in these
-literary studies; from early times “he was given an
-honourable place in the teaching of the young.”<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_253" id="fnanchor_253"></a><a href="#footnote_253" class="fnanchor">[253]</a></span>
-Vast
-<a name="Page_94" id="Page_94"></a><span class="pageno">94</span>
-quantities of the <cite>Iliad</cite> and <cite>Odyssey</cite> were learnt by
-heart. Nikeratos, in Xenophon,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_254" id="fnanchor_254"></a><a href="#footnote_254" class="fnanchor">[254]</a></span>
-says: “My father,
-wishing me to grow up into a good man, made me
-learn all the lines of Homer; and now I can repeat the
-whole of the <cite>Iliad</cite> and <cite>Odyssey</cite> from memory.” Such
-prodigious feats were, no doubt, assisted by the rhapsodes,
-who could be heard at Athens declaiming Homer
-“nearly every day.”<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_255" id="fnanchor_255"></a><a href="#footnote_255" class="fnanchor">[255]</a></span>
-The Hellenes did not let their
-greatest poet lie neglected, to be “revived” at long
-intervals. Homer was supposed to teach everything,
-especially soldiering and good morals. “I suppose you
-know,” continues Nikeratos,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_256" id="fnanchor_256"></a><a href="#footnote_256" class="fnanchor">[256]</a></span>
- “that Homer, the wisest
-of men, has written about all human matters. So whoever
-of you wishes to excel as a householder or public
-speaker or general, or desires to become like Achilles
-or Aias or Nestor or Odusseus, let him come to me.”
-Then he proceeds to show how, for example, the poet
-gives full directions about the proper way to drive a
-chariot in a race. Aristophanes<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_257" id="fnanchor_257"></a><a href="#footnote_257" class="fnanchor">[257]</a></span>
-makes the shade of
-Aeschylus say, “Whence did divine Homer win his
-honour and renown, save from this, that he taught drill,
-courage, the arming of troops? Many a man of valour
-he trained, and our own dead hero, Lamachos. I took
-my print from him, and represented many deeds of
-valour done by a Patroklos or lion-hearted Teukros, to
-rouse my countrymen to model themselves upon such
-men, when they heard the trumpet sound.”</p>
-
-<p>The great poet does not seem to have been taught
-pedantically; the attention of the boys was not concentrated
-simply on the difficulties of the Homeric
-vocabulary. In fact, probably they were little troubled
-with such points; the sense, the rhythm, and the beauty
-<a name="Page_95" id="Page_95"></a><span class="pageno">95</span>
-of the original do not depend upon an exact understanding
-of every word, as many a modern reader has
-discovered. In a fragment of Aristophanes,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_258" id="fnanchor_258"></a><a href="#footnote_258" class="fnanchor">[258]</a></span>
-a father
-asks his son the meaning of some hard words in Homer,
-such as <ins title="amenêna karêna">ἀμένηνα κάρηνα</ins> and <ins title="korymba">κόρυμβα</ins>; the son is quite
-unable to translate them, at any rate when separated
-from their context, and can only retort by asking his
-father to interpret some archaic phrases in Solon’s laws.
-A later comic poet<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_259" id="fnanchor_259"></a><a href="#footnote_259" class="fnanchor">[259]</a></span>
-introduced a cook who insisted on
-using Homeric language, just as a modern <em>chef</em> writes
-his <em>menu</em> in French; the man who has hired him is
-ludicrously unable to understand his phrases, and has to
-go in search of a commentary.</p>
-
-<p>Explanations and interpretations of supposed moral
-allegories in Homer, and lessons drawn from a close
-study of his characters, were very popular in Hellas,
-and no doubt figured in the schools.</p>
-
-<p>If Homer occupied the first place in literary education,
-other leading authors were not neglected. All
-the great poets were made useful. “Orpheus taught
-ceremonial rites and abstinence from bloodshed, and
-Mousaios medicine and oracles, and Hesiod the tillage
-of land, the seasons of fruits and ploughing.”<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_260" id="fnanchor_260"></a><a href="#footnote_260" class="fnanchor">[260]</a></span>
-Hesiod
-probably served more as a theological handbook than as
-a manual of agriculture; the moral precepts to Perses
-in the <cite>Works and Days</cite> probably also found favour
-with schoolmasters. The fourth-century comic poet
-Alexis gives an interesting catalogue of a school
-library.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_261" id="fnanchor_261"></a><a href="#footnote_261" class="fnanchor">[261]</a></span>
-Besides Orpheus, Hesiod, and Homer, who
-have been mentioned already, there are Epicharmos,
-Choirilos, the author of an epic poem on the Persian
-war, and what is called vaguely “tragedy,” probably
-<a name="Page_96" id="Page_96"></a><span class="pageno">96</span>
-meaning a selection from the great tragedians. We can
-see from Plato’s attacks that Aeschylus and Euripides
-must have been important in the schools, and we know
-that Athenian gentlemen were expected to be able to
-recite them at dinner-parties, and must therefore have
-learnt them by heart. The vague words “tragedy”
-and “comedy” are similarly used of the recitations of
-the boys at Teos. Various editions of moral precepts
-were also popular. Among these were <cite>The Precepts
-of Cheiron</cite>, or Cheironeia, supposed to have been given
-by the wise Centaur to his pupil Achilles and put
-into verse by Hesiod; on a vase at Berlin three boys
-are seen reading this work with apparent interest.
-The extant lines of Theognis are often supposed to
-represent a school edition of the poet’s works, containing
-the more improving portions. The lyric poets
-were taught at the lyre-school, and I shall discuss them
-later.</p>
-
-<p>Alexis also mentions “all sorts of prose works” in
-the school library. The only one of these to which he
-gives a more definite name is a cookery-book by Simos.
-But that is only introduced for the sake of a joke; such
-a work would not, of course, figure in an Athenian
-school. Aesop may have been a prose work read in
-schools; it was considered the sign of an ignoramus
-“not to have thumbed Aesop,” or to be able to quote
-him.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_262" id="fnanchor_262"></a><a href="#footnote_262" class="fnanchor">[262]</a></span>
-Such moral works as Prodikos’ <cite>Choice of
-Herakles</cite> were probably popular in schools. The
-case of Lusis in Plato suggests that some of the old
-nature-philosophers may have been read. No doubt
-the school library varied according to the taste of the
-master, and his freedom of choice may have led to some
-curious selections. But on the whole prose works very
-<a name="Page_97" id="Page_97"></a><span class="pageno">97</span>
-rarely figured in the elementary schools, partly because
-they were usually too technical, still more because the
-artistic and literary sense of the Hellenes regarded
-poetry, if only because of its greater beauty and its
-imaginative value, as better for educational purposes
-than prose.</p>
-
-<p>It must be remembered that when boys recited
-Homer or Aeschylus or Euripides, they acted them,
-delivering even the narrative with a great deal of
-gesture, and dramatising the speeches as fully as they
-could. The almost daily recitations of the rhapsodes,
-and the frequent dramatic performances in the theatres,
-gave them plenty of examples of the way to act. The
-Hellenes were extremely sensitive and sympathetic:
-they were a nation of actors. The rhapsode Ion tells
-Plato that, when he recited Homer, his eyes watered
-and his hair stood on end. This may give the modern
-reader some idea of what his repetition-lesson meant to
-a boy at Athens. More may be gathered from Plato’s
-vehement denunciations of dramatisation in poetry
-intended for use in schools; he believed that this continuous
-acting exerted an evil influence upon character.
-But this question will be discussed elsewhere.</p>
-
-<p>The schoolrooms were used as the scene of lectures,
-to which grown-up men were invited; probably the
-lectures would be given to the boys at a different time.
-The wandering teacher, Hippias of Elis, meeting
-Sokrates one day, invited him to such a lecture, which,
-from its subject, was clearly meant mainly for the
-young.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_263" id="fnanchor_263"></a><a href="#footnote_263" class="fnanchor">[263]</a></span>
-After the fall of Troy, according to the story
-which Hippias invented for the occasion, Neoptolemos
-asked the wise old Nestor what was good and honourable
-conduct and what manner of life would cause a
-<a name="Page_98" id="Page_98"></a><span class="pageno">98</span>
-young man to win renown. Given this convenient
-opening, Nestor replied by suggesting many excellent
-rules of conduct. Hippias had delivered this lecture at
-Sparta, where it had won great applause. He now
-proposes, he says, “to deliver it the day after to-morrow
-in the schoolroom of Pheidostratos, and to
-impart much other valuable information at the same
-time, at the request of Eudikos son of Apemantos.
-Mind you come and bring any friends who will be
-capable of appreciating what I say.” No doubt it was
-a very excellent little sermon on the duties of life,
-closely analogous to Prodikos’ famous <cite>Choice of
-Herakles</cite>, and most improving for the pupils of
-Pheidostratos, if they were allowed to attend.</p>
-
-<p>One charming picture of two Athenian school
-friends,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_264" id="fnanchor_264"></a><a href="#footnote_264" class="fnanchor">[264]</a></span>
-in their sleeveless tunics, is extant. “I saw
-you, Sokrates,” says a guest at a dinner-party, “when
-you and Kritoboulos at the School of Letters were both
-looking for something in the same book, putting your
-head against his, and your bare shoulder against his
-shoulder.”</p>
-
-<p>It is also recorded that the Athenians were great
-hands at nicknames:<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_265" id="fnanchor_265"></a><a href="#footnote_265" class="fnanchor">[265]</a></span>
-it may be inferred that this
-peculiarity extended also to their schoolboys.</p>
-
-<p>A vivid picture of school life has recently come to
-light in the third Mime of Herondas. It belongs to
-the Alexandrian period in point of date, but many of
-its details will, no doubt, suit the Athenian schools just
-as well; it is, however, quite inconceivable that gags
-and fetters were used as punishments at Athens in the
-schools.</p>
-
-<p>A mother, Metrotimé, brings her truant boy,
-<a name="Page_99" id="Page_99"></a><span class="pageno">99</span>
-Kottalos, to his schoolmaster Lampriskos to receive a
-flogging.</p>
-
-<div class="drama-container">
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="i1"><span class="sc">Metrotimé</span>.<span class="ss" style="width:5em"> </span>Flog him, Lampriskos,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_266" id="fnanchor_266"></a><a href="#footnote_266" class="fnanchor">[266]</a></span></div>
- <div class="i0">Across the shoulders, till his wicked soul</div>
- <div class="i0">Is all but out of him. He’s spent my all</div>
- <div class="i0">In playing odd and even: knucklebones</div>
- <div class="i0">Are nothing to him. Why, he hardly knows</div>
- <div class="i0">The door o’ the Letter School. And yet the thirtieth</div>
- <div class="i0">Comes round and I must pay&mdash;tears no excuse.</div>
- <div class="i0">His writing-tablet, which I take the trouble</div>
- <div class="i0">To wax anew each month, lies unregarded</div>
- <div class="i0">I’ the corner. If by chance he deigns to touch it,</div>
- <div class="i0">He scowls like Hades, then puts nothing right</div>
- <div class="i0">But smears it out and out. He doesn’t know</div>
- <div class="i0">A letter, till you scream it twenty times.</div>
- <div class="i0">The other day his father made him spell</div>
- <div class="i0"><span class="sc">Maron</span>; the rascal made it <span class="sc">Simon</span>; dolt</div>
- <div class="i0">I thought myself to send him to a school:</div>
- <div class="i0">Ass-tending is his trade. Another time</div>
- <div class="i0">We set him to recite some childish piece;</div>
- <div class="i0">He sifts it out like water through a crack,</div>
- <div class="i0">“Apollo,” pause, then “hunter.”</div>
- </div><!--end drama-->
-</div><!--end container-->
-
-<p>The poor mother goes on to say that it is useless to
-scold the boy; for, if she does, he promptly runs away
-from home to sponge upon his grandmother, or sits up
-on the roof out of the way, like an ape, breaking the
-tiles, which is expensive for his parents.</p>
-
-<div class="drama-container">
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="i0"><span class="ss" style="width:5em"> </span>Yet he knows</div>
- <div class="i0">The seventh and the twentieth of the month,</div>
- <div class="i0">Whole holidays, as if he read the stars.</div>
- <div class="i0">He lies awake o’ nights adreaming of them.</div>
- <div class="i0">But, so may yonder Muses prosper you,</div>
- <div class="i0">Give him in stripes no less than&mdash;&mdash;</div>
-
- <div class="i1"><span class="sc">Lampriskos.</span><span class="ss" style="width:8em"> </span>Right you are.</div>
- <div class="i0">Here, Euthias, Kokkalos, and Phillos, hoist him</div>
- <div class="i0">Upon your backs.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_267" id="fnanchor_267"></a><a href="#footnote_267" class="fnanchor">[267]</a></span> I like your goings on,</div>
-<a name="Page_100" id="Page_100"></a><span class="pageno">100</span>
- <div class="i0">My boy. I’ll teach you manners. Where’s my strap,</div>
- <div class="i0">The stinging cow’s-tail!</div>
-
- <div class="i1"><span class="sc">Kottalos.</span><span class="ss" style="width:5em"> </span>By the Muses, Sir,</div>
- <div class="i0">Not with the stinger.</div>
-
- <div class="i1"><abbr title="Lampriskos"><span class="sc">Lamp.</span></abbr><span class="ss" style="width:5em"> </span>Then you shouldn’t be</div>
- <div class="i0">So naughty.</div>
-
- <div class="i1"><abbr title="Kottalos"><span class="sc">Kott.</span></abbr><span class="ss" style="width:2em"> </span>O, how many will you give me?</div>
-
- <div class="i1"><abbr title="Lampriskos"><span class="sc">Lamp.</span></abbr> Your mother fixes that.</div>
-
- <div class="i1"><abbr title="Kottalos"><span class="sc">Kott.</span></abbr><span class="ss" style="width:8em"> </span>How many, mother?</div>
-
- <div class="i1"><abbr title="Metrotimé"><span class="sc">Metr.</span></abbr> As many as your wicked hide can bear.</div>
-
- <div class="i1"><abbr title="Kottalos"><span class="sc">Kott.</span></abbr> Stop, that’s enough, stop.</div>
-
- <div class="i1"><abbr title="Lampriskos"><span class="sc">Lamp.</span></abbr><span class="ss" style="width:8em"> </span>You should stop your ways.</div>
-
- <div class="i1"><abbr title="Kottalos"><span class="sc">Kott.</span></abbr> I’ll never do it more, I promise you.</div>
-
- <div class="i1"><abbr title="Lampriskos"><span class="sc">Lamp.</span></abbr> Don’t talk so much, or else I’ll bring a gag.</div>
-
- <div class="i1"><abbr title="Kottalos"><span class="sc">Kott.</span></abbr> I won’t talk, only do not kill me, please.</div>
-
- <div class="i1"><abbr title="Lampriskos"><span class="sc">Lamp.</span></abbr> Let him down, boys.</div>
-
- <div class="i1"><abbr title="Metrotimé"><span class="sc">Metr.</span></abbr><span class="ss" style="width:8em"> </span>No, leather him till sunset.</div>
-
- <div class="i1"><abbr title="Lampriskos"><span class="sc">Lamp.</span></abbr> Why, he’s as mottled as a water-snake.</div>
-
- <div class="i1"><abbr title="Metrotimé"><span class="sc">Metr.</span></abbr> Well, when he’s done his reading, good or bad,</div>
- <div class="i0">Give him a trifle more, say twenty strokes.</div>
-
- <div class="i1"><abbr title="Kottalos"><span class="sc">Kott.</span></abbr> Yah!</div>
-
- <div class="i1"><abbr title="Metrotimé"><span class="sc">Metr.</span></abbr><span class="ss" style="width:2em"> </span>I’ll go home and get a pair of fetters.</div>
- <div class="i0">Our Lady Muses, whom he scorned, shall see</div>
- <div class="i0">Their scorner hobble here with shackled feet.</div>
- </div><!--end poem-->
-</div><!--end container-->
-
-<p>The exact age at which arithmetic was taught to
-boys at Athens involves a somewhat complicated inquiry.
-The arrangements which Plato makes in the <cite>Republic</cite>
-and <cite>Laws</cite> defer this subject till the age of sixteen. In
-the <cite>Laws</cite><span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_268" id="fnanchor_268"></a><a href="#footnote_268" class="fnanchor">[268]</a></span>
-he says: “It remains to discuss, first the
-question of Letters, and secondly that of the Lyre and
-practical arithmetic&mdash;by which I mean so much as is
-necessary for purposes of war and household management
-and the work of government.” His citizens will
-also require, he thinks, enough astronomy to make the
-calendar intelligible to them. In this passage he distinctly
-couples practical arithmetic with music; and
-<a name="Page_101" id="Page_101"></a><span class="pageno">101</span>
-when he proceeds to detail, he makes the study of the
-lyre last from thirteen to sixteen, and then deals with
-arithmetic, the weights and measures, and the astronomical
-calendar, studies which terminate with the seventeenth
-year. This course is designed for all the free
-boys in his State: it is to be noticed that it is eminently
-practical, elementary, and concrete. In the <cite>Republic</cite>
-he is educating a few picked boys: before they are
-eighteen they are to have gone through a course of
-abstract and theoretical mathematics, the Theory of
-Numbers, Plane and Solid Geometry, Kinetics and
-Harmonics. Thus he mentions two sorts of mathematics,
-the one practical and concrete, called by the
-Hellenes <ins title="logistikê">λογιστική</ins>,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_269" id="fnanchor_269"></a><a href="#footnote_269" class="fnanchor">[269]</a></span>
-whose object is mainly mercantile,
-and the other theoretical and abstract, which they called
-<ins title="arithmêtikê">ἀριθμητική</ins>. Both sorts are to be learned in the period
-next before the eighteenth year.</p>
-
-<p>But it must not be assumed that this was the case
-at Athens. The philosopher is dealing with an ideal
-State, where education can be arranged in the theoretically
-best way, not with the real Athens, where the boy
-might be called away to the counting-house or the
-farm at any moment, and many did not stay at school
-after they had once learned to read and write. Moreover
-Plato, as a good Pythagorean, saw a peculiar
-appropriateness in making numbers follow music, and
-his Dorian sympathies made him divide up education
-into clearly marked periods, in each of which only one
-subject was taught. This arrangement, I have already
-shown, did not find favour at Athens.</p>
-
-<p>His system must, then, be received with caution.
-<a name="Page_102" id="Page_102"></a><span class="pageno">102</span>
-It is inherently far more probable that the simpler,
-practical arithmetic would be taught at the elementary
-schools of letters, which all citizens, including future
-tradesmen and artisans, attended, not at some later
-date in a separate school. But can any evidence be
-found for such an arrangement? Yes, Plato himself
-in the <cite>Laws</cite><span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_270" id="fnanchor_270"></a><a href="#footnote_270" class="fnanchor">[270]</a></span>
-declares that the future builder ought to
-play with toy bricks and learn weights and measurements
-when he is a child. His builder, at any rate,
-cannot wait to learn arithmetic till he is sixteen.
-Then, in the same work, he quotes the instance of
-Egypt, where “a very large number of children learn
-practical arithmetic <em>simultaneously with their letters</em>,”
-and he goes on to commend the methods by which it
-was taught. Now Egypt in the <cite>Laws</cite> is represented
-as the home of ideal education, a sort of Utopia.
-Again, in Plato<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_271" id="fnanchor_271"></a><a href="#footnote_271" class="fnanchor">[271]</a></span>
-Protagoras blames his brother Sophists
-for “leading their pupils <em>back</em>, much against their wish,
-and casting them <em>again</em> into the sciences from which
-they have escaped, practical arithmetic and astronomy
-and geometry and music.” How could the Sophists<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_272" id="fnanchor_272"></a><a href="#footnote_272" class="fnanchor">[272]</a></span>
-be described as “leading them back and casting them
-again” into studies from which they had escaped?
-Where had they learnt these subjects before they were
-fourteen? It could only have been at school. But
-what the Sophists taught must have been new to the
-boys, or they would not have paid to learn it. It was
-new, because the Sophists taught the advanced and
-theoretical stages, which appear in the <cite>Republic</cite>, and the
-elementary schoolmasters taught the simpler and concrete
-elements of arithmetic, weights and measures,
-and the calendar, described in the <cite>Laws</cite>, which were
-<a name="Page_103" id="Page_103"></a><span class="pageno">103</span>
-necessary to every Athenian citizen. From all this
-it may be assumed that the Athenian boys, like Plato’s
-Egyptian boys, learnt simple arithmetic, weights and
-measures, and perhaps the calendar, “simultaneously
-with their letters.”</p>
-
-<p>Now there are two passages in Xenophon which
-seem to suit this view. They are not conclusive in
-themselves, but they give a valuable hint. In the first<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_273" id="fnanchor_273"></a><a href="#footnote_273" class="fnanchor">[273]</a></span>
-it is stated that any one who knows his letters could
-say <em>how many</em> letters there are in “Sokrates,” and in
-what order they occur. In the second,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_274" id="fnanchor_274"></a><a href="#footnote_274" class="fnanchor">[274]</a></span>
-in the course
-of an argument, two illustrations are used, in close
-connection with one another. The passage runs:&mdash;“Take
-the case of Letters. Suppose some one asks
-you how many letters there are in ‘Sokrates,’ and
-which are they?… Or take the case of Numbers.
-Suppose some one asks what is twice five?” These two
-quotations certainly make simple counting a part of
-learning letters, with which study the second passage
-also closely connects the multiplication table. It would
-seem that it was part of a spelling lesson to answer such
-questions as “How many letters in ‘Sokrates’?”
-Answer, “Eight.” “Where does R come?” Answer,
-“Fourth.” It may be noticed also that the symbols of
-the numerals in ancient Hellas were, with one or two
-exceptions, identical with the current alphabet. The
-games with cubic dice and knucklebones, to which the
-boys were much addicted, must also have needed some
-arithmetical skill. The natural conclusion is that
-simple arithmetic, with, probably, the weights and
-measures, and the outlines of the calendar, were taught
-by the letter-master: the practice of music by the
-music-master: while the theory of numbers, of
-<a name="Page_104" id="Page_104"></a><span class="pageno">104</span>
-astronomy, and of music were taught by the Sophists
-to <ins title="meirakia">μειράκια</ins>.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
- <a name="i104" id="i104"></a>
- <img src="images/104.jpg"
- width="500" height="413"
- alt="Illustration: Finger counting system"
- title="Illustration: Finger counting system"
- />
-</div><!--end illustration-->
-
-<p>Simple counting was done on the fingers. “Reckon
-on your fingers,” says a character in Aristophanes,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_275" id="fnanchor_275"></a><a href="#footnote_275" class="fnanchor">[275]</a></span>
-“not with pebbles.” A common word for counting
-was <ins title="pempazein">πεμπάζειν</ins>, “to reckon on the five fingers”; the
-division of the month into three periods of ten days
-can be traced to the same custom. But by various
-devices it was possible to count up to very large
-numbers on the fingers. Pebbles were also employed
-to assist in arithmetic. In the case of complicated
-accounts a reckoning board (<ins title="abakos">ἄβακος</ins> or <ins title="abax">ἄβαξ</ins>) was used,
-on which the pebbles varied in value according to their
-position. Such boards go back to early days at Athens,
-for Solon compared the life of a courtier to a pebble
-upon them, since he was now worth much and now
-little.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_276" id="fnanchor_276"></a><a href="#footnote_276" class="fnanchor">[276]</a></span>
-A character in a fourth-century comedy<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_277" id="fnanchor_277"></a><a href="#footnote_277" class="fnanchor">[277]</a></span>
-sends
-for an abacus and pebbles, in order that he may do his
-accounts. The pebbles were arranged in grooves,
-<!--Blank Page-->
-<a name="Page_105" id="Page_105"></a><span class="pageno">105</span>
-being worth one or ten or a hundred and so forth,
-according to the groove in which they were placed.
-If they were put on the left-hand side of the board,
-their value was multiplied by five.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_278" id="fnanchor_278"></a><a href="#footnote_278" class="fnanchor">[278]</a></span>
-The various
-games of <ins title="pessoi">πεσσοί</ins>, which somewhat resembled chess, were
-played on a somewhat similar board to this, and these
-chess-boards were known as <ins title="abakes">ἄβακες</ins>. Now the art of
-playing with <ins title="pessoi">πεσσοί</ins> is more than once coupled by
-Plato with arithmetic or mathematics generally in such
-a way as to show that the game must have involved
-mathematical skill.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_279" id="fnanchor_279"></a><a href="#footnote_279" class="fnanchor">[279]</a></span>
-As was usual in Athens, instruction
-went hand in hand with amusement, and, in
-playing games, the boys learned arithmetic willingly.
-A similar value seems to have attached to the game of
-knucklebones, which the boys in the <cite>Lusis</cite> are found
-playing during their whole holiday. Each boy carried
-a large basket of knucklebones, and the loser in each
-game paid so many of them over to the winner. The
-art of playing this game is also coupled with mathematics
-by Plato;<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_280" id="fnanchor_280"></a><a href="#footnote_280" class="fnanchor">[280]</a></span>
-so it must at any rate have
-encouraged the study of arithmetic, in his opinion. In
-the school scene of the British Museum amphora, a
-little bag, usually supposed to contain knucklebones, is
-figured: so they may even have been used in schools
-for teaching arithmetic. In another school scene this
-bag is present with a lyre and ruler; so it was evidently
-part of the school furniture.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter together" style="width: 500px">
- <p class="captionleft">PLATE <abbr title="Three">III.</abbr></p>
- <a name="i03" id="i03"></a>
- <img src="images/3.jpg"
- width="500" height="312"
- alt="Illustration: Music School Scenes"
- />
- <p class="caption">MUSIC-SCHOOL SCENES<br />
-From a Hudria in the British Museum (E 171).</p>
-</div><!--end illustration-->
-
-<p>After such revelations of Hellenic educational
-methods, it is natural to suppose that the ingenious
-<a name="Page_106" id="Page_106"></a><span class="pageno">106</span>
-devices by which the “Egyptians,”<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_281" id="fnanchor_281"></a><a href="#footnote_281" class="fnanchor">[281]</a></span>
-according to Plato,
-“make simple arithmetic into a game” for their
-children, were really used in Attica. One of these
-devices<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_282" id="fnanchor_282"></a><a href="#footnote_282" class="fnanchor">[282]</a></span>
-was as follows. The master took, say, sixty
-apples. First he divided them among two boys, who
-were made to count their share, thirty each; then
-among three boys, twenty each; then among four,
-fifteen each; then among five, twelve each; and then
-among six, ten each. This would teach the system of
-factors. Then, again, a real or imaginary competition
-in boxing or wrestling<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_283" id="fnanchor_283"></a><a href="#footnote_283" class="fnanchor">[283]</a></span>
-was arranged, say in a class of
-nine. The boys would work out, by actual experiment,
-how many fights would be necessary, if each boy had to
-fight all the others one by one, and how many if a
-system of rounds and byes was introduced. This might
-even teach Permutations and Combinations.</p>
-
-<p>In another case a number of bowls, some containing
-mixed coins, gold, silver, and bronze, some all of one sort,
-would be handed round the class. The boys would
-have to count them, add and subtract them, and so on.
-Thus they would learn addition and subtraction of
-money, and would also gain a clear knowledge of the
-national coinage.</p>
-
-<p>Plato was immensely impressed with the educational
-value of Arithmetic. “Those who are born with a
-talent for it,” he says, “are quick at all learning; while
-even those who are slow at it, have their general intelligence
-much increased by studying it.”<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_284" id="fnanchor_284"></a><a href="#footnote_284" class="fnanchor">[284]</a></span>
- “No
-branch of education is so valuable a preparation for
-household management and politics, and all arts and
-<a name="Page_107" id="Page_107"></a><span class="pageno">107</span>
-crafts, sciences and professions, as arithmetic; best of
-all, by some divine art, it arouses the dull and sleepy
-brain, and makes it studious, mindful, and sharp.”<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_285" id="fnanchor_285"></a><a href="#footnote_285" class="fnanchor">[285]</a></span>
-</p>
-
-<p>The question of the more advanced stages of Mathematics,
-which were taught to older boys, may be left
-for the chapter on Secondary Education.</p>
-
-<p class="center">* * * * *</p>
-
-<p>The chief and often the sole instrument taught in
-the music school was the seven-stringed lyre,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_286" id="fnanchor_286"></a><a href="#footnote_286" class="fnanchor">[286]</a></span>
-with a
-large sounding-board originally made of a tortoise’s
-shell.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_287" id="fnanchor_287"></a><a href="#footnote_287" class="fnanchor">[287]</a></span>
-It might be played either with the hand or else
-with the “plektron” or striker; the boy Lusis had
-learnt to do either.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_288" id="fnanchor_288"></a><a href="#footnote_288" class="fnanchor">[288]</a></span>
-The boys were also taught how
-to tighten and relax the strings by turning the pegs till
-the proper degree of tension was obtained. They
-brought their own lyre with them from home, the
-paidagogos carrying it behind his charge. This was a
-wise regulation from the master’s point of view; for
-the boys seem to have usually ruined these instruments
-by their early efforts.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_289" id="fnanchor_289"></a><a href="#footnote_289" class="fnanchor">[289]</a></span>
-Like the piano, the lyre required
-great delicacy of touch and very agile fingers,
-and these qualities could only be obtained by continual
-practice.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_290" id="fnanchor_290"></a><a href="#footnote_290" class="fnanchor">[290]</a></span>
-</p>
-
-<p>As would naturally be expected, individual tuition
-was usual in the lyre-school; instrumental music
-cannot be learnt in class. The vases make this point
-quite clear. The master has a single boy seated in
-front of him; both hold lyres in their hands, to which
-they are singing, the words of the song being sometimes
-<a name="Page_108" id="Page_108"></a><span class="pageno">108</span>
-represented by a string of little dots. In
-<a href="#i04">Plate <abbr title="Four">IV.</abbr></a>, on the left of this group, a boy is coming up
-to take his turn, lyre in hand, while behind him stands
-his paidagogos, leaning on a reading-desk and following
-his charge with his eyes. On the right is a boy just
-taking up his flute-case and preparing to depart, while
-another sits in the corner, wrapped in his cloak, waiting
-for his turn to take a lesson. In <a href="#i03">Plate <abbr title="Three">III.</abbr></a>,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_291" id="fnanchor_291"></a><a href="#footnote_291" class="fnanchor">[291]</a></span>
-the
-master is playing a barbitos and apparently singing,
-while the pupil plays the flute. On the left is a flute-master
-playing, and a pupil just leaving him, flute in
-hand. Another pupil, with a lyre, is waiting to take a
-lesson from the master in the centre, and is amusing
-himself meanwhile by playing with an animal that is
-probably a leopard,<span class="lock"><a href="#footnote_291" class="fnanchor">[291]</a></span>
-like that which figures in <a href="#i04">Plate
-<abbr title="Four">IV.</abbr></a> Another pet, a dog, is howling in disgust at
-the music. On the right, a pupil with a flute is
-advancing to take a lesson from the flute-master in front
-of him. Behind him follows a young man, who may be
-an elder brother replacing the customary paidagogos
-for the nonce, or an admirer. In the background sits
-a small child, sucking his thumb, probably the younger
-brother of one of the pupils, who has come, in accordance
-with Aristotle’s advice, to look on, although still
-too young to learn.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter together" style="width: 500px">
- <p class="captionleft">PLATE <abbr title="Four">IV.</abbr></p>
- <a name="i04" id="i04"></a>
- <img src="images/4.jpg"
- width="500" height="312"
- alt="Illustration: In a Lyre-School"
- />
- <p class="caption">IN A LYRE-SCHOOL<br />
-From a Hudria in the British Museum (E 172).</p>
-</div><!--end illustration-->
-
-<p>As soon as his pupils knew how to play, the master
-taught them the works of the great lyric poets,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_292" id="fnanchor_292"></a><a href="#footnote_292" class="fnanchor">[292]</a></span>
-which
-were not taught in the school of letters. These were
-set to music, and the boys sang them and played the
-accompaniment. Every gentleman at Athens was
-expected to be able to sing and play in this manner
-when he went out to a dinner-party. The custom,
-<!--Blank Page-->
-<a name="Page_109" id="Page_109"></a><span class="pageno">109</span>
-however, began to become unfashionable during the
-Peloponnesian War. When old Strepsiades, in the
-<cite>Clouds</cite>,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_293" id="fnanchor_293"></a><a href="#footnote_293" class="fnanchor">[293]</a></span>
-asked Pheidippides to take the lyre and sing a
-song of Simonides, his new-fashioned son replies that
-playing the lyre was quite out of date, and singing over
-the wine was only fit for a slave-woman at the grindstone.
-Whether this state of feeling continued and
-whether it had a prejudicial effect on the music-schools
-cannot be decided. Sometimes the guests brought
-their boys to sing to the company: in the <cite>Peace</cite> the
-son of the hero Lamachos is going to sing Homer, while
-the coward Kleonumos’ boy has a song of Archilochos
-ready. Alkaios and Anakreon were also favourites;<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_294" id="fnanchor_294"></a><a href="#footnote_294" class="fnanchor">[294]</a></span>
-the lyric portions of Kratinos’ comedies, too, are
-mentioned as sung at banquets:<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_295" id="fnanchor_295"></a><a href="#footnote_295" class="fnanchor">[295]</a></span>
-no doubt, the same
-was true of the other great comedians. As the iambic
-parts of Aeschylus and Euripides were recited at the
-dinner-table, it is natural to suppose that their songs
-were also sung. The aged Dikasts in the <cite>Wasps</cite> sing
-the choruses from Phrunichos’ <cite>Sidonians</cite>. Old songs
-like Lamprokles’ “Pallas, dread sacker of cities” and
-Kudides’ “A cry that echoes afar” were popular in
-earlier times. No doubt there was plenty of variety
-in accordance with the master’s taste. At the music
-school, too, may have been taught the metrical version,
-set to music, of the Athenian laws, which was ascribed
-to Solon,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_296" id="fnanchor_296"></a><a href="#footnote_296" class="fnanchor">[296]</a></span>
-and that of the legislation of Charondas,
-which Athenian gentlemen sang over their wine.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_297" id="fnanchor_297"></a><a href="#footnote_297" class="fnanchor">[297]</a></span>
-Athenian boys were expected to know the laws by the
-time that they were epheboi, and may well have been
-taught them in this convenient and attractive way at
-<a name="Page_110" id="Page_110"></a><span class="pageno">110</span>
-the lyre-master’s. To know how to play the lyre
-became the mark of a liberal education, since every one
-learned letters, but the poorest did not enter the music-school.
-“He doesn’t know the way to play the lyre,”
-became a proverb for an uneducated person, who had
-not had so many opportunities in life as his wealthier
-fellow-citizens. So, as a plea for a defendant we find&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="i0">He may have stolen. But acquit him, for</div>
- <div class="i0">He doesn’t know the way to play the lyre.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_298" id="fnanchor_298"></a><a href="#footnote_298" class="fnanchor">[298]</a></span></div>
- </div><!--end poem-->
-</div><!--end poem container-->
-
-<p class="unindent">To this the Dikast retorts that he has not learnt the
-lyre either, so he must be forgiven if he is so stupid as
-to condemn the accused.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_299" id="fnanchor_299"></a><a href="#footnote_299" class="fnanchor">[299]</a></span>
-</p>
-
-<p>At the beginning of the fifth century the Hellenes
-were stimulated, according to Aristotle,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_300" id="fnanchor_300"></a><a href="#footnote_300" class="fnanchor">[300]</a></span>
-by their growing
-wealth and importance to make many educational
-experiments, especially in music. All manner of musical
-instruments were tried in the music-schools, but were
-rejected on trial, when the moral effects could be better
-appreciated. Among the instruments thus found
-wanting was the flute. At one time the flute became
-so popular at Athens that the majority of the free
-citizens could play it. But its moral effect proved to
-be unsatisfactory; it was the instrument which belonged
-to wild religious orgies, and it aroused that hysterical
-and almost lunatic excitement<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_301" id="fnanchor_301"></a><a href="#footnote_301" class="fnanchor">[301]</a></span>
-which the Hellenes
-regarded as a useful medicine, when taken at long
-intervals of time, for giving an outlet to such feelings
-and working them off the system, in order that a long
-period of calm might follow. But such a medicine was
-most unsuitable to be the daily food of boys. The
-<a name="Page_111" id="Page_111"></a><span class="pageno">111</span>
-flute had two other disadvantages. It distorted the
-face sufficiently to horrify a sensitive Hellene.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_302" id="fnanchor_302"></a><a href="#footnote_302" class="fnanchor">[302]</a></span>
-It also
-prevented the use of the voice: the boys could not
-sing to it, as they sang to the lyre. So Athena, in the
-old legend, had been quite right in throwing the
-instrument away in disgust: it was only suitable for a
-Phrygian Satyr, for it made no appeal to the intellect,
-but only to the passions.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_303" id="fnanchor_303"></a><a href="#footnote_303" class="fnanchor">[303]</a></span>
-</p>
-
-<p>This is Aristotle’s account. It may be objected
-that the vases which represent scenes in the music-schools
-show the flute and the lyre being taught side
-by side, and apparently equally popular. But these
-vases can mostly be traced more or less certainly to
-the first half of the fifth century, and so they bear out
-Aristotle’s statement. Moreover, the flute did not, of
-course, die out in Hellas by any means; it only became
-an extra, instead of the regular instrument in schools.
-The most notable Athenians, Kallias and Kritias and
-Alkibiades, are said to have played it.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_304" id="fnanchor_304"></a><a href="#footnote_304" class="fnanchor">[304]</a></span>
-It always
-remained popular at Thebes. But at Athens, in the
-banquets, while the guests usually played the lyre
-themselves, the flute was as a rule only played by
-professional flute-girls,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_305" id="fnanchor_305"></a><a href="#footnote_305" class="fnanchor">[305]</a></span>
-although on the vases the guests
-are sometimes found performing on this instrument
-also.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_306" id="fnanchor_306"></a><a href="#footnote_306" class="fnanchor">[306]</a></span>
-Probably the Athenian attitude may be summed
-up in the “ancient proverb”:<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_307" id="fnanchor_307"></a><a href="#footnote_307" class="fnanchor">[307]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="i0">A flutist’s brains can never stay:</div>
- <div class="i0">He puffs his flute, they’re puffed away.</div>
- </div><!--end poem-->
-</div><!--end container-->
-
-<p class="unindent"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112"></a><span class="pageno">112</span>
-It was usual to play on two flutes at the same time.
-Such a pair has been found,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_308" id="fnanchor_308"></a><a href="#footnote_308" class="fnanchor">[308]</a></span>
-together with a lyre, in a
-tomb at Athens. The flutes are somewhat over a foot
-in length, and have five holes on the upper and one
-on the lower side. Each has a separate mouthpiece.
-Besides this, flute-players sometimes wore a sort of
-leathern muzzle<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_309" id="fnanchor_309"></a><a href="#footnote_309" class="fnanchor">[309]</a></span>
-over their mouths; but this does not
-appear in the schools. The pair of flutes were carried
-in a double case, made of some spotted skin; it had a
-pocket on one side, to hold the mouthpieces,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_310" id="fnanchor_310"></a><a href="#footnote_310" class="fnanchor">[310]</a></span>
-and a
-cord attached by which it could be hung up when not
-in use. The two flutes seem to have corresponded to
-treble and bass, “male” and “female” as Herodotos
-calls them. The treble was on the right, the bass on
-the left.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_311" id="fnanchor_311"></a><a href="#footnote_311" class="fnanchor">[311]</a></span>
-Flutes could be set to different harmonies,
-apparently by some rearrangement of stops. In the
-case of the flute, as in the case of the lyre, individual
-tuition was the rule. First the master played an air,
-and then the boy had to repeat it, while the master
-criticised.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_312" id="fnanchor_312"></a><a href="#footnote_312" class="fnanchor">[312]</a></span>
-Or the master played the air on a barbitos
-and sang to it, while the pupil accompanied him on the
-flute. This method had two advantages. The master
-was able to play at the same time as the boy, and give
-him instruction while playing, which the flute prevented
-him from doing. The song, too, which he was enabled
-to sing obviated one of the chief disadvantages of the
-flute: for the Hellenes objected to instrumental music
-as meaningless, unless it was accompanied by words.</p>
-
-<p>There seem to have been music-schools scattered
-throughout Attica, besides those established in the
-capital: the description of the village boys marching off
-<a name="Page_113" id="Page_113"></a><span class="pageno">113</span>
-to the lyre-master’s in a snow-storm without overcoats
-has already been quoted. The names of a few masters
-are extant. Lampros taught Sophocles the poet.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_313" id="fnanchor_313"></a><a href="#footnote_313" class="fnanchor">[313]</a></span>
-Sokrates<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_314" id="fnanchor_314"></a><a href="#footnote_314" class="fnanchor">[314]</a></span>
-recommends Nikias to send his son to the
-famous Damon, who “is not merely a first-class musician,
-but also just the man to be with boys like this.” But
-whether these musicians kept regular schools cannot be
-ascertained. Sokrates himself in his later years attended
-the music-school of Konnos, and learned among the
-boys. “I am disgracing Konnos the music-master,”
-he says, “who is still teaching me to play the lyre.
-The boys who are my schoolfellows laugh at me and
-call Konnos the ‘Greybeard teacher.’”<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_315" id="fnanchor_315"></a><a href="#footnote_315" class="fnanchor">[315]</a></span>
-The same
-Konnos adopted the common but iniquitous custom
-of bestowing his chief attention on his more promising
-pupils, while neglecting the backward.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_316" id="fnanchor_316"></a><a href="#footnote_316" class="fnanchor">[316]</a></span>
-Aristophanes
-caricatures Kleon’s school-days as follows: “The boys
-who went to school with Kleon say he would often set
-his lyre to the Dorian (= Gift-ian) harmony alone.
-Finally, the lyre-master lost his temper and told the
-paidagogos to take him away, saying, “This boy can’t
-learn anything but the Briberian (Dorodokisti) mode.”<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_317" id="fnanchor_317"></a><a href="#footnote_317" class="fnanchor">[317]</a></span>
-</p>
-
-<p>The attitude of the philosophers towards music will
-be discussed elsewhere. Plato’s view may be summed
-up in the words which he puts in the mouth of
-Protagoras the Sophist.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_318" id="fnanchor_318"></a><a href="#footnote_318" class="fnanchor">[318]</a></span>
- “The music-master makes
-rhythm and harmony familiar to the souls of the boys,
-and they become gentler and more refined, and having
-more rhythm and harmony in them, they become more
-efficient in speech and in action. The whole life of Man
-stands in need of good harmony and good rhythm.”
-<a name="Page_114" id="Page_114"></a><span class="pageno">114</span>
-Aristotle’s attitude is briefly this. “Music is neither a
-necessary nor a useful accomplishment in the sense in
-which Letters are useful, but it provides a noble and
-worthy means of occupying leisure-time.”<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_319" id="fnanchor_319"></a><a href="#footnote_319" class="fnanchor">[319]</a></span>
-</p>
-
-<p class="center">* * * * *</p>
-
-<p>Aristotle mentions that in his day some added drawing
-and painting to the three parts of the course.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_320" id="fnanchor_320"></a><a href="#footnote_320" class="fnanchor">[320]</a></span>
-It
-was not universal, like these, and it does not seem to
-have started till the fourth century. In the <cite>Republic</cite>
-and <cite>Laws</cite> Plato does not attack and criticise it among
-the other educational subjects; but it plays so prominent
-a part in the <cite>Republic</cite> that it is obvious that the
-philosopher regarded it as a dangerous enemy to the
-views which he wished to spread. It is noticeable that
-the discussion of Art comes in as an after-thought, in
-Book <abbr title="Ten">X.</abbr> May it not be inferred that when Plato
-wrote the earlier books, drawing and painting were not
-yet in vogue in the schools, but they became popular
-before he had finished his great work?</p>
-
-<p>In Periclean Athens the possibilities of artistic training
-had certainly existed. In the <cite>Protagoras</cite>,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_321" id="fnanchor_321"></a><a href="#footnote_321" class="fnanchor">[321]</a></span>
-as an
-instance in some argument, it is suggested that the
-lad Hippokrates might “go to this young fellow who
-has been in Athens of late, Zeuxippos of Heraklea.
-Every day that he was with him he would improve as
-an artist.” Earlier in the same dialogue Sokrates
-remarks that his friend might go to Polukleitos or
-Pheidias, and pay to be taught sculpture.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_322" id="fnanchor_322"></a><a href="#footnote_322" class="fnanchor">[322]</a></span>
-The large
-numbers of boys who became apprentices to the potters
-at Athens must have learned line-drawing and designing
-and painting from the earliest times. But art probably
-did not become a usual part of a liberal, as distinct from
-<a name="Page_115" id="Page_115"></a><span class="pageno">115</span>
-a technical, education till the middle of the fourth
-century.</p>
-
-<p>This date is fixed by a passage in Pliny.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_323" id="fnanchor_323"></a><a href="#footnote_323" class="fnanchor">[323]</a></span>
-According
-to him, its introduction was due to Pamphilos the
-Macedonian. At his instance, first at Sikuon, where
-he lived, and afterwards in the rest of Hellas, free boys
-were taught before everything painting on boxwood,
-and this art was included in the first rank of the liberal
-arts. Now Pamphilos’ picture of the Herakleidai is
-mentioned in the <cite>Ploutos</cite> of Aristophanes, which
-appeared in 388 <span class="sc">B.C.</span> Apelles, his pupil, began to
-come into prominence about 350: Pamphilos himself
-seems to have lived on till the close of the century.
-The introduction of painting into the schools at Sikuon
-may therefore be dated, roughly, about 360 <span class="sc">B.C.</span>, and
-from there the custom spread over Hellas. By 300
-<span class="sc">B.C.</span> no doubt art had become a regular part of the
-educational curriculum; for the philosopher Teles,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_324" id="fnanchor_324"></a><a href="#footnote_324" class="fnanchor">[324]</a></span>
-who probably lived about that time, mentions the
-gymnastic trainer, the letter-master, the musician, and
-the painter as the four chief burdens of boys. A
-trace of the new art-schools, with their technical
-vocabulary, is found in the <cite>Laws</cite>, the work of Plato’s
-old age:<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_325" id="fnanchor_325"></a><a href="#footnote_325" class="fnanchor">[325]</a></span>
- “paint in or shade off,” he says, “or whatever
-the artists’ boys call it.”</p>
-
-<p>Of the methods used in drawing and painting in
-Hellas little trace is left. Polugnotos and his contemporaries
-had produced idealised pictures, taking
-points from many beautiful men and women and
-uniting them to make one perfect man or woman.
-When Idealism gave way to Realism in Hellas, the change
-affected painting also. The artists tried to create a real
-<a name="Page_116" id="Page_116"></a><span class="pageno">116</span>
-illusion in their works, taking subjects like chairs or
-tables and making the spectator believe them to be real.
-They were helped by the developments of perspective
-and foreshortening, which were discovered at this time.
-It is against this exaggerated realism and the choice
-of homely subjects that Plato’s attack is directed: he
-hates such illusions as shams.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_326" id="fnanchor_326"></a><a href="#footnote_326" class="fnanchor">[326]</a></span>
-In the diatribes of the
-<cite>Republic</cite> the possibility of idealised painting seems
-to be forgotten. Whether the boys in the art-schools
-also suffered by this change and were condemned to
-draw chairs and tables only cannot be decided.</p>
-
-<p>The pupils, of course, did not have paper to draw
-and paint upon, nor was canvas employed. Ordinarily
-they used white wood, boxwood for preference, owing
-to its smoothness. Lead or charcoal would serve for
-drawing; for erasures, instead of india-rubber a sponge
-was used.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_327" id="fnanchor_327"></a><a href="#footnote_327" class="fnanchor">[327]</a></span>
-They may, perhaps, have practised on their
-wax tablets. One process was <ins title="skiagraphia">σκιαγραφία</ins> “shadow-drawing,”
-which produced rough sketches in light and
-shade: these seem to have been only intelligible when
-considered from a distance. Plato regarded them with
-distrust, as a sort of conjuring.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_328" id="fnanchor_328"></a><a href="#footnote_328" class="fnanchor">[328]</a></span>
-</p>
-
-<p>In ordinary painting, which might be either watercolour
-or encaustic,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_329" id="fnanchor_329"></a><a href="#footnote_329" class="fnanchor">[329]</a></span>
-the first thing was to sketch in the
-outline (<ins title="hypographein, perigraphê">ὑπογράφειν, περιγραφή</ins>); the artist then filled
-in (<ins title="apergazesthai">ἀπεργάζεσθαι</ins>) the picture with his colours, with
-perpetual glances, now to the original, now to the copy,
-mixing his paints the while. Beginners would, no doubt,
-rub out (<ins title="exaleiphein">ἐξαλείφειν</ins>) frequently, and paint in again.</p>
-
-<p><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117"></a><span class="pageno">117</span>
-Aristotle,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_330" id="fnanchor_330"></a><a href="#footnote_330" class="fnanchor">[330]</a></span>
-in discussing artistic education, notices
-that it gave boys a good eye for appreciating art, and
-enabled them to exercise good taste in buying furniture,
-pottery, and other household requisites, which, to judge
-from the scanty relics, must have been masterpieces of
-beauty in the house of a cultivated Athenian. But still
-more important, it gave them “an eye for bodily
-beauty”:<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_331" id="fnanchor_331"></a><a href="#footnote_331" class="fnanchor">[331]</a></span>
-which suggests that the human form,
-especially its proportions, formed the chief study of the
-art-schools. Proportion was the essence of Hellenic
-art; the great sculptors, as is well known, spent much
-time in drawing up a canon of perfect proportions for
-the human body. The boys may well have used their
-companions in the palaistrai for models, and the
-canons of physical proportion which they were taught
-by the art-master would serve to stimulate them with
-a desire to attain to such a perfection of body by
-their own athletic exercises.</p>
-
-<p class="p2 footnote"> <a name="footnote_207" id="footnote_207"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_207"><span class="muchsmaller">[207]</span></a>
-Lucian, <cite>Loves</cite>, 44-45.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_208" id="footnote_208"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_208"><span class="muchsmaller">[208]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Aischines">Aischin.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="against">ag.</abbr> <abbr title="Timarchos">Timarch.</abbr></cite> 12; <abbr title="Thucidides">Thuc.</abbr> <abbr title="seven">vii.</abbr> 29; Plato, <cite>Laws</cite>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_209" id="footnote_209"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_209"><span class="muchsmaller">[209]</span></a>
-Lucian, <cite>Paracite</cite>, 61.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_210" id="footnote_210"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_210"><span class="muchsmaller">[210]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Aischines">Aischin.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="against">ag.</abbr> <abbr title="Timarchos">Timarch.</abbr></cite> 12.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_211" id="footnote_211"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_211"><span class="muchsmaller">[211]</span></a>
-<cite><abbr title="Anthologia Palatina">Anthol. Palat.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="ten">x.</abbr> 43 has been quoted as evidence that six hours’ work a day
-was a maximum. The epigram runs: “Six hours suffice for work; rest of the day,
-expressed in numerals, says <ins title="zêthi">ζῆθι</ins>, ‘enjoy life.’” But the point is the joke that the
-numerals for 7, 8, 9, 10, the later hours of the day, are <ins title="z">ζʹ</ins>, <ins title="ê">ηʹ</ins>, <ins title="th">θʹ</ins>, <ins title="i">ιʹ</ins>, which spells
-<ins title="zêthi">ζῆθι</ins>. The epigram does not mean to state a fact; the joke is its only <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">raison d’être</i>.
-In any case schools are not mentioned.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_212" id="footnote_212"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_212"><span class="muchsmaller">[212]</span></a>
-Herondas, <cite>Schoolmaster</cite> (iii.) 53.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_213" id="footnote_213"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_213"><span class="muchsmaller">[213]</span></a>
-Mahaffy, <cite>Greek Education</cite>, <abbr title="page">p.</abbr> 54.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_214" id="footnote_214"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_214"><span class="muchsmaller">[214]</span></a>
-Lucian, <cite><abbr title="Necyomantia">Nekuom.</abbr></cite> 17.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_215" id="footnote_215"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_215"><span class="muchsmaller">[215]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Demosthenes">Dem.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="de Coronoa">de Cor.</abbr></cite> 315.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_216" id="footnote_216"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_216"><span class="muchsmaller">[216]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Theophrastos">Theoph.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Characters">Char.</abbr></cite> 30.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_217" id="footnote_217"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_217"><span class="muchsmaller">[217]</span></a>
-<cite>Ibid.</cite> 30.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_218" id="footnote_218"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_218"><span class="muchsmaller">[218]</span></a>
-Herondas, <abbr title="three">iii.</abbr> 3.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_219" id="footnote_219"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_219"><span class="muchsmaller">[219]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Demosthenes">Demos.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="against">ag.</abbr> Aphobos</cite>, <abbr title="one">i.</abbr> 828.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_220" id="footnote_220"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_220"><span class="muchsmaller">[220]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Demosthenes">Demos.</abbr> <cite>Crown</cite>, 312.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_221" id="footnote_221"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_221"><span class="muchsmaller">[221]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Demosthenes">Demos.</abbr> <cite>Crown</cite>, 270. This is the most probable restoration of the facts from
-the statements of the opposing orators.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_222" id="footnote_222"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_222"><span class="muchsmaller">[222]</span></a>
-<cite>Ibid.</cite> 313.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_223" id="footnote_223"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_223"><span class="muchsmaller">[223]</span></a>
-Aelian, <cite><abbr title="Vera Historia">Var. Hist.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="twelve">xii.</abbr> 9 (at Klazomenai).</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_224" id="footnote_224"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_224"><span class="muchsmaller">[224]</span></a>
-Benches do not appear on vases, because a row of boys involves elaborate perspective;
-the artist preferred to take single boys on stools, as a sort of section of a
-class, just as he gave the stools only two legs. <abbr title="Xenophon">Xen.</abbr> <cite>Banquet</cite>, 4. 27, shows two
-boys sitting side by side. It is not necessary to reject benches, with Girard.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_225" id="footnote_225"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_225"><span class="muchsmaller">[225]</span></a>
-Alexis, <cite>Linos</cite> (in <abbr title="Athenaeus">Athen.</abbr> 164 <span class="sc">B.C.</span>). See <abbr title="Illustrations">Illustr.</abbr> <a href="#i01a">Plates <abbr title="One">I.</abbr> <span class="sc lowercase">A</span></a> and <a href="#i01b"><abbr title="One">I.</abbr> <span class="sc lowercase">B</span></a>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_226" id="footnote_226"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_226"><span class="muchsmaller">[226]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Plutarch">Plut.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Alcibiades">Alkib.</abbr> </cite> 7.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_227" id="footnote_227"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_227"><span class="muchsmaller">[227]</span></a>
-Herondas, <abbr title="three">iii.</abbr> 83. 96.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_228" id="footnote_228"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_228"><span class="muchsmaller">[228]</span></a>
-See <abbr title="Illustration">Illustr.</abbr> <a href="#i01a">Plate <abbr title="Number One">No. I.</abbr> <span class="sc lowercase">A</span></a>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_229" id="footnote_229"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_229"><span class="muchsmaller">[229]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite><abbr title="Protagoras">Protag.</abbr></cite> 326 <span class="sc lowercase">D</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_230" id="footnote_230"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_230"><span class="muchsmaller">[230]</span></a>
-In Clement of Alexandria, who gives two others. <cite><abbr title="Stromata">Strom.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="volume">v.</abbr> 8 (<abbr title="page">p.</abbr> 675, Potter).
-A writing copy set by a master, though not of the alphabetical kind described by
-Clement, is actually extant on a wax tablet in the British Museum (Add. MS. 34,186).
-It consists of two lines of verse written out by the master and copied twice by a pupil.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_231" id="footnote_231"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_231"><span class="muchsmaller">[231]</span></a>
-Aeschylus, <cite>Choeph.</cite> 209.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_232" id="footnote_232"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_232"><span class="muchsmaller">[232]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Illustration">Illustr.</abbr> <a href="#i01a">Plate <abbr title="One">I.</abbr> <span class="sc lowercase">A</span></a>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_233" id="footnote_233"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_233"><span class="muchsmaller">[233]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Xenophon">Xen.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Economics">Econ.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="fifteen">xv.</abbr> 5.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_234" id="footnote_234"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_234"><span class="muchsmaller">[234]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Demosthenes">Demosth.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="de Coronoa">de Cor.</abbr></cite> 313.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_235" id="footnote_235"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_235"><span class="muchsmaller">[235]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite>Laws</cite>, 810 <span class="sc lowercase">A</span> (<abbr title="compare">cp.</abbr> the prizes for calligraphy in Teos).</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_236" id="footnote_236"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_236"><span class="muchsmaller">[236]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Athenaeus">Athen.</abbr> 453 d.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_237" id="footnote_237"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_237"><span class="muchsmaller">[237]</span></a>
-Giles’ <cite>Manual of Comparative Philology</cite>, § 604.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_238" id="footnote_238"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_238"><span class="muchsmaller">[238]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Athenaeus">Athen.</abbr> 453 c, d.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_239" id="footnote_239"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_239"><span class="muchsmaller">[239]</span></a>
-A fragment of terra-cotta has been found at Athens, containing on it:</p>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="i0"><ins title="ar bar gar dar">αρ βαρ γαρ δαρ</ins></div>
- <div class="i0"><ins title="er ber ger der">ερ βερ γερ δερ</ins></div>
- </div><!--end poem-->
-</div><!--end container-->
-
-<p class="footnote unindent">which must have belonged to some spelling-book&mdash;perhaps the brick formed part of
-the wall of a schoolroom.&mdash;Quoted by Girard, <abbr title="page">p.</abbr> 131.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_240" id="footnote_240"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_240"><span class="muchsmaller">[240]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Athenaeus">Athen.</abbr> 454 f.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_241" id="footnote_241"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_241"><span class="muchsmaller">[241]</span></a>
-This is by no means inconceivable, when it is remembered that the Hellenes
-often set even the laws to music, in order to make them easier to learn and
-remember.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_242" id="footnote_242"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_242"><span class="muchsmaller">[242]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite><abbr title="Politics">Polit.</abbr></cite> 278 <span class="sc lowercase">A</span>, <span class="sc lowercase">B</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_243" id="footnote_243"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_243"><span class="muchsmaller">[243]</span></a>
-<cite>Ibid.</cite></p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_244" id="footnote_244"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_244"><span class="muchsmaller">[244]</span></a>
-<cite>Ibid.</cite> 285 <span class="sc lowercase">C</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_245" id="footnote_245"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_245"><span class="muchsmaller">[245]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Xenophon">Xen.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Economics">Econ.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="eight">viii.</abbr> 14.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_246" id="footnote_246"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_246"><span class="muchsmaller">[246]</span></a>
-See <abbr title="Illustration">Illustr.</abbr> <a href="#i01a">Plate <abbr title="One">I.</abbr> <span class="sc lowercase">A</span></a>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_247" id="footnote_247"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_247"><span class="muchsmaller">[247]</span></a>
-Case E 190.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_248" id="footnote_248"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_248"><span class="muchsmaller">[248]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite><abbr title="Protagoras">Protag.</abbr></cite> 325 <span class="sc lowercase">E</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_249" id="footnote_249"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_249"><span class="muchsmaller">[249]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite>Laws</cite>, 811.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_250" id="footnote_250"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_250"><span class="muchsmaller">[250]</span></a>
-<ins title="ta kephalaia">τὰ κεφάλαια</ins>&mdash;a phrase used in later times for “commonplaces,” “topics,”
-which suggests that these selections were of that sort.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_251" id="footnote_251"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_251"><span class="muchsmaller">[251]</span></a>
-As the great speeches are picked out from Shakespeare for “repetition”
-nowadays.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_252" id="footnote_252"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_252"><span class="muchsmaller">[252]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite>Laws</cite>, 802, 811.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_253" id="footnote_253"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_253"><span class="muchsmaller">[253]</span></a>
-Isokrates (<cite><abbr title="Panegyricus">Paneg.</abbr></cite> 74 <span class="sc lowercase">A</span>). He says the object was to make the boys hate the
-barbarians; as, <span class="decoration">e.g.</span>, English boys might learn <cite>Henry <abbr title="Five">V.</abbr></cite> in order to dislike the
-French!</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_254" id="footnote_254"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_254"><span class="muchsmaller">[254]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Xenophon">Xen.</abbr> <cite>Banquet</cite>, <abbr title="three">iii.</abbr> 5.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_255" id="footnote_255"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_255"><span class="muchsmaller">[255]</span></a>
-<cite>Ibid.</cite></p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_256" id="footnote_256"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_256"><span class="muchsmaller">[256]</span></a>
-<cite>Ibid.</cite> <abbr title="four">iv.</abbr> 6.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_257" id="footnote_257"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_257"><span class="muchsmaller">[257]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Aristophanes">Aristoph.</abbr> <cite>Frogs</cite>, 1035.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_258" id="footnote_258"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_258"><span class="muchsmaller">[258]</span></a>
-From the <cite>Banqueters</cite>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_259" id="footnote_259"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_259"><span class="muchsmaller">[259]</span></a>
-Straton (in <abbr title="Athenaeus">Athen.</abbr> 382, 383).</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_260" id="footnote_260"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_260"><span class="muchsmaller">[260]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Aristophanes">Aristoph.</abbr> <cite>Frogs</cite>, 1032.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_261" id="footnote_261"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_261"><span class="muchsmaller">[261]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Athenaeus">Athen.</abbr> 164.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_262" id="footnote_262"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_262"><span class="muchsmaller">[262]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Aristophanes">Aristoph.</abbr> <cite>Birds</cite>, 471; <cite>Wasps</cite>, 1446. 1401.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_263" id="footnote_263"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_263"><span class="muchsmaller">[263]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite><abbr title="Hippias Major">Hipp. Maj.</abbr></cite> 286 <span class="sc lowercase">B</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_264" id="footnote_264"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_264"><span class="muchsmaller">[264]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Xenophon">Xen.</abbr> <cite>Banquet</cite>, <abbr title="four">iv.</abbr> 27. School friendships are also mentioned in <abbr title="Aristotle">Aristot.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Ethics">Eth.</abbr></cite>
-<abbr title="eight">viii.</abbr> 12; <abbr title="Aristophanes">Aristoph.</abbr> <cite>Clouds</cite>, 1006.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_265" id="footnote_265"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_265"><span class="muchsmaller">[265]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Athenaeus">Athen.</abbr> 242 d.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_266" id="footnote_266"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_266"><span class="muchsmaller">[266]</span></a>
-The translation is free, and I omit a good deal that is less relevant.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_267" id="footnote_267"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_267"><span class="muchsmaller">[267]</span></a>
-For a picture of such a flogging see <abbr title="page">p.</abbr> 599 of Bury’s <cite>Roman Empire</cite>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_268" id="footnote_268"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_268"><span class="muchsmaller">[268]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite>Laws</cite>, 809 <span class="sc lowercase">C</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_269" id="footnote_269"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_269"><span class="muchsmaller">[269]</span></a>
-The distinction between <ins title="logistikê">λογιστική</ins>, reckoning up and comparing numbers,
-chiefly in bills and the like, practical arithmetic, and <ins title="arithmêtikê">ἀριθμητική</ins>, theory of numbers,
-is noted in Plato, <cite><abbr title="Gorgias">Gorg.</abbr></cite> 451 <span class="sc lowercase">B</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_270" id="footnote_270"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_270"><span class="muchsmaller">[270]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite>Laws</cite>, 643 <span class="sc">B.C.</span></p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_271" id="footnote_271"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_271"><span class="muchsmaller">[271]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite><abbr title="Protagoras">Protag.</abbr></cite> 318 <span class="sc lowercase">D</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_272" id="footnote_272"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_272"><span class="muchsmaller">[272]</span></a>
-So Theodoros in the <cite>Theaitetos</cite>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_273" id="footnote_273"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_273"><span class="muchsmaller">[273]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Xenophon">Xen.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Economics">Econ.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="eight">viii.</abbr> 14.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_274" id="footnote_274"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_274"><span class="muchsmaller">[274]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Xenophon">Xen.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Memorabilia">Mem.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="four">iv.</abbr> 4. 7.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_275" id="footnote_275"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_275"><span class="muchsmaller">[275]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Aristophanes">Aristoph.</abbr> <cite>Wasps</cite>, 656.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_276" id="footnote_276"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_276"><span class="muchsmaller">[276]</span></a>
-In Diogenes Laertius, <abbr title="one">i.</abbr> 2. 10.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_277" id="footnote_277"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_277"><span class="muchsmaller">[277]</span></a>
-Alexis (in <abbr title="Athenaeus">Athen.</abbr> 117 e).</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_278" id="footnote_278"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_278"><span class="muchsmaller">[278]</span></a>
-An abacus of a very similar sort is still in use in China and Japan, even in
-banks. The “pebbles” are pushed to and fro, not in grooves, but on wires passing
-through the middle of them. Calculations can be made by this means with
-marvellous rapidity.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_279" id="footnote_279"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_279"><span class="muchsmaller">[279]</span></a>
-e.g. <cite><abbr title="Politics">Polit.</abbr></cite> 299 <span class="sc lowercase">D</span>. <ins title="petteian ê xympasan arithmêtikên">πεττείαν ἢ ξύμπασαν ἀριθμητικήν</ins>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_280" id="footnote_280"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_280"><span class="muchsmaller">[280]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite><abbr title="Phaidros">Phaid.</abbr></cite> 274.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_281" id="footnote_281"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_281"><span class="muchsmaller">[281]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite>Laws</cite>, 819 <span class="sc lowercase">B</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_282" id="footnote_282"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_282"><span class="muchsmaller">[282]</span></a>
-The restoration of this process rests on <abbr title="Athenaeus">Athen.</abbr> 671; the other two are purely
-conjectural.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_283" id="footnote_283"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_283"><span class="muchsmaller">[283]</span></a>
-Suggests at once Hellenic, not Egyptian customs.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_284" id="footnote_284"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_284"><span class="muchsmaller">[284]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite><abbr title="Republic">Rep.</abbr></cite> 526 <span class="sc lowercase">B</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_285" id="footnote_285"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_285"><span class="muchsmaller">[285]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite>Laws</cite>, 747.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_286" id="footnote_286"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_286"><span class="muchsmaller">[286]</span></a>
-Technically speaking, this was <ins title="lyra">λύρα</ins>, the <ins title="kithara">κιθάρα</ins> being a professional
-instrument which was not taught at school.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_287" id="footnote_287"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_287"><span class="muchsmaller">[287]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Illustration">Illustr.</abbr> <a href="#i01b">Plate <abbr title="One">I.</abbr> <span class="sc lowercase">B</span></a>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_288" id="footnote_288"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_288"><span class="muchsmaller">[288]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite>Lusis</cite>, 209 <span class="sc lowercase">B</span>. On Inscriptions there are separate prizes for the two
-methods.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_289" id="footnote_289"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_289"><span class="muchsmaller">[289]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Xenophon">Xen.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Economics">Econ.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="two">ii.</abbr> 13.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_290" id="footnote_290"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_290"><span class="muchsmaller">[290]</span></a>
-<cite>Ibid.</cite> <abbr title="seventeen">xvii.</abbr> 7.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_291" id="footnote_291"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_291"><span class="muchsmaller">[291]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Compare">Cp.</abbr> British Museum Vase E 57, on which a man is leading a leopard by a string.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_292" id="footnote_292"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_292"><span class="muchsmaller">[292]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite><abbr title="Protagoras">Protag.</abbr></cite> 326 <span class="sc lowercase">B</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_293" id="footnote_293"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_293"><span class="muchsmaller">[293]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Aristophanes">Aristoph.</abbr> <cite>Clouds</cite>, 1356.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_294" id="footnote_294"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_294"><span class="muchsmaller">[294]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Aristophanes">Aristoph.</abbr> fragment of <cite>Banqueters</cite>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_295" id="footnote_295"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_295"><span class="muchsmaller">[295]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Aristophanes">Aristoph.</abbr> <cite>Knights</cite>, 526.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_296" id="footnote_296"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_296"><span class="muchsmaller">[296]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Plutarch">Plut.</abbr> <cite>Solon</cite>, <abbr title="three">iii.</abbr></p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_297" id="footnote_297"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_297"><span class="muchsmaller">[297]</span></a>
-Hermippos (in <abbr title="Athenaeus">Athen.</abbr> 619 b).</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_298" id="footnote_298"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_298"><span class="muchsmaller">[298]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Aristophanes">Aristoph.</abbr> <cite>Wasps</cite>, 959.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_299" id="footnote_299"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_299"><span class="muchsmaller">[299]</span></a>
-<cite>Ibid.</cite> 989.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_300" id="footnote_300"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_300"><span class="muchsmaller">[300]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Aristotle">Aristot.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Politics">Pol.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="eight">viii.</abbr> 6. 11.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_301" id="footnote_301"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_301"><span class="muchsmaller">[301]</span></a>
-For this reason it was opposed to <em>Dorian</em> influences by Pratinas. It was
-excluded from the Pythian games (<abbr title="Pausanias">Pausan.</abbr> 10. <abbr title="seven">vii.</abbr> 5). Pratinas bids it be content
-to “lead drunk young men in their carousals and brawls.”</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_302" id="footnote_302"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_302"><span class="muchsmaller">[302]</span></a>
-Telestes, in his defence of the flute, could only retort that Athena, being condemned
-to eternal spinsterhood, ought not to be particular about her looks
-(<abbr title="Athenaeus">Athen.</abbr> 617).</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_303" id="footnote_303"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_303"><span class="muchsmaller">[303]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Aristotle">Aristot.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Politics">Pol.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="eight">viii.</abbr> 6. 11.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_304" id="footnote_304"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_304"><span class="muchsmaller">[304]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Athenaeus">Athen.</abbr> 184 d. Plutarch, however, says that when Alkibiades’ masters tried to
-make him learn the flute, he refused, declaring that it was unfit for gentlemen
-(<cite><abbr title="Alkibiades">Alk.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="two">ii.</abbr> 5).</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_305" id="footnote_305"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_305"><span class="muchsmaller">[305]</span></a>
-Not a respected profession at Athens.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_306" id="footnote_306"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_306"><span class="muchsmaller">[306]</span></a>
-<abbr title="British Museum">Brit. Mus.</abbr> E 495, 64, 71.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_307" id="footnote_307"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_307"><span class="muchsmaller">[307]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Athenaeus">Athen.</abbr> 337 f.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_308" id="footnote_308"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_308"><span class="muchsmaller">[308]</span></a>
-Smith’s <cite>Dictionary of Antiquities</cite>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_309" id="footnote_309"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_309"><span class="muchsmaller">[309]</span></a>
-<ins title="phorbeia">φορβεία</ins>. It belonged to professionals.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_310" id="footnote_310"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_310"><span class="muchsmaller">[310]</span></a>
-<ins title="glôssokomeion">γλωσσοκομεῖον</ins>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_311" id="footnote_311"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_311"><span class="muchsmaller">[311]</span></a>
-See the “Inscription” of the <cite>Andria</cite> and other plays of Terence.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_312" id="footnote_312"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_312"><span class="muchsmaller">[312]</span></a>
-See <abbr title="Illustration">Illustr.</abbr> <a href="#i02">Plate <abbr title="Two">II.</abbr></a></p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_313" id="footnote_313"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_313"><span class="muchsmaller">[313]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Athenaeus">Athen.</abbr> 20 f.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_314" id="footnote_314"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_314"><span class="muchsmaller">[314]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite>Laches</cite>, 180 <span class="sc lowercase">D</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_315" id="footnote_315"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_315"><span class="muchsmaller">[315]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite><abbr title="Euthydemus">Euthud.</abbr> </cite> 272 <span class="sc lowercase">C</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_316" id="footnote_316"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_316"><span class="muchsmaller">[316]</span></a>
-<cite>Ibid.</cite> 295 <span class="sc lowercase">D</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_317" id="footnote_317"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_317"><span class="muchsmaller">[317]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Aristophanes">Aristoph.</abbr> <cite>Knights</cite>, 987-996.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_318" id="footnote_318"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_318"><span class="muchsmaller">[318]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite><abbr title="Protagoras">Protag.</abbr></cite> 326 <span class="sc lowercase">B</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_319" id="footnote_319"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_319"><span class="muchsmaller">[319]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Aristotle">Aristot.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Politics">Pol.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="eight">viii.</abbr> 3. 7.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_320" id="footnote_320"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_320"><span class="muchsmaller">[320]</span></a>
-<cite>Ibid.</cite> <abbr title="eight">viii.</abbr> 3. 1.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_321" id="footnote_321"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_321"><span class="muchsmaller">[321]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite><abbr title="Protagoras">Protag.</abbr></cite> 318 <span class="sc lowercase">B</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_322" id="footnote_322"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_322"><span class="muchsmaller">[322]</span></a>
-<cite>Ibid.</cite> 311 <span class="sc lowercase">C</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_323" id="footnote_323"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_323"><span class="muchsmaller">[323]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Pliny">Plin.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Historia Naturalis">Hist. Nat.</abbr></cite> 35.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_324" id="footnote_324"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_324"><span class="muchsmaller">[324]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Stobaeus">Stob.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Florilegium">Floril.</abbr></cite> 98, <abbr title="page">p.</abbr> 535.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_325" id="footnote_325"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_325"><span class="muchsmaller">[325]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite>Laws</cite>, 769 <span class="sc lowercase">B</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_326" id="footnote_326"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_326"><span class="muchsmaller">[326]</span></a>
-See <cite><abbr title="Republic">Rep.</abbr></cite> <span class="sc"><abbr title="Ten">X.</abbr></span> 596 <span class="sc lowercase">E</span>, 605 <span class="sc lowercase">A</span>, etc. In the <cite>Sophist</cite>, 235 <span class="sc lowercase">D</span>, 266 <span class="sc lowercase">D</span>, etc., Plato reserves
-his denunciation for <ins title="phantastikê">φανταστική</ins> which creates illusions; he almost approves of
-<ins title="eikastikê">εἰκαστική</ins>. Idealised painting is hinted at in <cite><abbr title="Republic">Rep.</abbr></cite> 472 <span class="sc lowercase">D</span>, 484 <span class="sc lowercase">C</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_327" id="footnote_327"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_327"><span class="muchsmaller">[327]</span></a>
-Aeschylus, <cite>Agamemnon</cite>, 1329.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_328" id="footnote_328"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_328"><span class="muchsmaller">[328]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite><abbr title="Theaitetos">Theait.</abbr></cite> 208 <span class="sc lowercase">E</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_329" id="footnote_329"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_329"><span class="muchsmaller">[329]</span></a>
-The modern oil process was not employed till late on in the Renaissance.
-Fresco was common.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_330" id="footnote_330"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_330"><span class="muchsmaller">[330]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Aristotle">Aristot.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Politics">Pol.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="eight">viii.</abbr> 3. 12.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_331" id="footnote_331"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_331"><span class="muchsmaller">[331]</span></a>
-<ins title="theôrêtikon tou peri ta sômata kallous">
- θεωρητικὸν τοῦ περὶ τὰ σώματα κάλλους</ins>.</p>
-</div><!--end chapter-->
-
-<div class="chapter"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118"></a><span class="pageno">118</span>
-
-<h3 class="p4 h3head">CHAPTER IV</h3>
-
-<h4 class="p2 h4head">ATHENS AND THE REST OF HELLAS:<br />
-PHYSICAL EDUCATION</h4>
-
-<p class="p2"><span class="sc">It</span> is well known that the Hellenes attached an
-enormous importance to physical exercise. This was
-partly, no doubt, due to their intense appreciation of
-bodily beauty, which it was the endeavour of their
-gymnastic training to produce. But it must be
-remembered that to be in “good condition” was
-essential to them. Any morning an Hellenic citizen
-might find himself called upon to take the field against
-an invader, or might be despatched to ravage an
-enemy’s territory. Only the most cogent excuses
-were accepted. Plato<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_332" id="fnanchor_332"></a><a href="#footnote_332" class="fnanchor">[332]</a></span>
-has left a vivid picture of a
-rich man, who has lived in idleness and luxury, suddenly
-called out to serve his country. Unhappy Dives
-marches along panting and perspiring, he is ill on
-board ship, and in battle when he has to charge or
-fight vigorously, he has no wind and is in a state of
-hopeless misery; while his poorer or wiser companions,
-who are “lean and wiry, and have lived in the open
-air,” mock at him and despise him. Sokrates points
-out to young Epigenes,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_333" id="fnanchor_333"></a><a href="#footnote_333" class="fnanchor">[333]</a></span>
-who has neglected his physical
-condition, what risks he runs. In battle, when a
-<a name="Page_119" id="Page_119"></a><span class="pageno">119</span>
-retreat is sounded, he will be left behind by his
-companions, and be either killed or taken prisoner by
-the foe; and the lot of the captive was frequently
-slavery for life, unless his friends ransomed him. But
-there were also intellectual and moral risks. “Bodily
-debility,” says Sokrates, “frequently causes a loss of
-memory, and low spirits, and a peevish temper, and
-even madness, to invade a man, so as to make even
-intellectual pursuits impossible.” To be a good citizen
-and to be a good thinker a man must always be in good
-physical condition. It became a duty to oneself and to
-the State “to live in the open air and accustom oneself
-to manly toils and sweat, avoiding the shade and
-unmanly ways of life.”<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_334" id="fnanchor_334"></a><a href="#footnote_334" class="fnanchor">[334]</a></span>
-By divine ordinance, “Sweat
-was the doorstep of manly virtue,” as old Hesiod had
-sung.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_335" id="fnanchor_335"></a><a href="#footnote_335" class="fnanchor">[335]</a></span>
-</p>
-
-<p>This addiction to gymnastic exercises of all kinds
-was characteristic of the Hellenic peoples from the
-days of Homer. The original object had been
-symmetrical development of the body, health, speed,
-strength, and agility. But, as the Egyptian sage
-remarked, the Hellenes were a nation of children&mdash;it is
-just that which gives to them their charm and interest&mdash;and
-children usually and naturally care most for the
-body. Consequently athletics were carried too far:
-they became an end in themselves, instead of being
-merely a means of attaining physical activity and health.
-The professional athlete became a sort of spoilt child,
-fed at public expense,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_336" id="fnanchor_336"></a><a href="#footnote_336" class="fnanchor">[336]</a></span>
-courted by crowds of admirers,
-and all the time he was quite useless for everything
-except his own particular sort of contest, boxing or
-<a name="Page_120" id="Page_120"></a><span class="pageno">120</span>
-wrestling or the like. The tendency was ruinous: the
-Hellenes preferred to be good gymnasts rather than
-good soldiers.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_337" id="fnanchor_337"></a><a href="#footnote_337" class="fnanchor">[337]</a></span>
-The competitor, boy or man, who
-entered for one of the great prizes had to live in
-complete idleness from other pursuits.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_338" id="fnanchor_338"></a><a href="#footnote_338" class="fnanchor">[338]</a></span>
-Such professionals
-“slept all the day long, and if they departed
-from their prescribed system of training in the very
-slightest degree, they were seized with serious diseases.”<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_339" id="fnanchor_339"></a><a href="#footnote_339" class="fnanchor">[339]</a></span>
-Consequently they were useless as soldiers, since in
-war it is necessary to be wide awake, not torpid, and
-to be able to stand vicissitudes of heat and cold, and
-not to be made ill by changes of diet. Specialisation
-even led to deformity. The long-distance runner
-developed thick legs and narrow shoulders, the boxer
-broad shoulders and thin legs.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_340" id="fnanchor_340"></a><a href="#footnote_340" class="fnanchor">[340]</a></span>
-It is to this specialisation
-that Galen<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_341" id="fnanchor_341"></a><a href="#footnote_341" class="fnanchor">[341]</a></span>
-attributes the decline in utility of
-Hellenic athletics. Philostratos even notes that only
-in the good old days was the health of athletes not
-actually impaired by their exercises. In those times,
-he says, they grew old late, and took part in eight or
-nine Olympic contests&mdash;retained, that is, their efficiency
-for thirty years or more; moreover, they were as good
-soldiers as they were athletes. Later, these habits
-changed, and athletes became averse to war, torpid,
-effeminate, luxurious in their diet. The medical profession
-took upon itself to advise them&mdash;a good thing
-in its way, but unsuitable for athletes; for it told them
-to sit still after meals before taking exercise, and
-introduced them to elaborate cookery. Bribery also
-<!--Blank Page-->
-<!--Blank Page-->
-<a name="Page_121" id="Page_121"></a><span class="pageno">121</span>
-came into vogue among the professionals; usurers began
-to enter the training schools on purpose to lend them
-money for bribing their opponents.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_342" id="fnanchor_342"></a><a href="#footnote_342" class="fnanchor">[342]</a></span>
-The first recorded
-instance of this was early in the fourth century.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_343" id="fnanchor_343"></a><a href="#footnote_343" class="fnanchor">[343]</a></span>
-</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter together" style="width: 500px">
- <p class="captionleft">PLATE <abbr title="Five">V.</abbr> <span class="sc lowercase">A.</span></p>
- <a name="i05a" id="i05a"></a>
- <img src="images/5a.jpg"
- width="500" height="269"
- alt="Illustration: Scenes in a Palaistra"
- />
- <p class="caption">SCENES IN A PALAISTRA<br />
-<cite lang="de" xml:lang="de">Archaeologische Zeitung</cite>, 1878, Plate <span class="sc lowercase"><abbr title="Two">II.</abbr></span> From a Kulix at Munich, attributed to Euphronios.</p>
-</div><!--end illustration-->
-
-<div class="figcenter together" style="width: 500px">
- <p class="captionleft">PLATE <abbr title="Five">V.</abbr> <span class="sc lowercase">B.</span></p>
- <a name="i05b" id="i05b"></a>
- <img src="images/5b.jpg"
- width="500" height="316"
- alt="Illustration: Title or description"
- />
- <p class="caption">SCENE IN A PALAISTRA&mdash;A BOY WITH HALTERES, A BOY WITH JAVELIN, AND TWO PAIDOTRIBAI<br />
-<cite lang="de" xml:lang="de">Archaeologische Zeitung</cite>, 1878, Plate <span class="sc lowercase"><abbr title="Two">II.</abbr></span> From a Kulix at Munich, attributed to Euphronios.
-</p>
-</div><!--end illustration-->
-
-<p>Critics of this exaggerated athleticism were not
-wanting, even in the earliest times. The attack begins
-with Xenophanes of Kolophon. In an elegiac poem
-he writes: “If a man wins a victory at Olympia
-… either by speed of foot or in the pentathlon,
-or by wrestling, or competing in painful boxing,
-or in the dread contest called the pankration, his
-countrymen will look upon him with admiration, and
-he will receive a front seat in the games, and eat his
-dinners at the public cost, and be presented with some
-gift that he will treasure. All this he will get, even if
-he only win a horse race. Yet he is not as worthy as I;
-for my wisdom is better than the strength of men and
-steeds. Nay, this custom is foolish, and it is not right
-to honour strength more than the excellence of wisdom.
-Not by good boxing, not by the pentathlon, nor by
-wrestling, nor yet by speed of foot, which is the most
-honoured in the contests of all the feats of human
-strength&mdash;not so would a city be well governed. Small
-joy would it get from a victory at Olympia: such
-things do not fatten the dark corners of a city.”</p>
-
-<p>Pass straight from this to the works of Pindar, in
-order to see whether Xenophanes’ attack was justified.
-To Pindar the world holds nothing better than an
-Olympian victory. Be the descendant of athletes and
-be an athlete yourself&mdash;that is the summit of human
-attainment and bliss. His gods are either athletes
-themselves or founders of athletic contests. A man’s
-true desires may usually be best traced in the conception
-<a name="Page_122" id="Page_122"></a><span class="pageno">122</span>
-which he forms of the future state: Pindar’s portrait
-of Elysium is characteristic. First the scenery, a
-magnificent description in his best manner:</p>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="i0">In that Underworld the sun shines in his might</div>
- <div class="i4">Through our night.</div>
- <div class="i0">Round that city through the dewy meadow-ways</div>
- <div class="i4">Roses blaze.</div>
- <div class="i0">Through the fragrant shadows, bright with golden gleams,</div>
- <div class="i4">Fruitage teems.…</div>
- <div class="i0">Every flower of joyance blooms nor withers there.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_344" id="fnanchor_344"></a><a href="#footnote_344" class="fnanchor">[344]</a></span></div>
- </div><!--end poem-->
-</div><!--end container-->
-
-<p class="unindent">And in this Paradise how are the shades of the departed
-occupying themselves? “Some take their joy in horses,
-some in gymnasia, some in draughts.”<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_345" id="fnanchor_345"></a><a href="#footnote_345" class="fnanchor">[345]</a></span>
-That is the
-highest bliss conceivable, in Pindar’s opinion.</p>
-
-<p>But Euripides did not agree with him. He denounces
-the athletic life with much vigour.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_346" id="fnanchor_346"></a><a href="#footnote_346" class="fnanchor">[346]</a></span>
- “Of
-countless ills in Hellas, the race of athletes is quite the
-worst.… They are slaves of their jaw and worshippers
-of their belly.… In youth they go about in splendour,
-the admiration of their city, but when bitter old age
-comes upon them, they are cast aside like worn-out
-coats. I blame the custom of the Hellenes, who gather
-together to watch these men, honouring a useless
-pleasure.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_347" id="fnanchor_347"></a><a href="#footnote_347" class="fnanchor">[347]</a></span>
-Who ever helped his fatherland by winning
-a crown for wrestling, or speed of foot, or flinging
-the quoit, or giving a good blow on the jaw? Will
-they fight the foe with quoits, or smite their fists
-through shields? Garlands should be kept for the
-wise and good, and for him who best rules the city by
-his temperance and justice, or by his words drives away
-evil deeds, preventing strife and sedition.”</p>
-
-<p><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123"></a><span class="pageno">123</span>
-In return for this, the athlete-loving populace, finding
-their voice in the popular poet Aristophanes,
-denounced Euripides and his Sophist friends for emptying
-the gymnasia and making the boys desire only a
-good tongue, instead of a sound body, turning them
-into pale-faced, indoor pedants, fit for nothing but
-jabbering nonsense. The attitude of the poet in the
-<cite>Clouds</cite> and <cite>Frogs</cite> is just that of an average schoolboy
-discussing a student.</p>
-
-<p>Plato has already been quoted as an authority against
-the athlete of his day. In the <cite>Laws</cite> he rejects every
-kind of gymnastics which is not strictly conducive to
-military efficiency, and, like the Spartans, condemns the
-pankration and boxing. Races in the ideal State are to
-be run in full armour, and the javelin and spear are to
-replace the quoit. It is exactly the position of some
-moderns, who would substitute shooting and field-days
-for cricket and football. The case against the athletes
-may be closed with Aristotle’s testimony: he also condemns
-the specialisation of the trained professional.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_348" id="fnanchor_348"></a><a href="#footnote_348" class="fnanchor">[348]</a></span>
-</p>
-
-<p>But these denunciations of athletes do not apply so
-much to Athens as to the other States of Hellas. The
-Athenian Agora was full of the statues of generals and
-patriots, not, as was the usual custom, of athletes.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_349" id="fnanchor_349"></a><a href="#footnote_349" class="fnanchor">[349]</a></span>
-The author of the treatise on the Athenian constitution,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_350" id="fnanchor_350"></a><a href="#footnote_350" class="fnanchor">[350]</a></span>
-writing in the early days of the Peloponnesian War,
-notices that the democracy had driven gymnastics out
-of fashion.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_351" id="fnanchor_351"></a><a href="#footnote_351" class="fnanchor">[351]</a></span>
-He writes as one of the aristocrats who,
-like Pindar and his princely friends, cared mainly for
-the body and the outward beauties of life: the democracy
-was vulgar, for it could not spend all its time in bodily
-<a name="Page_124" id="Page_124"></a><span class="pageno">124</span>
-exercises and musical banquets. No doubt at that
-period in Athens, as can be seen in Aristophanes, there
-was a reaction in favour of intellectual pursuits against
-the exclusive athleticism of the preceding age: the time
-of the citizens in a great democracy was also largely
-monopolised by State duties, whether in the Assembly
-or in the Law Courts or in fighting by sea or land.
-But athletics still remained quite sufficiently popular
-even at Athens, and athletic “shop” remained one of
-the chief topics of conversation at a dinner-party.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_352" id="fnanchor_352"></a><a href="#footnote_352" class="fnanchor">[352]</a></span>
-</p>
-
-<p class="center">* * * * *</p>
-
-<p>Gymnastic exercises centred round two sorts of
-buildings which are often confused, the “gymnasium”
-and the “palaistra.” The former may be said to
-correspond to the whole series of fields and buildings
-intended for games, which surround a modern public
-school, including football and cricket grounds, running
-track and jumping pit, fives courts, and so forth. The
-“palaistra” often resembled little more than the playground
-of a village school: it only demanded a sandy
-floor, and sufficient privacy to protect the exercises from
-intrusion: such buildings could be run up at private
-expense in the smallest villages, and were often attached
-to private houses. A “gymnasium,” on the other
-hand, must have cost a vast sum to erect: even a great
-capital like Athens only possessed three in the fourth
-century; small towns must have been unable to afford
-them at all. But the gymnasia were public buildings,
-open to all; they were always full of citizens of all
-ages, practising or watching others practise; they were
-a fashionable place of resort, where Sophists lectured in
-the big halls, and philosophers taught in the shady
-gardens. For the trainer who wished to instruct his
-<a name="Page_125" id="Page_125"></a><span class="pageno">125</span>
-class of boys they were wholly unsuitable; besides, any
-casual stranger could stand by and get a lesson for
-nothing. Consequently, even at Athens, the boys were
-taught in palaistrai which could be closed to the
-public:<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_353" id="fnanchor_353"></a><a href="#footnote_353" class="fnanchor">[353]</a></span>
-in the towns and villages there was no other
-place.</p>
-
-<p>It is quite true that boys went to the gymnasia.
-Aristophanes<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_354" id="fnanchor_354"></a><a href="#footnote_354" class="fnanchor">[354]</a></span>
-talks of “a nice little boy on his way
-home from the gymnasium.” In Antiphon,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_355" id="fnanchor_355"></a><a href="#footnote_355" class="fnanchor">[355]</a></span>
-some
-older boys are practising the javelin in a gymnasium;
-a younger boy, who had been standing among the
-spectators, being called by his paidotribes, runs across the
-course and is killed. If the reading “paidotribes,” for
-which K. F. Hermann would substitute “paidagogos,” is
-correct, we find a paidotribes and his class of younger
-boys present in a gymnasium, probably to practise
-javelin-throwing, which must have demanded a larger
-space than the palaistra often afforded. The elder boys
-are probably not under his tuition, for they are using
-real javelins, not the unpointed shafts which were
-employed at school. Paidotribai with small palaistrai
-may often have taken their classes to the free public
-gymnasia to practise the diskos, the javelin, and running,
-which required a large space. But none the less the
-palaistra was the usual scene of the teaching of boys.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_356" id="fnanchor_356"></a><a href="#footnote_356" class="fnanchor">[356]</a></span>
-It must not, however, be supposed that a palaistra
-was always reserved for boys. The “many palaistrai,”
-which the democracy built for itself,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_357" id="fnanchor_357"></a><a href="#footnote_357" class="fnanchor">[357]</a></span>
-were doubtless
-as much public buildings, open to all ages, as the
-Akademeia or Lukeion. The palaistrai owned or
-<a name="Page_126" id="Page_126"></a><span class="pageno">126</span>
-hired by private teachers must have been open to adults
-when the boys were not present; that which is the
-scene of the <cite>Lusis</cite> was apparently attended by two
-classes, one of boys and the other of youths, who only
-met there on festival days. In the palaistra of Taureas,
-however, mentioned in the <cite>Charmides</cite>, the different
-classes seem all to meet in the undressing-room; but
-on that occasion the building may have been open for
-general practice, not for teaching. Some such arrangement
-into classes must have taken place in the village
-palaistrai.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_358" id="fnanchor_358"></a><a href="#footnote_358" class="fnanchor">[358]</a></span>
-The master who taught the boys in the
-palaistra was called the paidotribes, “boy-rubber”:
-he must have owed his name to the great part which
-rubbing, whether with oil or with various sorts of dust,
-played in athletics.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_359" id="fnanchor_359"></a><a href="#footnote_359" class="fnanchor">[359]</a></span>
-He was expected to be scientific.
-He had to know what exercises would suit what constitutions:<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_360" id="fnanchor_360"></a><a href="#footnote_360" class="fnanchor">[360]</a></span>
-he is often coupled with the doctor.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_361" id="fnanchor_361"></a><a href="#footnote_361" class="fnanchor">[361]</a></span>
-His
-object was to prevent, the doctor’s to cure, diseases.
-He even prescribed diet. Besides health, he was
-expected to aim at beauty and strength.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_362" id="fnanchor_362"></a><a href="#footnote_362" class="fnanchor">[362]</a></span>
-His training,
-in Plato’s opinion, also served to produce firmness of
-character and strength of will: he must therefore know
-how much training to administer to each boy, for too
-much would cause excess of these qualities and lead
-to savage brutality, and too little would result in
-effeminacy.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_363" id="fnanchor_363"></a><a href="#footnote_363" class="fnanchor">[363]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127"></a><span class="pageno">127</span>
-Since so much science was demanded of the paidotribes,
-parents exercised much forethought in choosing
-a gymnastic school for their boys:<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_364" id="fnanchor_364"></a><a href="#footnote_364" class="fnanchor">[364]</a></span>
-they would “call
-upon their friends and relations to give advice, and
-deliberate for many days,” in order to find a trainer
-whose instructions would “make their son’s body a
-useful servant to his mind, not likely by its bad
-condition to compel him to shirk his duty in war or
-elsewhere.”<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_365" id="fnanchor_365"></a><a href="#footnote_365" class="fnanchor">[365]</a></span>
-This at Athens, no doubt: in the smaller
-towns and villages there could have been little choice:
-parents must have taken what they could get.</p>
-
-<p>On arriving at the chosen palaistra with his paidagogos
-the boy would find a class assembling. He
-would first go into the undressing-room<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_366" id="fnanchor_366"></a><a href="#footnote_366" class="fnanchor">[366]</a></span>
-and strip.
-For all the exercises were performed naked. This no
-doubt gave the trainer a good opportunity of watching
-which muscles most required development, and what
-constitutional weaknesses, if any, must be treated circumspectly.
-Passing into the palaistra proper, the boy
-would find an enclosure surrounded, in the case of the
-more expensive schools, with pillars. There would be
-no roof. Hellenic custom maintained that it was
-healthy to expose the naked body to the open air and
-the mid-day sun: a white skin was regarded as a sign
-of effeminacy.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_367" id="fnanchor_367"></a><a href="#footnote_367" class="fnanchor">[367]</a></span>
-If the sun became dangerously hot,
-little caps were worn, which at other times hung on the
-walls of the palaistra. The floor was sand. Before
-wrestling or practising the pankration or jumping,
-the boys had to break up the soil with pickaxes<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_368" id="fnanchor_368"></a><a href="#footnote_368" class="fnanchor">[368]</a></span>
-in order to make it soft: these pickaxes were
-also suspended on the walls. Beside them would
-<a name="Page_128" id="Page_128"></a><span class="pageno">128</span>
-be also <em>kôrukoi</em> or punch-balls, <em>haltêres</em> (a sort of
-dumb-bell, used for jumping and other exercises),
-the scrapers with which the dirt and sweat were
-removed, bags to hold the cords which were used
-as boxing-gloves, and spare javelins. Grown-up men
-were not allowed to enter during the lessons, but could
-apparently, if they wished, watch “from outside,” that
-is, probably, from the dressing-room, where we often
-find Sokrates conversing with the pupils, boys and
-lads: he could not, probably, penetrate further.</p>
-
-<p>The symbol of office which marked the paidotribes
-was a long forked stick depicted in the vases.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_369" id="fnanchor_369"></a><a href="#footnote_369" class="fnanchor">[369]</a></span>
-This was
-probably derived from the branch which the umpires at
-the games held in their hands. The two symbols are
-so much alike when represented on the vases<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_370" id="fnanchor_370"></a><a href="#footnote_370" class="fnanchor">[370]</a></span>
-that it is
-often hard to distinguish them. There were generally
-several under-masters in the palaistra. The more proficient
-boys also were employed in teaching backward
-schoolfellows; these “pupil-teachers” appear on vases,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_371" id="fnanchor_371"></a><a href="#footnote_371" class="fnanchor">[371]</a></span>
-holding the stick of office like the grown-up masters.
-No doubt, poor boys managed to get instruction in this
-manner from their richer friends in the public gymnasia
-and palaistrai, without attending a school at all.</p>
-
-<p>The staff of a palaistra also included professional
-flute-players, for most of the exercises<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_372" id="fnanchor_372"></a><a href="#footnote_372" class="fnanchor">[372]</a></span>
-were performed
-to the sound of a flute, in order that good time might
-be preserved in the various movements. The player
-in these cases wore the <ins title="phorbeia">φορβεία</ins> or mouth-band.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_373" id="fnanchor_373"></a><a href="#footnote_373" class="fnanchor">[373]</a></span>
-</p>
-
-<p>As I have pointed out in Chapter <abbr title="Two">II.</abbr>, although the
-literary authorities make gymnastic training of a sort
-<!--Blank Page-->
-<!--Blank Page-->
-<a name="Page_129" id="Page_129"></a><span class="pageno">129</span>
-begin with the seventh year, it is not at all probable
-that the more recognised exercises, such as boxing and
-wrestling, began till a good many years later. The
-vases suggest that these subjects were taught some years
-after letters and music had begun, for they represent
-only older boys as learning them. Aristotle seems to
-vouch for a graduated course of gymnastic exercises
-during boyhood.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_374" id="fnanchor_374"></a><a href="#footnote_374" class="fnanchor">[374]</a></span>
-</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter together" style="width: 500px">
- <p class="captionleft">PLATE <abbr title="Six">VI.</abbr> <span class="sc lowercase">A.</span></p>
- <a name="i06a" id="i06a"></a>
- <img src="images/6a.jpg"
- width="500" height="262"
- alt="Illustration: Wrestlers"
- />
- <p class="caption">IN THE PALAISTRA: WRESTLERS, PAIDOTRIBES, BOY PREPARING GROUND<br />
-Gerhard’s <cite lang="de" xml:lang="de">Auserlesene Vasenbilder</cite>, <abbr title="271">cclxxi.</abbr> Fig. 2.</p>
-</div><!--end illustration-->
-
-<div class="figcenter together" style="width: 500px">
- <p class="captionleft">PLATE <abbr title="Six">VI.</abbr> <span class="sc lowercase">B.</span></p>
- <a name="i06b" id="i06b"></a>
- <img src="images/6b.jpg"
- width="500" height="239"
- alt="Illustration: Boy putting on boxing thong"
- />
- <p class="caption">IN THE PALAISTRA: BOY PUTTING ON BOXING-THONG, A PANKRATION LESSON, AND A PAIDOTRIBES<br />
-Gerhard’s <cite lang="de" xml:lang="de">Auserlesene Vasenbilder</cite>, <abbr title="271">cclxxi.</abbr> Fig. 1.</p>
-</div><!--end illustration-->
-
-<p>What did the boys learn at the palaistra in the
-meantime? Deportment and easy exercises. A passage
-in Aristophanes informs us that they were taught the
-most graceful way to sit down and get up.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_375" id="fnanchor_375"></a><a href="#footnote_375" class="fnanchor">[375]</a></span>
-Vases
-represent boys learning how to stand straight. There
-were also all sorts of exercises in which the unpointed
-javelin played the part of a training-rod and the
-halteres the part of dumb-bells. The paidotribes might
-also try to strengthen particular muscles in particular
-boys. In an epigram,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_376" id="fnanchor_376"></a><a href="#footnote_376" class="fnanchor">[376]</a></span>
-a trainer is exercising a boy’s
-middle by bending him over his knee, and then, while
-holding his feet fast, swinging him over backwards.</p>
-
-<p>No doubt what was known as “gesticulation” (<ins title="to
-cheironomein">τὸ χειρονομεῖν</ins>) played a large part in this earlier training.
-“Gesticulation” meant a scientific series of gestures and
-movements of all the limbs, somewhat like the modern
-systems of physical education taught by Sandow and
-others. It was chiefly an exercise for the arms, as the
-name implies, but on a celebrated occasion Hippokleides
-the Athenian stood on his head on a table and “gesticulated”
-with his feet.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_377" id="fnanchor_377"></a><a href="#footnote_377" class="fnanchor">[377]</a></span>
-The particular movements were
-very carefully designed, and were all intended to be
-beautiful and gentlemanly.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_378" id="fnanchor_378"></a><a href="#footnote_378" class="fnanchor">[378]</a></span>
-Gesticulation served as a
-preparation for various dancing-systems, but was
-<a name="Page_130" id="Page_130"></a><span class="pageno">130</span>
-distinct from dancing, for Charmides was able to gesticulate
-but unable to dance.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_379" id="fnanchor_379"></a><a href="#footnote_379" class="fnanchor">[379]</a></span>
-It was also preparatory
-to gymnastics, for it resembled the movements of a
-boxer sparring at the air for lack of an opponent.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_380" id="fnanchor_380"></a><a href="#footnote_380" class="fnanchor">[380]</a></span>
-The halteres were possibly often employed, for they
-played a part in many gymnastic exercises.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_381" id="fnanchor_381"></a><a href="#footnote_381" class="fnanchor">[381]</a></span>
-This
-“gesticulation,” then, being a preliminary to gymnastics
-and dancing, would be the natural thing for the small
-boys to learn in the palaistra. Other early exercises
-were rope-climbing<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_382" id="fnanchor_382"></a><a href="#footnote_382" class="fnanchor">[382]</a></span>
-and a sort of leap-frog.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_383" id="fnanchor_383"></a><a href="#footnote_383" class="fnanchor">[383]</a></span>
-The
-various kinds of ball-game,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_384" id="fnanchor_384"></a><a href="#footnote_384" class="fnanchor">[384]</a></span>
-mostly designed to exercise
-the body scientifically, may also have been employed.
-Of the regular exercises of the palaistra, which I am
-about to discuss, running and jumping would suit quite
-small boys; the diskos and javelin could also be begun
-at an early age, for smaller sizes were made for children.</p>
-
-<p class="center">* * * * *</p>
-
-<p>The age at which the recognised exercises were first
-taught no doubt varied with individual taste and
-physical capacity: no strict line can be drawn. These
-exercises were wrestling, boxing, the pankration, jumping,
-running, throwing the diskos and the javelin.
-
-<span class="decoration">Wrestling</span> (<ins title="palê">πάλη</ins>) was probably regarded as the most
-important of these subjects, for it gave its name to the
-Palaistra. For this exercise the soil was broken up
-with the pickaxe and watered: the bodies of the
-combatants were oiled beforehand. By these means
-the Hellenes prevented their boys from disfiguring their
-bodies with bumps and bruises, and the slipperiness of
-the ground and of the antagonist’s body made the
-exercise more difficult and therefore more valuable.
-<a name="Page_131" id="Page_131"></a><span class="pageno">131</span>
-Three throws were necessary for victory. There were
-two sorts of wrestling. In one the victor had to throw
-his antagonist without coming to the ground himself;
-this was a matter of ingenious twists and turns somewhat
-like the Japanese jiu-jitsu. In the other both
-combatants rolled over and over on the ground: this
-was less scientific. The leading paidotribai had their
-own favourite systems of wrestling, with various
-openings, as in chess, and various ways of meeting
-them. “What style of wrestling did you learn at the
-Palaistra?” Kleon asks the sausage-seller.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_385" id="fnanchor_385"></a><a href="#footnote_385" class="fnanchor">[385]</a></span>
-When
-two boys were set to wrestle in school, they were not
-allowed to contend as they pleased with a view to
-victory, but had to carry out the directions of the
-paidotribes.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_386" id="fnanchor_386"></a><a href="#footnote_386" class="fnanchor">[386]</a></span>
-A fragment of a system of wrestling has
-been unearthed at Oxurhunchos.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_387" id="fnanchor_387"></a><a href="#footnote_387" class="fnanchor">[387]</a></span>
-</p>
-
-<p>Suppose there are two boys, Charmides and Glaukon.
-The paidotribes sets them to wrestle, while the rest
-of the class watch. He holds a long forked stick in
-his hand. Pointing with it to Charmides, he says,
-“You put your right hand between his legs and grip
-him.” Then to Glaukon, “Close your legs on it, and
-thrust your left side against his side.” To Charmides,
-“Throw him off with your left hand.” To Glaukon,
-“Shift your ground, and engage.” Each group of
-directions, or figure <ins title="schêma">σχῆμα</ins>, as it was called, closes
-with the word “Engage” <ins title="plexon">πλέξον</ins>. At this point,
-probably, the two boys were allowed to wrestle at will,
-the result, however, being foreseen and inevitable owing
-to the previous moves.</p>
-
-<p>An epigram in the <cite>Anthology</cite> represents instruction
-<a name="Page_132" id="Page_132"></a><span class="pageno">132</span>
-of this sort being given: the boy retorts in the middle,
-“I can’t possibly do it, Diophantos; that’s not the
-way boys wrestle.”<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_388" id="fnanchor_388"></a><a href="#footnote_388" class="fnanchor">[388]</a></span>
-</p>
-
-<p>But, to use a parallel given by Isokrates, a pupil is
-not yet a complete orator, when he knows how to
-create pathos, irony, and so forth, and has been taught
-the parts of a speech: he has still to learn when and
-where and in what order to employ these several
-artifices. So with wrestling. A boy who knows his
-“figures” is not yet a wrestler: he has got to learn
-when is the right moment to employ each of them in
-an actual contest with a real antagonist. “When the
-paidotribes has taught his pupils the ‘figures’ invented
-for bodily training and practised them and made them
-perfect in these, he makes the boys go through their
-exercises again and accustoms them to physical toil, and
-compels them to string together one by one the figures
-which they have learnt, that they may have a firmer
-grasp of them and get a clearer comprehension of the
-right occasions for using them: for it is impossible to
-comprehend these in an exact science.”<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_389" id="fnanchor_389"></a><a href="#footnote_389" class="fnanchor">[389]</a></span>
-The boys
-have to judge for themselves, in the heat of the
-contest, which figure it will be expedient to use: the
-trainer cannot fix that beforehand. But they will best
-be able to judge, if by long practice they have
-discovered which figures suit them best and which
-prove fatal to a particular type of opponent.</p>
-
-<p><span class="decoration">Boxing</span> was similarly taught by a series of “figures.”
-The boys used the light gloves, consisting of strings
-wound round the hands, not the heavy, metal-weighted
-gloves which professional athletes wore. The <span class="decoration">pankration</span><span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_390" id="fnanchor_390"></a><a href="#footnote_390" class="fnanchor">[390]</a></span>
-was a mixture of boxing and wrestling: the boys
-<!--Blank Page-->
-<a name="Page_133" id="Page_133"></a><span class="pageno">133</span>
-usually wore similar gloves for this but left the fingers
-unfastened, only the wrists and knuckles being protected:
-sometimes they fought with bare hands. For
-both these exercises it was usual to wear dogskin
-caps, in order to protect the ears from injury. The
-pankration seems to have been regarded as an unsatisfactory
-game for boys: so it was excluded from both
-Olympian and Pythian games till a comparatively
-late date. For one thing, it was dangerous, and
-the exercise was very severe. But in the palaistra,
-carefully regulated by the paidotribes and stopped
-when the fighting became dangerous, no doubt it was
-harmless enough. Alkibiades, however, once succeeded
-in biting an opponent who was pressing him hard, being
-ready to do anything rather than be beaten. “You
-bite like a girl, Alkibiades!” exclaimed the indignant
-boy. “No, like a lion,” answered Alkibiades.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_400" id="fnanchor_400"></a><a href="#footnote_400" class="fnanchor">[400]</a></span>
-</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter together" style="width: 500px">
- <p class="captionleft">PLATE <abbr title="Seven">VII.</abbr></p>
- <a name="i07a" id="i07a"></a>
- <img src="images/7a.jpg"
- width="500" height="506"
- alt="Illustration: Stadion at Delphi"
- />
- <p class="captionright"><span class="decoration">Photo by Mr. R. Coupland.</span></p>
- <p class="caption"><span class="sc">Stadion at Delphi from the Fortifications of Philomelos.</span><br />
-Length about 220 yards.</p>
-</div><!--end illustration-->
-
-<div class="figcenter together" style="width: 500px">
- <a name="i07b" id="i07b"></a>
- <img src="images/7b.jpg"
- width="500" height="509"
- alt="Illustration: Stadion at Delphi"
- />
- <p class="captionright"><span class="decoration">Photo by Mr. R. Coupland.</span></p>
- <p class="caption"><span class="sc">Stadion at Delphi from the Fortifications of Philomelos.</span><br />
-A nearer view.</p>
-</div><!--end illustration-->
-
-<p><span class="decoration">Running</span> needs no comment: the methods are much
-the same in all ages. The chief distances for races in
-Hellas were the Stadion or 200 yards,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_401" id="fnanchor_401"></a><a href="#footnote_401" class="fnanchor">[401]</a></span>
-the Diaulos or
-quarter-mile, and the Long-distance race, which varied
-from three-quarter mile to about three miles. The
-race in armour was not taught to boys. Races were
-often run over soft sand, where the runners sank in,
-just as long-distance races in England often include a
-ploughed field or two. The sand made running both
-a more severe exercise (so that a shorter distance
-sufficed) and also a better training for war.</p>
-
-<p>For the <span class="decoration">long jump</span> the Hellenes used the “halteres”
-or light dumb-bells, to assist their momentum.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_402" id="fnanchor_402"></a><a href="#footnote_402" class="fnanchor">[402]</a></span>
-Even
-in competitions, a flute-player stood by, to give the
-competitors the assistance of his music: no doubt it
-<a name="Page_134" id="Page_134"></a><span class="pageno">134</span>
-helped them to manage their steps so as to “take off”
-on the right spot. They alighted into a large sandy
-pit, dug up by the ever-present pickaxe: the jump
-was only measured if they came down on to this evenly,
-leaving a clear trace of their foot.</p>
-
-<p>The <span class="decoration">diskos</span> was a flat circle of polished bronze or
-other metal.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_403" id="fnanchor_403"></a><a href="#footnote_403" class="fnanchor">[403]</a></span>
-The specimen in the British Museum is
-between 8 and 9 inches in diameter, and is inscribed
-with athletic pictures on either side. It was flung with
-either hand. A great many attitudes were necessary
-before the diskos was launched, and every muscle of
-the body must have been well exercised in the process.
-The time was given, in the palaistra, by a flute-player.
-In competitions both the distance and the direction of
-the throw were taken into consideration.</p>
-
-<p>Boys learnt to throw the <span class="decoration">javelin and spear</span> by
-practising with long unpointed rods, which were also
-used for a variety of physical exercises. The mark
-seems to have been a sort of croquet-hoop or pair of
-compasses, fixed into the ground: other targets were
-also employed.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_404" id="fnanchor_404"></a><a href="#footnote_404" class="fnanchor">[404]</a></span>
-The vases which represent this pursuit
-often show the paidotribes carrying this hoop or fixing
-it into the ground. It was planted at a fixed distance
-which was stepped out.</p>
-
-<p>It may be mentioned, before we leave the “paidotribes,”
-that his fee for his whole course seems to
-have been a <ins title="mna">μνᾶ</ins>, about £4:<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_405" id="fnanchor_405"></a><a href="#footnote_405" class="fnanchor">[405]</a></span>
-this enabled the pupil
-to attend his lectures “for ever,” that is, perhaps till
-the course was finished. Or perhaps this sum made a
-pupil a life-member of a particular private palaistra.</p>
-
-<p>Let us now look into one of the gymnasia at
-Athens, the Akademeia or Lukeion. We will suppose
-<a name="Page_135" id="Page_135"></a><span class="pageno">135</span>
-that it is late in the afternoon, for this was a favourite
-time for taking exercise: the Athenians liked to get a
-good appetite for their evening meal. Outside, a
-troop of young men who intend to be enrolled in the
-State-cavalry are practising their evolutions, mounting,
-in the absence of stirrups, by a leaping-pole, and charging
-in squadrons. On another side a body of heavy
-infantry with spear and shield are assembling for a
-night march into the Megarid;<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_406" id="fnanchor_406"></a><a href="#footnote_406" class="fnanchor">[406]</a></span>
-they are packing
-their supplies, onions and dried fish, perhaps, into their
-knapsacks as they fall in, and are grumbling at having
-to leave Athens just when a festival is coming; a burly
-countryman is complaining to his general that it is not
-his turn to serve, as he took part in the raid into
-Boiotia last week, and his general is threatening him
-with a prosecution for insubordination if he becomes
-abusive. After paying our respects to the patron
-deities, Herakles and Hermes and Eros,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_407" id="fnanchor_407"></a><a href="#footnote_407" class="fnanchor">[407]</a></span>
-and having
-muttered a curse on all tyrants suggested by the statue
-of Eros which Charmos the father-in-law of Hippias
-the Peisistratid set up,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_408" id="fnanchor_408"></a><a href="#footnote_408" class="fnanchor">[408]</a></span>
-we enter the gymnasium.</p>
-
-<p>The first room which we come to is the undressing-room.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_409" id="fnanchor_409"></a><a href="#footnote_409" class="fnanchor">[409]</a></span>
-On the benches round the walls a row of men
-are sitting discussing the exact nature of Self-control:
-an extremely ugly person, to whom they all pay great
-respect, is stating that it is an exact science, and, if only
-they can discover this science, the whole world will
-become virtuous. Lads and men are stripping all
-about the room, and passing off to take their exercises
-elsewhere; others keep coming in and dressing and
-listening to the discussion for a minute or two. A
-handsome young fellow comes in: the ugly man makes
-<a name="Page_136" id="Page_136"></a><span class="pageno">136</span>
-room for him with great energy, and his friends who
-are sitting at the end of the bench are pushed off
-suddenly on to the floor. A shout of laughter,
-mingled with some strong Attic abuse, arises. Not
-wishing to be involved as witnesses in an interminable
-lawsuit, we hurry out through the further door into a
-great cloister.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_410" id="fnanchor_410"></a><a href="#footnote_410" class="fnanchor">[410]</a></span>
-In the centre of this is a large open
-space, with no roof. Here we meet a well-known
-mathematician from Kurene,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_411" id="fnanchor_411"></a><a href="#footnote_411" class="fnanchor">[411]</a></span>
-who is walking round the
-cloister with a crowd of pupils: he is explaining to
-them that famous theorem about right-angled triangles,
-whose proof is so neat that Pythagoras the vegetarian
-sacrificed a hundred oxen when he discovered it. At
-intervals the mathematician stops and draws a diagram
-in the dust with his stick. As we follow him, we can
-look into the rooms which surround the cloister. In
-one, a crowd of men are anointing themselves with oil.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_412" id="fnanchor_412"></a><a href="#footnote_412" class="fnanchor">[412]</a></span>
-The rubbing, which is so good for all bodily ills, and
-the oil, even if not followed by any further exercise, are
-regarded as an excellent thing. An Athenian gentleman
-is expected to carry about a certain fragrance of this
-oil,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_413" id="fnanchor_413"></a><a href="#footnote_413" class="fnanchor">[413]</a></span>
-and his skin must always be sleek with it; but as
-a rule the anointing is a prelude to exercise, and is
-meant to make the joints supple and the body slippery
-enough to elude a wrestler’s grip.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_414" id="fnanchor_414"></a><a href="#footnote_414" class="fnanchor">[414]</a></span>
-A slave or an
-attendant stands by many of the men, holding one of
-those dainty oil-flasks which make so great a feature in
-modern Museums of Archæology. Through the next
-<a name="Page_137" id="Page_137"></a><span class="pageno">137</span>
-door we see the “dusting-room.” Various sorts of
-dust were used for rubbing the body. They served
-to clean it of sweat after exercise, to open the pores, to
-warm it when cold, and to soften the skin. A yellow
-dust was particularly popular; for it made the body
-glisten so as to be pleasant to look at, as a good body
-in good condition ought to be.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_415" id="fnanchor_415"></a><a href="#footnote_415" class="fnanchor">[415]</a></span>
-Next perhaps will be
-the bathing-room&mdash;a popular place in the evening, for
-it was usual to take a bath before dinner.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_416" id="fnanchor_416"></a><a href="#footnote_416" class="fnanchor">[416]</a></span>
-The
-bathers either splash themselves out of great bowls
-which stand upon pedestals, or receive a shower bath
-by getting a companion or an attendant to pour a
-pitcher of water over them. Tanks capable of receiving
-the whole body at once were not usual, though
-known to Homer.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_417" id="fnanchor_417"></a><a href="#footnote_417" class="fnanchor">[417]</a></span>
-Then we see the room of the
-<span class="decoration">korukos</span>, or punch-ball, which will present a very curious
-appearance.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_418" id="fnanchor_418"></a><a href="#footnote_418" class="fnanchor">[418]</a></span>
-The <span class="decoration">korukos</span> is a large sack hanging
-from the ceiling by a rope. The lighter <span class="decoration">korukoi</span> are
-filled with fig seeds or meal, the heavier with sand.
-They hang at about the height of a man’s waist. You
-push one of them gently at first, and more and more
-violently as you gain experience; having pushed it,
-you plant yourself in the way of the rebound, and try
-to stop the sack with your hands or your chest or your
-back or your head. If you are not strong enough, you
-will be knocked over, and the room will laugh. This
-will practise you in standing steady, and make all parts
-of your body firm and muscular. The <span class="decoration">korukos</span> can
-also be used as a punch-ball, to strengthen the boxer’s
-arms and shoulders. This exercise is especially recommended
-for boxers and pankratiasts: the latter
-<a name="Page_138" id="Page_138"></a><span class="pageno">138</span>
-ought to use the heavier variety. Perhaps there will
-also be some lay-figures hanging up round the walls,
-for these also were used for practising. Here, too,
-some unlucky individuals who, from unpopularity or
-other causes, are unable to find an antagonist, will be
-exercising their fists on thin air. But both these
-expedients were regarded as ridiculous.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_419" id="fnanchor_419"></a><a href="#footnote_419" class="fnanchor">[419]</a></span>
-</p>
-
-<p>There were a large number of other rooms round
-the cloister, some intended for exercises in wet weather,
-for, if possible, exercise was always taken out of doors;
-for it was regarded as a great object to make the skin
-brown and hard by exposure to the sun. So King
-Agesilaos put his Asiatic captives up for sale in his
-camp naked, in order that his Hellenic soldiers, seeing
-their pale, soft flesh, unused to exposure, might despise
-their enemy. But as most of these rooms were furnished
-with seats, they were largely used as lecture-halls
-by wandering Sophists,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_420" id="fnanchor_420"></a><a href="#footnote_420" class="fnanchor">[420]</a></span>
-who gave free lectures in
-them to any passer-by who might care to listen, in
-order to attract regular, paying pupils. So we can
-take our pick and hear lectures on poetry or metaphysics,
-music or rhetoric, geography or history, at our
-pleasure.</p>
-
-<p>After this, we can turn our attention to the
-great central courtyard,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_421" id="fnanchor_421"></a><a href="#footnote_421" class="fnanchor">[421]</a></span>
-which is surrounded by the
-cloister, or to the racecourse and open spaces which
-lie beyond it. In one part will be the wrestling
-arena.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_422" id="fnanchor_422"></a><a href="#footnote_422" class="fnanchor">[422]</a></span>
-Pairs of oiled, naked combatants will be
-struggling together, amid a crowd of cheering spectators,
-<a name="Page_139" id="Page_139"></a><span class="pageno">139</span>
-and perhaps the trainer will be standing by,
-giving them directions. One group attracts especial
-attention: for the pair are going to represent Athens
-at Olympia next year. Elsewhere the pankratiasts are
-contending, some sparring at arm’s length, others
-joined in a deadly grapple, rolling over and over on
-the ground and pummelling one another’s heads with
-their gloved knuckles. They are covered with clotted
-dust and oil and will need much scraping. Then there
-are the boxers, bearing either the light gloves, or, if
-they intend to take part in a big competition, the
-heavy iron balls padded over with leather which were
-used in the great Games.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_423" id="fnanchor_423"></a><a href="#footnote_423" class="fnanchor">[423]</a></span>
-There are races too in
-progress, lap by lap round the great Stadion. Some of
-the runners are naked, others are wearing helmet and
-shield, since they are practising for the Race in Armour.
-Friends run beside them for a little way, pacing them
-and encouraging them. Others are jumping, with the
-halteres in their hands, into the pit, while their friends
-mark the point where their heels have left a mark in
-the sand. A professional flute-player, with his mouth-band
-on, sets the time. Each is, no doubt, hoping
-to beat Phaüllos’ great jump of 55 feet&mdash;the world’s
-record. Everywhere are crowds of spectators,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_424" id="fnanchor_424"></a><a href="#footnote_424" class="fnanchor">[424]</a></span>
-and
-everywhere eager trainers giving advice, hoping, if their
-pupil gains a prize at some great Games, to make a
-name for themselves, and attract a crowd of lads to
-their paid lessons: perhaps they will even be immortalised
-by some contemporary Pindar in a song in honour
-of their pupil’s victory.</p>
-
-<p>In another corner, it may be, there will be teams
-<a name="Page_140" id="Page_140"></a><span class="pageno">140</span>
-practising together. A regiment of epheboi may be
-undergoing their gymnastic training before service
-on the frontier:<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_425" id="fnanchor_425"></a><a href="#footnote_425" class="fnanchor">[425]</a></span>
-or a team of them may be training,
-watched by the rich “gumnasiarchos,” for the
-torch-race at the festival of Hephaistos, or for the
-race from the Temple of Dionusos to that of Athena
-of the Sunshades, where the winner will receive a large
-bowl containing wine and honey and cheese and meat
-and olive oil&mdash;not all mixed together, let us hope.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_426" id="fnanchor_426"></a><a href="#footnote_426" class="fnanchor">[426]</a></span>
-There may also be teams practising wrestling and other
-bodily exercises together. Their trainer, “thinking it
-impossible to lay down separate regulations for each
-individual, orders roughly what suits the majority. So
-every one of the team takes an equal amount of exercise,
-and they all start and all stop running, or wrestling, or
-whatever it may be, at the same moment.”<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_427" id="fnanchor_427"></a><a href="#footnote_427" class="fnanchor">[427]</a></span>
-</p>
-
-<p>In the larger open spaces we shall find Athenians
-throwing the diskos, like Muron’s celebrated figure, or
-practising archery, or flinging the spear or javelin.
-In watching these care must be exercised: unwary spectators
-may be killed or injured. Mythology is full of
-unfortunates killed in this way. Was not the fair
-Huakinthos slain by Apollo’s quoit? Antiphon, too,
-in his new book on speech-writing, takes as one of his
-themes a boy killed by a comrade’s javelin accidentally.
-We can also take a lesson in the use of spear and shield
-from the teacher of arms: a pair of Sophists, who
-specialise in this subject, have just come to Athens, and
-will doubtless be exhibiting their skill here. We remember,
-though, that the warlike Spartans ridicule these
-professors, and General Laches regards them as quite
-<a name="Page_141" id="Page_141"></a><span class="pageno">141</span>
-useless for military purposes, as we heard him telling
-Sokrates the other day.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_428" id="fnanchor_428"></a><a href="#footnote_428" class="fnanchor">[428]</a></span>
-So we will pass on.</p>
-
-<p>The vast majority of people in the gymnasium
-confine themselves to walking about. The colonnades
-and the gardens are convenient and attractive, and
-there is plenty to watch everywhere. The “xustos,”
-or covered cloister,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_429" id="fnanchor_429"></a><a href="#footnote_429" class="fnanchor">[429]</a></span>
-where athletes exercise in bad
-weather, is particularly popular among the walkers.
-And while they walk, they talk. There is a group of
-philosophical students arguing about the Supreme Good
-or constructing an ideal State. There is a party of
-inquirers who are discussing the nature of plants, or
-the varieties of crustaceans. Yonder, a half-naked,
-unkempt enthusiast is declaiming against luxury.
-“Man,” he cries, “is independent of circumstances.”
-Everywhere, walkers and spectators and talkers, but
-walkers above all.</p>
-
-<p>For the average Athenian spent all his time upon
-his legs: to sit down was the mark of a slave.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_430" id="fnanchor_430"></a><a href="#footnote_430" class="fnanchor">[430]</a></span>
-He
-walked nearly all day: the distance which he covered
-in five or six days would easily stretch from Athens to
-Olympia. He took a walk before breakfast, another
-before lunch, another before dinner, and another between
-dinner and bed.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_431" id="fnanchor_431"></a><a href="#footnote_431" class="fnanchor">[431]</a></span>
-</p>
-
-<p>Games of ball are going on in the ball-court yonder.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_432" id="fnanchor_432"></a><a href="#footnote_432" class="fnanchor">[432]</a></span>
-We may remember that the poet Sophocles was a
-famous player.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_433" id="fnanchor_433"></a><a href="#footnote_433" class="fnanchor">[433]</a></span>
-But the shadow on the great sun-dial
-has nearly reached the ten-foot mark which announces
-dinner-time to the Athenian world. The crowds who
-have been exercising themselves are scraping off the
-<a name="Page_142" id="Page_142"></a><span class="pageno">142</span>
-sweat and dirt with the <ins title="stlengis">στλεγγίς</ins> or scraper,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_434" id="fnanchor_434"></a><a href="#footnote_434" class="fnanchor">[434]</a></span>
-or else
-hurrying to the bath-rooms. After the bath comes
-another anointing, with oil and water this time.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_435" id="fnanchor_435"></a><a href="#footnote_435" class="fnanchor">[435]</a></span>
-Then
-away through the nearest gate into the city, while the
-great buildings on the Akropolis grow misty in the
-twilight and Athena’s guardian Spear catches the last
-rays of the setting sun.</p>
-
-<p>All this was open to the poorest Athenian: there
-was no fee for entrance. The only expenses were those
-incurred in buying an oil-flask and scraper, which the
-State did not as a rule provide, and any fees that might
-be paid to a trainer for special “coaching.” The poor
-could learn as much as they required from watching
-those who were proficient. It was usual to tip the man
-in the public baths who poured cold water over the
-bathers and assisted them generally: but this probably
-did not apply to the bath-rooms in the gymnasia. The
-State certainly made it easy for every citizen to take as
-much exercise as he pleased.</p>
-
-<p>Women were wholly excluded from athletics at
-Athens. In Sparta girls exercised themselves as much
-as the boys. In other Dorian States feminine athletics
-were encouraged to a less degree. At Argos there
-were foot-races for girls. In Chios they could be seen
-wrestling in the gymnasia.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_436" id="fnanchor_436"></a><a href="#footnote_436" class="fnanchor">[436]</a></span>
-</p>
-
-<p class="center">* * * * *</p>
-
-<p>But the gymnasia and palaistrai, though they provided
-so many different kinds of exercises, did not
-supply the Hellenes with their sole opportunities for
-keeping the body in good condition. Hunting was a
-popular employment at Sparta and no doubt elsewhere:
-Xenophon, who was devoted to it, would have liked
-<a name="Page_143" id="Page_143"></a><span class="pageno">143</span>
-to make it more popular in Attica,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_437" id="fnanchor_437"></a><a href="#footnote_437" class="fnanchor">[437]</a></span>
-where it languished,
-perhaps from lack of game. Swimming and rowing
-were usual accomplishments. Riding was compulsory
-for rich citizens at Athens, for they had to serve in the
-cavalry; it was also popular in Thessaly, the land of
-horses. Military service provided both an incentive
-to physical exercise and a frequent means of obtaining
-it. Dancing was universal throughout the Hellenic
-world and played a larger part in Hellenic education than
-is usually recognised. At Sparta it was of paramount
-importance. At Athens it was taught free to large
-numbers of boys under the system of leitourgiai. Plato
-divides physical education into dancing and wrestling.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_438" id="fnanchor_438"></a><a href="#footnote_438" class="fnanchor">[438]</a></span>
-Aristophanes<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_439" id="fnanchor_439"></a><a href="#footnote_439" class="fnanchor">[439]</a></span>
-brackets dancing between the palaistra
-and music, when he wishes to give the three elements
-of a gentleman’s education. Choral dancing to a
-Hellene was at once the ritual of religion, the ordinary
-accompaniment of a festival or public holiday, the
-highest form of music, and the most perfect system of
-physical exercise then discovered.</p>
-
-<p>The modern reader finds it very hard to realise
-why Hellenic philosophers attach so much educational
-importance to the various kinds of dance. This is
-because modern dancing differs from its ancient prototype
-in two very important particulars: it is not
-connected with religion and it is not dramatic. In the
-East dancing was, and is, the language of religion.
-David, to show his fervour, danced before the Ark
-with all his might. In Hellas, dancing accompanied
-every rite and every mystery.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_440" id="fnanchor_440"></a><a href="#footnote_440" class="fnanchor">[440]</a></span>
-The choral dance
-afforded the outlet to religious enthusiasm which elsewhere
-<a name="Page_144" id="Page_144"></a><span class="pageno">144</span>
-is provided by services: any change in its
-characteristics was a change in ritual and in the inexpressible
-sentiments and moral attitudes which become
-so closely bound up with habitual religious observances.
-And, since it was the usual ritual of worship, dancing
-became all-important in education, as providing the
-forms through which the highest aspirations of the
-children were accustomed to find expression.</p>
-
-<p>The boy who danced in honour of Dionusos was
-trying to assimilate himself to the god, whose history
-and personality would be brought home to him vividly
-by the vineyards around him: they would serve him for
-a parable. The vine that came so mysteriously out of
-the earth, lived its short life in the rain and sunshine,
-and was crushed and killed at the harvest, to rise
-again in the strange juice which thrilled him with such
-wondrous power&mdash;there was plenty of parable for him
-there. And while he felt the god’s history so vividly,
-he was acting it, for acting was the very essence of
-Hellenic dancing. He would act the sorrows of
-Dionusos, his persecution from city to city, and his
-final conquest; he would match each incident in the
-story with suitable inward feelings and outward gestures
-of sorrow and triumph. Thus his dancing came to
-be a keenly religious observance, accompanied by more
-vivid acting than is possible on a modern stage; such
-dancing, it must be remembered, was the parent of Attic
-Drama. The dramatic power of such acting became
-enormous; one dancer, it is said, could make the whole
-philosophic system of Pythagoras intelligible without
-speaking a word, simply by his gestures and attitudes.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_441" id="fnanchor_441"></a><a href="#footnote_441" class="fnanchor">[441]</a></span>
-</p>
-
-<p>In such dramatic dancing the subject or plot was
-important. Here the weakness of the old Hellenic
-<a name="Page_145" id="Page_145"></a><span class="pageno">145</span>
-mythology became fatal. For it was the old myths
-that supplied the motives of religious dances as well
-as of the drama, and many of them were morally
-unsatisfactory. When a chorus of boys danced the
-<cite>Birth-pangs of Semelé</cite>, the most famous dithyramb
-of Timotheos, not unnaturally objections were raised.
-The new school of musicians and poets, which arose
-towards the end of the fifth century, tried to represent
-everything and anything in the most realistic way
-possible: their dancers had to imitate with voice and
-gesture “blacksmiths at the forge, craftsmen at work,
-sailors rowing and boatswains giving them orders,
-horses neighing, bulls bellowing,”<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_442" id="fnanchor_442"></a><a href="#footnote_442" class="fnanchor">[442]</a></span>
-and so forth. They
-chose the commonest and coarsest scenes, just like
-Dutch painters. In their hands, dancing became something
-vulgar, as well as morally risky, though still under
-a semi-religious sanction. It is this charge which
-justified Plato’s denunciations of the dramatic element
-in poetry and music. It must be remembered that the
-choregos at Athens, who collected the boys from his
-tribe to dance these dithyrambs, could use compulsion
-if fathers refused to allow their sons to join his chorus.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_443" id="fnanchor_443"></a><a href="#footnote_443" class="fnanchor">[443]</a></span>
-Yet the advantages of learning to dance were great,
-quite apart from the religious aspects. Dancing was a
-scientifically designed system of physical training, which
-exercised every part of the body symmetrically.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_444" id="fnanchor_444"></a><a href="#footnote_444" class="fnanchor">[444]</a></span>
-The
-different masters invented systems of their own, just
-as the paidotribai invented systems of wrestling; in
-both cases the teaching began with a series of figures,
-which were afterwards fitted together. Different
-localities also had their own particular figures.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_445" id="fnanchor_445"></a><a href="#footnote_445" class="fnanchor">[445]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146"></a><span class="pageno">146</span>
-The solo dance was used for private exercise. It
-also made its way into the drama. Sometimes, too, in
-the choral performances one or two of the best dancers
-were singled out to perform more elaborate evolutions
-expressing the dramatic course of the subject. But
-the choral dance was universal throughout Hellas. Its
-motives ranged from the solemn religious questionings
-of Aeschylus to the drunken buffoonery of the vine-festivals.
-The dance might be the act of worship of
-a whole people, as in the great festivals at Delos. It
-might, like the Gumnopaidia at Sparta, be designed to
-exhibit the physical perfection and practise the military
-evolutions of a nation in arms. It might celebrate
-the triumphant return of an Olympian victor to his
-native city, as did many of the dances which accompanied
-the extant odes of Pindar. The chorus-songs
-of Tragedy and Comedy were set to dances of a sort;
-but from these last boys seem to have been excluded.</p>
-
-<p>For educational purposes, besides the dithuramboi
-already mentioned, the two most important classes were
-the War-dance and the Naked-dance (<ins title="gymnopaidia">γυμνοπαιδία</ins>).<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_446" id="fnanchor_446"></a><a href="#footnote_446" class="fnanchor">[446]</a></span>
-In the War-dance the performers, clad in arms, imitated
-all the ways in which blows and spears might be avoided,
-now bending to one side, now drawing back, now leaping
-in the air, now crouching down: then, again, they
-acted as though they were hurling javelins and spears
-and dealing all manner of blows at close quarters.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_447" id="fnanchor_447"></a><a href="#footnote_447" class="fnanchor">[447]</a></span>
-The Kuretic dance in Crete was very similar; the
-dancers “in full armour beat their swords against their
-shields and leaped in an inspired and warlike manner.”<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_448" id="fnanchor_448"></a><a href="#footnote_448" class="fnanchor">[448]</a></span>
-The field-days, when teams of boys and “packs” of
-epheboi fought one another to the sound of music, were
-<a name="Page_147" id="Page_147"></a><span class="pageno">147</span>
-only a more warlike sort of dance. In fact, war and
-the war-dance were as closely connected in Hellas as
-war and drill in Modern Europe. The Thessalians
-called their heroes “dancers”; Lucian quotes an
-inscription that “the people set up this statue to
-Eilation, who danced the battle well”: “chief dancer”
-(<ins title="proorchêstêr">προορχηστήρ</ins>)<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_449" id="fnanchor_449"></a><a href="#footnote_449" class="fnanchor">[449]</a></span>
-was a dignified title. The same author
-observes that in warlike Sparta the young men learn
-to dance as much as to fight, and that their military
-and gymnastic exercises alike were inextricably mixed
-up with dancing.<span class="lock"><a href="#footnote_449" class="fnanchor">[449]</a></span>
-</p>
-
-<p>The “Naked-dance” was to gymnastics what the war-dance
-was to war.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_450" id="fnanchor_450"></a><a href="#footnote_450" class="fnanchor">[450]</a></span>
-It represented the movements of
-the palaistra set to music, accompanied by some singing.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_451" id="fnanchor_451"></a><a href="#footnote_451" class="fnanchor">[451]</a></span>
-The style was solemn, like that of the <ins title="emmeleia">ἐμμέλεια</ins>, or
-dance of Tragedy. It was performed in the main by
-boys, as the name <ins title="gymnopaidia">γυμνοπαιδία</ins> implies; but grown men
-also took part, as at Sparta, where practically the whole
-male population danced it at once. Plato seems to
-mean a similar type by his “peace-dance” (in the
-<cite>Laws</cite>), which is to be a thanksgiving for past mercies
-or a prayer for continued prosperity.</p>
-
-<p>In the regular system of education at Athens, it
-is true, the boys learned only to sing and play, not
-to dance. But owing to the perpetual demand for
-boys from each of the ten tribes to compete at the great
-festivals in war-dances and dithyrambs, dancing must
-have been a common accomplishment. These competitors
-also attracted and encouraged a large number
-of dancing-masters. Any boy who showed promise
-<a name="Page_148" id="Page_148"></a><span class="pageno">148</span>
-as a dancer, or perhaps even as a singer only, would
-be singled out by the agents who collected choroi for
-the choregoi.</p>
-
-<p>Some rich man, let us call him Tisias,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_452" id="fnanchor_452"></a><a href="#footnote_452" class="fnanchor">[452]</a></span>
-has just
-been appointed choregos of the Erechtheid tribe for
-the war-dance of boys at the Panathenaic festival, or
-a boy-chorus in dithyrambs at the Thargelia. After
-drawing lots with the choregoi of other tribes, he gets
-Pantakles assigned to him as his poet and music-master,
-to teach the boys: he might, if he wished, hire at his
-own expense extra dancing- and music-masters.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_453" id="fnanchor_453"></a><a href="#footnote_453" class="fnanchor">[453]</a></span>
-Tisias
-then sends for Amunias, whom the Erechtheid tribe
-have chosen to collect their choroi and keep an eye on
-them while they are being trained. If Tisias bears a
-bad name or is unpopular with his tribe, he and his
-agent will have trouble in collecting the boys; for the
-fathers will refuse to give them up, and there will be
-fines imposed and securities taken, before the chorus
-assembles. But as a rule the parents will accept gladly;
-it is a chance of a free education for a month or so,
-for Tisias will pay all expenses, even of meals, and the
-State supplies the teacher; it is a chance, too, for the
-boy to distinguish himself.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile, Tisias will have provided a suitable
-schoolroom, in his own house, if possible; rich men,
-to whom the post of choregos was a frequent burden,
-would keep an apartment for the purpose. If he
-himself is busy, he will depute friends, who can be
-trusted to swear in his favour before the Courts, to
-watch the teaching; the agent will also be present.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_454" id="fnanchor_454"></a><a href="#footnote_454" class="fnanchor">[454]</a></span>
-For sometimes accidents occurred. Once a boy was
-<a name="Page_149" id="Page_149"></a><span class="pageno">149</span>
-given a dose to drink, to improve his voice, and it
-killed him.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_455" id="fnanchor_455"></a><a href="#footnote_455" class="fnanchor">[455]</a></span>
-</p>
-
-<p>When the day of the competition came, the chorus
-would be suitably dressed at Tisias’ expense; he might
-perhaps allow them gold crowns.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_456" id="fnanchor_456"></a><a href="#footnote_456" class="fnanchor">[456]</a></span>
-There might be
-nine other choroi entering for the prize, but in the
-time of Demosthenes this was not common. The
-whole Athenian people and many foreigners would be
-present at the contest, and it would be an anxious day
-for choregos, boys, and parents. The State gave the
-prizes,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_457" id="fnanchor_457"></a><a href="#footnote_457" class="fnanchor">[457]</a></span>
-usually a tripod, which went to the winning
-choregos, who would set it up in some public place
-with an appropriate inscription, such as&mdash;</p>
-
-<p class="blockquote">The Oeneid tribe was victorious; a choros of boys. Eureimenes,
-son of Meleteon, was choregos. Nikostratos taught.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_458" id="fnanchor_458"></a><a href="#footnote_458" class="fnanchor">[458]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="unindent">Or&mdash;</p>
-
-<p class="blockquote">Lusikrates, son of Lusitheides of Kikunna, was choregos.
-The boys of the Acamantid tribe won. Theon played the
-flute. Lusiades taught. Euainetos led.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_459" id="fnanchor_459"></a><a href="#footnote_459" class="fnanchor">[459]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="center">* * * * *</p>
-
-<p>We pass to the position which riding held in
-Athenian education. The two richest classes in the
-State were liable to service in the cavalry. They had to
-supply their own horses, which were examined and, if
-unfit, rejected; but the State paid them a sum of £8
-annually for maintenance and arms in time of peace. As,
-however, the number of the citizen cavalry never rose
-above 1000, the whole of these two classes can never
-have been so employed at once: the remainder served
-in the heavy infantry. The two Hipparchoi elected for
-the year, and their subordinates, the ten Phularchoi,
-<a name="Page_150" id="Page_150"></a><span class="pageno">150</span>
-who each commanded a tribal contingent, on coming
-into their office, would note how many of the thousand
-who had served in the former year were no longer
-liable to service owing to age, and would fill up the
-vacancies; they would also make good those gaps
-which occurred from time to time during their term of
-office owing to wounds or death or sudden poverty.
-To secure a recruit, they had only to go to some
-rich and active young man who was not already
-serving; if he refused to be enrolled, they could
-prosecute him. The training often began before
-eighteen, for Xenophon speaks of persuading the
-recruit’s guardians,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_460" id="fnanchor_460"></a><a href="#footnote_460" class="fnanchor">[460]</a></span>
-from whom he would be free at
-that age. So Teles mentions the horse-breaker as
-among the teachers of the lad in the secondary stage
-of education. No doubt it took some training to
-make an efficient cavalryman, and the Hipparchoi
-liked to take the recruits young; but to keep a stud
-was the favourite amusement of a rich young Athenian,
-and many would learn to ride without any view to
-military efficiency. As the Hellenes rode without
-stirrups, mounting was one of the great difficulties of
-the young rider, and figures chiefly on the vases.
-Often they used the long cavalry-spear as a vaulting-pole.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_461" id="fnanchor_461"></a><a href="#footnote_461" class="fnanchor">[461]</a></span>
-Otherwise a groom or the master gave the
-pupil a leg up: on a vase<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_462" id="fnanchor_462"></a><a href="#footnote_462" class="fnanchor">[462]</a></span>
-in the British Museum
-the master is seen simply pushing the boy into his
-seat. A comic poet,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_463" id="fnanchor_463"></a><a href="#footnote_463" class="fnanchor">[463]</a></span>
-who has left us a picture of
-the young recruits learning to ride under the eye
-of their Phularchoi, speaks only of mounting and
-dismounting.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_464" id="fnanchor_464"></a><a href="#footnote_464" class="fnanchor">[464]</a></span>
- “Go to the Agora,” says the speaker to
-<a name="Page_151" id="Page_151"></a><span class="pageno">151</span>
-his slave, “to the Hermai, where the phularchoi keep
-coming, and to the pretty disciples whom Pheidon is
-teaching to mount their steeds and to get down again.”
-Xenophon, among much sound advice to the young
-rider about buying, training, and keeping his horse,
-gives the Hipparchos the following <span class="lock">suggestions:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<p class="blockquote">“Persuade the younger men to vault on to their
-horses. It will be best if you supply the teacher for
-this. The older men may be put up by some one else
-in the Persian way. To practise the men in keeping
-their seats over difficult country, frequent riding
-expeditions are a good thing, but will be unpopular.
-So tell your men to practise by themselves whenever
-they are in the open country. But take them out
-yourself occasionally and test them over all sorts of
-ground. Give them sham fights in different kinds of
-country. In order to make them keen about throwing
-the javelin from horseback,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_465" id="fnanchor_465"></a><a href="#footnote_465" class="fnanchor">[465]</a></span>
-stir up rivalry between
-the different squadrons and give prizes for this and for
-good riding and the like. Above all make yourself
-and your attendant gallopers as smart as possible.”<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_466" id="fnanchor_466"></a><a href="#footnote_466" class="fnanchor">[466]</a></span>
-</p>
-
-<p>There were frequent reviews under the eyes of the
-Boule. In the race-course at the Lukeion there was a
-sham fight, each hipparchos commanding five squadrons
-which pursued one another, and then charged front
-to front, passing through the gaps in one another’s
-lines. They had, also, to wheel in line. The review
-was followed by javelin-throwing.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_467" id="fnanchor_467"></a><a href="#footnote_467" class="fnanchor">[467]</a></span>
-Another review
-was held at the Akademeia, on a course with a hard
-soil (<ins title="ho epikrotos">ὁ ἐπίκροτος</ins>)&mdash;good practice for cavalry intending
-to fight in rocky Attica. Here they had, among
-<a name="Page_152" id="Page_152"></a><span class="pageno">152</span>
-other manœuvres, to charge at full gallop and suddenly
-come to a halt.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_468" id="fnanchor_468"></a><a href="#footnote_468" class="fnanchor">[468]</a></span>
-</p>
-
-<p>One of the attractions of the cavalry service was
-the great Panathenaic procession, where the horsemen
-played a leading part: an idealised picture of them
-may be seen on the frieze of the Parthenon. Xenophon
-gives a series of directions how to make the horses
-prance and hold their heads up on this great occasion,
-and suggests devices in gait which will attract popular
-notice. This and kindred processions must have made
-recruiting for the cavalry easy.</p>
-
-<p class="center">* * * * *</p>
-
-<p><span class="decoration">Swimming</span> seems to have been, as would naturally
-be expected, an exceedingly common accomplishment
-in the maritime states of Hellas; even at inland Sparta
-the boys must have learnt it for their daily plunge in
-the Eurotas. According to tradition,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_469" id="fnanchor_469"></a><a href="#footnote_469" class="fnanchor">[469]</a></span>
-there was a law
-at Athens that every boy should be taught reading,
-writing, and swimming: the proverb for an utter dunce
-was “he knows neither his letters nor how to swim.”<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_470" id="fnanchor_470"></a><a href="#footnote_470" class="fnanchor">[470]</a></span>
-Herodotos distinctly implies that all Hellenes knew
-how to swim. “The Hellenic loss at Salamis,” he
-says, “was small. For, as they knew how to swim
-(as opposed to the barbarians who did not), when
-their ships were destroyed, they swam over to the
-island.”<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_471" id="fnanchor_471"></a><a href="#footnote_471" class="fnanchor">[471]</a></span>
-He takes it as a matter of course that every
-sailor could swim. The whole crew of a captured
-trireme during the Peloponnesian War as often as not
-jumped overboard and escaped by swimming.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_472" id="fnanchor_472"></a><a href="#footnote_472" class="fnanchor">[472]</a></span>
-In
-a story in Athenaeus the boys of Lasos, on coming out
-of the wrestling-school, go off together for a bathe
-and begin to dive. A friend of Aristippos used to
-<a name="Page_153" id="Page_153"></a><span class="pageno">153</span>
-boast to him of his diving.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_473" id="fnanchor_473"></a><a href="#footnote_473" class="fnanchor">[473]</a></span>
-During the blockade
-of Sphakteria by the Athenian fleet, numbers of
-Helots swam over from the mainland to the island
-under water.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_474" id="fnanchor_474"></a><a href="#footnote_474" class="fnanchor">[474]</a></span>
-Scanty and scrappy as they are, these
-details show that swimming must have been taught
-to most boys, at any rate if they were ever likely to
-serve in a fleet. Plato twice<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_475" id="fnanchor_475"></a><a href="#footnote_475" class="fnanchor">[475]</a></span>
-uses a metaphor drawn
-from a man swimming on his back, showing that this
-method was known. When a young disputant is being
-severely handled in a discussion, Sokrates intervenes,
-“wishing to give the boy a rest, since he saw that he
-was getting a severe ducking and he feared that he
-might lose heart.”<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_476" id="fnanchor_476"></a><a href="#footnote_476" class="fnanchor">[476]</a></span>
-The phrase suggests that the sight
-of boys learning to swim was familiar. They could
-learn either in the innumerable creeks and bays of the
-sea, or in the lakes and rivers, or in diving-pools.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_477" id="fnanchor_477"></a><a href="#footnote_477" class="fnanchor">[477]</a></span>
-There were also various “gymnastic games” which
-young people played in the water together;<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_478" id="fnanchor_478"></a><a href="#footnote_478" class="fnanchor">[478]</a></span>
-but of
-their nature nothing is known.</p>
-
-<p>It cannot reasonably be doubted that in the maritime
-states a large proportion of the boys, at any rate of the
-lower classes, were taught to <span class="decoration">row</span>, since each trireme
-required a crew of 200, nearly all of whom had to use
-the oar. In the good old days, according to the
-<cite>Wasps</cite>, the main object was to be a good oar,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_479" id="fnanchor_479"></a><a href="#footnote_479" class="fnanchor">[479]</a></span>
-and
-rowing-blisters were a sign of patriotism.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_480" id="fnanchor_480"></a><a href="#footnote_480" class="fnanchor">[480]</a></span>
-In an
-emergency, the Athenians could make the whole citizen
-force under a certain age embark on the fleet and could
-win a victory with these rowers; this would have been
-impossible if the average citizen had been ignorant of
-rowing.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_481" id="fnanchor_481"></a><a href="#footnote_481" class="fnanchor">[481]</a></span>
-On such occasions many even of the Hippeis
-<a name="Page_154" id="Page_154"></a><span class="pageno">154</span>
-embarked: Aristophanes jestingly asserts that in an
-expedition to Korinth the horses tried also, shouting,
-“Gee-ho, put your backs into it. Do more work,
-Dobbin.”<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_482" id="fnanchor_482"></a><a href="#footnote_482" class="fnanchor">[482]</a></span>
-Before the close of the war,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_483" id="fnanchor_483"></a><a href="#footnote_483" class="fnanchor">[483]</a></span>
-Charon, the
-ferryman of Styx, assuming that every Hellene knows
-the way to row, makes the souls of the departed row
-themselves across. Boat-races were certainly known at
-this period. A client of Lusias asserts that he has won
-a race with a trireme off Cape Sounion.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_484" id="fnanchor_484"></a><a href="#footnote_484" class="fnanchor">[484]</a></span>
-Probably the
-trierarchoi, the rich men appointed to fit out the State
-navy, either voluntarily or by regular custom, made the
-ships race one another. Thus the races would be as
-much inter-tribal contests as the dithyrambs or torch-races.
-Two crews of the epheboi of a later date used
-to race in the two sacred triremes. The vessels sailing
-out for the Sicilian expedition raced as far as Aigina.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_485" id="fnanchor_485"></a><a href="#footnote_485" class="fnanchor">[485]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>A fragment of Plato the comic poet<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_486" id="fnanchor_486"></a><a href="#footnote_486" class="fnanchor">[486]</a></span>
-refers to similar
-contests:</p>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="i0">Thy high-heaped tomb on this fair promontory</div>
- <div class="i0">Shall take the greetings of our far-flung fleets,</div>
- <div class="i0">And watch the merchants sailing out and in,</div>
- <div class="i0">And be spectator when the galleons race.</div>
- </div><!--end poem-->
-</div><!--end container-->
-
-<p class="p2 center">EXCURSUS I</p>
-
-<p><span class="sc">The</span> “gumnasiarchoi” have created some confusion among
-those who have discussed Attic ways. Some authorities would
-make them rich men performing a “leitourgia” and holding a
-similar position to the trierarchoi and choregoi: others make
-them officials appointed to superintend the gymnasia.</p>
-
-<p>The gumnasiarchia is certainly reckoned among leitourgiai
-as a general rule. A speaker in Lusias,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_487" id="fnanchor_487"></a><a href="#footnote_487" class="fnanchor">[487]</a></span>
-giving a list of these
-duties which he had performed, says: “I supplied a chorus of
-<a name="Page_155" id="Page_155"></a><span class="pageno">155</span>
-men at the Thargelia, a chorus of war-dancers at the Panathenaia,
-a cyclic chorus at the little Panathenaia, I was Gumnasiarchos
-for the Prometheia and was victorious, then choregos with a
-chorus of boys, then with beardless war-dancers at the little
-Panathenaia.” In Andokides<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_488" id="fnanchor_488"></a><a href="#footnote_488" class="fnanchor">[488]</a></span>
-a gumnasiarchos at the
-Hephaisteia is mentioned. The author of the treatise on the
-Athenian constitution says:<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_489" id="fnanchor_489"></a><a href="#footnote_489" class="fnanchor">[489]</a></span>
- “In the case of the choregiai,
-gumnasiarchiai, and trierarchiai, the Athenians realise that the
-rich fill the offices and the populace serve under them and get
-the benefit. So the populace claims to be paid for singing and
-running and dancing and sailing in the ships.” Now “singing
-and dancing” belong to the choregiai, and “sailing in the
-ships” to the trierarchiai. So “running” is left for the
-gumnasiarchiai. The main feature of the yearly festivals of
-Hephaistos and Prometheus, which the two earlier passages
-gave as the scene of the duties of the gumnasiarchos, was a
-torch-race. It may thus be inferred that the duty of the
-gumnasiarchos was to collect, and train, a team of his own
-tribe for the torch-race at these festivals.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_490" id="fnanchor_490"></a><a href="#footnote_490" class="fnanchor">[490]</a></span>
-In connection
-with this duty, they could prosecute members of their team,
-or any one who interfered with them, for impiety before the
-Archon Basileus,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_491" id="fnanchor_491"></a><a href="#footnote_491" class="fnanchor">[491]</a></span>
-since the race was a religious function.
-They were thus in the sacrosanct position which Demosthenes
-as choregos claims for himself in his speech against Meidias.</p>
-
-<p>So far the gumnasiarchos is an ordinary performer of a
-leitourgia, and his duties are confined to providing a tribal
-team for the torch-races at the Prometheia and Hephaisteia.
-His team, usually at any rate, consisted of epheboi, as we learn
-from an inscription describing the victory of Eutuchides with
-his epheboi.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_492" id="fnanchor_492"></a><a href="#footnote_492" class="fnanchor">[492]</a></span>
-</p>
-
-<p class="center">* * * * *</p>
-
-<p>There is also the law quoted as Solon’s in Aischines’
-speech against Timarchos.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_493" id="fnanchor_493"></a><a href="#footnote_493" class="fnanchor">[493]</a></span>
- “The gumnasiarch<em>ai</em> (note that
-<a name="Page_156" id="Page_156"></a><span class="pageno">156</span>
-it is a different word) “are not to allow any one over age to
-keep company with the boys at the festival of Hermes in any
-way whatsoever: if he does not keep all such persons out of
-the gymnasia, the gumnasiarch<em>es</em> shall be liable to the law that
-prescribes penalties for those who corrupt free boys.” But the
-orator himself only mentions paidotribai, and special enactments
-dealing with the Hermaia; there is no mention of a
-gumnasiarches. The law itself is an addition made in a later
-period when there was a special officer to control the gymnasia.
-But there is no evidence for such an official in the days of the
-independence of Hellas.</p>
-
-<p>One interesting passage remains. “I was gumnasiarchos
-in my deme,” or country district, says a speaker in Isaios.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_494" id="fnanchor_494"></a><a href="#footnote_494" class="fnanchor">[494]</a></span>
-There must therefore have been local torch-races, for which
-rich men were called upon to pay and train teams, just as there
-were certainly local theatrical performances. The passage
-opens up a prospect of vigorous athletic life throughout the
-country districts and villages of Attica.</p>
-
-<p class="p2 footnote"> <a name="footnote_332" id="footnote_332"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_332"><span class="muchsmaller">[332]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite><abbr title="Republic">Rep.</abbr></cite> 556 <span class="sc lowercase">B-D</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_333" id="footnote_333"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_333"><span class="muchsmaller">[333]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Xenophon">Xen.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Memorabilia">Mem.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="three">iii.</abbr> 12. 1.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_334" id="footnote_334"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_334"><span class="muchsmaller">[334]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite><abbr title="Phaidros">Phaidr.</abbr></cite> 239 c.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_335" id="footnote_335"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_335"><span class="muchsmaller">[335]</span></a>
-Hesiod, <cite>Works and Days</cite>, 289.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_336" id="footnote_336"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_336"><span class="muchsmaller">[336]</span></a>
-Solon reduced this endowment to 500 drachmai for an Olympian victor, 100 for
-an Isthmian (<abbr title="Plutarch">Plut.</abbr> <cite>Solon</cite>, 23).</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_337" id="footnote_337"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_337"><span class="muchsmaller">[337]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Plutarch">Plut.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Quastiones Romanae">Quaest. Rom.</abbr></cite> 40.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_338" id="footnote_338"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_338"><span class="muchsmaller">[338]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite>Laws</cite>, 807 c.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_339" id="footnote_339"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_339"><span class="muchsmaller">[339]</span></a>
-For this their vast appetites were partly responsible. Milo and Theagenes
-each ate a whole ox in a single day (<abbr title="Athenaeus">Athen.</abbr> 412 f). Astuanax the pankratiast ate
-what was meant for nine guests (<cite>ibid.</cite> 413 b).</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_340" id="footnote_340"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_340"><span class="muchsmaller">[340]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Xenophon">Xen.</abbr> <cite>Banquet</cite>, <abbr title="two">ii.</abbr> 17.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_341" id="footnote_341"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_341"><span class="muchsmaller">[341]</span></a>
-Galen, <cite>On <abbr title="Medicine and Gymnastics">Medic. and Gym.</abbr></cite> § 33 (ed. Kühn. v. 870).</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_342" id="footnote_342"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_342"><span class="muchsmaller">[342]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Philostratus">Philos.</abbr> <cite>On Gymnastics</cite>, 54.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_343" id="footnote_343"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_343"><span class="muchsmaller">[343]</span></a>
- <abbr title="Pausanias">Pausan.</abbr> v. 21. 10.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_344" id="footnote_344"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_344"><span class="muchsmaller">[344]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Pindar">Pind.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Olympian">Olymp.</abbr></cite></p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_345" id="footnote_345"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_345"><span class="muchsmaller">[345]</span></a>
-Pindar, <abbr title="fragment">frag.</abbr></p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_346" id="footnote_346"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_346"><span class="muchsmaller">[346]</span></a>
-Fragment of <cite>Autolukos</cite>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_347" id="footnote_347"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_347"><span class="muchsmaller">[347]</span></a>
-A very bold attack on the Olympian games, which must have caused a sensation
-in the theatre.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_348" id="footnote_348"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_348"><span class="muchsmaller">[348]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Aristotle">Aristot.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Politics">Pol.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="seven">vii.</abbr> 16. 13.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_349" id="footnote_349"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_349"><span class="muchsmaller">[349]</span></a>
-Lukourg. <cite><abbr title="against Leokrates">ag. Leok.</abbr></cite> 51.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_350" id="footnote_350"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_350"><span class="muchsmaller">[350]</span></a>
-[<abbr title="Xenophon">Xen.</abbr>] <cite><abbr title="Constitution">Constit.</abbr> of Athens</cite>, <abbr title="one">i.</abbr> 13.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_351" id="footnote_351"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_351"><span class="muchsmaller">[351]</span></a>
-<ins title="katelyse">κατέλυσε</ins> must mean this, as in [<abbr title="Andokides">Andok.</abbr>] <cite><abbr title="against">ag.</abbr> Alkibiades</cite>, where that gentleman
-is said to be <ins title="katalyôn ta gymnasia">καταλύων τὰ γυμνάσια</ins> by his bad example.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_352" id="footnote_352"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_352"><span class="muchsmaller">[352]</span></a>
-See end of <abbr title="Aristophanes">Aristoph.</abbr> <cite>Wasps</cite>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_353" id="footnote_353"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_353"><span class="muchsmaller">[353]</span></a>
-As shown by the beginning of Plato, <cite>Lusis</cite>, 203 <span class="sc lowercase">B</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_354" id="footnote_354"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_354"><span class="muchsmaller">[354]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Aristophanes">Aristoph.</abbr> <cite>Birds</cite>, 141.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_355" id="footnote_355"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_355"><span class="muchsmaller">[355]</span></a>
-Antiphon, <cite>Second Tetralogy</cite>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_356" id="footnote_356"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_356"><span class="muchsmaller">[356]</span></a>
-The law quoted in Aischines <cite><abbr title="against">ag.</abbr> Timarchos</cite> is spurious, being a later interpolation;
-it cannot therefore be used as evidence.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_357" id="footnote_357"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_357"><span class="muchsmaller">[357]</span></a>
-[<abbr title="Xenophon">Xen.</abbr>] <cite><abbr title="Constitution">Constit.</abbr> of Athens</cite>, <abbr title="two">ii.</abbr> 10.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_358" id="footnote_358"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_358"><span class="muchsmaller">[358]</span></a>
-The division of the boys into classes by age in the contests points to such a
-usage. <abbr title="Compare">Cp.</abbr> the <ins title="hêlikiai">ἡλικίαι</ins> at Teos.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_359" id="footnote_359"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_359"><span class="muchsmaller">[359]</span></a>
-Later, this was done by a special official, the <ins title="aleiptês">ἀλειπτής</ins>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_360" id="footnote_360"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_360"><span class="muchsmaller">[360]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Aristotle">Aristot.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Politics">Pol.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="four">iv.</abbr> 1. 1.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_361" id="footnote_361"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_361"><span class="muchsmaller">[361]</span></a>
-<span class="decoration">e.g.</span> Plato, <cite><abbr title="Gorgias">Gorg.</abbr></cite> 504 <span class="sc lowercase">A</span>; <cite><abbr title="Protagoras">Protag.</abbr></cite> 313 <span class="sc lowercase">D</span>; <abbr title="Aristotle">Aristot.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Politics">Pol.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="three">iii.</abbr> 16. 8.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_362" id="footnote_362"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_362"><span class="muchsmaller">[362]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite><abbr title="Gorgias">Gorg.</abbr></cite> 452 <span class="sc lowercase">B</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_363" id="footnote_363"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_363"><span class="muchsmaller">[363]</span></a>
-The paidotribes is distinguished from the gumnastes as the schoolmaster
-from the crammer. The gumnastes coached pupils chiefly for the great games,
-while the paidotribes presided over physical training generally, especially of boys,
-but sometimes of epheboi. See the elaborate discussion in Grasberger, <abbr title="one">i.</abbr> 263-268.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_364" id="footnote_364"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_364"><span class="muchsmaller">[364]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite><abbr title="Protagoras">Protag.</abbr></cite> 313 <span class="sc lowercase">A</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_365" id="footnote_365"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_365"><span class="muchsmaller">[365]</span></a>
-<cite>Ibid.</cite> 326 <span class="sc lowercase">C</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_366" id="footnote_366"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_366"><span class="muchsmaller">[366]</span></a>
-<ins title="apodytêrion">ἀποδυτήριον</ins>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_367" id="footnote_367"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_367"><span class="muchsmaller">[367]</span></a>
-See Thompson, Plato, <cite><abbr title="Phaidros">Phaedr.</abbr></cite> 239 <span class="sc lowercase">C</span>., and <abbr title="Euripides">Eur.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Bacchae">Bacch.</abbr></cite> 456.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_368" id="footnote_368"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_368"><span class="muchsmaller">[368]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Illustration">Illustr.</abbr> <a href="#i06a">Plate <abbr title="Six">VI.</abbr> <span class="sc lowercase">A</span></a>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_369" id="footnote_369"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_369"><span class="muchsmaller">[369]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Illustrations">Illustr.</abbr> <a href="#i06a">Plates <abbr title="Six">VI.</abbr> <span class="sc lowercase">A</span></a> and <a href="#i06b"><abbr title="Six">VI.</abbr> <span class="sc lowercase">B</span></a>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_370" id="footnote_370"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_370"><span class="muchsmaller">[370]</span></a>
-See especially the Panathenaic vases in the British Museum.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_371" id="footnote_371"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_371"><span class="muchsmaller">[371]</span></a>
-<span class="decoration">e.g.</span> <abbr title="British Museum">Brit. Mus.</abbr> E 288.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_372" id="footnote_372"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_372"><span class="muchsmaller">[372]</span></a>
-Brit Mus. B 361, E 427, E 288.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_373" id="footnote_373"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_373"><span class="muchsmaller">[373]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Illustration">Illustr.</abbr> <a href="#i08">Plate <abbr title="Eight">VIII.</abbr></a></p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_374" id="footnote_374"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_374"><span class="muchsmaller">[374]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Aristotle">Aristot.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Politics">Pol.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="eight">viii.</abbr> 4.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_375" id="footnote_375"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_375"><span class="muchsmaller">[375]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Aristophanes">Aristoph.</abbr> <cite>Clouds</cite>, 973.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_376" id="footnote_376"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_376"><span class="muchsmaller">[376]</span></a>
-<cite><abbr title="Anthologia Palatina">Anthol. Palat.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="thirteen">xiii.</abbr> 222.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_377" id="footnote_377"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_377"><span class="muchsmaller">[377]</span></a>
-Herod, <abbr title="six">vi.</abbr> 127-129.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_378" id="footnote_378"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_378"><span class="muchsmaller">[378]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Athenaeus">Athen.</abbr> 629 <span class="sc lowercase">B</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_379" id="footnote_379"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_379"><span class="muchsmaller">[379]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Xenophon">Xen.</abbr> <cite>Banquet</cite>, <abbr title="two">ii.</abbr> 19.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_380" id="footnote_380"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_380"><span class="muchsmaller">[380]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite>Laws</cite>, 830 <span class="sc lowercase">C</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_381" id="footnote_381"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_381"><span class="muchsmaller">[381]</span></a>
-Philostratus, <cite>On Gymnastics</cite>, 55.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_382" id="footnote_382"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_382"><span class="muchsmaller">[382]</span></a>
-Galen, <cite><abbr title="De sanitate tuenda">De sanit. tuend.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="two">ii.</abbr> 8.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_383" id="footnote_383"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_383"><span class="muchsmaller">[383]</span></a>
-Grasberger, <abbr title="one">i.</abbr> 154.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_384" id="footnote_384"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_384"><span class="muchsmaller">[384]</span></a>
-Described at length, Grasberger, <abbr title="one">i.</abbr> 84-98.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_385" id="footnote_385"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_385"><span class="muchsmaller">[385]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Aristophanes">Aristoph.</abbr> <cite>Knights</cite>, 1238.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_386" id="footnote_386"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_386"><span class="muchsmaller">[386]</span></a>
-See <abbr title="Illustration">Illustr.</abbr> <a href="#i06a">Plate <abbr title="Six">VI.</abbr> <span class="sc lowercase">A</span></a> for a wrestling lesson. Lucian, <cite><abbr title="Asinus">Ass.</abbr></cite> 8-11.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_387" id="footnote_387"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_387"><span class="muchsmaller">[387]</span></a>
-Oxyrhynchus Papyri, Grenfell and Hunt, Part <abbr title="Three">III.</abbr> <abbr title="number">No.</abbr> 466 (1903). The
-papyrus is of the second century.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_388" id="footnote_388"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_388"><span class="muchsmaller">[388]</span></a>
-<cite><abbr title="Anthologia Palatina">Anthol. Palat.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="twelve">xii.</abbr> 206.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_389" id="footnote_389"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_389"><span class="muchsmaller">[389]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Isokrates">Isok.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Antidemocracy">Antid.</abbr></cite> 184.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_390" id="footnote_390"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_390"><span class="muchsmaller">[390]</span></a>
-See <abbr title="Illustration">Illustr.</abbr> <a href="#i06b">Plate <abbr title="Six">VI.</abbr> <span class="sc lowercase">B</span></a> for a pankration lesson.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_400" id="footnote_400"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_400"><span class="muchsmaller">[400]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Plutarch">Plut.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Alcibiades">Alkib.</abbr> </cite> <abbr title="two">ii.</abbr> 3.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_401" id="footnote_401"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_401"><span class="muchsmaller">[401]</span></a>
-See <abbr title="Illustration">Illustr.</abbr> <a href="#i07a">Plate <abbr title="Seven">VII.</abbr></a></p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_402" id="footnote_402"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_402"><span class="muchsmaller">[402]</span></a>
-See <abbr title="Illustration">Illustr.</abbr> <a href="#i05b">Plate <abbr title="Five">V.</abbr> <span class="sc lowercase">B</span></a>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_403" id="footnote_403"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_403"><span class="muchsmaller">[403]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Illustration">Illustr.</abbr> <a href="#i05a">Plate <abbr title="Five">V.</abbr> <span class="sc lowercase">A</span></a>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_404" id="footnote_404"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_404"><span class="muchsmaller">[404]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Illustration">Illustr.</abbr> <a href="#i05b">Plate <abbr title="Five">V.</abbr> <span class="sc lowercase">B</span></a>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_405" id="footnote_405"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_405"><span class="muchsmaller">[405]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Athenaeus">Athen.</abbr> 584 <span class="sc lowercase">C</span>, referring to about 320 <span class="sc">B.C.</span></p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_406" id="footnote_406"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_406"><span class="muchsmaller">[406]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Aristophanes">Aristoph.</abbr> <cite>Peace</cite>, 357.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_407" id="footnote_407"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_407"><span class="muchsmaller">[407]</span></a>
-Zeno in <abbr title="Athenaeus">Athen.</abbr> 561 <span class="sc lowercase">C</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_408" id="footnote_408"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_408"><span class="muchsmaller">[408]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Athenaeus">Athen.</abbr> 609 <span class="sc lowercase">D</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_409" id="footnote_409"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_409"><span class="muchsmaller">[409]</span></a>
-<ins title="apodytêrion">ἀποδυτήριον</ins>. See Plato, <cite>Charmides</cite>, 153 <abbr title="and following">ff.</abbr></p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_410" id="footnote_410"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_410"><span class="muchsmaller">[410]</span></a>
-<ins title="katastegos dromos">κατάστεγος δρόμος</ins>. Plato, <cite><abbr title="Euthydemus">Euthud.</abbr> </cite> 273 <span class="sc lowercase">A</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_411" id="footnote_411"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_411"><span class="muchsmaller">[411]</span></a>
-Theodoros (Plato, <cite><abbr title="Theaitetos">Theait.</abbr></cite>).</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_412" id="footnote_412"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_412"><span class="muchsmaller">[412]</span></a>
-This was often done outside (Plato, <cite><abbr title="Theaitetos">Theait.</abbr></cite> 144 <span class="sc lowercase">C</span>). The oil-room (<ins title="elaiothesion">ἐλαιοθέσιον</ins>)
-of Vitruvius may be a later invention. This preliminary anointing was called
-<ins title="xêraloiphein">ξηραλοιφεῖν</ins>. After the baths they rubbed themselves with a mixture of oil and
-water; this was <ins title="chytlousthai">χυτλοῦσθαι</ins>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_413" id="footnote_413"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_413"><span class="muchsmaller">[413]</span></a>
-See <abbr title="Xenophon">Xen.</abbr> <cite>Banquet</cite>, 1. 7.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_414" id="footnote_414"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_414"><span class="muchsmaller">[414]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Aristophanes">Aristoph.</abbr> <cite>Knights</cite>, 492.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_415" id="footnote_415"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_415"><span class="muchsmaller">[415]</span></a>
-Philostratus, <cite>On Gymnastics</cite>, 56. It was usual to be dusted before wrestling.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_416" id="footnote_416"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_416"><span class="muchsmaller">[416]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Xenophon">Xen.</abbr> <cite>Banquet</cite>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_417" id="footnote_417"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_417"><span class="muchsmaller">[417]</span></a>
-For a good bathing scene, see <abbr title="British Museum">Brit. Mus.</abbr> Vase E 83. Also E 32.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_418" id="footnote_418"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_418"><span class="muchsmaller">[418]</span></a>
-Philostratus, <cite>On Gymnastics</cite>, 57.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_419" id="footnote_419"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_419"><span class="muchsmaller">[419]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite>Laws</cite>, 830 <span class="sc lowercase">C</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_420" id="footnote_420"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_420"><span class="muchsmaller">[420]</span></a>
-Particular Sophists attached themselves to particular gymnasia and palaistrai
-which they came to regard as their schools. Mikkos has already occupied the
-newly-built palaistra in the <cite>Lusis</cite>, 204 <span class="sc lowercase">A</span>. <abbr title="Compare">Cp.</abbr> Plato’s position at the Akademeia and
-Aristotle’s at the Lukeion.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_421" id="footnote_421"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_421"><span class="muchsmaller">[421]</span></a>
-<ins title="aulê">αὐλή</ins> (Plato, <cite>Lusis</cite>, 206 <span class="sc lowercase">E</span>).</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_422" id="footnote_422"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_422"><span class="muchsmaller">[422]</span></a>
-<ins title="konistra">κονίστρα</ins>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_423" id="footnote_423"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_423"><span class="muchsmaller">[423]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite>Laws</cite>, 830 <span class="sc lowercase">B</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_424" id="footnote_424"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_424"><span class="muchsmaller">[424]</span></a>
-For the excitement of the spectators and their shouts of encouragement see
-<abbr title="Isokrates">Isok.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Euagoras">Euag.</abbr></cite> 32.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_425" id="footnote_425"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_425"><span class="muchsmaller">[425]</span></a>
-Some gymnasia provided a large “Room of the Epheboi.” So in Vitruvius’
-model.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_426" id="footnote_426"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_426"><span class="muchsmaller">[426]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Athenaeus">Athen.</abbr> 495-6.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_427" id="footnote_427"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_427"><span class="muchsmaller">[427]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite><abbr title="Politics">Polit.</abbr></cite> 294 <span class="sc lowercase">D</span>, <span class="sc lowercase">E</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_428" id="footnote_428"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_428"><span class="muchsmaller">[428]</span></a>
-But by the end of the fourth century the teacher of arms becomes an
-important individual in the training of the epheboi.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_429" id="footnote_429"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_429"><span class="muchsmaller">[429]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite><abbr title="Euthydemus">Euthud.</abbr> </cite> 273 <span class="sc lowercase">A</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_430" id="footnote_430"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_430"><span class="muchsmaller">[430]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Xenophon">Xen.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Economics">Econ.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="three">iii.</abbr> 13.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_431" id="footnote_431"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_431"><span class="muchsmaller">[431]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Xenophon">Xen.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Economics">Econ.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="eleven">xi.</abbr> 18; <cite>Banquet</cite>, <abbr title="one">i.</abbr> 7, <abbr title="nine">ix.</abbr> 1.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_432" id="footnote_432"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_432"><span class="muchsmaller">[432]</span></a>
-<ins title="sphairistêrion">σφαιριστήριον</ins>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_433" id="footnote_433"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_433"><span class="muchsmaller">[433]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Athenaeus">Athen.</abbr> 20 f.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_434" id="footnote_434"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_434"><span class="muchsmaller">[434]</span></a>
-<abbr title="British Museum">Brit. Mus.</abbr> E 83, for a picture of this in use.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_435" id="footnote_435"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_435"><span class="muchsmaller">[435]</span></a>
-<ins title="chytlousthai">χυτλοῦσθαι</ins>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_436" id="footnote_436"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_436"><span class="muchsmaller">[436]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Athenaeus">Athen.</abbr> 566 e.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_437" id="footnote_437"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_437"><span class="muchsmaller">[437]</span></a>
-<cite>Hunting with Hounds</cite>, passim. So Plato in the <cite>Laws</cite>, with reservations.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_438" id="footnote_438"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_438"><span class="muchsmaller">[438]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite>Laws</cite>, 795 <span class="sc lowercase">E</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_439" id="footnote_439"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_439"><span class="muchsmaller">[439]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Aristophanes">Aristoph.</abbr> <cite>Frogs</cite>, 729.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_440" id="footnote_440"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_440"><span class="muchsmaller">[440]</span></a>
-Lucian, <cite>On Dancing</cite>, 15.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_441" id="footnote_441"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_441"><span class="muchsmaller">[441]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Athenaeus">Athen.</abbr> 20 d.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_442" id="footnote_442"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_442"><span class="muchsmaller">[442]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite><abbr title="Republic">Rep.</abbr></cite> 396 <span class="sc lowercase">A</span>, <span class="sc lowercase">B</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_443" id="footnote_443"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_443"><span class="muchsmaller">[443]</span></a>
-Antiphon, <cite>The Choreutes</cite>, 11.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_444" id="footnote_444"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_444"><span class="muchsmaller">[444]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Xenophon">Xen.</abbr> <cite>Banquet</cite>, <abbr title="two">ii.</abbr> 17.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_445" id="footnote_445"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_445"><span class="muchsmaller">[445]</span></a>
-Lakonian and Attic (<abbr title="Herodotos">Herod.</abbr> <abbr title="six">vi.</abbr> 129); Persian (<abbr title="Xenophon">Xen.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Anabasis">Anab.</abbr> </cite> <abbr title="six">vi.</abbr> 1. 10); Troizenìan
-Epizephurian Lokrian, Cretan, Ionian, Mantinean in Lucian, <cite>On Dancing</cite>, 22.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_446" id="footnote_446"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_446"><span class="muchsmaller">[446]</span></a>
-Not necessarily nude, for <ins title="gymnos">γυμνός</ins> only represents the absence of the armour used
-in the War-dance.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_447" id="footnote_447"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_447"><span class="muchsmaller">[447]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite>Laws</cite>, 815 <span class="sc lowercase">A</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_448" id="footnote_448"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_448"><span class="muchsmaller">[448]</span></a>
-Lucian, <cite>On Dancing</cite>, 8.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_449" id="footnote_449"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_449"><span class="muchsmaller">[449]</span></a>
-Lucian, <cite>On Dancing</cite>, 8.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_450" id="footnote_450"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_450"><span class="muchsmaller">[450]</span></a>
-The dance known as <ins title="gymnopaidikê">γυμνοπαιδική</ins> is described in <abbr title="Athenaeus">Athen.</abbr> 631 b, as including
-representations of wrestling. In 678 b, c, the festival of the <ins title="Gymnopaidiai">Γυμνοπαιδίαι</ins>, and the
-dances in it are referred to, but no mention is there made of wrestling.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_451" id="footnote_451"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_451"><span class="muchsmaller">[451]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Athenaeus">Athen.</abbr> 630 d.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_452" id="footnote_452"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_452"><span class="muchsmaller">[452]</span></a>
-This sketch is drawn chiefly from Antiphon, <cite>The Choreutes</cite>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_453" id="footnote_453"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_453"><span class="muchsmaller">[453]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Demosthenes">Demos.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="against">ag.</abbr> Midias</cite>, 533.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_454" id="footnote_454"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_454"><span class="muchsmaller">[454]</span></a>
-Rivals sometimes tried to interrupt the lessons or bribe the teacher (<abbr title="Demosthenes">Demos.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Midias">Mid.</abbr></cite>
-535).</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_455" id="footnote_455"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_455"><span class="muchsmaller">[455]</span></a>
-The situation of Antiphon’s speech.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_456" id="footnote_456"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_456"><span class="muchsmaller">[456]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Demosthenes">Demos.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Midias">Mid.</abbr></cite> 520.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_457" id="footnote_457"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_457"><span class="muchsmaller">[457]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Xenophon">Xen.</abbr> <cite>Hiero</cite>, <abbr title="nine">ix.</abbr> 4.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_458" id="footnote_458"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_458"><span class="muchsmaller">[458]</span></a>
-Böckh, 212.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_459" id="footnote_459"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_459"><span class="muchsmaller">[459]</span></a>
-<cite>Ibid.</cite> 221.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_460" id="footnote_460"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_460"><span class="muchsmaller">[460]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Xenophon">Xen.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Hipparchos">Hipparch.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="one">i.</abbr> 11.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_461" id="footnote_461"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_461"><span class="muchsmaller">[461]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Illustration">Illustr.</abbr> <a href="#i09">Plate <abbr title="Nine">IX.</abbr></a></p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_462" id="footnote_462"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_462"><span class="muchsmaller">[462]</span></a>
-<abbr title="British Museum">Brit. Mus.</abbr> E 485.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_463" id="footnote_463"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_463"><span class="muchsmaller">[463]</span></a>
-Mnesimachos, <cite>Hippotrophos</cite> (<abbr title="Athenaeus">Athen.</abbr> 402 f).</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_464" id="footnote_464"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_464"><span class="muchsmaller">[464]</span></a>
-See <abbr title="Illustrations">Illustr.</abbr> <a href="#i10a">Plates <abbr title="Ten">X.</abbr> <span class="sc lowercase">A</span></a>, <a href="#i10b"><abbr title="Ten">X.</abbr> <span class="sc lowercase">B</span></a> and the <a href="#frontis">Frontispiece</a> for scenes in a riding-school.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_465" id="footnote_465"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_465"><span class="muchsmaller">[465]</span></a>
-The mark was a suspended shield, <abbr title="British Museum">Brit. Mus.</abbr> Prize-Amphora 7, Room
-<abbr title="Four">IV.</abbr></p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_466" id="footnote_466"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_466"><span class="muchsmaller">[466]</span></a>
-A rough summary of <abbr title="Xenophon">Xen.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Hipparchos">Hipparch.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="one">i.</abbr> 15-26.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_467" id="footnote_467"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_467"><span class="muchsmaller">[467]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Xenophon">Xen.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Hipparchos">Hipparch.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="three">iii.</abbr> 6.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_468" id="footnote_468"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_468"><span class="muchsmaller">[468]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Xenophon">Xen.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Hipparchos">Hipparch.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="three">iii.</abbr> 14.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_469" id="footnote_469"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_469"><span class="muchsmaller">[469]</span></a>
-Petit, <cite><abbr title="Leges Atticae">Leg. Att.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="two">ii.</abbr> 4.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_470" id="footnote_470"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_470"><span class="muchsmaller">[470]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite>Laws</cite>, 689 <span class="sc lowercase">D</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_471" id="footnote_471"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_471"><span class="muchsmaller">[471]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Herodotos">Herod.</abbr> <abbr title="eight">viii.</abbr> 89.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_472" id="footnote_472"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_472"><span class="muchsmaller">[472]</span></a>
-<span class="decoration">e.g.</span> <abbr title="Thucidides">Thuc.</abbr> <abbr title="four">iv.</abbr> 25.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_473" id="footnote_473"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_473"><span class="muchsmaller">[473]</span></a>
-Diogenes <abbr title="Laertius">Laert.</abbr> <abbr title="two">ii.</abbr> 8. 73.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_474" id="footnote_474"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_474"><span class="muchsmaller">[474]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Thucidides">Thuc.</abbr> <abbr title="four">iv.</abbr> 26.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_475" id="footnote_475"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_475"><span class="muchsmaller">[475]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite><abbr title="Republic">Rep.</abbr></cite> 529 <span class="sc lowercase">C</span>; <cite><abbr title="Phaidros">Phaedr.</abbr></cite> 264 <span class="sc lowercase">A</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_476" id="footnote_476"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_476"><span class="muchsmaller">[476]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite><abbr title="Euthydemus">Euthud.</abbr> </cite> 277 <span class="sc lowercase">D</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_477" id="footnote_477"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_477"><span class="muchsmaller">[477]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite><abbr title="Republic">Rep.</abbr></cite> 453 <span class="sc lowercase">D</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_478" id="footnote_478"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_478"><span class="muchsmaller">[478]</span></a>
-Galen, <cite>de <abbr title="locis affectics">loc. aff.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="four">iv.</abbr> 8. See Grasberger, <abbr title="one">i.</abbr> 151.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_479" id="footnote_479"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_479"><span class="muchsmaller">[479]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Aristophanes">Aristoph.</abbr> <cite>Wasps</cite>, 1095.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_480" id="footnote_480"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_480"><span class="muchsmaller">[480]</span></a>
-<cite>Ibid.</cite> 1119.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_481" id="footnote_481"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_481"><span class="muchsmaller">[481]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Xenophon">Xen.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Hellenica">Hellen.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="one">i.</abbr> 6. 24.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_482" id="footnote_482"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_482"><span class="muchsmaller">[482]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Aristophanes">Aristoph.</abbr> <cite>Knights</cite>, 600.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_483" id="footnote_483"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_483"><span class="muchsmaller">[483]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Aristophanes">Aristoph.</abbr> <cite>Frogs</cite>, 200-271, describes a rowing lesson.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_484" id="footnote_484"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_484"><span class="muchsmaller">[484]</span></a>
-<cite><abbr title="Lusis">Lus.</abbr></cite> 21. 5.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_485" id="footnote_485"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_485"><span class="muchsmaller">[485]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Thucidides">Thuc.</abbr> <abbr title="six">vi.</abbr> 32.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_486" id="footnote_486"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_486"><span class="muchsmaller">[486]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Plutarch">Plut.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Themistokles">Themist.</abbr></cite> 32.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_487" id="footnote_487"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_487"><span class="muchsmaller">[487]</span></a>
-Lusias, speech 21. 1-2.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_488" id="footnote_488"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_488"><span class="muchsmaller">[488]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Andokides">Andok.</abbr> 17. 20.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_489" id="footnote_489"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_489"><span class="muchsmaller">[489]</span></a>
-[<abbr title="Xenophon">Xen.</abbr>] <cite><abbr title="Constitution">Constit.</abbr> of <abbr title="Athens">Athen.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="one">i.</abbr> 13.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_490" id="footnote_490"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_490"><span class="muchsmaller">[490]</span></a>
-So</p>
-<div class="poem-container">
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="i0"><ins title="gymnasiarchein lampadi">γυμνασιαρχεῖν λαμπάδι</ins>.&mdash;Isaios, <cite>Philoktemon</cite>, 62. 60.</div>
- <div class="i0"><ins title="gymnasiarcheisthai eu tais lampasin">γυμνασιαρχεῖσθαι εὐ ταῖς λαμπάσιν</ins>.&mdash;<abbr title="Xenophon">Xen.</abbr> <cite>Revenues</cite>, 4. 52.</div>
- <div class="i0"><ins title="lampadi nikêsas gymnasiarchôn">λάμπάδι νικήσας γυμνασιαρχῶν</ins>.&mdash;Böckh, 257.</div>
- </div><!--end poem-->
-</div><!--end container-->
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_491" id="footnote_491"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_491"><span class="muchsmaller">[491]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Demosthenes">Dem.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="against">ag.</abbr> Lakritos</cite>, 940; <abbr title="Aristotle">Aristot.</abbr> <ins title="Athenian Politics">Ἀθ. Πολ.</ins> 57.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_492" id="footnote_492"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_492"><span class="muchsmaller">[492]</span></a>
-Böckh, 243.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_493" id="footnote_493"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_493"><span class="muchsmaller">[493]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Aeschylus">Aesch.</abbr> <cite>Tim.</cite> 12.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_494" id="footnote_494"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_494"><span class="muchsmaller">[494]</span></a>
-Isaios, <cite>Menekles</cite>, § 42. See Wyse’s edition on the passage.</p>
-</div><!--end chapter-->
-
-<div class="chapter"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157"></a><span class="pageno">157</span>
-<h3 class="p4 h3head">CHAPTER V</h3>
-
-<h4 class="p2 h4head">SECONDARY EDUCATION: <abbr title="One">I.</abbr> THE SOPHISTS</h4>
-
-<p class="p2"><span class="sc">At</span> fourteen or soon after, it was usual for the ordinary
-course of letters and lyre-playing to terminate: the
-gymnastic lessons might be carried on till old age
-interrupted them. During the first three-quarters of the
-fifth century, the lad, on leaving school, was left to live
-more or less as he pleased, if he was rich enough not to
-have to work for his living: the sons of poorer citizens
-at this age, if not before, settled down to learn a trade
-or engaged in merchandise. Rich boys, no doubt, spent
-most of their time in athletic pursuits; riding and
-chariot-driving were favourite amusements. But with
-the Periclean age arose a violent desire for a further
-course of intellectual study, and a system of secondary
-education arose, to occupy the four years which
-elapsed between the time when the lad finished his
-primary education and the time when the State
-summoned him to undergo his two years of military
-training.</p>
-
-<p>Many of the primary schools of the better sort
-started courses of study for lads, providing, no doubt,
-separate class-rooms, or else the younger boys attended
-at different hours from those at which the elder pupils
-assembled. Probably some such provision had been
-made much earlier for those who wished to obtain a
-<a name="Page_158" id="Page_158"></a><span class="pageno">158</span>
-more advanced knowledge of literature and music
-than was offered by the primary schools. But in the
-time of Sokrates many masters seemed to have held
-classes for lads as well as for boys. On entering the
-schools of Dionusios,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_495" id="fnanchor_495"></a><a href="#footnote_495" class="fnanchor">[495]</a></span>
-the master of letters, Sokrates
-finds a class of lads assembled here.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_496" id="fnanchor_496"></a><a href="#footnote_496" class="fnanchor">[496]</a></span>
-They all belong
-to noble families: the poor were no doubt unable to
-afford education of this sort. Two of the lads were
-busy discussing a point of astronomy, and were quoting
-the authority of Oinopides<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_497" id="fnanchor_497"></a><a href="#footnote_497" class="fnanchor">[497]</a></span>
-and Anaxagoras, for
-Sokrates catches these two names as he enters the
-room. They were drawing circles on the ground and
-imitating the inclination of some orbit or other with
-their hands. This scene shows a much more advanced
-sort of study than was usual at the primary school of
-letters. The Sophists seem to have often lectured in
-class-rooms.</p>
-
-<p>More often secondary education was imparted, not
-in the regular schools by regular, established masters,
-but by the wandering savants, who taught every conceivable
-subject, and were all grouped together under
-the general name of Sophists.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_498" id="fnanchor_498"></a><a href="#footnote_498" class="fnanchor">[498]</a></span>
-From this category the
-mathematicians and astronomers, who in all respects
-occupied the same position, are often excluded. This
-is due to the authority of Plato, who, while detesting
-the other subjects taught as secondary education, had a
-great affection for mathematics and astronomy, the
-only subjects which he prescribes for lads in the
-<cite>Republic</cite> and <cite>Laws</cite>. But Aristophanes, taking a
-more logical position, includes geometry and astronomy
-<a name="Page_159" id="Page_159"></a><span class="pageno">159</span>
-among the subjects taught by the burlesque Sophists
-of the <cite>Clouds</cite>. In point of fact, secondary education
-included any subject that the lad or his parents
-desired; and the wandering professors who imparted
-it, and even established teachers like Isokrates, who
-kept permanent secondary schools at Athens, were all
-alike, in the popular view, Sophists.</p>
-
-<p>But the more important subjects do naturally fall
-into two great groups, Mathematics and Rhetoric.
-Mathematics, as may be seen from the <cite>Republic</cite>,
-meant, as a part of secondary education, the Science of
-Numbers, Geometry, and Astronomy, with a certain
-amount of the theory of Music, which, owing partly to
-Pythagorean traditions, was classed with mathematics.
-We have already seen a class learning Astronomy.
-Plato, in the <cite>Theaitetos</cite>,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_499" id="fnanchor_499"></a><a href="#footnote_499" class="fnanchor">[499]</a></span>
-supplies a sketch of a lesson
-in more advanced arithmetic, which, by Hellenic custom,
-was usually expressed in geometrical terms in order to
-obtain the assistance of a diagram. The lad Theaitetos
-says to Sokrates that Theodorus of Kurene, the great
-contemporary mathematician, had been teaching him.
-“He was giving us a lesson in Roots, with diagrams,
-showing us that the root of 3 and the root of 5 did not
-admit of linear measurement by the foot (that is, were
-not rational). He took each root separately up to 17.
-There, as it happened, he stopped. So the other pupil
-and I determined, since the roots were apparently
-infinite in number, to try to find a single name which
-would embrace all these roots.</p>
-
-<p>“We divided all number into two parts. The number
-which has a square root we likened to the geometrical
-square, and called ‘square and equilateral’ (<span class="decoration">e.g.</span> 4, 9,
-16). The intermediate numbers, such as 3 and 5 and
-<a name="Page_160" id="Page_160"></a><span class="pageno">160</span>
-the rest which have no square root, but are made up
-of unequal factors, we likened to the rectangle with
-unequal sides, and called rectangular numbers.” And
-so on. As the pupils apply the same principle to
-cubes and cube roots, Theodorus must have initiated
-them into the mysteries of solid geometry also.</p>
-
-<p>Here we find a professor lecturing to a select class,
-in this case of only two lads, and his pupils, as in the
-class-room of Dionusios, discussing and elaborating
-among themselves afterwards the subject-matter of the
-lecture. Theodoros is mentioned as teaching Geometry,
-Astronomy, and the theory of Music, as well as the
-Science of Numbers. Geometry by this time included
-a good number of the easier propositions which were
-afterwards incorporated in the works of Euclid; the
-school of Pythagoras, and, later, that of Plato, did
-much to develop it. The problem of squaring the
-circle was already occupying attention.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_500" id="fnanchor_500"></a><a href="#footnote_500" class="fnanchor">[500]</a></span>
-Compasses
-and the rule were the ordinary geometrical implements:
-diagrams were drawn on the ground, on dust or sand.
-In Arithmetic surds<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_501" id="fnanchor_501"></a><a href="#footnote_501" class="fnanchor">[501]</a></span>
-were a popular subject: but
-arithmetical problems, being usually expressed in terms
-of geometry plane or solid, become as a rule a part of
-the latter science.</p>
-
-<p>To Plato these mathematical studies are alone suitable
-for secondary education: the philosopher Teles,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_502" id="fnanchor_502"></a><a href="#footnote_502" class="fnanchor">[502]</a></span>
-carrying on the same tradition, makes arithmetic and
-geometry the special plagues of the lad.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_503" id="fnanchor_503"></a><a href="#footnote_503" class="fnanchor">[503]</a></span>
-But then the
-philosophers despised Rhetoric.</p>
-
-<p>Rhetoric, from the time of Gorgias onwards,
-formed a very large part of secondary education
-<a name="Page_161" id="Page_161"></a><span class="pageno">161</span>
-Isokrates was its greatest professor. He provided in
-his school a course of three or four years for lads, to
-occupy their time till they were epheboi. But the
-methods, the aims, and the personality of this interesting
-professor will be discussed later.</p>
-
-<p class="center">* * * * *</p>
-
-<p>Besides mathematics and rhetoric, there were literary
-studies. The <cite>Axiochos</cite> gives <ins title="kritikoi">κριτικοί</ins> among the
-teachers of a lad. These are the lecturers on literary
-subjects, who concerned themselves with interpretations,
-often far-fetched, of the poets; a summary of the
-literary discussion in the <cite>Protagoras</cite> may give some
-idea of such a lesson.</p>
-
-<p>“<span class="sc">Protagoras.</span> I consider that it is a most important
-part of a man’s education to be skilled in poetry;
-to understand, that is, what is rightly said, and what is
-not, by the poets. Simonides says to Skopas, son of
-Kreon the Thessalian, ‘To become indeed a good man is
-hard, a man foursquare, wrought without blame in hands
-and feet and mind.’ You know the poem? Do you
-know then that farther on in the same poem he says,
-‘But the saying of Pittakos, wise though he was, seems
-to me not said aright: he said, “’Tis hard to be
-noble.”’ Don’t you see that the poet has contradicted
-himself?”</p>
-
-<p>Sokrates replies by distinguishing “being” from
-“becoming,” and suggests that <ins title="chalepos">χαλεπός</ins> (hard) may
-mean not “difficult” but “bad.” He then gives a
-lecture in his turn. He picks out a <ins title="men">μέν</ins> in the first line
-and puts it into a most unwarrantable position in his
-translation, and makes “indeed” go with “hard.” To
-become good is difficult but possible, to be and remain
-good quite impossible. Hence Simonides goes on to
-say that he is quite satisfied with those who do no
-<a name="Page_162" id="Page_162"></a><span class="pageno">162</span>
-positive harm. Sokrates also notes a philological point,
-that <ins title="epainêmi">ἐπαίνημι</ins> in the poem is a Lesbian Aeolic form,
-justified because the poem is addressed to a citizen of
-Mitulene. It may be remarked that Hippias also
-possessed a lecture on the subject. A lecture on
-Homer by a Sophist is mentioned by Isokrates: such
-lectures were frequently given by the rhapsodes.</p>
-
-<p>Grammar was also taught, and the right use of
-words. Less usual subjects were geography,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_504" id="fnanchor_504"></a><a href="#footnote_504" class="fnanchor">[504]</a></span>
-art, and
-metre. Logic was in its infancy, but the growing lad
-could practise himself in argument by listening to the
-disputes of the dialecticians. Current conversation was
-full of ethical and political discussions: in the fourth
-century there were the philosophical schools of Plato
-and, later, of Aristotle, and the lectures of Antisthenes
-the cynic in Kunosarges; and Isokrates taught political
-science. Lads seem to have been expected to learn
-something, at any rate, of the laws of their country: no
-doubt they were taken up to the Akropolis to read
-Solon’s code: occasionally they may have been present
-as spectators in the law-courts, in order that they might
-gain an idea of legal procedure. Those who intended
-to become speech-writers for the courts would doubtless
-learn more: they would also attend some well-known
-writer like Lusias or Isaios, and learn the art of forensic
-rhetoric.</p>
-
-<p>It must be clearly understood that the whole of this
-secondary education was purely voluntary. The parent
-need not send his lad to hear any teaching of the sort:
-the poorer classes certainly would not. The richer
-parents could choose what subjects they or their sons
-<a name="Page_163" id="Page_163"></a><span class="pageno">163</span>
-preferred: rhetoric or literature, geography or mathematics&mdash;it
-was all one to the State. Teachers came and
-went: few stayed in Athens long. Their pupils had
-either to follow them abroad, as Isokrates went to
-Gorgias in Thessaly, or wait for their next visit. It
-was only the schools of Isokrates, of the great philosophers,
-and of a few speech-writers like Lusias and Isaios,
-that had any permanence in Athens. Isokrates himself
-had taught in Chios for a time: Plato was more
-than once in Sicily, and his school had to do without
-him in his absence. There is a peculiar fluidity about
-secondary education in Hellas: the teachers are always
-on the move. Endowed buildings for them there were
-none: they taught in their own houses and gardens, or
-in those of rich hosts, or in school-rooms borrowed for
-the occasion, or in public resorts like the gymnasia, or
-even in the streets. Consistent or continuous instruction
-was the exception: the Sophists proper gave it only to
-a few. The average lad at this time naturally acquired
-a wide and superficial knowledge of a great number of
-subjects, just the amount of knowledge which is such a
-dangerous thing. The lads became Jacks-of-all-trades:
-Plato, struck with the educational error of wide superficiality,
-wrote the <cite>Republic</cite> as a counterblast, preaching
-“One man, one trade.” This protest is largely
-directed against the specious superficiality of the Sophists’
-teaching.</p>
-
-<p>Consequently, secondary education fell into two
-halves, the fluid teaching of the wandering Sophists and
-the continuous teaching of the more stationary schools
-of Plato and Isokrates. It will be convenient to accept
-this division, and take the fluid half first. In subjects,
-the two must overlap one another: the Sophists taught
-logic as much as Plato, rhetoric as much as Isokrates,
-<a name="Page_164" id="Page_164"></a><span class="pageno">164</span>
-and universal information of very much the same range
-as Aristotle. But the method was different, just because
-as a rule the Sophist was here to-day and gone to-morrow,
-while the stationary teachers taught the same
-pupils for several years together and could study their
-particular idiosyncrasies, and the value of education
-depends very largely on the teacher’s understanding
-of, and sympathy with, the individual boys whom he
-teaches.</p>
-
-<p>It is of interest to trace the development of the term
-Sophia and of the Sophists who professed it.</p>
-
-<p>The earliest thoughts of the Hellenic peoples were
-enshrined in hexameter verse. Homer and Hesiod
-represent the science and philosophy, as well as the
-religion, of their age. The poetical tradition survived
-in philosophy as late as Parmenides and Empedokles:
-the last trace of it may perhaps be found in the myths
-of Plato. The religious and ritual thinkers and the
-composers of oracles also employed verse. Consequently
-“wisdom,” in the earliest Hellenic literature, is mainly
-associated with poetry and music, and the words <ins title="sophoi">σοφοί</ins>
-and <ins title="sophistai">σοφισταί</ins> are applied indiscriminately to poets.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_505" id="fnanchor_505"></a><a href="#footnote_505" class="fnanchor">[505]</a></span>
-This sense of <ins title="sophistês">σοφιστής</ins> survived in later times, and
-Protagoras could call Homer, Hesiod, Mousaios,
-Orpheus, and Simonides all alike by this title. Orpheus
-is so styled in the <cite>Rhesos</cite>. Phrunichos called
-Lampros the musician a “hyper-sophist,” and Athenaeus
-declares that Sophist was a general title for all
-students of music.</p>
-
-<p>A second use of the word “wise man” had also
-existed from the earliest times, by which it had been
-applied to those who were skilful in some particular
-<a name="Page_165" id="Page_165"></a><span class="pageno">165</span>
-craft, such as carpentering,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_506" id="fnanchor_506"></a><a href="#footnote_506" class="fnanchor">[506]</a></span>
-medicine,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_507" id="fnanchor_507"></a><a href="#footnote_507" class="fnanchor">[507]</a></span>
-or chariot-driving.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_508" id="fnanchor_508"></a><a href="#footnote_508" class="fnanchor">[508]</a></span>
-</p>
-
-<p>The “Seven Sages” also received the name of
-Sophist,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_509" id="fnanchor_509"></a><a href="#footnote_509" class="fnanchor">[509]</a></span>
-and in their age the cognate words <ins title="sophos">σοφός</ins> and
-<ins title="sophia">σοφία</ins> became connected with practical and political
-wisdom.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_510" id="fnanchor_510"></a><a href="#footnote_510" class="fnanchor">[510]</a></span>
-</p>
-
-<p>Then the rise of education in Hellas, in which these
-old poets and thinkers were largely employed, and the
-analogy of the other educational titles with similar
-endings, <ins title="grammatistês">γραμματιστής</ins> and <ins title="kitharistês">κιθαριστής</ins>, gave the word
-<ins title="sophistês">σοφιστής</ins> an association with the teaching profession.
-Scientific knowledge was beginning to accumulate.
-Sufficient history was known to serve as a foundation
-for political theory and precept. Rhetoric was becoming
-an essential preliminary to political life, since, with
-the rise of democracy, persuasion became the dominating
-influence in law-courts and assemblies. The desire
-for knowledge was never so keen as during the latter
-half of the fifth century in Hellas. With the demand
-came the men. All over the Hellenic world arose
-professional teachers, who carried the knowledge, which
-they had learnt from one another or discovered for
-themselves, from city to city. Everywhere their
-lectures attracted large and enthusiastic <a name="crowds" id="crowds"></a>crowds.
-Among the subjects which they studied and taught
-may be mentioned mathematics (including arithmetic,
-geometry, and astronomy), grammar, etymology,
-geography, natural history, the laws of metre and
-rhythm, history (under which head fell also mythology
-and genealogies), politics, ethics, the criticism of
-religion, mnemonics, logic, tactics and strategy, music,
-drawing and painting, scientific athletics, and, above all,
-<a name="Page_166" id="Page_166"></a><span class="pageno">166</span>
-rhetoric. To such a heterogeneous collection what
-name could be given but “wisdom,” <ins title="sophia">σοφία</ins>? The
-name Sophist was applied indiscriminately to all these
-secondary teachers.</p>
-
-<p>There are several interesting accounts of these
-Sophists in extant literature, but the writers are always
-prejudiced opponents.</p>
-
-<p>In the <cite>Clouds</cite> of Aristophanes, the Sophists and their
-pupils are represented as living in an underground
-Thinking-Shop. They are pale and squalid, engaged
-in all sorts of researches. Natural history is represented
-by the important question, “How many times the
-length of its own foot does a flea jump?” a problem
-which is solved by actual experiment. Later in the
-play they inquire why the sea does not overflow, since
-the rivers are always running into it. Scientific instead
-of mythological explanations of thunder and lightning
-are given. There is religious criticism too, such
-as Xenophanes had uttered long before: “If Zeus
-imprisoned his own father, why has he not been
-punished?” There is astronomy, “the paths and orbit
-of the sun,” and a hanging basket is introduced as an
-observatory. Geometry and compasses are mentioned.
-The visitor is shown a map of the world, containing
-Euboia, Lakedaimon, and Attica on a large enough
-scale, it would seem, to mark the deme Kikunna;
-perhaps, as Strepsiades expects to find dikastai on it at
-Athens, it had pictures of elephants and monsters in unknown
-districts. The students are interested in metres
-and rhythms. The poet laughs at grammar, forming
-“cockess” as the logical feminine of cock, and making
-the chief Sophist object to feminine nouns with
-masculine terminations. It is suggested that the pupils
-at the Thinking-Shop are dirty, half-starved vegetarians,
-<a name="Page_167" id="Page_167"></a><span class="pageno">167</span>
-too economical to go to the hair-cutter or the baths,
-abstaining from wine and the gymnasia. But the main
-point attacked by Aristophanes is the teaching of
-Argument. The whole object of learning under the
-Sophists is, according to him, to be able to cajole the
-dikastai and so win impunity to cheat, and to have an
-argument to justify anything. The successful scholars
-beat their fathers and mothers, giving logical reasons
-for their behaviour; they refuse to go to school, and
-are too clever to believe or accept anything. But their
-intellectual exhilaration is spasmodic; they have been
-taught, if they reach a difficult problem, to jump on to
-something else.</p>
-
-<p>A vivid sketch of Sophist-life is given in Plato’s
-<cite>Protagoras</cite>. Young Hippokrates, on returning to
-Athens in the evening after pursuing a runaway slave
-to the frontier, hears that Protagoras the great Sophist
-has arrived in the city. Only the lateness of the hour
-deters him from rushing off to find Sokrates, who will
-give him an introduction to the teacher. Next morning
-he comes round to Sokrates’ house long before it is
-light, bangs and shouts at the door in his excitement,
-and announces that he is ready to spend all the money
-which he and all his friends possess, in fees.</p>
-
-<p>They go off to the house of Kallias, where
-Protagoras and other Sophists are staying. The porter
-is so worn out by the number of visitors that he is
-distinctly rude. They find Protagoras walking up and
-down in the cloisters of the house, with three or four
-listeners on either side, one of whom is learning to be a
-Sophist himself. Behind follows a crowd, mostly composed
-of the foreigners whom he draws from city to
-city, like Orpheus, with his magic voice. Another
-Sophist, Hippias, is sitting on a sort of throne in the
-<a name="Page_168" id="Page_168"></a><span class="pageno">168</span>
-opposite part of the cloisters; around him on benches
-are a number of inquirers, who were asking him
-questions about natural science and astronomy. A
-third Sophist, Prodikos, is in a side-building, still in
-bed, covered up in blankets.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_511" id="fnanchor_511"></a><a href="#footnote_511" class="fnanchor">[511]</a></span>
-His audience sat on
-neighbouring beds. The whole assemblage finally
-collect couches and benches together in a great circle to
-hear a discussion between Sokrates and Protagoras.
-Kallias, the host on this occasion, often entertained
-Sophists: at another time he had Gorgias and Polos
-in the house. His cloisters must have provided a
-favourite lecture-room. The Sophists also haunted
-the gymnasia. The discussion in the <cite>Euthudemos</cite>
-takes place in the undressing-room of the Lukeion:
-the two Sophists have been walking in the cloister.
-Hippias on one occasion lectures in a school-room, on
-another in a public place at Olympia.</p>
-
-<p>Protagoras was the first of these teachers to take
-pay. His system was very fair. On the close of their
-course of instruction his pupils, if they chose, paid the
-fee for which he asked; otherwise, they went into a
-temple, and, after taking an oath, paid as much as they
-said his instruction was worth.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_512" id="fnanchor_512"></a><a href="#footnote_512" class="fnanchor">[512]</a></span>
-Hippias made about
-£600 in a very short time in Sicily, receiving some £80
-from the tiny town of Inukos, although Protagoras
-was also lecturing in the island at the time. Prodikos
-charged £2 for a particular lecture on correct speech,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_513" id="fnanchor_513"></a><a href="#footnote_513" class="fnanchor">[513]</a></span>
-but there was also a less complete form of it which cost
-only 10d.; he seems to have been noted for the gradations
-in his charges, for there were also lectures at 5d.,
-1s. 8d., and 3s. 4d.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_514" id="fnanchor_514"></a><a href="#footnote_514" class="fnanchor">[514]</a></span>
-The sum which Euenos of Paros
-asked for teaching the whole duties of a man and a
-<a name="Page_169" id="Page_169"></a><span class="pageno">169</span>
-citizen was £20.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_515" id="fnanchor_515"></a><a href="#footnote_515" class="fnanchor">[515]</a></span>
-Probably, however, the charges of
-these Sophists, and the money which they made, were
-much exaggerated by their contemporaries. Isokrates,
-the pupil of Gorgias, gives a much lower estimate.
-“None of the so-called Sophists,” he says, “will be
-found to have collected much money. On the contrary,
-some passed their lives in poverty and the rest in quite
-ordinary circumstances. The richest Sophist within
-my memory was Gorgias. He spent most of his time
-in Thessaly, the most prosperous part of Hellas. He
-lived to a great age and followed his profession for a
-great many years. He did not take upon himself any
-public burdens by settling in any one city. He did not
-marry or have children to bring up. Yet with all these
-opportunities of growing wealthy, he only left about
-£800 at his death.”<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_516" id="fnanchor_516"></a><a href="#footnote_516" class="fnanchor">[516]</a></span>
-It must be remembered that the
-Sophists received money only from those who definitely
-enrolled themselves as pupils or came to a few advertised
-lectures. Hippias lectured at Sparta frequently, and
-never received a penny. Any one might go and ask a
-Sophist a question, and would almost always receive a
-voluminous answer. The eloquence and practical
-skill of these men were also always at the disposal of
-their own city. Like the greater Renaissance scholars,
-Hippias, Gorgias, and Prodikos were much occupied
-in going on embassies. For the larger part of their
-life-work they received no payment whatever; what
-they actually received was possibly less than what their
-philosophic opponents obtained in donations from
-friendly tyrants.</p>
-
-<p>At any rate, their fees were not heavy enough to
-damp the ardour of their pupils. Young men left
-their relations and friends to follow Sophists from
-<a name="Page_170" id="Page_170"></a><span class="pageno">170</span>
-city to city. These enthusiastic disciples were almost
-ready to carry their teachers about on their shoulders,
-so great was their affection for them. Why this
-enthusiasm? Partly because the Sophists were men
-of great personal charm. Partly because in that age
-the thirst for knowledge was unbounded. Partly
-from a desire to learn the way of virtue, which the
-Sophists claimed to teach. But the most potent reason
-was ambition. The young wished to shine in conversation,
-the great occupation of the age, and to be able to
-discuss every conceivable topic with intelligence. But
-education was also the road to political success. The
-Sophists taught systematic rhetoric, and logic of a sort.
-They also supplied the subject-matter for orations, in
-their practical handling of political science, of history,
-of ethical commonplaces; for a public oration was
-expected to be a storehouse of erudition. Rhetoric
-was needful not only for power, but also for security;
-for in the courts it had more influence than mere
-argument and facts.</p>
-
-<p class="center">* * * * *</p>
-
-<p>About the individual Sophists little is known. They
-appear for us only in the pages of those who traduced
-them. Plato is mainly occupied with various conclusions
-which he draws from their philosophic theories,
-which were not a part of their teaching. <cite>Protagoras</cite>, the
-eldest of them, a most dignified personage, set himself
-to train good citizens: he claimed that he enabled his
-pupils to manage their households and govern their
-states. He imparted to them all the worldly wisdom
-which he had gained by long years of personal experience.
-He made a special study of political science, no
-doubt for this purpose, and left a treatise upon the
-subject, which was sufficiently excellent for a certain
-<a name="Page_171" id="Page_171"></a><span class="pageno">171</span>
-Aristoxenos to be able to say that Plato had plagiarised
-most of the <cite>Republic</cite> from it.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_517" id="fnanchor_517"></a><a href="#footnote_517" class="fnanchor">[517]</a></span>
-Being businesslike, he
-favoured clearness of thought, and studied grammar: he
-was the first to separate nouns into the three genders.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_518" id="fnanchor_518"></a><a href="#footnote_518" class="fnanchor">[518]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><cite>Prodikos</cite> belonged to the same practical school. He
-began by teaching his pupils the right use of words.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_519" id="fnanchor_519"></a><a href="#footnote_519" class="fnanchor">[519]</a></span>
-Thus he told Sokrates not to use <ins title="deinos">δεινός</ins> when he meant
-“clever”; for its proper meaning was “terrible,”
-applicable to war, disease, or the like.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_520" id="fnanchor_520"></a><a href="#footnote_520" class="fnanchor">[520]</a></span>
-There is an
-amusing skit on his pet subject in Plato.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_521" id="fnanchor_521"></a><a href="#footnote_521" class="fnanchor">[521]</a></span>
-“The audience
-in a philosophical debate should give an impartial
-but not an equal attention to both speakers; for it is
-not the same thing. For it is right to give an impartial
-hearing, but you ought to incline, not equally towards
-both, but rather towards the wiser speaker. I also ask
-you to agree, and to discuss, not to dispute. For
-friends discuss with friends for friendship’s sake, but
-enemies dispute. In this way our meeting will be best
-conducted. For you, the speakers, would thus win
-from the audience most repute, not praise (for repute
-is without deception in the minds of the hearers, but
-praise is an outward expression of what is often not
-felt); and we, the audience, would thus receive most
-happiness, not pleasure; for happiness is produced by
-the mental reception of knowledge and wisdom, pleasure
-by eating or by some other pleasant physical state.”
-It was easy to laugh, but, as Plato himself shows, these
-distinctions of meaning were extremely useful in meeting
-logical quibbles, and were much needed in contemporary
-logic. Besides this, Prodikos was a moral
-teacher, and composed the famous <cite>Choice of Herakles</cite>,
-<a name="Page_172" id="Page_172"></a><span class="pageno">172</span>
-in which he inculcated the duty of hard work as opposed
-to a life of laziness and pleasure. He was an invalid,
-but worked on in spite of ill-health; the result was,
-perhaps, a certain amount of pessimism.</p>
-
-<p><span class="person">Hippias</span> was a marvellously all-round genius. He
-once came to the Olympian festival with everything
-that he wore or carried made by himself, ring, oil bottle,
-shoes, clothes, a wonderful Persian girdle; he also
-brought epic poems, tragedies, dithyrambs, and all sorts
-of prose-works.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_522" id="fnanchor_522"></a><a href="#footnote_522" class="fnanchor">[522]</a></span>
-He knew astronomy, geometry,
-arithmetic, grammar. At Sparta he taught history and
-archæology. He had a wonderful system of mnemonics,
-by which, if he once heard a string of fifty names, he
-could remember them all.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_523" id="fnanchor_523"></a><a href="#footnote_523" class="fnanchor">[523]</a></span>
-He lectured on Homer
-and other poets. He also composed a moral discourse,
-which won great applause at Sparta, where quibbles or
-bad morality would have been sternly repressed; it
-was afterwards delivered in an Athenian school-room.
-Hippias was always ready to answer any question which
-was put to him, and was rarely at a loss.</p>
-
-<p>A less prominent Sophist was <span class="person">Antiphon</span>, who must
-be carefully distinguished from his namesake the Attic
-orator. He published works on physics, on concord
-(<ins title="homonoia">ὁμόνοια</ins>), and on political science. The fragments are
-interesting, and show some popular handling of ethical
-teaching. The following extracts<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_524" id="fnanchor_524"></a><a href="#footnote_524" class="fnanchor">[524]</a></span>
-will give some idea
-of the <span class="lock">man:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<p class="blockquote">“First among things human I reckon education.
-For if you begin anything whatever in the right way,
-the end will probably be right also. The nature of the
-harvest depends upon the seed you sow. If you plant
-<a name="Page_173" id="Page_173"></a><span class="pageno">173</span>
-good education in a young body, it bears leaves and
-fruit the whole life long, and no rain or drought can
-destroy it.”</p>
-
-<p class="blockquote">“Life is like a day’s sentry-duty, and the length of
-life is comparable to a single day. While our day
-lasts, we look up to the sunlight, then we pass on our
-duty to our successors.”</p>
-
-<p class="blockquote">“A miser stored up money in a hiding-place, and
-did not lend or use it. Then it was stolen. A man to
-whom he had refused to lend it told him to put a stone
-in the hiding-place instead, and imagine that it was
-money; it would be just as useful.”</p>
-
-<p>Among the Sophists were some apparently who were
-merely jesters, and used their brains solely in arousing
-laughter. It may well be doubted whether the account
-which Plato gives of <span class="person">Euthudemos</span> and <span class="person">Dionusodoros</span> is
-true to life; but they probably represent a type. As
-teachers, no sane man could take them seriously. They
-had been gladiators, and had taught forensic rhetoric;
-afterwards they discovered a genius for quibbles. They
-were ready to make out any statement to be true or
-false. The respondent may only answer “Yes” or
-“No,” and no previous statement could be quoted
-against them, since they did not claim to teach anything
-consistent. A sample<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_525" id="fnanchor_525"></a><a href="#footnote_525" class="fnanchor">[525]</a></span>
-of their arguments will make
-their methods clearer. “<span class="decoration">A.</span> Your father is a dog. <span class="decoration">B.</span>
-So is yours. <span class="decoration">A.</span> If you answer my questions, you will
-admit it. Have you a dog? <span class="decoration">B.</span> Yes, a very bad one.
-<span class="decoration">A.</span> Has it puppies? <span class="decoration">B.</span> Mongrels like itself. <span class="decoration">A.</span>
-Then the dog is a father? <span class="decoration">B.</span> Yes. <span class="decoration">A.</span> Isn’t the dog
-yours? <span class="decoration">B.</span> Certainly. <span class="decoration">A.</span> Then being yours and a
-father, it is your father, and you are the brother of
-puppies.” Absurd as it is, such discussions are a good
-<a name="Page_174" id="Page_174"></a><span class="pageno">174</span>
-means of teaching logic, since they make the search for
-rules intellectually compulsory.</p>
-
-<p>No doubt there were black sheep among the lesser
-Sophists, to whom Plato’s bitter definitions in the
-<cite>Sophist</cite> were quite applicable, who were “hunters
-after young men of wealth and position, with sham
-education as their bait, and a fee for their object, making
-money by a scientific use of quibbles in private conversation,
-while quite aware that what they were teaching
-was wrong.” But they do not appear in extant literature,
-which has only recorded a very few, and those the
-very pick, of the hundreds of Sophists that there must
-have been in the Socratic age.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_526" id="fnanchor_526"></a><a href="#footnote_526" class="fnanchor">[526]</a></span>
-</p>
-
-<p class="center">* * * * *</p>
-
-<p>The Sophists who have been mentioned so far have
-been but little concerned with Rhetoric: they form
-rather a school of Logic, opposed to the rhetorical school
-of <span class="person">Gorgias</span> and his followers.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter together" style="width: 500px">
- <p class="captionleft">PLATE <abbr title="Eight">VIII.</abbr></p>
- <a name="i08" id="i08"></a>
- <img src="images/8.jpg"
- width="500" height="229"
- alt="Illustration: In the Palastra"
- />
- <p class="caption">IN THE PALAISTRA: FLUTE-PLAYERS (WITH <ins title="phorbeia">φορβεία</ins>), JAVELIN-THROWER, DISK-THROWER, AND BOXER<br />
-Gerhard’s <cite lang="de" xml:lang="de">Auserlesene Vasenbilder</cite>, <abbr title="272">cclxxii.</abbr> Fig. 1.<br />
-From a Kulix, now at Berlin, signed by Epiktetos (<abbr title="number">No.</abbr> 2262).</p>
-</div><!--end illustration-->
-
-<p>Of the rise of Rhetoric in Hellas I need say little:
-the whole subject has been admirably treated elsewhere.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_527" id="fnanchor_527"></a><a href="#footnote_527" class="fnanchor">[527]</a></span>
-For educational purposes, Hellenic rhetoric started with
-several fatal drawbacks and some counterbalancing
-advantages. The southern nature of the Hellenes preferred
-sensuous charm of sound to logical accuracy of
-fact; their rhetoric, arising as it did out of poetry, and
-modelling itself upon its literary parent, pandered only
-too readily to their taste. With truth it had no more
-to do than Homer had; its object was to please the ear
-by curious rhythms, balanced clauses, parisosis, and all
-other possible devices. As long as the form was excellent,
-no matter how trivial the subject:<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_528" id="fnanchor_528"></a><a href="#footnote_528" class="fnanchor">[528]</a></span>
-mice or salt
-<!--Blank Page-->
-<a name="Page_175" id="Page_175"></a><span class="pageno">175</span>
-were good enough for a theme. The oration must, of
-course, be full of passion, but that could be simulated:
-rhetoric had inherited the legacy of acting from its
-parent, Lyric Poetry. So rhetoric became simply a
-question of style, not of argument; and since arguments
-were not required, the strength or weakness of a
-case did not matter: rhetoric could make any cause
-attractive to a sensuous Hellenic ear by its tricks of
-style, and thus make “the weaker cause the stronger.”
-The method by which its professors taught their pupils
-brought out this attitude clearly. They were accustomed
-to take an imaginary case, and then to teach their pupils
-how to write a speech on either side of it: the extant
-“Tetralogies” of Antiphon are examples of the
-method, which was excellent educationally; for it is
-good to see the arguments on both sides of a case. It
-was the carelessness about fact and indifference to truth,
-and the element of acting, that were so dangerous to
-the pupils. These elements certainly wrecked the justice
-of the Athenian courts; their effect on Hellenic character
-was probably equally unsatisfactory.</p>
-
-<p>Rhetoric also inherited the “gnome” or commonplace,
-a general statement about ethics or politics or
-what not, which could be developed into a sententious
-little essay. Budding orators learned to compose a
-little store of these and keep them ready for use, to
-be inserted in a speech whenever an opportunity
-occurred. For writing these essays, a certain amount
-of independent thought about politics and ethics was
-necessary; and both the thought and the essay-writing
-were no doubt good for the lads.</p>
-
-<p>The flowery and poetic style, which was the main
-characteristic of early Hellenic rhetoric, was the creation
-of Gorgias. A fragment of a funeral oration, in which
-<a name="Page_176" id="Page_176"></a><span class="pageno">176</span>
-no doubt he put forth all his powers, may be given as a
-sample of the sort of thing which his pupils learned to
-<span class="lock">write:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<p>“As witness to their deeds these dead set up trophies
-over the foe, offerings to Zeus, offered by themselves.
-They were not unskilled in natural Ares nor lawful
-loves nor armèd strife nor beauty-loving Peace; revering
-the Gods by Justice, honouring their parents by
-Service, just to their countrymen by Equality, faithful
-to their friends by Loyalty. Therefore, when they died,
-love for them died not with them, but deathless in
-bodies no longer bodies it lives when they live no
-longer.” In the <cite>Encomium on Helen</cite> we have “fright
-exceeding fearful, and pity exceeding tearful, and yearning
-exceeding painful,” and “productive of pleasure,
-destructive of pain.” In the <cite>Palamedes</cite> Gorgias even
-uses puns.</p>
-
-<p>His poetical compounds and those of his pupil
-<span class="person">Alkidamas</span> were famous. In short, at this time there
-was no boundary whatever between poetry and prose:
-prose, if anything, was the more poetical of the two.</p>
-
-<p>This strange hothouse Euphuistic style of Gorgias
-took Hellas by storm, and his influence was enormous:
-it even half-mastered the austere mind of Thucydides.
-As reformed by the greater critical faculties of his pupil
-Isokrates, it became the parent of Ciceronian Latin and
-so of the prose literature of centuries.</p>
-
-<p>The other rhetorical Sophists of the time are less
-interesting. <span class="person">Likumnios</span> and <span class="person">Polos</span>, teacher and pupil,
-seem to have devoted themselves to questions of
-rhythm: they employed quaint conceits and affectations,
-like Gorgias. <span class="person">Theodoros</span> and <span class="person">Euenos</span> divided and subdivided
-the parts of an oration into “confirmation” and
-“additional confirmation,” and “by-blames” and “by-panegyrics”:
-<a name="Page_177" id="Page_177"></a><span class="pageno">177</span>
-in which work Polos joined them.
-<span class="person">Thrasumachos</span> of Chalcedon, who seems to have been a
-bigger man altogether, began to attack the psychological
-side of rhetoric by studying the questions of pathos and
-indignation; these studies he embodied in pamphlets,
-and no doubt his results were imparted to his pupils.</p>
-
-<p>One of the beauties of old Hellenic education had
-been that it did not make the rich a class apart from
-the poor by giving a widely different form of culture.
-The rise of the Sophists changed all this: their fees
-excluded the poor. The odium of resultant class-separation
-fell upon the teachers. Their pupils, rich,
-aristocratic, and cultured, inclined towards oligarchy.
-Hellenic sentiment held the teacher responsible for the
-whole career of his pupils. So for this reason again the
-democracies regarded the Sophists with suspicion, as
-the trainers of oligarchs and tyrants. It was chiefly
-because he had been the teacher of Kritias and Alkibiades
-that Sokrates was put to death by the restored democracy.
-The persuasive powers which the rhetoricians
-gave to their pupils might be, and often were, misused;
-the pupils might mislead the Ekklesia into
-bad policy or the law-courts into injustice by their
-eloquence. However much the Sophists might protest
-that they taught only rhetoric, not ethics, they were
-held responsible for the dishonesty as well as for the
-eloquence of such pupils. Besides, rhetoric gave the
-rich man, who alone could buy it, a most undemocratic
-influence in the State. The odium against the Sophists
-was increased by their religious and political views.
-They were free thinkers in all things. Protagoras was
-a frank agnostic; Gorgias believed that nothing whatever
-existed. Their political theories were equally
-revolutionary, full of the idea of Social Contracts and
-<a name="Page_178" id="Page_178"></a><span class="pageno">178</span>
-the right of the one strong man. All this was extremely
-distasteful to the majority, who were democratic
-and orthodox. But it must be remembered that no
-such views appeared in lectures: they were confined to
-an occasional book or to private conversation. Outwardly
-the Sophists were law-abiding and respectable
-servants of the constitution, and their lectures were, if
-anything, rather commonplace.</p>
-
-<p>Thus the prejudice against them was excited partly
-by their freethinking and partly by their fees. The
-first of these two reasons applied still more to Sokrates
-and the philosophic schools. But Sokrates neither
-asked nor received fees: Plato and Aristotle only
-accepted presents. Consequently when the philosophic
-party tried to dissociate themselves in the popular mind
-from the Sophists with whom they were confounded,
-they attempted to revive the old Hellenic prejudice
-against taking fees for “wisdom,” which had given
-trouble to the lyric poets, and to emphasise the money-making
-aspects of the Sophists’ profession. This rather
-absurd appeal to the gallery has influenced posterity;
-but it did not win universal acceptation in Hellas.
-Aischines still calls Sokrates a Sophist. Under the
-Roman Empire “Sophist” became a title of distinction
-applied to artistic stylists and teachers like Libanius.</p>
-
-<p class="p2 footnote"> <a name="footnote_495" id="footnote_495"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_495"><span class="muchsmaller">[495]</span></a>
-Plato’s own schoolmaster, <abbr title="Diogenes Laertius">Diog. Laertius</abbr> <abbr title="three">iii.</abbr> 5.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_496" id="footnote_496"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_496"><span class="muchsmaller">[496]</span></a>
-[Plato] <cite>Lovers</cite>, 132.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_497" id="footnote_497"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_497"><span class="muchsmaller">[497]</span></a>
-Reputed inventor of Euclid <abbr title="one">i.</abbr> 12 and 23, and a great astronomer.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_498" id="footnote_498"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_498"><span class="muchsmaller">[498]</span></a>
-Thus the lad Theages, who has learnt letters, lyre-playing, and wrestling, is
-vaguely in search of a Sophist, to make him “wise” ([Plato] <cite>Theages</cite>, 121 <span class="sc lowercase">D</span>, 122 <span class="sc lowercase">E</span>).</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_499" id="footnote_499"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_499"><span class="muchsmaller">[499]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite><abbr title="Theaitetos">Theait.</abbr></cite> 147 <span class="sc lowercase">D</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_500" id="footnote_500"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_500"><span class="muchsmaller">[500]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Aristophanes">Aristoph.</abbr> <cite>Birds</cite>, 1005.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_501" id="footnote_501"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_501"><span class="muchsmaller">[501]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite><abbr title="Hippias Major">Hipp. Maj.</abbr></cite> 303 <span class="sc lowercase">B</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_502" id="footnote_502"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_502"><span class="muchsmaller">[502]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Stobaeus">Stob.</abbr> 98, <abbr title="page">p.</abbr> 535.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_503" id="footnote_503"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_503"><span class="muchsmaller">[503]</span></a>
-And learning to ride. He is thinking of the aristocratic lad, who would afterwards
-enter the later exclusive ephebic college.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_504" id="footnote_504"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_504"><span class="muchsmaller">[504]</span></a>
-Among the common amusements of Athenian dinner-parties was a geographical
-game, in which A gave, say, the name of a city in Asia beginning with K, and B had
-to reply with one in Europe beginning with the same letter (<abbr title="Athenaeus">Athen.</abbr> 457).</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_505" id="footnote_505"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_505"><span class="muchsmaller">[505]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Pindar">Pind.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Isthmian">Isthm.</abbr></cite> 5 (4) 36. <ins title="sophistai">σοφισταί</ins>; <ins title="sophos">σοφός</ins>, <abbr title="Pindar">Pind.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Olympian">Ol.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="one">i.</abbr> 15; <cite><abbr title="Pythian">Pyth.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="one">i.</abbr> 42. <ins title="sophia">σοφία</ins>,
-<cite>Hymn to Hermes</cite>, and <abbr title="Pindar">Pind.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Olympian">Ol.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="one">i.</abbr> 187.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_506" id="footnote_506"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_506"><span class="muchsmaller">[506]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Homer">Hom.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Iliad">Il.</abbr></cite> 15. 412.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_507" id="footnote_507"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_507"><span class="muchsmaller">[507]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Pindar">Pind.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Pythian">Pyth.</abbr></cite> 3. 96.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_508" id="footnote_508"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_508"><span class="muchsmaller">[508]</span></a>
-<cite>Ibid.</cite> 5. 154.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_509" id="footnote_509"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_509"><span class="muchsmaller">[509]</span></a>
-In Isokrates, <cite><abbr title="Antidemocracy">Antid.</abbr></cite> 235.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_510" id="footnote_510"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_510"><span class="muchsmaller">[510]</span></a>
-As in <abbr title="Theognis">Theog.</abbr> 1074.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_511" id="footnote_511"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_511"><span class="muchsmaller">[511]</span></a>
-He was an invalid.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_512" id="footnote_512"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_512"><span class="muchsmaller">[512]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite><abbr title="Protagoras">Protag.</abbr></cite> 328 <span class="sc lowercase">C</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_513" id="footnote_513"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_513"><span class="muchsmaller">[513]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite><abbr title="Kratinos">Krat.</abbr></cite> 384 <span class="sc lowercase">E</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_514" id="footnote_514"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_514"><span class="muchsmaller">[514]</span></a>
-[Plato] <cite><abbr title="Axiochos">Axioch.</abbr></cite> 366 <span class="sc lowercase">C</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_515" id="footnote_515"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_515"><span class="muchsmaller">[515]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite><abbr title="Apology">Apol.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="four">iv.</abbr> 20 <span class="sc lowercase">B</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_516" id="footnote_516"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_516"><span class="muchsmaller">[516]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Isokrates">Isok.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Antidemocracy">Antid.</abbr></cite> 156.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_517" id="footnote_517"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_517"><span class="muchsmaller">[517]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Diogenes Laertius">Diog. Laertius</abbr> <abbr title="three">iii.</abbr> 25.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_518" id="footnote_518"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_518"><span class="muchsmaller">[518]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Aristotle">Aristot.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Rhetoric">Rhet.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="three">iii.</abbr> 3. 5.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_519" id="footnote_519"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_519"><span class="muchsmaller">[519]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite><abbr title="Euthydemus">Euthud.</abbr> </cite> 277 <span class="sc lowercase">E</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_520" id="footnote_520"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_520"><span class="muchsmaller">[520]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite><abbr title="Protagoras">Protag.</abbr></cite> 341 <span class="sc lowercase">A</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_521" id="footnote_521"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_521"><span class="muchsmaller">[521]</span></a>
-<cite>Ibid.</cite> 337 <span class="sc lowercase">A-C</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_522" id="footnote_522"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_522"><span class="muchsmaller">[522]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite><abbr title="Hippias Minor">Hipp. Min.</abbr></cite> 368.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_523" id="footnote_523"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_523"><span class="muchsmaller">[523]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite><abbr title="Hippias Major">Hipp. Maj.</abbr></cite> and <cite><abbr title="Protagoras">Protag.</abbr></cite> 318.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_524" id="footnote_524"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_524"><span class="muchsmaller">[524]</span></a>
-Quoted in the Teubner Antiphon from Stobaeus. <cite><abbr title="Florilegium">Flor.</abbr></cite> 98. 533. <cite><abbr title="Florilegium">Flor.</abbr></cite> Appendix,
-16. 36. This Antiphon comes in <abbr title="Xenophon">Xen.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Memorabilia">Mem.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="one">i.</abbr> 6. 1.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_525" id="footnote_525"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_525"><span class="muchsmaller">[525]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite><abbr title="Euthydemus">Euthud.</abbr> </cite> 298 <span class="sc lowercase">D</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_526" id="footnote_526"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_526"><span class="muchsmaller">[526]</span></a>
-It is not fair to condemn Polos and Thrasumachos on the score of the opinions
-which Plato puts into their mouths.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_527" id="footnote_527"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_527"><span class="muchsmaller">[527]</span></a>
-Jebb, <cite>Attic Orators</cite>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_528" id="footnote_528"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_528"><span class="muchsmaller">[528]</span></a>
-Compare Renaissance poetry in Italy.</p>
-</div><!--end chapter-->
-
-<div class="chapter"><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179"></a><span class="pageno">179</span>
-
-<h3 class="p4 h3head">CHAPTER VI</h3>
-
-<h4 class="p2 h4head">SECONDARY EDUCATION: <abbr title="Two">II.</abbr> THE PERMANENT SCHOOLS</h4>
-
-<p class="p2"><span class="sc">Athens</span> was the place in which the fluid educational
-system of the Sophists would naturally begin to crystallise.
-Not only were the Athenians the keenest and most
-intellectual of the Hellenes: owing to the vast trade
-of their city, merchants, astronomers, inventors, poets,
-thinkers of all sorts, poured into it, and men of all trades
-and all tongues collected there. Many stayed there for
-a few days only, in passing; for Athens was a sort of
-Clapham Junction in those days. All these brought a
-perpetual supply of new ideas into the city, which the
-inhabitants were quick to assimilate.</p>
-
-<p>But, possessing all the advantages of a commercial
-centre, Athens was free from the disadvantages. The
-clamour and vulgarity of trade were confined to the
-Peiraieus: in the gymnasia or the streets or the colonnades
-of Athens the philosopher and the thinker could
-teach and meditate in peace, in an atmosphere ennobled
-by her treasures of architecture and art and sculpture,
-which subdued the most blatant visitor, amid the literary
-circles which her dramatic contests attracted and encouraged.
-Here was an ideal spot for the meeting-place
-of the best minds in Hellas and the growth of a
-great educational system. The city was an education
-in itself. Perikles had called Athens the school of
-<a name="Page_180" id="Page_180"></a><span class="pageno">180</span>
-Hellas; the name was now to be justified in its most
-literal sense.</p>
-
-<p>Early in the fourth century there arose established
-secondary schools in Athens. Plato began to teach
-Logic and Philosophy, Isokrates Rhetoric, not for a few
-weeks at a time, but permanently: their courses lasted
-three or four years. Characteristically, there was no
-State organisation or interference; Isokrates taught in
-his own house, near the Lukeion, Plato in his garden
-near Kolonos and in the Akademeia. Their pupils came
-from all parts of the civilised world, staying in Athens
-during their course of study. Plato imposed a preliminary
-examination in mathematics upon his pupils;
-Isokrates only commended a knowledge of such subjects.
-The students of these two schools became recognised
-features of Athenian life.</p>
-
-<p>Plato led his pupils towards intellectual research and
-a life of retirement; the tendency of the school was
-markedly aristocratic, and several of the lads became
-tyrants in after life. Isokrates inculcated the practical
-life: his teaching was meant as a preparation for success
-in society and politics. But as his school naturally was
-only for the comparatively wealthy and leisured classes,
-it also tended to be aristocratic; however, it produced
-some of the leading democratic statesmen of the day.</p>
-
-<p>Besides these two great schools others grew up. It
-is hard to distinguish exactly between the boys who
-went to Isokrates in order to learn political speaking
-and those who went to a “logographos” like Lusias
-or Demosthenes to learn forensic oratory. The
-“logographoi” do not seem to have claimed to impart
-culture, but only technical instruction: they are thus
-on the boundary line of education. But Demosthenes
-went to the “logographos” Isaios to get precisely the
-<a name="Page_181" id="Page_181"></a><span class="pageno">181</span>
-instruction which Isokrates had refused him: so it is
-hard to make a clear distinction. I shall therefore give
-a short sketch of the “logographoi” also.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_529" id="fnanchor_529"></a><a href="#footnote_529" class="fnanchor">[529]</a></span>
-</p>
-
-<p>By the time that these schools began to establish
-themselves the Sophists were beginning to die out.
-Times were harder in the fourth century, and fewer
-people had money to spend on these expensive teachers.
-The intellectual movement of the Periclean age had
-spent itself, and the desire for universal knowledge was
-no longer so keen. Moreover, it is quite probable that
-settled schools, like that of Isokrates at Athens, were
-forming in many of the great centres: it is known that
-Isokrates himself taught for a while in Chios. The
-great demerit of the Sophists’ teaching, namely, that it
-was too much in a hurry and gave no time for personal
-endeavour on the part of the pupil, had been recognised:
-and the result was that the Sophists settled down in a
-single place and gave continuous courses of instruction.</p>
-
-<p>But a good many Sophists of the old type remained,
-to vex Isokrates by their criticisms and rivalries. They
-still came to Athens at the great festivals, and gave
-hurried lectures.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_530" id="fnanchor_530"></a><a href="#footnote_530" class="fnanchor">[530]</a></span>
-But they had not the originality of
-their predecessors, and people preferred to read the
-works of Protagoras or Gorgias for themselves to hearing
-them repeated as original by a lecturer. Books
-were already a serious rival to lecturing, and were a
-cause of much searching of heart to Plato: Isokrates,
-however, preferred to write himself and so advertise his
-school.</p>
-
-<p>Besides the wandering Sophists there were probably
-a good many teachers, both of Philosophy and of
-<a name="Page_182" id="Page_182"></a><span class="pageno">182</span>
-Rhetoric, established permanently at Athens. Isokrates
-mentions casually that all the schools<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_531" id="fnanchor_531"></a><a href="#footnote_531" class="fnanchor">[531]</a></span>
-produce only
-two or three first-class speakers. In his educational
-prospectus, <cite>Against the Sophists</cite>, he criticises these
-rivals freely. “They merely try to attract pupils by
-low fees and big promises. The speeches which they
-write themselves are worse than the improvisations of
-the wholly untrained, yet they promise to make a complete
-orator out of any one who comes to them; for
-they make no allowance for natural talent or for experience,
-but regard eloquence as an exact science, just like
-the A B C and equally communicable; whereas it is
-really a progressive art, where the same thing must
-never be said twice, and its rules must be relative to the
-occasion and the circumstances.”<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_532" id="fnanchor_532"></a><a href="#footnote_532" class="fnanchor">[532]</a></span>
-It is clear that these
-rivals committed the serious crime of underselling
-Isokrates and also of issuing more attractive prospectuses;
-perhaps, too, they are the captious critics to
-whom he is always referring.</p>
-
-<p>Isokrates is still more severe on various philosophical
-teachers; he cannot mean Plato alone, for he mentions
-their fees, and Plato made no charge. There must have
-been a large number of philosophical professors, of
-whom Plato was only the most brilliant. But in many
-points Isokrates no doubt meant his denunciations to
-apply to Plato also. The summary of his attack is as
-follows:&mdash;“They make impossible offers, promising to
-impart to their pupils an exact science of conduct, by
-means of which they will always know what to do.
-Yet for this science they charge only 3 or 4 <ins title="mnai">μναῖ</ins> (£12
-or £16), a ridiculously small sum. They try to attract
-pupils by the specious titles of the subjects which they
-claim to teach, such as Justice and Prudence. But the
-<a name="Page_183" id="Page_183"></a><span class="pageno">183</span>
-Justice and the Prudence which they teach are of a very
-peculiar sort, and they give a meaning to the words
-quite different from that which ordinary people give;
-in fact, they cannot be sure about the meaning themselves,
-but can only dispute about it. Although they
-profess to teach Justice, they refuse to trust their pupils,
-but make them deposit the fees with a third party
-before the course begins.”<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_533" id="fnanchor_533"></a><a href="#footnote_533" class="fnanchor">[533]</a></span>
-Here we have a picture of
-a distinct group of ethical teachers all trying to work
-at that Socratic paradox that virtue is knowledge, and
-imparting their results to pupils for low fees.</p>
-
-<p>All these Professors of Ethics seem to have made
-Mathematics and Astronomy a part of their course,
-just as Plato did. “To the old Athenian education, of
-Letters and Music and Gymnastics, they have added a
-more advanced course, consisting of Geometry and
-Astronomy and such subjects, together with eristic
-dialogues,” that is, Dialectic.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_534" id="fnanchor_534"></a><a href="#footnote_534" class="fnanchor">[534]</a></span>
-This course seems to have
-been much criticised as being a mere waste of time, since
-it was of no practical use and the knowledge so obtained
-was soon forgotten in after life. But Isokrates, although
-these subjects played no part in his own school, was
-sufficiently good an educationalist to see their merits:
-the study of subtle and difficult matters like Astronomy
-and Geometry “trains a boy to keep his attention
-closely fixed upon the point at issue and not to allow his
-mind to wander; so, being practised in this way and
-having his wits sharpened, he will be made capable of
-learning more important matters with greater ease and
-speed.”<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_535" id="fnanchor_535"></a><a href="#footnote_535" class="fnanchor">[535]</a></span>
-But all these unpractical, if improving,
-studies should be abandoned before the nineteenth
-year: for they dry up the human nature and make men
-<a name="Page_184" id="Page_184"></a><span class="pageno">184</span>
-unbusinesslike. “Some of those who have become so
-adept in these subjects that they teach them to others,
-show themselves in the practical conduct of life less
-wise than their pupils, not to say than their servants.”<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_536" id="fnanchor_536"></a><a href="#footnote_536" class="fnanchor">[536]</a></span>
-Consequently, those who care to study mathematics and
-eristic should confine them to the years between fourteen
-and eighteen: and then pass on to learn rhetoric
-with Isokrates; the rest can come to his school as lads,
-as many did.</p>
-
-<p>But, although he differentiated himself so carefully
-from what moderns would call the philosophical schools,
-Isokrates styled himself a teacher of philosophy quite as
-much as they did. To him, as to the Romans, philosophy
-was the art of living a practical life. “That
-which is of no immediate use either for speech or for
-action does not deserve the name of Philosophy.”<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_537" id="fnanchor_537"></a><a href="#footnote_537" class="fnanchor">[537]</a></span>
-The
-true philosopher is not the dreamer who neglects what
-is practical and essential, but the man of the world who
-learns and studies subjects which will make him able to
-manage his household and govern his state well; for
-this is the object of all labour and all philosophy.<span class="lock"><a href="#footnote_537" class="fnanchor">[537]</a></span>
-With this practical end in view he ridicules the metaphysical
-researches of “the old Sophists, of whom
-Demokritos said that the number of realities was infinite,
-and Empedokles declared for four, and Ion for not
-more than three, and Alkmaion for only two, and
-Parmenides and Melissos for one, while Gorgias asserted
-that nothing existed at all.”<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_538" id="fnanchor_538"></a><a href="#footnote_538" class="fnanchor">[538]</a></span>
-</p>
-
-<p>In the promises which he makes of imparting to his
-pupils this practical wisdom which he calls philosophy,
-Isokrates is characteristically cautious. An exact
-science, which will embrace all possible questions and
-circumstances which may arise in domestic and political
-<a name="Page_185" id="Page_185"></a><span class="pageno">185</span>
-matters, is an impossibility; men must be content with
-a general capacity of forming a right judgment in view
-of each particular case when it arises. Consequently he
-defines as “wise men,” <ins title="sophoi">σοφοί</ins>, “those whose judgment
-usually hits upon the right course of action,” and as
-“seekers after wisdom” or philosophers, <ins title="philosophoi">φιλόσοφοι</ins>,
-“those who occupy themselves with those studies and
-pursuits from which they will most quickly obtain this
-practical wisdom,”<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_539" id="fnanchor_539"></a><a href="#footnote_539" class="fnanchor">[539]</a></span>
-or capacity of forming correct
-judgments. But a judgment can only be formed
-properly after a proper deliberation: so the work of
-Philosophy is to practise her pupils in this deliberation.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_540" id="fnanchor_540"></a><a href="#footnote_540" class="fnanchor">[540]</a></span>
-</p>
-
-<p>This practice is, of course, provided in the school
-of Isokrates; for his school was, in fact, a debating
-or deliberating society, in which the pupils wrote and
-recited carefully composed speeches on given themes,
-or listened to the harangues of their master. Sometimes
-they discussed events of the day and matters of general
-interest<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_541" id="fnanchor_541"></a><a href="#footnote_541" class="fnanchor">[541]</a></span>
-at the moment; at another time their topic
-was some constitutional or historical question, or the
-comparative merits of different nations and governments.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_542" id="fnanchor_542"></a><a href="#footnote_542" class="fnanchor">[542]</a></span>
-At another time, as may be seen from the example of
-Isokrates’ own orations, they dealt with those mythical
-characters who were historical realities as well as sacred
-personages to the average Hellene, Theseus and Helen
-and Bousiris: this in their eyes was almost equivalent
-to religious instruction and they were virtually writing
-theological essays. No doubt also the pupils wrote
-and recited those “commonplaces” or short essays on
-general topics, composed in a most elaborate style,
-which ancient orators kept in stock, ready to be inserted
-<a name="Page_186" id="Page_186"></a><span class="pageno">186</span>
-in a speech when a suitable opening presented itself.
-Isokrates’ own works are particularly full of these
-highly finished little essays:<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_543" id="fnanchor_543"></a><a href="#footnote_543" class="fnanchor">[543]</a></span>
-so it is at least extremely
-probable that he insisted upon their composition in his
-school. Before his pupils, too, Isokrates would recite
-those fine sermons of his, like the <cite>Demonikos</cite>; and
-effective pieces of moral exhortation they must have
-been.</p>
-
-<p>Thus the Isocratean school claimed to be, and was,
-a school of morals: it was also a school of good style
-and composition. The boys’ essays had to be written
-in a particular style, grandiloquent and ornate, to suit
-their themes. “For it is absurd to suppose that the
-matter and manner of ordinary conversation or of
-forensic oratory are suitable to Pan-Hellenic themes;
-on the contrary, in this kind of speech the thoughts
-must be more original and more lofty, the style more
-striking, and the diction more poetical and elaborate.”<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_544" id="fnanchor_544"></a><a href="#footnote_544" class="fnanchor">[544]</a></span>
-Style, diction, and matter must, in fact, be that which
-Isokrates worked out in his own speeches. That style<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_545" id="fnanchor_545"></a><a href="#footnote_545" class="fnanchor">[545]</a></span>
-I do not mean to discuss here. The fact that he wrote
-in a study and never spoke in public, has made him
-exaggerate the merits of the artistic prose-style of which
-he was the first really great exponent; but of its
-popularity with an Hellenic audience there can be no
-question. The pupils of Isokrates became the most
-eminent politicians and the most eminent prose-writers
-of the time; his house, as Cicero puts it, was the school
-of Hellas and the manufactory of eloquence.</p>
-
-<p>To acquire this kind of oratory, there was need both
-of natural ability and of diligent study. Isokrates
-<a name="Page_187" id="Page_187"></a><span class="pageno">187</span>
-professes to supply, first an exact science of all the
-rhetorical devices and the various forms which speech
-can take, and then practice in the right employment
-and arrangement of these several parts. To learn the
-technique of rhetoric is comparatively easy, if the
-aspirant applies to the right man; but the right use of
-the technique can never be brought under any set of
-rules, or taught by one man to another: it can only be
-learnt by experience. The future orator must try the
-effect of each arrangement and combination of technique
-on the audience, and so draw up his own system.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_546" id="fnanchor_546"></a><a href="#footnote_546" class="fnanchor">[546]</a></span>
-The
-requisite audience for these experiments will be provided
-by the other pupils of the school, with the master
-as chief critic. A good master is essential. By his
-personal influence he will be able to communicate those
-finer elements of style which cannot be communicated
-in formal teaching. If he is worth his salt, all his
-pupils will bear the stamp of his own manner, and will
-easily be distinguished from every one else by the
-similarity of their style to his and to one another’s.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_547" id="fnanchor_547"></a><a href="#footnote_547" class="fnanchor">[547]</a></span>
-Education in rhetoric at Isokrates’ school seems to have
-begun with the study of his own works. In the
-<cite>Panathenaikos</cite> he describes himself as reading the
-speech over with two or three of his regular pupils;
-they revise and criticise it as they go along. This
-would give Isokrates the opportunity of expounding
-his own views of technique, with his own works before
-him as illustrations. It may be inferred from the
-beginning of the <cite>Bousiris</cite> that the written speeches
-of other Sophists were also studied, and their faults, or
-aberrations from Isocratean canons, pointed out, in
-order that they might be avoided in future. At any
-rate, Isokrates complains that other professors of the
-<a name="Page_188" id="Page_188"></a><span class="pageno">188</span>
-same sort of Rhetoric at Athens made use of his
-writings for teaching their own pupils, though, of
-course, according to him, they did so in order to show
-the boys what to admire, not what to avoid. When
-this technique had been fully mastered Isokrates set his
-pupils to write speeches on their own account, choosing
-for them some great and improving theme: in these
-speeches they had to apply the rules which they had
-learnt, and the subtler influences which they had imbibed,
-from their teacher. But they had also to think
-out the subject-matter, and in this lies much of the
-merit of the whole system. For, as Isokrates observes,
-the essayist who writes upon such themes will have to
-think noble thoughts, and select noble deeds as his
-instances and illustrations. This contemplation of what
-is noble will be a greater incentive to virtue than any
-so-called science of ethics:<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_548" id="fnanchor_548"></a><a href="#footnote_548" class="fnanchor">[548]</a></span>
-for there is no science
-which can create goodness in wicked natures, but exhortation
-and persuasion can work wonders. Moreover,
-since the orator’s best argument is, after all, a good
-reputation, the young orator will see that his conduct
-and character are as excellent as possible.<span class="lock"><a href="#footnote_548" class="fnanchor">[548]</a></span>
-And the
-practice of weighing just what thoughts and actions are
-suitable to the speech involves that faculty of sound
-deliberation which is necessary for the formation of
-right judgments. In fact, Isocratean “Philosophy”
-does more to form character than it does to produce
-eloquence.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_549" id="fnanchor_549"></a><a href="#footnote_549" class="fnanchor">[549]</a></span>
-</p>
-
-<p>The pupils practised themselves, as we have seen, by
-delivering their harangues before Isokrates and their
-fellow-pupils. The school formed a select clique of
-trained critics of Rhetoric; the encouragement of
-criticism by this means must have been valuable. To
-<a name="Page_189" id="Page_189"></a><span class="pageno">189</span>
-this council Isokrates submitted his own orations before
-publication; former pupils were also invited to attend
-on these occasions. There is an interesting account of
-such an assembly at the end of the <cite>Panathenaikos</cite>. “I
-was revising the speech as it stands down to this point,”
-Isokrates says, “with three or four of the lads who are
-accustomed to study with me. On reading it through,
-we were satisfied with it and thought it only needed a
-peroration. I determined, however, to send for one of
-those among my pupils who had been brought up in an
-oligarchy and had set themselves to praise Lakedaimon,
-so that he might notice any false charge which we had
-unwittingly brought against the Spartans.” The pupil
-comes, and, while praising the speech enthusiastically,
-makes an unguarded criticism of its matter which led
-to a long discussion, in the course of which he and
-Isokrates deliver lengthy harangues. Finally, the pupil
-is crushed. The boys who had been present throughout
-the discussion were completely convinced by
-Isokrates and applauded him warmly. But the master
-himself was not satisfied. So three or four days later
-he called together all his old pupils who were in
-Athens, and the speech was submitted to their judgment,
-and received with enthusiastic applause. The
-former critic then delivered a brilliant harangue, trying
-to elucidate a hidden meaning in the speech. “The
-crowd of pupils, which is usually ready to applaud,
-shouted, flocked round him, and congratulated him,
-thoroughly agreeing with his eulogy of me,” says
-Isokrates. “I praised him too, but did not reveal
-whether he had hit off my secret meaning or not.”</p>
-
-<p>The whole tone of the passage suggests that such
-an appeal to the pupils for criticism and advice was
-common, the only extraordinary feature being the
-<a name="Page_190" id="Page_190"></a><span class="pageno">190</span>
-presence of the “old boys.” This view is supported
-by other passages. In the <cite>Areiopagitikos</cite><span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_550" id="fnanchor_550"></a><a href="#footnote_550" class="fnanchor">[550]</a></span>
-Isokrates
-tells his imaginary audience that “Some who heard me
-on a former occasion describe this constitution which
-Athens once enjoyed, while praising it enthusiastically
-and calling our ancestors happy,… told me that I
-was not likely to persuade you to adopt it.” On
-another occasion his speech made such an impression
-upon this preliminary audience that “No one praised
-the beauty of the style, as they usually do, but all
-admired the truth of the argument.” When he first
-told his pupils that he meant to send an advisory
-speech to Philip, “they all thought he was mad, and
-had the impudence to rebuke him, a thing which they
-had never done before.… But when they had heard
-the speech, they changed their minds completely and
-thought that Philip, Athens, and all Hellas would alike
-be grateful to him.”<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_551" id="fnanchor_551"></a><a href="#footnote_551" class="fnanchor">[551]</a></span>
-</p>
-
-<p>Isokrates’ great political pamphlets, with their
-wonderfully polished style and their striking themes,
-naturally served him as an excellent advertisement, as
-he naïvely admits in the <cite>Antidosis</cite>. Those who
-required further information about his educational
-methods and aims would turn to the prospectus
-<cite>Against the Sophists</cite>, which he published at the
-beginning of his career. Owing to these attractions,
-pupils came to him from all parts of the Hellenic
-world, from Pontos, Sicily, and Cyprus;<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_552" id="fnanchor_552"></a><a href="#footnote_552" class="fnanchor">[552]</a></span>
-he had
-“more than all the other teachers of philosophy put
-together.”<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_553" id="fnanchor_553"></a><a href="#footnote_553" class="fnanchor">[553]</a></span>
-They were not merely private citizens,
-but statesmen, generals, kings, and tyrants.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_554" id="fnanchor_554"></a><a href="#footnote_554" class="fnanchor">[554]</a></span>
-Probably
-the age at which they came varied greatly, but most
-<a name="Page_191" id="Page_191"></a><span class="pageno">191</span>
-of his actual pupils would probably be between fifteen
-and twenty-one. He often speaks of <ins title="meirakia">μειράκια</ins> as among
-them. Moreover, he speaks of parents bringing their
-sons to him,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_555" id="fnanchor_555"></a><a href="#footnote_555" class="fnanchor">[555]</a></span>
-which they certainly would not do if the
-boys were over eighteen. Public life in the average
-Hellenic state began at twenty; so boys would wish
-to be ready for it by that age. The course at Isokrates’
-school lasted for three or four years.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_556" id="fnanchor_556"></a><a href="#footnote_556" class="fnanchor">[556]</a></span>
-The Athenian
-lad was more or less busy with his military duties from
-eighteen to twenty, so he would probably take the
-course between fourteen and eighteen; natives of other
-states would fit it in according to their local customs.
-The fee for the whole course was 10 mnai, or £40.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_557" id="fnanchor_557"></a><a href="#footnote_557" class="fnanchor">[557]</a></span>
-The story<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_558" id="fnanchor_558"></a><a href="#footnote_558" class="fnanchor">[558]</a></span>
-goes that Demosthenes, having only £8,
-offered to pay that sum for one-fifth of the course.
-But Isokrates replied that he could not sell his philosophy
-in slices; the customer must take the whole fish
-or none at all. Probably, however, the tale is a fiction:
-Isokrates himself claims not to have made any money
-out of his countrymen, and only to have charged his
-foreign pupils.</p>
-
-<p>Since, soon after the opening of his school, he had
-a hundred pupils, the accounts of his great wealth,
-which he repudiated so indignantly, cannot have been
-far wrong, especially as he received 20 talents
-(nearly £5000) for his panegyric on Euagoras. His
-own comparison of his wealth with that of Gorgias,
-who left only £800 at his death, is curious, if the above
-statements are true.</p>
-
-<p>But his pupils, drawn from a class that had sufficient
-substance to live at leisure,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_559" id="fnanchor_559"></a><a href="#footnote_559" class="fnanchor">[559]</a></span>
-seem to have been well
-satisfied with what they got for their money. “At
-<a name="Page_192" id="Page_192"></a><span class="pageno">192</span>
-the end of their time, when they were on the point
-of sailing home to their friends, they so loved their
-life in Athens that they parted from it with tears and
-sighs.” Isokrates kept on friendly terms with them
-afterwards. Thus he writes to Timotheos, tyrant of
-Herakleia and an old pupil, to congratulate him on
-his accession and commend to him another old pupil,
-Autokrator. Then there is the charming letter in
-which he introduces Diodotos, another of his pupils, to
-the Macedonian Antipater, at some personal risk, for
-there was war between Athens and Macedon at the
-time. “I have had many pupils,” the letter runs,
-“some of whom have become great orators, some men
-of action, some great thinkers, some, with no particular
-talents, have at any rate become upright and cultured
-gentlemen: Diodotos combines all these qualities.”</p>
-
-<p>The chief boast of the school of Isokrates was
-that it produced gentlemen. Isokrates defines education
-not as a knowledge of metaphysics and a contemplation
-of the Good, nor yet as technical ability
-in some particular profession, art, or trade, but as a
-sort of culture and polish. “This is my definition of
-the educated man,” he says. “First, he is capable of
-dealing with the ordinary events of life, by possessing a
-happy sense of fitness and a faculty of usually hitting
-upon the right course of action.</p>
-
-<p>“Secondly, his behaviour in any society is always
-correct and proper. If he is thrown with offensive or
-disagreeable company, he can meet it with easy good-temper;
-and he treats every one with the utmost
-fairness and gentleness.</p>
-
-<p>“Thirdly, he always has the mastery over his
-pleasures, and does not give way unduly under misfortune
-and pain, but behaves in such cases with
-<a name="Page_193" id="Page_193"></a><span class="pageno">193</span>
-manliness and worthily of the nature which has been
-given to us.</p>
-
-<p>“Fourthly (the most important point) he is not
-spoilt or puffed up nor is his head turned by success,
-but he continues throughout to behave like a wise
-man, taking less pleasure in the good things which
-chance has given him at birth than in the products of
-his own talents and intelligence.</p>
-
-<p>“Those whose soul is well tuned to play its part in
-all these ways, those I call wise and perfect men, and
-declare to possess all the virtues; those I regard as
-truly educated.”<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_560" id="fnanchor_560"></a><a href="#footnote_560" class="fnanchor">[560]</a></span>
-</p>
-
-<p>Thus the object of Isokrates was rather to impart
-culture and polish to his pupils than to teach them
-rhetoric; it is in this point that he differs from the
-other professors who taught the same sort of rhetoric
-as he did at Athens and have now been forgotten, and
-from the logographoi, who taught the kind of speaking
-which suited the Athenian law-courts, without professing
-to supply anything but a technical knowledge of
-their particular subject.</p>
-
-<p>In an Athenian trial the prosecutor and defendant
-had each to deliver a speech for themselves; afterwards,
-regular advocates might address the jury in some cases,
-but this was rare. So the duty of an Athenian lawyer
-was simply to write speeches for his clients to deliver,
-not to speak himself. Thus the metic Lusias, who
-had no right to speak in a court himself, was a famous
-lawyer, or logographos, speech-writer, as the Hellenes
-called him.</p>
-
-<p>Mantitheos, say, finds himself involved in a lawsuit.
-He comes to Lusias and explains the circumstances.
-Lusias masters the details, looks up the laws on the
-<a name="Page_194" id="Page_194"></a><span class="pageno">194</span>
-question, and studies his client’s age, character, and so
-forth. He then writes a speech sufficiently dramatised
-to come naturally from Mantitheos’ mouth. In composing
-it he will simulate the indignation which he
-supposes his client to feel, he will adopt the nonchalant
-air of injured innocence which Mantitheos showed in
-telling the story, and so on, till the speech is a real
-bit of dramatisation like the speeches in a tragedy.
-When composed, the speech would be carried off by
-Mantitheos, learnt by heart, and duly recited. It is
-all a bit of acting on Lusias’ part. The habit of
-simulating feelings when writing speeches was dangerous,
-when the logographos came forward to speak in his
-own person on some question. Demosthenes never
-quite escapes the suspicion of acting and posing, even
-in his most impressive moments.</p>
-
-<p>Besides these clients, the Athenian lawyers had
-permanent pupils, who either intended to be lawyers
-themselves or thought the study would help them in
-a political life. Their methods of teaching, as may
-be seen from Plato’s <cite>Phaidros</cite>, resembled those of
-Isokrates. In the dialogue called by his name, Phaidros
-is going out to walk off the effects of sitting indoors
-too long.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_561" id="fnanchor_561"></a><a href="#footnote_561" class="fnanchor">[561]</a></span>
-He had been listening to Lusias, “the
-cleverest speech-writer of the age,” reciting one of his
-speeches, on which he had spent much labour. Phaidros
-had made him repeat it several times, and has now
-borrowed the book in order to learn it by heart during
-his walk. Sokrates persuades him to read it aloud, in
-doing which he is quite carried away by its eloquence.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_562" id="fnanchor_562"></a><a href="#footnote_562" class="fnanchor">[562]</a></span>
-Sokrates then proceeds to criticise the style and
-matter of the speech,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_563" id="fnanchor_563"></a><a href="#footnote_563" class="fnanchor">[563]</a></span>
-and to compose one of his
-<a name="Page_195" id="Page_195"></a><span class="pageno">195</span>
-own on the same subject to show how it ought to be
-treated.</p>
-
-<p>This reveals the method of teaching. The teacher,
-as here and in Isokrates’ case, recites a speech of his
-own, explaining how it was done and asking for
-criticism from the pupils. Then the pupil would learn
-it by heart and declaim it in some solitary place. On
-other occasions, as Sokrates does here, the master would
-take the speech of some rival professor and criticise it
-severely, composing a better speech himself. The
-<cite>Bousiris</cite> and <cite>Helen</cite> of Isokrates show this method.
-Or else the pupil replied to the teacher, or the
-teacher wrote two speeches on opposite sides of the
-question. The extant work of Antiphon and the lost
-work of Gorgias<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_564" id="fnanchor_564"></a><a href="#footnote_564" class="fnanchor">[564]</a></span>
-are of this type.</p>
-
-<p>Most of the Attic orators seem to have taken pupils.
-Isaios taught Demosthenes. Demosthenes in his turn
-seems to have had great popularity as a teacher. He
-“promises to teach young men the art of speaking”;<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_565" id="fnanchor_565"></a><a href="#footnote_565" class="fnanchor">[565]</a></span>
-“he filled Aristarchos with empty hopes of becoming
-the prince of orators all in a moment”;<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_566" id="fnanchor_566"></a><a href="#footnote_566" class="fnanchor">[566]</a></span>
- “he invited
-some of his pupils to come and listen to the speech
-<cite>On the False Embassy</cite>, promising to show them how to
-cheat and mislead the audience”;<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_567" id="fnanchor_567"></a><a href="#footnote_567" class="fnanchor">[567]</a></span>
- “later on he will
-brag before his boys of his tricks.” These passages
-give an interesting picture of Demosthenes and
-his pupils, as seen through his opponent’s green
-spectacles.</p>
-
-<p class="center">* * * * *</p>
-
-<p>In opposition to the schools of Rhetoric stood the
-schools of Philosophy, leading their pupils towards the
-life of retirement and contemplation and away from the
-<a name="Page_196" id="Page_196"></a><span class="pageno">196</span>
-strenuous life of political and social activity.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_568" id="fnanchor_568"></a><a href="#footnote_568" class="fnanchor">[568]</a></span>
-We
-have seen that there were many professors of Philosophy
-at Athens in Isokrates’ time, charging fees of three or four
-mnai for their course. But only one of them is known
-to posterity, and he gave lessons gratis. Otherwise,
-Plato must be taken as a member of a class, albeit the
-most brilliant member. The teaching of Plato centred,
-as is well known, round the Akademeia. Plato possessed
-a house and garden, which he bequeathed to his school,
-between that gymnasium and Kolonos. When he and
-his pupils wished to be private they could withdraw into
-his gardens; otherwise they frequented the Akademeia,
-from which their school took its name. It was not
-every one who could obtain admission to the school,
-for, as Plato taught gratuitously, he could pick and
-choose his pupils. He expected would-be students to
-be well grounded in Geometry: there must have been
-some sort of entrance-examination. His successor,
-Xenokrates, finding that an applicant was ignorant of
-Music, Geometry, and Astronomy, told him to go away:
-“for you give philosophy no chance of getting a grip
-upon you.”<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_569" id="fnanchor_569"></a><a href="#footnote_569" class="fnanchor">[569]</a></span>
-The inner circle of the school had their
-meals in common: the banquets were extremely plain.
-Timotheos, the Athenian general, who was accustomed
-to rich living, after having been a guest at one of these
-meals, remarked, on meeting Plato next day, “Your
-suppers are more pleasant on the following day than
-they are at the time.”<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_570" id="fnanchor_570"></a><a href="#footnote_570" class="fnanchor">[570]</a></span>
-After the meal, a larger
-number of friends probably came in; this, at any rate,
-was a custom at the similar meetings held by the
-philosopher Menedemos a generation later.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_571" id="fnanchor_571"></a><a href="#footnote_571" class="fnanchor">[571]</a></span>
-The discourse
-often went on all night. There was a fixed code
-<a name="Page_197" id="Page_197"></a><span class="pageno">197</span>
-of rules to regulate these meals,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_572" id="fnanchor_572"></a><a href="#footnote_572" class="fnanchor">[572]</a></span>
-which is suggestive of
-Plato’s pleasantries in the <cite>Laws</cite> about the educational
-value of strictly regulated bouts of intoxication. But
-drunkenness was, of course, not allowed: Plato had a
-particular objection to it, and used to tell drunkards to
-look in the looking-glass and they would never err in
-that way again.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_573" id="fnanchor_573"></a><a href="#footnote_573" class="fnanchor">[573]</a></span>
-It offended his strict canons of
-physical beauty and propriety. It is interesting to note
-that the author of the <cite>Republic</cite> admitted women on
-terms of equality to this inner circle of the Akademeia,
-in defiance of Athenian prejudice. Lastheneia of
-Mantineia and Axiothea of Phlious, who dressed in
-male attire, are the first champions of women’s rights
-to a University education who appear in history.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_574" id="fnanchor_574"></a><a href="#footnote_574" class="fnanchor">[574]</a></span>
-The
-discussions of this clique were probably conducted after
-the model of the Platonic dialogue, and doubtless were
-in Plato’s mind when in the <cite>Laws</cite> he constructed
-his curious ethical and political debating-society for the
-older and wiser members of his state.</p>
-
-<p>But admission to these mysteries must have been
-reserved for comparatively few, personal friends and
-mature thinkers: the members formed rather a private
-club than an educational system. The young Athenian
-who wished, when his primary education was finished,
-to study philosophy under Plato, had two means open
-to him: there were lectures in various public places;
-there was also a school for lads in the Akademeia.</p>
-
-<p>The only lecture,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_575" id="fnanchor_575"></a><a href="#footnote_575" class="fnanchor">[575]</a></span>
-of which any very definite trace
-is left, was not a great success from the educational
-point of view. Plato announced beforehand that
-his subject would be “The Good.” A great crowd
-<a name="Page_198" id="Page_198"></a><span class="pageno">198</span>
-collected, expecting to hear a neat Isocratean discussion
-of such things as Health, Wealth, Friendship, which
-were popularly considered to be rival claimants for the
-title of the Good. But Plato began to talk about
-arithmetic and geometry and astronomy, and discussed
-the One as the Good. The whole lecture was couched
-in enigmatical language. The majority of the audience
-went away in despair.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_576" id="fnanchor_576"></a><a href="#footnote_576" class="fnanchor">[576]</a></span>
-Only practised Platonists like
-Aristotle and Herakleides and Hestiaios did their best
-to understand the lecture, and took notes. The whole
-idea of a “popular lecture” must have been repugnant
-to Plato. In his view, knowledge was only for the few,
-who, starting with great natural abilities, could devote
-themselves for years at a time to continual study and
-research. The pupil must be talented to start with:
-he must undergo a long course of preparatory studies
-in Logic and Mathematics: only when middle-aged
-might he approach the inner mysteries of Philosophy.
-Holding such educational ideas as these, Plato naturally
-made his lectures unintelligible to all but a few: his
-main subject for public exposition seems to have been
-that curious mathematical metaphysic which Aristotle
-combats as Platonic, although it is nowhere found in
-the extant dialogues. By reading the <cite>Metaphysics</cite> of
-Aristotle the modern inquirer can perhaps realise how
-difficult Plato’s lectures must have been.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_577" id="fnanchor_577"></a><a href="#footnote_577" class="fnanchor">[577]</a></span>
-</p>
-
-<p>At the school in the Akademeia, Plato seems to have
-instructed his lads chiefly in Logic and Mathematics.
-Logic consisted chiefly of definitions, such as those for
-which Sokrates was always hunting, and that curious
-<a name="Page_199" id="Page_199"></a><span class="pageno">199</span>
-process of “division” which is exemplified at such
-length in the <cite>Sophist</cite> and <cite>Politikos</cite>. Diogenes
-Laertius<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_578" id="fnanchor_578"></a><a href="#footnote_578" class="fnanchor">[578]</a></span>
-gives a long catalogue of such divisions, of
-which only a few can be found in extant works: the
-rest must have figured in the school, and survived as
-traditions in the commentaries. A comic poet has left
-a picture of the logic school at work<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_579" id="fnanchor_579"></a><a href="#footnote_579" class="fnanchor">[579]</a>:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<p class="blockquote">“<span class="decoration">A.</span> What of Plato and Speusippos and Menedemos?
-Upon what are they now engaged? What is their
-thought? What argument is investigated among them?
-Tell me, I pray, if you know.</p>
-
-<p class="blockquote">“<span class="decoration">B.</span> I can tell you clearly. For at the Panathenaia
-I saw a herd (<ins title="agelê">ἀγέλη</ins>: note the Spartan word) of lads
-in the gymnasium of the Akademeia, and listened to
-strange, portentous arguments. They were drawing
-up definitions about natural history. They separated
-the life of animals and the nature of trees and the tribes
-of vegetables: then, among these last, they inquired to
-what tribe the cucumber belonged.… First of all
-they stood speechless, and, putting their heads down,
-thought for a long time. Then suddenly, while the
-lads still had their heads down, and were thinking, one
-of them said it was a circular vegetable, another declared
-that it was a herb, another suggested a tree. A Sicilian
-Doctor who was present ridiculed them most rudely.
-But the lads took no notice; and Plato, very gently
-and without losing his temper at all, told them to try
-again to define the species to which it belonged. So
-they began their divisions again.”</p>
-
-<p>In the <cite>Sophist</cite> the mysterious stranger divides
-Art into (1) creative or productive, (2) acquisitive.
-Then acquisitive art into (1) acquisition by exchange,
-(2) acquisition by capture. Then the art which acquires
-<a name="Page_200" id="Page_200"></a><span class="pageno">200</span>
-its object by capture is divided into public or competitive
-and secret or hunting. Then, when hunting has been
-duly divided and subdivided, a definition of angling is
-obtained. In the parody by Epikrates, the same process
-is employed in order to define “cucumber,” although
-the stages are, of course, confused. A cucumber is a
-form of life. Life is divided into animals and vegetation:
-vegetation into trees and vegetables. Then the
-doubt arises, to which half does the cucumber belong.
-Some of the pupils say it is a vegetable, some a tree.
-So the lesson begins again.</p>
-
-<p>Plato’s pupils seem to have been expected to take
-great care of their personal appearance: their neatness
-is a common butt of contemporary comedians<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_580" id="fnanchor_580"></a><a href="#footnote_580" class="fnanchor">[580]</a>:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="i0">Then rose a smart young man from the Akademeia</div>
- <div class="i0">Of Plato.…</div>
- <div class="i0">His hair was neatly smoothed, his foot was neatly</div>
- <div class="i0">Laced in the sandal, bound with even lengths</div>
- <div class="i0">Of shoe-lace curved about his ankle-bones:</div>
- <div class="i0">And neat the corselet of his weighty cloak.</div>
- </div><!--end poem-->
-</div><!--end container-->
-
-<p class="unindent">And again:</p>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="i0"><span class="decoration">A.</span> Who’s that old fellow yonder, do you know?</div>
- <div class="i0"><span class="decoration">B.</span> He looks a Hellene, wears a mantle white,</div>
- <div class="i1">A fair grey tunic, little soft felt hat,</div>
- <div class="i1">A well-tuned<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_581" id="fnanchor_581"></a><a href="#footnote_581" class="fnanchor">[581]</a></span>
-staff, in fact, to put it short,</div>
- <div class="i1">’Tis like a glimpse of the “Academy.”<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_582" id="fnanchor_582"></a><a href="#footnote_582" class="fnanchor">[582]</a></span></div>
- </div><!--end poem-->
-</div><!--end container-->
-
-<p>Of Plato himself, as he walked up and down among
-his pupils, wrestling with intellectual difficulties, several
-pictures survive in literature. A character in Alexis<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_583" id="fnanchor_583"></a><a href="#footnote_583" class="fnanchor">[583]</a></span>
-remarks to a friend who has come to visit him:</p>
-
-<a name="Page_201" id="Page_201"></a><span class="pageno">201</span>
-<div class="poem-container">
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="i0">You’ve come in the nick of time. I’m in a fix.</div>
- <div class="i0">Though walking up and down, like Plato, I’ve</div>
- <div class="i0">Found nothing clever: but my legs are tired.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_584" id="fnanchor_584"></a><a href="#footnote_584" class="fnanchor">[584]</a></span></div>
- </div><!--end poem-->
-</div><!--end container-->
-
-<p>Amphis, in his <cite>Dexidemides</cite>, said:</p>
-
-<p class="blockquote">Plato, all you can do is to frown, drawing up your eyebrows
-severely, like a shellfish.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_585" id="fnanchor_585"></a><a href="#footnote_585" class="fnanchor">[585]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The psychological yearning of the <cite>Phaidon</cite>, perpetually
-interrupted by cold currents of scepticism,
-must have found an echo in Plato’s school-teaching, as
-the following dialogues from Comedy show<span class="lock"><a href="#footnote_585" class="fnanchor">[585]</a>:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="i0"><span class="decoration">A.</span><span class="ss" style="width:5em"> </span>My mortal frame grew dry:</div>
- <div class="i1">My deathless part rushed forth into the air.</div>
- <div class="i0"><span class="decoration">B.</span> Why, bless us, are we in the school of Plato?</div>
- </div><!--end poem-->
-</div><!--end container-->
-
-<p class="unindent">And</p>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="i0"><span class="decoration">A.</span> You’re a man, clearly, and have got a soul.</div>
- <div class="i0"><span class="decoration">B.</span> Like Plato, I don’t know but I suspect it.<span class="lock"><a href="#footnote_585" class="fnanchor">[585]</a></span></div>
- </div><!--end poem-->
-</div><!--end container-->
-
-<p>Of discipline in the Akademeia under Plato nothing
-is known: the following story<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_586" id="fnanchor_586"></a><a href="#footnote_586" class="fnanchor">[586]</a></span>
-belongs to the school
-a little after his death. A certain Polemon agreed with
-some young friends of his, who attended the school,
-that he would rush into the room during the lesson,
-drunk and garlanded. This he carried out. But the
-teacher, Xenokrates, went calmly on with his lecture,
-which happened to deal with Sobriety. This conduct
-quite overcame Polemon, and he became a most diligent
-pupil, and finally succeeded Xenokrates as teacher.</p>
-
-<p>Of Plato’s affection for his pupils, his own poems
-afford sufficient proof. One of them was named Aster,
-or Star. One day, as the lad was studying the heavens,
-his master wrote the following epigram about <span class="lock">him:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<a name="Page_202" id="Page_202"></a><span class="pageno">202</span>
-<div class="poem-container">
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="i0">Star of my soul, thou gazest</div>
- <div class="i1">Upon the starry skies;</div>
- <div class="i0">I envy Heaven, that watches</div>
- <div class="i1">Thy face with countless eyes.</div>
- </div><!--end poem-->
-</div><!--end container-->
-
-<p class="unindent">And when he died, Plato wrote his epitaph:</p>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="i0">Thou wert the morning Star among the living,</div>
- <div class="i1">Ere thy fair light had fled:</div>
- <div class="i0">Now, being dead, thou art as Hesperus, giving</div>
- <div class="i1">New splendour to the dead.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_587" id="fnanchor_587"></a><a href="#footnote_587" class="fnanchor">[587]</a></span></div>
- </div><!--end poem-->
-</div><!--end container-->
-
-<p class="unindent">Additional evidence is given by his efforts on behalf of
-Dionusios and Dion, which led him into so many perils
-in Sicily.</p>
-
-<p>Plato was teaching in Athens almost continually
-from 388 till 347. His pupils included, no doubt, many
-of the chief men of the day: Chabrias, Iphikrates,
-Hupereides, Phokion, Lukourgos, and Demosthenes
-are mentioned, besides the philosophers Speusippos,
-Xenokrates, Herakleides of Pontos, and Aristotle.
-But posterity ascribed pupils recklessly to all the great
-teachers of antiquity, so the catalogue carries little
-weight. It is interesting to observe that the school as
-a whole was attacked for producing tyrants: the bitter
-description of the miseries of tyranny in the <cite>Republic</cite>
-are at once a sad reflection upon former pupils and a
-warning to those whom he was instructing at the time.
-But the Philosopher-king, who embodied Plato’s ideal
-form of Government, may well have had a corrupting
-influence upon the pupils. Dion, the philosopher and
-patriot who became a tyrant, is an interesting commentary
-upon the <cite>Republic</cite>.</p>
-
-<p>Teaching in the Akademeia was given gratuitously;
-but those who were so disposed might give presents to
-<a name="Page_203" id="Page_203"></a><span class="pageno">203</span>
-their teacher. Dionusios presented Plato with over
-80 talents.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_588" id="fnanchor_588"></a><a href="#footnote_588" class="fnanchor">[588]</a></span>
-</p>
-
-<p>The school of Aristotle in the Lukeion differed
-little in its methods from the school of Plato in the
-Akademeia. He had been a pupil of Plato for twenty
-years before he began to teach on his own account.
-He used to give instruction walking up and down in
-the walks of the Lukeion. In his earlier period, at any
-rate, he seems to have taught rhetoric, and taught it in
-Isocratean fashion: we hear of him setting a theme,
-on which he and the pupils delivered harangues “in
-rhetorical fashion.” Later the school became a home
-of universal knowledge and research; in this respect
-Aristotle is the heir of the much-abused Sophists. He
-adopted Xenokrates’ custom of appointing one of the
-pupils to be Archon of the school for ten days, and
-then another: this system must have relieved him of
-much petty business.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_589" id="fnanchor_589"></a><a href="#footnote_589" class="fnanchor">[589]</a></span>
-He delivered two courses of
-lectures daily: one in the morning on abstruse subjects
-to picked pupils; and the other in the afternoon, open
-to all comers and more intelligible in matter and manner.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_590" id="fnanchor_590"></a><a href="#footnote_590" class="fnanchor">[590]</a></span>
-His fame as a teacher was sufficient to win him the
-honour of being chosen to be Alexander’s tutor, and
-he seems to have retained his pupil’s respect, if not
-perhaps his affection. Aristotle, dreaming of a tiny
-city-state, and Alexander, dreaming of a world-empire
-and carrying out his dream, are an ill-assorted pair.
-What would Plato have given for the chance of
-educating such a Philosopher-king?</p>
-
-<p>That there were bitter feuds between the various
-educational leaders in Athens, goes without saying. A
-<a name="Page_204" id="Page_204"></a><span class="pageno">204</span>
-Hellene could no more brook a rival than could an
-Italian of the Renaissance. Isokrates attacks Plato,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_591" id="fnanchor_591"></a><a href="#footnote_591" class="fnanchor">[591]</a></span>
-Plato Isokrates, and then their pupils take the quarrel
-on into the next generation. Both attack with equal
-animus the wandering Sophists and the Eristics, who
-retaliated with vigour. A would-be pupil must have
-found it hard to choose a professor under whom to
-study, when so much evil had been spoken of them all.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_592" id="fnanchor_592"></a><a href="#footnote_592" class="fnanchor">[592]</a></span>
-</p>
-
-<p class="center">* * * * *</p>
-
-<p>The schools of Rhetoric and of Philosophy were
-only for the rich and the leisured classes: the poor had
-neither the time nor the money requisite for attending
-them. But they were not wholly debarred from the
-higher knowledge. There were still Sophists lecturing
-for advertisement in public places. Still more, there
-were books, which were beginning to be both numerous
-and cheap: every Athenian could read. How important
-a part books were beginning to take in national
-education may be seen from the works of Isokrates and
-Plato, who are both excessively indignant at the intrusion
-of such a rival.</p>
-
-<p>“I know that what is read has less power of persuasion
-than what is heard. It is universally believed that
-a speech, if actually delivered, deals with serious and
-important subjects; but if only written and never
-spoken, it is supposed to aim merely at effect and the
-fulfilment of a contract. This opinion is quite reasonable.
-For the written speech is deprived of the prestige
-of the author’s presence and of his voice and of the
-proper rhetorical delivery: it is read when the occasion
-which called it forth is past, and the points which it
-<a name="Page_205" id="Page_205"></a><span class="pageno">205</span>
-discusses are consequently less interesting. The slave
-who reads it aloud puts no character into it, but drones
-it out as though he were reckoning up the items of a
-bill.” Such is Isokrates’ view, somewhat freely translated,
-of “the written word,” which his shyness
-compelled him to use instead of the spoken, and he
-beseeches Philip of Macedon, whom he is addressing,
-to put aside the usual prejudice against writings.</p>
-
-<p>Plato regarded the written word with even greater
-contempt. To him it is the cause of forgetfulness;
-those who employ writing learn to rely on their notes,
-not on their memory, and are accustomed to register
-their impressions on tables of wax, not of the mind.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_593" id="fnanchor_593"></a><a href="#footnote_593" class="fnanchor">[593]</a></span>
-Again, it is impossible for an author to control the
-circulation of his works; they may reach those for
-whom they are not intended.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_594" id="fnanchor_594"></a><a href="#footnote_594" class="fnanchor">[594]</a></span>
-For Plato expects
-speaker and writer alike to express only what is suitable
-to their audience; the teacher must, by a study of
-psychology, know what arguments will do good and
-what will do harm to each particular pupil. But a
-book cannot impart knowledge, in the Platonic sense
-of the word, at all; for it is unable to answer questions
-or to explain its author’s meaning when the reader fails
-to follow.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_595" id="fnanchor_595"></a><a href="#footnote_595" class="fnanchor">[595]</a></span>
-Comprehension of a fact or of a statement
-made on a writer’s authority, without comprehension
-of the meaning and the explanation, is not knowledge.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_596" id="fnanchor_596"></a><a href="#footnote_596" class="fnanchor">[596]</a></span>
-Consequently, not even a lecture<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_597" id="fnanchor_597"></a><a href="#footnote_597" class="fnanchor">[597]</a></span>
-or a sermon, far less
-a book whose author is absent or dead, can impart
-knowledge; to gain this, long study and a severe course
-of dialectic are essential. The possessor of true knowledge
-<a name="Page_206" id="Page_206"></a><span class="pageno">206</span>
-must be able to defend his view against any
-opposing arguments and to support it by discussion
-himself:<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_598" id="fnanchor_598"></a><a href="#footnote_598" class="fnanchor">[598]</a></span>
-neither book nor lecture can give this intimate
-acquaintance with every point of view. Moreover,
-teaching is like agriculture. There are different soils
-and different minds. The seed of knowledge will bear
-different fruit in different soils, and there are types of
-minds in which some particular seeds must not be sown
-at all. Thus the same teacher will produce quite
-different philosophical results in different minds: just
-as Sokrates did with his various pupils. It is the
-development of the individual intellect and aptitudes
-of each pupil, not the inculcation of his own theories,
-that is the teacher’s true object.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_599" id="fnanchor_599"></a><a href="#footnote_599" class="fnanchor">[599]</a></span>
-Consequently, even
-a consistent scheme of dogmas is wrong for educational
-purposes; for it may suit the intellect of the teacher
-himself, but it cannot suit all his pupils.</p>
-
-<p>Hence, in order to be consistent with his own
-educational ideals, Plato makes his works inconsistent:
-they are not a body of rigid dogmas. Also, he provides
-in them just that discussion which he notes as lacking
-in most books; it is possible to ask his books a certain
-number of questions, for he anticipates and answers
-them himself in the dialogue. In this way he makes
-his words pass through the alembic<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_600" id="fnanchor_600"></a><a href="#footnote_600" class="fnanchor">[600]</a></span>
-of each pupil’s
-brain, and come out according to the type of mind
-through which they have passed. There is no enforcement
-of authority in true Platonism.</p>
-
-<p>Plato refused to publish any philosophy in his own
-name. By speaking through the mouth of others, he
-could vary his attitudes just as he wished. The written
-word, he declares, must necessarily contain much trifling.
-<a name="Page_207" id="Page_207"></a><span class="pageno">207</span>
-Its composition is a good amusement for leisure hours.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_601" id="fnanchor_601"></a><a href="#footnote_601" class="fnanchor">[601]</a></span>
-Its one use is that it serves to remind the writer of
-what he knows already, when the forgetfulness of old
-age comes upon him. But the writer is quite worthless
-if he possesses nothing better in his mind than what
-he has written on paper,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_602" id="fnanchor_602"></a><a href="#footnote_602" class="fnanchor">[602]</a></span>
- “twisting words up and
-down, glueing them together and pulling them
-apart.”<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_603" id="fnanchor_603"></a><a href="#footnote_603" class="fnanchor">[603]</a></span>
-</p>
-
-<p>Books, however, were already serious rivals to
-personal intercourse, as a means of education. The
-libraries founded by Peisistratos at Athens and by
-Polukrates at Samos were, it is true, almost certainly
-fabulous; for Euripides was satirised for possessing a
-collection of books, so it must have been a novelty in
-his time. Books were probably very rare before the
-Periclean age, but then they multiplied with great
-rapidity. The children used them in the schools.
-Schoolmasters were expected to possess them: Alkibiades
-beat one for not having a copy of Homer. The
-comic poet Alexis makes Herakles’ master, Linos, possess
-copies of Orpheus, Hesiod, the tragedians, Choirilos,
-Homer, Epicharmos, and all sorts of prose works, including
-a cookery-book. A cargo of books was wrecked at
-Salmudessos,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_604" id="fnanchor_604"></a><a href="#footnote_604" class="fnanchor">[604]</a></span>
-a fact which points to a large book-trade
-in Hellenic waters. Euthudemos, the companion of
-Sokrates, possessed a fine collection of the best-known
-poets and Sophists, including the works of Homer.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_605" id="fnanchor_605"></a><a href="#footnote_605" class="fnanchor">[605]</a></span>
-Sokrates suggests that he may be collecting his books
-in order to learn Medicine, on which subject there
-were many treatises, or Architecture or Geometry or
-<a name="Page_208" id="Page_208"></a><span class="pageno">208</span>
-Astronomy. This shows how handbooks dealing with
-all manner of subjects were multiplying.</p>
-
-<p>Xenophon’s treatise on <cite>The Horse</cite> had been preceded
-by a similar work by Simon;<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_606" id="fnanchor_606"></a><a href="#footnote_606" class="fnanchor">[606]</a></span>
-he himself also
-wrote on <cite>Hunting</cite>, on <cite>The Duties of a Cavalry Officer</cite>,
-on <cite>The Management of a Farm</cite>, and <cite>The Constitution
-of Sparta</cite>, besides his more definitely historical and
-philosophical works. His <cite>Education of Kuros</cite> conceals
-a treatise on the duties of a general. The subjects are
-significant of the new movement; for earlier Hellenes
-had supposed that Homer and Hesiod taught the whole
-art of agriculture and generalship. Other agricultural
-treatises, containing much theory but very little practical
-knowledge, were also in circulation.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_607" id="fnanchor_607"></a><a href="#footnote_607" class="fnanchor">[607]</a></span>
-Later in the
-fourth century Aineias the Tactician contributed a
-manual for generals. Medical treatises emanated in
-great numbers from the school of Hippokrates, and
-probably from elsewhere. Chares and Apollodoros
-published works on Husbandry,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_608" id="fnanchor_608"></a><a href="#footnote_608" class="fnanchor">[608]</a></span>
-Mithaikos a <cite>Sicilian
-Cookery-Book</cite>,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_609" id="fnanchor_609"></a><a href="#footnote_609" class="fnanchor">[609]</a></span>
-Metrodoros a book of Homeric allegories.
-Books of travels and geography are also
-mentioned by Aristotle.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_610" id="fnanchor_610"></a><a href="#footnote_610" class="fnanchor">[610]</a></span>
-Handbooks on “Rhetoric”
-were first compiled by Korax and Tisias: they dealt
-with the subject of “arguments from probability.”
-Show pieces were written by Antiphon and Gorgias. A
-treatise by Polos upon the systematic arrangement of a
-speech was read by Sokrates. Thrasumachos published
-a work upon <cite>Appeals to Compassion</cite>.</p>
-
-<p>The prices were probably not high, for the labour of
-copying could be cheaply performed by means of slaves.
-Sokrates, in the Platonic Apology,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_611" id="fnanchor_611"></a><a href="#footnote_611" class="fnanchor">[611]</a></span>
-mentions that a
-<a name="Page_209" id="Page_209"></a><span class="pageno">209</span>
-copy of Anaxagoras could sometimes be picked up for
-a drachma; and there is no reason to suppose that
-Anaxagoras was particularly cheap. If this was an
-average price, books must have been within the reach
-of most Athenians.</p>
-
-<p class="p2 footnote"> <a name="footnote_529" id="footnote_529"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_529"><span class="muchsmaller">[529]</span></a>
-Isokrates clearly felt them to be his educational rivals. See <cite><abbr title="Antidemocracy">Antid.</abbr></cite> 310 <span class="sc lowercase">A</span>, and
-the end of the <cite><abbr title="Panegyricus">Paneg.</abbr></cite></p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_530" id="footnote_530"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_530"><span class="muchsmaller">[530]</span></a>
-There is a sketch of them in <abbr title="Isokrates">Isok.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Panathenaikos">Panath.</abbr></cite> 236 <span class="sc lowercase">C</span>; to a lecture on Homer
-three or four of them had appended an attack upon Isokrates.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_531" id="footnote_531"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_531"><span class="muchsmaller">[531]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Isokrates">Isok.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Antidemocracy">Antid.</abbr></cite> 99.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_532" id="footnote_532"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_532"><span class="muchsmaller">[532]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Isokrates">Isok.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Sophist">Soph.</abbr></cite> 10. 293 <span class="sc lowercase">A</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_533" id="footnote_533"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_533"><span class="muchsmaller">[533]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Isokrates">Isok.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Sophist">Soph.</abbr></cite> 4. 291 <span class="sc lowercase">D</span>. <abbr title="Compare">Cp.</abbr> the modern “caution-money.”</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_534" id="footnote_534"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_534"><span class="muchsmaller">[534]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Isokrates">Isok.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Panathenaikos">Pan.</abbr></cite> 26. 238 <span class="sc lowercase">A</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_535" id="footnote_535"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_535"><span class="muchsmaller">[535]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Isokrates">Isok.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Antidemocracy">Antid.</abbr></cite> 118. 265.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_536" id="footnote_536"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_536"><span class="muchsmaller">[536]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Isokrates">Isok.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Panathenaikos">Panath.</abbr></cite> 238 <span class="sc lowercase">D</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_537" id="footnote_537"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_537"><span class="muchsmaller">[537]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Isokrates">Isok.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Antidemocracy">Antid.</abbr></cite> 118. 266.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_538" id="footnote_538"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_538"><span class="muchsmaller">[538]</span></a>
-<cite>Ibid.</cite> 118. 268.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_539" id="footnote_539"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_539"><span class="muchsmaller">[539]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Isokrates">Isok.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Antidemocracy">Antid.</abbr></cite> 118. 268.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_540" id="footnote_540"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_540"><span class="muchsmaller">[540]</span></a>
-<cite>Ibid.</cite> 91.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_541" id="footnote_541"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_541"><span class="muchsmaller">[541]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Isokrates">Isok.</abbr> letter to Alexander.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_542" id="footnote_542"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_542"><span class="muchsmaller">[542]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Isokrates">Isok.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Panathenaikos">Panath.</abbr></cite> 275. It is noticeable how many of his pupils became historians&mdash;Ephoros,
-Theopompos, Androtion, Asklepiades.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_543" id="footnote_543"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_543"><span class="muchsmaller">[543]</span></a>
-See, for example, “On Slander “(<cite><abbr title="Antidemocracy">Antid.</abbr></cite> 313 <span class="sc lowercase">E</span>), “On Speech” (115. 255).</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_544" id="footnote_544"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_544"><span class="muchsmaller">[544]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Isokrates">Isok.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Antidemocracy">Antid.</abbr></cite> 48.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_545" id="footnote_545"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_545"><span class="muchsmaller">[545]</span></a>
-For a complete analysis of it, see Jebb’s <cite>Attic Orators</cite>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_546" id="footnote_546"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_546"><span class="muchsmaller">[546]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Isokrates">Isok.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="against">ag.</abbr> <abbr title="Sophist">Soph.</abbr></cite> 294 <span class="sc lowercase">C</span>; <cite><abbr title="Antidemocracy">Antid.</abbr></cite> 91-93, etc.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_547" id="footnote_547"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_547"><span class="muchsmaller">[547]</span></a>
-<cite>Ibid.</cite> 294 <span class="sc lowercase">E</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_548" id="footnote_548"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_548"><span class="muchsmaller">[548]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Isokrates">Isok.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Antidemocracy">Antid.</abbr></cite> 121.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_549" id="footnote_549"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_549"><span class="muchsmaller">[549]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Isokrates">Isok.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="against">ag.</abbr> <abbr title="Sophist">Soph.</abbr></cite> 295 <span class="sc lowercase">D</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_550" id="footnote_550"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_550"><span class="muchsmaller">[550]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Isokrates">Isok.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Areiopagitikos">Areiop.</abbr></cite> 151 <span class="sc lowercase">B</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_551" id="footnote_551"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_551"><span class="muchsmaller">[551]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Isokrates">Isok.</abbr> <cite>Philip</cite>, 85, 86.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_552" id="footnote_552"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_552"><span class="muchsmaller">[552]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Isokrates">Isok.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Antidemocracy">Antid.</abbr></cite> 106.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_553" id="footnote_553"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_553"><span class="muchsmaller">[553]</span></a>
-<cite>Ibid.</cite> 318 <span class="sc lowercase">C</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_554" id="footnote_554"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_554"><span class="muchsmaller">[554]</span></a>
-<cite>Ibid.</cite> 316 <span class="sc lowercase">C</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_555" id="footnote_555"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_555"><span class="muchsmaller">[555]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Isokrates">Isok.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Antidemocracy">Antid.</abbr></cite> 110.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_556" id="footnote_556"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_556"><span class="muchsmaller">[556]</span></a>
-<cite>Ibid.</cite> 62.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_557" id="footnote_557"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_557"><span class="muchsmaller">[557]</span></a>
-[<abbr title="Demosthenes">Demos.</abbr>] <cite>Lakritos</cite>, 15 and 42.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_558" id="footnote_558"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_558"><span class="muchsmaller">[558]</span></a>
-[Plutarch] <cite>Ten Orators</cite>, 837.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_559" id="footnote_559"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_559"><span class="muchsmaller">[559]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Isokrates">Isok.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Antidemocracy">Antid.</abbr></cite> 129.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_560" id="footnote_560"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_560"><span class="muchsmaller">[560]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Isokrates">Isok.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Panathenaikos">Panath.</abbr></cite> 239.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_561" id="footnote_561"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_561"><span class="muchsmaller">[561]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite><abbr title="Phaidros">Phaedr.</abbr></cite> 227-228.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_562" id="footnote_562"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_562"><span class="muchsmaller">[562]</span></a>
-<cite>Ibid.</cite> 234 <span class="sc lowercase">D</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_563" id="footnote_563"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_563"><span class="muchsmaller">[563]</span></a>
-The criticisms do not suit Lusias; they fit Isokrates much better.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_564" id="footnote_564"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_564"><span class="muchsmaller">[564]</span></a>
-Cicero, <cite>Brutus</cite>, <abbr title="twelve">xii.</abbr> 46-47.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_565" id="footnote_565"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_565"><span class="muchsmaller">[565]</span></a>
-Aischines, <cite><abbr title="Timarchos">Timarch.</abbr></cite> 171, 173.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_566" id="footnote_566"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_566"><span class="muchsmaller">[566]</span></a>
-<cite>Ibid.</cite> 171.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_567" id="footnote_567"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_567"><span class="muchsmaller">[567]</span></a>
-<cite>Ibid.</cite> 175.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_568" id="footnote_568"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_568"><span class="muchsmaller">[568]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite><abbr title="Gorgias">Gorg.</abbr></cite> 484-486; end of <cite><abbr title="Euthydemus">Euthud.</abbr> </cite>; <cite><abbr title="Theaitetos">Theait.</abbr></cite> 172-177; <cite><abbr title="Republic">Rep.</abbr></cite> 496.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_569" id="footnote_569"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_569"><span class="muchsmaller">[569]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Diogenes Laertius">Diog. Laertius</abbr> <abbr title="four">iv.</abbr> 2. 6.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_570" id="footnote_570"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_570"><span class="muchsmaller">[570]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Athenaeus">Athen.</abbr> 419 d.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_571" id="footnote_571"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_571"><span class="muchsmaller">[571]</span></a>
-<cite>Ibid.</cite> 419 e and 55 d.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_572" id="footnote_572"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_572"><span class="muchsmaller">[572]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Athenaeus">Athen.</abbr> 186 b.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_573" id="footnote_573"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_573"><span class="muchsmaller">[573]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Diogenes Laertius">Diog. Laertius</abbr> <abbr title="three">iii.</abbr> 26.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_574" id="footnote_574"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_574"><span class="muchsmaller">[574]</span></a>
-<cite>Ibid.</cite> <abbr title="three">iii.</abbr> 31.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_575" id="footnote_575"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_575"><span class="muchsmaller">[575]</span></a>
-See for this lecture Simplikios (on <abbr title="Aristotle">Aristot.</abbr> <cite>Physics</cite>, <abbr title="page">p.</abbr> 202 <span class="sc lowercase">B</span>, 36), and Aristoxenos,
-<cite>Harmon</cite>, <abbr title="beginning of Book two">beg. of Bk. ii.</abbr> On one occasion, at least, it was delivered in the
-Peiraieus (<abbr title="Themistokles">Themist.</abbr> <cite>Orat.</cite> 21. 245).</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_576" id="footnote_576"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_576"><span class="muchsmaller">[576]</span></a>
-The popular attitude may be seen in Amphis’ <cite>Amphrikates</cite> (<abbr title="Diogenes Laertius">Diog. Laertius</abbr>
-<abbr title="three">iii.</abbr> 25): “I no more know what good you’ll get than I know what Plato’s Good is.”</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_577" id="footnote_577"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_577"><span class="muchsmaller">[577]</span></a>
-Plato seems also to have recited his dialogues in public. Favonius asserted that
-Aristotle alone of the audience stayed to the end when Plato thus delivered the
-<cite>Phaidon</cite> (<abbr title="Diogenes Laertius">Diog. Laertius</abbr> <abbr title="three">iii.</abbr> 25).</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_578" id="footnote_578"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_578"><span class="muchsmaller">[578]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Diogenes Laertius">Diog. Laertius</abbr> <abbr title="three">iii.</abbr> 45, etc.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_579" id="footnote_579"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_579"><span class="muchsmaller">[579]</span></a>
-Epikrates (in <abbr title="Athenaeus">Athen.</abbr> 59 d, e).</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_580" id="footnote_580"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_580"><span class="muchsmaller">[580]</span></a>
-Ephippos, <cite>Shipwrecked Man</cite> (<abbr title="Athenaeus">Athen.</abbr> 509).</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_581" id="footnote_581"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_581"><span class="muchsmaller">[581]</span></a>
-<ins title="eurythmos">εὔρυθμος</ins>, probably a hit at Plato’s demand for “rhythm.”</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_582" id="footnote_582"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_582"><span class="muchsmaller">[582]</span></a>
-Antiphanes, <cite>Antaros</cite> (<abbr title="Athenaeus">Athen.</abbr> 545 a).</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_583" id="footnote_583"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_583"><span class="muchsmaller">[583]</span></a>
-Alexis, <cite>Meropis</cite> (<abbr title="Diogenes Laertius">Diog. Laertius</abbr> <abbr title="three">iii.</abbr> 22).</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_584" id="footnote_584"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_584"><span class="muchsmaller">[584]</span></a>
-This walking up and down was characteristic of Hellenic teaching. Compare
-the <cite>Peripatetics</cite>, and Archutas in the temple-gardens at Tarentum (<abbr title="Athenaeus">Athen.</abbr> 545 b).</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_585" id="footnote_585"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_585"><span class="muchsmaller">[585]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Diogenes Laertius">Diog. Laertius</abbr> <abbr title="three">iii.</abbr> 22.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_586" id="footnote_586"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_586"><span class="muchsmaller">[586]</span></a>
-<cite>Ibid.</cite> <abbr title="four">iv.</abbr> 3. 1.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_587" id="footnote_587"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_587"><span class="muchsmaller">[587]</span></a>
-The first translation is my own, the second Shelley’s.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_588" id="footnote_588"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_588"><span class="muchsmaller">[588]</span></a>
-Saturos and Onetor in <abbr title="Diogenes Laertius">Diog. Laertius</abbr> <abbr title="three">iii.</abbr> 11.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_589" id="footnote_589"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_589"><span class="muchsmaller">[589]</span></a>
-The above details are mainly from <abbr title="Diogenes Laertius five">Diog. Laertius v.</abbr></p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_590" id="footnote_590"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_590"><span class="muchsmaller">[590]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Aulus Gellius twenty">Aul. Gell. xx.</abbr> 5. 4.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_591" id="footnote_591"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_591"><span class="muchsmaller">[591]</span></a>
-Plato had also his feuds with Antisthenes, who wrote a dialogue against him,
-calling him Satho, with Aristippos, and with Aischines the Sokratic (<abbr title="Diogenes Laertius">Diog. Laertius</abbr>
-iii. 24).</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_592" id="footnote_592"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_592"><span class="muchsmaller">[592]</span></a>
-Kriton feels this difficulty in <cite><abbr title="Euthydemus">Euthud.</abbr> </cite> 306 <span class="sc lowercase">D</span>, <span class="sc lowercase">E</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_593" id="footnote_593"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_593"><span class="muchsmaller">[593]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite><abbr title="Phaidros">Phaedr.</abbr></cite> 275 <span class="sc lowercase">A</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_594" id="footnote_594"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_594"><span class="muchsmaller">[594]</span></a>
-<cite>Ibid.</cite> 275 <span class="sc lowercase">E</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_595" id="footnote_595"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_595"><span class="muchsmaller">[595]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite><abbr title="Phaidros">Phaedr.</abbr></cite> 275 <span class="sc lowercase">D</span>; <cite><abbr title="Theaitetos">Theait.</abbr></cite> 164; <cite><abbr title="Protagoras">Protag.</abbr></cite> 329 <span class="sc lowercase">A</span>, and 347 <span class="sc lowercase">E</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_596" id="footnote_596"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_596"><span class="muchsmaller">[596]</span></a>
-So book-knowledge is a hothouse plant which has sprung up unnaturally all in a
-moment, and very delicate when exposed to the open air of criticism (<cite><abbr title="Phaidros">Phaedr.</abbr></cite> 276-7).</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_597" id="footnote_597"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_597"><span class="muchsmaller">[597]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite>Sophist</cite>, 230 <span class="sc lowercase">A</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_598" id="footnote_598"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_598"><span class="muchsmaller">[598]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite>Menon</cite>, 97; <cite><abbr title="Republic">Rep.</abbr></cite> 534 <span class="sc lowercase">B</span>, <span class="sc lowercase">C</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_599" id="footnote_599"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_599"><span class="muchsmaller">[599]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite><abbr title="Republic">Rep.</abbr></cite> 518.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_600" id="footnote_600"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_600"><span class="muchsmaller">[600]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite><abbr title="Phaidros">Phaidr.</abbr></cite> 277 <span class="sc lowercase">A</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_601" id="footnote_601"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_601"><span class="muchsmaller">[601]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite><abbr title="Phaidros">Phaidr.</abbr></cite> 276 <span class="sc lowercase">D</span>, <span class="sc lowercase">E</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_602" id="footnote_602"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_602"><span class="muchsmaller">[602]</span></a>
-Plato apparently regarded his dialogues as mere trifles compared with what he
-taught to his inner circle.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_603" id="footnote_603"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_603"><span class="muchsmaller">[603]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite><abbr title="Phaidros">Phaedr.</abbr></cite> 278 <span class="sc lowercase">D</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_604" id="footnote_604"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_604"><span class="muchsmaller">[604]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Xenophon">Xen.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Anabasis">Anab.</abbr> </cite> <abbr title="seven">vii.</abbr> 5. 14.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_605" id="footnote_605"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_605"><span class="muchsmaller">[605]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Xenophon">Xen.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Memorabilia">Mem.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="four">iv.</abbr> 2.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_606" id="footnote_606"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_606"><span class="muchsmaller">[606]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Xenophon">Xen.</abbr> <cite>Horsemanship</cite>, <abbr title="one">i.</abbr></p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_607" id="footnote_607"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_607"><span class="muchsmaller">[607]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Xenophon">Xen.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Economics">Econ.</abbr></cite> xvi.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_608" id="footnote_608"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_608"><span class="muchsmaller">[608]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Aristotle">Aristot.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Politics">Pol.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="one">i.</abbr> 11. 7.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_609" id="footnote_609"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_609"><span class="muchsmaller">[609]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite><abbr title="Gorgias">Gorg.</abbr></cite> 518 <span class="sc lowercase">B</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_610" id="footnote_610"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_610"><span class="muchsmaller">[610]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Aristotle">Aristot.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Politics">Pol.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="two">ii.</abbr> 3. 9.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_611" id="footnote_611"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_611"><span class="muchsmaller">[611]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite><abbr title="Apology">Apol.</abbr></cite> 26 <span class="sc lowercase">D</span>.</p>
-</div><!--end chapter-->
-
-<div class="chapter"><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210"></a><span class="pageno">210</span>
-
-<h3 class="p4 h3head">CHAPTER VII</h3>
-
-<h4 class="p2 h4head">TERTIARY EDUCATION</h4>
-
-<p class="p2"><span class="sc">When</span> he reached eighteen years, the young Athenian
-partly came of age. His property passed into his
-possession, if he had been a ward, and he could now
-prosecute his guardians if they had defrauded him.
-But he could not appear in any other sort of lawsuit,
-or take part in the National Assembly, nor could he
-be taxed, till he was twenty.</p>
-
-<p>First of all, his deme or parish had to examine him
-to see if he was of proper parentage and of the requisite
-age.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_612" id="fnanchor_612"></a><a href="#footnote_612" class="fnanchor">[612]</a></span>
-If they rejected him, the case came before the
-regular Court of Athens. In the event of being
-again rejected, if it was on the score of age, he returned
-to the ranks of the boys to wait a further trial, but
-if on the score of parentage, he might be sold as a
-slave and his price put into the Treasury. If his deme
-accepted him he was again examined by the Boule of
-500 at Athens, who might rescind their decision.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_613" id="fnanchor_613"></a><a href="#footnote_613" class="fnanchor">[613]</a></span>
-</p>
-
-<p>When he had passed all these preliminary examinations,
-the boy was inscribed upon the roll of his deme,
-the <ins title="lêxiarchikon grammateion">ληξιαρχικὸν γραμματεῖον</ins>, and became in the eyes of
-the law an ephebos. It was then incumbent upon him
-to take a solemn oath in the temple of Aglauros, in
-the following terms<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_614" id="fnanchor_614"></a><a href="#footnote_614" class="fnanchor">[614]</a>:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<p class="blockquote"><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211"></a><span class="pageno">211</span>
-“I will not disgrace my sacred weapons nor desert
-the comrade who is placed by my side. I will fight for
-things holy and things profane, whether I am alone or
-with others. I will hand on my fatherland greater and
-better than I found it. I will hearken to the magistrates,
-and obey the existing laws and those hereafter
-established<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_615" id="fnanchor_615"></a><a href="#footnote_615" class="fnanchor">[615]</a></span>
-by the people. I will not consent unto any
-that destroys or disobeys the constitution, but will
-prevent him, whether I am alone or with others. I
-will honour the temples and the religion which my forefathers
-established. So help me Aglauros, Enualios,
-Ares, Zeus, Thallo, Auxo, Hegemone.”</p>
-
-<p>This oath and ceremony must be ancient. The
-orator Lukourgos<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_616" id="fnanchor_616"></a><a href="#footnote_616" class="fnanchor">[616]</a></span>
-includes them among “the ancient
-laws and customs of the original founders,” and claims
-that the oath of the Hellenic army at Plataea in 479
-was imitated from the oath of the Athenian epheboi.
-By this solemn act the ephebos accepted the duties and
-responsibilities of an Athenian citizen. So in Plato’s
-dialogue, the <cite>Kriton</cite>,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_617" id="fnanchor_617"></a><a href="#footnote_617" class="fnanchor">[617]</a></span>
-where the Laws of Athens are
-introduced as pleading their cause, they say, “When
-any one has passed his examination, and has seen the
-constitution of the city and us, the Laws of Athens, we
-bid him, if he is dissatisfied with us, to take what is his
-and go whither he pleases. But if he stays, we consider
-that he has promised to obey us.” For there is good
-evidence, besides that which is afforded by the above
-passage, to show that Athenian boys were taught what
-the laws of their city were, before they promised to
-obey them. Thus Aischines says: “When any one is
-inscribed upon the muster roll of his deme and knows
-the laws of the city.”<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_618" id="fnanchor_618"></a><a href="#footnote_618" class="fnanchor">[618]</a></span>
-Plato puts it even more
-<a name="Page_212" id="Page_212"></a><span class="pageno">212</span>
-definitely: “When the children leave school,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_619" id="fnanchor_619"></a><a href="#footnote_619" class="fnanchor">[619]</a></span>
-the city
-compels them to learn the laws.”<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_620" id="fnanchor_620"></a><a href="#footnote_620" class="fnanchor">[620]</a></span>
-So the ephebos
-knew what he was doing when he swore to obey the
-law of the land.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile the tribes had met and each chosen three
-men of over forty years of age, from whom the
-assembled people elected one, to look after the epheboi
-of each tribe.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_621" id="fnanchor_621"></a><a href="#footnote_621" class="fnanchor">[621]</a></span>
-These supervisors were called Sophronistai
-or Moderators. That these Moderators probably
-dated back to Solonic times, and possessed a general,
-but rarely exercised, supervision over all education, I
-have endeavoured to show in Chapter <abbr title="Two">II.</abbr> Their
-province was the morality and discipline of the epheboi,
-whose military training was naturally controlled by the
-military officers, the Generals and Taxiarchoi; later,
-however, when the epheboi ceased to be a military body,
-these latter functionaries ceased to have any connection
-with them. Towards the close of the fourth century
-the people elected a single Kosmetes or Chancellor for
-the epheboi; he is first mentioned, if a probably spurious
-passage in the <cite>Axiochos</cite> is rejected, in an inscription,
-in which he is associated with the epheboi and Moderators
-of the year in awarding a crown to Theophanes in the
-Archonship of Nikostratos (333-332 <span class="sc">B.C.</span>).<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_622" id="fnanchor_622"></a><a href="#footnote_622" class="fnanchor">[622]</a></span>
-But in
-280 <span class="sc">B.C.</span>, in the list of the officers and masters of the
-epheboi, the Kosmetes is mentioned, but no Sophronistai:<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_623" id="fnanchor_623"></a><a href="#footnote_623" class="fnanchor">[623]</a></span>
-at that time the epheboi were too few to need
-an officer to each tribe.</p>
-
-<p><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213"></a><span class="pageno">213</span>
-These newly appointed magistrates took the epheboi
-of their year in charge at once. The young recruits
-were first taken round the temples, and then put into
-garrison in Mounuchia and Peiraieus. They had masters
-and under-masters appointed for them by the Sophronistai
-to teach them the use of heavy arms, and also of the
-bow, javelin, and catapult. There were also two Paidotribai,
-for gymnastics. These masters, together with
-later introductions such as literary teachers, chaplains,
-doctors, and so forth, appear regularly in the inscriptions
-after 300 <span class="sc">B.C.</span><span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_624" id="fnanchor_624"></a><a href="#footnote_624" class="fnanchor">[624]</a></span>
-The Sophronistai were paid a drachma
-a day for their services. They also received four obols
-for every ephebos in their tribe, out of which they had
-to provide the rations, etc.; the ephebos did not handle
-the money himself. Each tribe messed together.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_625" id="fnanchor_625"></a><a href="#footnote_625" class="fnanchor">[625]</a></span>
-</p>
-
-<p>Besides the Sophronistai and Kosmetes, the Council
-of the Areiopagos also kept a watch over the epheboi.
-Discipline seems to have been fairly strict: the
-<cite>Axiochos</cite><span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_626" id="fnanchor_626"></a><a href="#footnote_626" class="fnanchor">[626]</a></span>
-talks of “rods and immensities of evils.”
-But there were plenty of amusements, and, apparently,
-plenty of vacations. There were a very large number
-of special festivals, in which the epheboi took part.
-There were also the torch-races at the feasts of Hephaistos
-and Prometheus, for teams of epheboi from each tribe,
-trained at the expense of a gumnasiarchos. The epheboi
-had also a special part of the theatre reserved for them.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_627" id="fnanchor_627"></a><a href="#footnote_627" class="fnanchor">[627]</a></span>
-</p>
-
-<p>No doubt a large part of the time of these epheboi
-was spent in severe physical exercise in the gymnasia.
-The analogy of the epheboi in Plato’s <cite>Republic</cite> and
-<cite>Laws</cite> would suggest this. The <cite>Axiochos</cite> mentions,
-as consequent upon enrolment in the epheboi, “the
-Lukeion and Akademeia,” <span class="decoration">i.e.</span> practices in these
-<a name="Page_214" id="Page_214"></a><span class="pageno">214</span>
-gymnasia. Xenophon,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_628" id="fnanchor_628"></a><a href="#footnote_628" class="fnanchor">[628]</a></span>
-just before mentioning the
-“peripoloi” or epheboi in their second year, talks of
-“those who are ordered to practise gymnastic exercises,”
-clearly referring to this period. He suggests
-that their duties would be better and more cheerfully
-performed if they received a larger supply of rations
-than those who were training for torch-races; to these
-latter no doubt a liberal gumnasiarchos might serve
-out meals costing much more than four obols a day.
-Probably those who were physically inferior alone were
-told off for these compulsory gymnastics: Xenophon’s
-phrase seems to distinguish them from the epheboi
-selected for the torch-race, who would naturally be the
-physically fittest in the tribal contingent.</p>
-
-<p>At the end of their first year of training, the epheboi
-appeared in the theatre at the great Dionusia to show
-off their military evolutions and the drill which they
-had learned. After the review they received a spear
-and shield from the State.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_629" id="fnanchor_629"></a><a href="#footnote_629" class="fnanchor">[629]</a></span>
-The sons of those who
-had fallen in battle, being the wards of the State,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_630" id="fnanchor_630"></a><a href="#footnote_630" class="fnanchor">[630]</a></span>
-received a complete outfit of armour. These arms,
-which the epheboi received from the State, were
-considered to be sacred: consequently to throw away
-the shield in flight was regarded as a serious offence,
-almost an act of sacrilege.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_631" id="fnanchor_631"></a><a href="#footnote_631" class="fnanchor">[631]</a></span>
-</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter together" style="width: 500px">
- <p class="captionleft">PLATE <abbr title="Nine">IX.</abbr></p>
- <a name="i09" id="i09"></a>
- <img src="images/9.jpg"
- width="500" height="247"
- alt="Illustration: Riding lesson"
- />
- <p class="caption">A RIDING LESSON&mdash;MOUNTING
-<cite>Archaeologische Zeitung</cite>, 1885, Plate 11.<br />
-From a Kulix at Munich, attributed to Euphronios.</p>
-</div><!--end illustration-->
-
-<p>After receiving their arms from the State, the
-epheboi were marched out of Athens, and spent most
-of the next year patrolling the country and frontiers,
-and garrisoning the forts.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_632" id="fnanchor_632"></a><a href="#footnote_632" class="fnanchor">[632]</a></span>
-Attica was studded with
-<!--Blank Page-->
-<a name="Page_215" id="Page_215"></a><span class="pageno">215</span>
-these <ins title="peripolia">περιπόλια</ins>, or patrol-stations, from Oinoé and
-Phulé on the north-western frontier to Anaphlustos
-and Thorikos in the south. The epheboi, like the
-<ins title="kryptoi">κρυπτοί</ins> in Plato’s <cite>Laws</cite> and at Sparta, were shifted
-about from district to district, in order that they might
-acquire a thorough knowledge of their country’s
-geographical peculiarities. The tribal companies, into
-which they were divided, relieved one another in various
-stations. Thus in the course of 334-333 we know
-that both the Hippothontid and the Kekropid tribes
-were successively stationed at Eleusis, for the people
-of that district pass two separate votes of thanks to
-them for the excellent discipline which they had
-preserved.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_633" id="fnanchor_633"></a><a href="#footnote_633" class="fnanchor">[633]</a></span>
-There may also have been open-air
-camps: the Eleusinian inscriptions talk of <ins title="hypaithrioi">ὑπαίθριοι</ins>.</p>
-
-<p>The epheboi seem to have been assisted in their
-patrol-duties by a mercenary force of foreigners.
-Thucydides<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_634" id="fnanchor_634"></a><a href="#footnote_634" class="fnanchor">[634]</a></span>
-declares that Phrunichos was assassinated
-by a peripolos: the Athenian people, according to
-Lusias, rewarded Thrasuboulos of Kaludon as the
-slayer and recorded his name on a pillar.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_635" id="fnanchor_635"></a><a href="#footnote_635" class="fnanchor">[635]</a></span>
-If the
-historian had meant to dispute this award, he must have
-referred to it, for it was clearly the accepted version.
-He also states that the plot was arranged at the house
-of the captain of the peripoloi, and mentions an
-Argive as one of the accomplices: Lusias mentions
-a Megarian. Both these foreigners were probably
-peripoloi. But foreign youths cannot at this period
-have been permitted to serve with the tribal companies
-of epheboi. A legend, it is true, asserts that this
-privilege was granted to the young men of Kos, in
-honour of the great doctor Hippokrates; but even
-<a name="Page_216" id="Page_216"></a><span class="pageno">216</span>
-this only shows that all other states were excluded.
-Indeed, foreigners were not enrolled among the
-Athenian epheboi until a much later epoch, when the
-system was no longer military.</p>
-
-<p>What, then, was this “Foreign Legion”? M.
-Girard identifies it with the Mounted Archers, on the
-strength of a passage in Aristophanes’ <cite>Birds</cite>. An
-unknown deity has invaded the territory of Cloud-Cuckoo
-town. Peisthetairos exclaims, “Why didn’t
-you despatch peripoloi after him at once?” To which
-the messenger replies, “We did send 30,000 Mounted
-Archers.” The inscriptions at Eleusis also make a force
-of non-citizen troops serve under the captain of the
-peripoloi. These mercenary troops, having no civil
-duties, would naturally be used as a patrol. Moreover,
-to an Athenian, “archer” meant “policeman.”
-Athens was policed by foreign “Archers”: it would be
-natural for Attica to be policed in like manner, only
-by a mounted force, as a greater distance had to be
-covered.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_636" id="fnanchor_636"></a><a href="#footnote_636" class="fnanchor">[636]</a></span>
-But it is also possible that the non-Athenian
-peripoloi were the sons of <ins title="metoikoi isoteleis">μέτοικοι ἰσοτελεῖς</ins>, who,
-being forced to serve as hoplites when grown up, would
-require some preliminary training; these alien hoplites
-are coupled by Thucydides<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_637" id="fnanchor_637"></a><a href="#footnote_637" class="fnanchor">[637]</a></span>
-with the recruits and
-veterans, who garrisoned the Athenian walls and forts:
-they seem to have served as a perpetual patrol.</p>
-
-<p>The first three classes of Athenian citizens in wealth
-must all have passed through this training; for,
-although the two first were liable to cavalry service,
-they might also be called upon to serve as hoplites.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_638" id="fnanchor_638"></a><a href="#footnote_638" class="fnanchor">[638]</a></span>
-Rich young epheboi, who had plenty of time on their
-<a name="Page_217" id="Page_217"></a><span class="pageno">217</span>
-hands, would naturally learn both cavalry and infantry
-drill. The poorer Zeugitai would only have to learn
-their duties as heavy infantry, and were probably
-allowed to spend a good proportion of their time on
-their farms in Athens. But what about the fourth
-class, the Thetes? They were not liable to be called
-out as hoplites, but had to serve on land as light-armed
-troops or at sea as rowers. Did they also have
-a recruit course? Now the garrisons of the Athenian
-forts and walls were hoplites:<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_639" id="fnanchor_639"></a><a href="#footnote_639" class="fnanchor">[639]</a></span>
-there is no trace of the
-Thetes here. But the patrol duties in the mountains
-can hardly have been performed by heavy troops: it
-is noticeable that in Xenophon light troops are
-suggested for this purpose, when Sokrates is developing
-an elaborate scheme for holding the frontiers of
-Attica against all invaders.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_640" id="fnanchor_640"></a><a href="#footnote_640" class="fnanchor">[640]</a></span>
-In the next century, at
-any rate, light troops were used for this purpose.
-In a later work Xenophon talks of “those who are
-ordered to occupy the forts and those who have to
-serve as peltasts and patrol the country,”<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_641" id="fnanchor_641"></a><a href="#footnote_641" class="fnanchor">[641]</a></span>
-in a passage
-where he is clearly referring to the epheboi. Thus
-there are two classes, the garrisons, who would
-naturally be hoplites, and the patrols, who are peltasts,
-suitably equipped for mountaineering. But the peltasts
-only began to appear towards the close of the Peloponnesian
-War: the first mention of them is in Thucydides’
-account of the army of Brasidas. Before this
-time, the light troops were archers and some slingers;
-thus, in the monument to those of the Erechtheid tribe
-who fell in the year 459, after the hoplites four archers
-are mentioned.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_642" id="fnanchor_642"></a><a href="#footnote_642" class="fnanchor">[642]</a></span>
-But they were a small force: there
-<a name="Page_218" id="Page_218"></a><span class="pageno">218</span>
-were only 1600 of them in 431 <span class="sc">B.C.</span> The majority
-of the Thetes served in the ships. In the <cite>Birds</cite> of
-Aristophanes, which appeared in 414, when it was a
-question of repelling a sudden raid, just after the
-peripoloi have been mentioned, Peisthetairos bids his
-immediate attendants arm themselves with slings and
-bows: these are clearly the weapons for a flying column
-despatched in pursuit of raiders.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_643" id="fnanchor_643"></a><a href="#footnote_643" class="fnanchor">[643]</a></span>
-</p>
-
-<p>The passage of Xenophon makes it clear that there
-were peltasts in the ephebic force in the fourth century;
-that of Aristophanes suggests the probability of archers
-and slingers among them in the fifth. But whether
-these light-armed troops consisted of enterprising
-Zeugitai who added this training to their hoplite drill,
-or were a small detachment of Thetes, cannot be fixed.
-Thetes must, at any rate, not have been numerous in
-the ephebic force, for they could not have spared the
-time necessary for such lengthy training.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_644" id="fnanchor_644"></a><a href="#footnote_644" class="fnanchor">[644]</a></span>
-</p>
-
-<p>As a rule, the epheboi were not expected to do more
-than guard the frontier and repel an occasional foray:
-even this, however, must have given them plenty of
-employment in war-time. But they shared in Muronides’
-great victory in the Megarid in 458, when Athens had
-to use her reserves.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_645" id="fnanchor_645"></a><a href="#footnote_645" class="fnanchor">[645]</a></span>
-Either they or the “foreign
-legion” joined in a later invasion of Megara.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_646" id="fnanchor_646"></a><a href="#footnote_646" class="fnanchor">[646]</a></span>
-But
-as a rule they served for home defence only. Their
-recruit-course ended with their twentieth year: henceforth
-they were ordinary Athenian citizens and soldiers.</p>
-
-<p>In about 332 <span class="sc">B.C.</span>, when Lukourgos delivered his
-speech against Leokrates, the old ephebic system seems
-<a name="Page_219" id="Page_219"></a><span class="pageno">219</span>
-still to have been in force. The suggestion that
-Leokrates might have evaded the ephebic oath is only
-rhetorical, for the orator immediately goes on to assume
-that he took it.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_647" id="fnanchor_647"></a><a href="#footnote_647" class="fnanchor">[647]</a></span>
-In 328, the probable date of Aristotle’s
-<cite>Athenian Constitution</cite>, it seems still to have been in
-existence, for the philosopher records it as part of the
-contemporary regime. The inscriptions support these
-authorities. A list of epheboi of the Kekropid tribe
-enrolled in 334 is given under the vote of thanks:
-the upper part of the list is gone, but the numbers were
-apparently large.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_648" id="fnanchor_648"></a><a href="#footnote_648" class="fnanchor">[648]</a></span>
-Some forty-four names can be inferred
-from the fragments, belonging to six or seven
-demes out of the twelve which composed the tribe; but
-apparently the smallest contingents are at the bottom,
-so there may well have been a hundred names in the
-tribe, and 1000 epheboi altogether. Considering the
-impoverishment of Attica and the consequent decrease
-in the hoplite classes, this is probably a fair proportion
-of epheboi.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_649" id="fnanchor_649"></a><a href="#footnote_649" class="fnanchor">[649]</a></span>
-A tribal contingent is still large enough
-to serve as a garrison for Eleusis, and to act by itself.</p>
-
-<p>But in the next century the numbers drop down to
-twenty-nine and twenty-three. The service must have
-been voluntary. Moreover, brothers are found serving
-together, from which it may be inferred that the exact
-age qualification was no longer regarded.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_650" id="fnanchor_650"></a><a href="#footnote_650" class="fnanchor">[650]</a></span>
-Philosophy
-and literature become subjects of study; and a
-library, swollen by gifts from old epheboi, is collected.
-Foreigners begin to be enrolled in the second century,
-<a name="Page_220" id="Page_220"></a><span class="pageno">220</span>
-and in course of time outnumber the native Athenians.
-Although the old military service is preserved, no doubt
-in a mummified condition, the system of the epheboi
-develops into the Athenian university, where young
-Romans like Cicero’s son came to learn philosophy,
-though they had little to learn from Athens in military
-matters. The Sophronistai and Kosmetes become the
-Proctors and Chancellor, the special festivals the compulsory
-services, of the new University. The torch-races,
-the military duties, and the naval races<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_651" id="fnanchor_651"></a><a href="#footnote_651" class="fnanchor">[651]</a></span>
-become
-its athletics. It is the old conscription system of
-Athens, not the schools of Plato or Isokrates, that
-gives birth to the first University.</p>
-
-<p>The system of epheboi was represented at Sparta
-by the κρυπτοί [kryptoi]. We hear of an archephebos at Argos,
-and a gumnasiarchos who manages the epheboi at
-Troizen.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_652" id="fnanchor_652"></a><a href="#footnote_652" class="fnanchor">[652]</a></span>
-In the Megarid and in Boiotia the epheboi
-were trained as cavalry, hoplites, or peltasts.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_653" id="fnanchor_653"></a><a href="#footnote_653" class="fnanchor">[653]</a></span>
-An
-ephebarchos can be traced in Teos. There were
-patrol-houses, and so possibly epheboi patrols in the
-territory of Syracuse.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_654" id="fnanchor_654"></a><a href="#footnote_654" class="fnanchor">[654]</a></span>
-This period of special training
-for military duties seems to have been general all over
-Hellas. Plato adopts it without demur in the <cite>Republic</cite>
-and <cite>Laws</cite>.</p>
-
-<p class="p2 footnote"> <a name="footnote_612" id="footnote_612"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_612"><span class="muchsmaller">[612]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Aristotle">Aristot.</abbr> <ins title="Ath. Pol.">Ἀθ. Πολ.</ins> 42 for these examinations.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_613" id="footnote_613"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_613"><span class="muchsmaller">[613]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Lukourgos">Luk.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="against Leokrates">ag. Leok.</abbr></cite> 18. 76.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_614" id="footnote_614"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_614"><span class="muchsmaller">[614]</span></a>
-Pollux, <abbr title="eight">viii.</abbr> 105-106, etc.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_615" id="footnote_615"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_615"><span class="muchsmaller">[615]</span></a>
-<ins title="krainontes">κραίνοντες</ins>. Note the archaic word.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_616" id="footnote_616"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_616"><span class="muchsmaller">[616]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Lukourgos">Luk.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="against Leokrates">ag. Leok</abbr></cite>. 18. 75.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_617" id="footnote_617"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_617"><span class="muchsmaller">[617]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite><abbr title="Kriton">Krit.</abbr></cite> 51 <span class="sc lowercase">D</span>, <span class="sc lowercase">E</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_618" id="footnote_618"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_618"><span class="muchsmaller">[618]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Aischines">Aischin.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="against">ag.</abbr> <abbr title="Timarchos">Timarch.</abbr></cite> 18.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_619" id="footnote_619"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_619"><span class="muchsmaller">[619]</span></a>
-I have already suggested that metrical versions may have been taught at the
-music-schools.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_620" id="footnote_620"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_620"><span class="muchsmaller">[620]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite><abbr title="Protagoras">Protag.</abbr></cite> 326 <span class="sc lowercase">D</span>. Boys used to listen to cases in the law-courts. This
-would give them some idea of legal procedure. (Compare the custom at some English
-public schools of letting the boys go to hear the local assizes.) Demosthenes thus
-went with his paidagogos to hear the trial of Kallistratos.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_621" id="footnote_621"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_621"><span class="muchsmaller">[621]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Aristotle">Aristot.</abbr> <ins title="Ath. Pol.">Ἀθ. Πολ.</ins> 42. 2.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_622" id="footnote_622"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_622"><span class="muchsmaller">[622]</span></a>
-<cite><abbr title="Corpus Inscriptionun Atticarum">C.I.A.</abbr></cite> <span class="sc"><abbr title="Four">IV.</abbr></span> <abbr title="two">ii.</abbr> 1571 <span class="sc lowercase">B</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_623" id="footnote_623"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_623"><span class="muchsmaller">[623]</span></a>
-<cite><abbr title="Corpus Inscriptionun Atticarum">C.I.A.</abbr></cite> <span class="sc"><abbr title="Two">II.</abbr></span> 316.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_624" id="footnote_624"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_624"><span class="muchsmaller">[624]</span></a>
-e.g. <cite><abbr title="Corpus Inscriptionun Atticarum">C.I.A.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="two">ii.</abbr> 316. 338.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_625" id="footnote_625"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_625"><span class="muchsmaller">[625]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Aristotle">Aristot.</abbr> <ins title="Ath. Pol.">Ἀθ. Πολ.</ins> 42. 3.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_626" id="footnote_626"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_626"><span class="muchsmaller">[626]</span></a>
-[Plato] <cite>Axiochos</cite>, 367 <span class="sc lowercase">A</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_627" id="footnote_627"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_627"><span class="muchsmaller">[627]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Scholia">Schol.</abbr> on <abbr title="Aristophanes">Aristoph.</abbr> <cite>Birds</cite>, 794.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_628" id="footnote_628"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_628"><span class="muchsmaller">[628]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Xenophon">Xen.</abbr> <cite>Revenues</cite>, <abbr title="four">iv.</abbr> 52.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_629" id="footnote_629"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_629"><span class="muchsmaller">[629]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Aristotle">Aristot.</abbr> <ins title="Ath. Pol.">Ἀθ. Πολ.</ins> 42. 4.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_630" id="footnote_630"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_630"><span class="muchsmaller">[630]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Thucidides">Thuc.</abbr> <abbr title="two">ii.</abbr> 46.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_631" id="footnote_631"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_631"><span class="muchsmaller">[631]</span></a>
-Lucias, <abbr title="ten">x.</abbr> 1, and Aristophanes anent Kleonumos, <cite>passim</cite>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_632" id="footnote_632"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_632"><span class="muchsmaller">[632]</span></a>
-Properly speaking, it was only during his second year that the ephebos was a
-peripolos or patrol. Aischines, however, claims to have served two years as a
-peripolos. The term may have been used loosely, or else in times of crisis the
-epheboi may have been hurried off to the frontier as soon as they were enrolled.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_633" id="footnote_633"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_633"><span class="muchsmaller">[633]</span></a>
-<cite><abbr title="Corpus Inscriptionun Atticarum">C.I.A.</abbr></cite> <span class="sc muchsmaller"><abbr title="Four">IV.</abbr></span> <abbr title="two">ii.</abbr> 574 <span class="sc lowercase">D</span>, and 563 <span class="sc lowercase">B</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_634" id="footnote_634"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_634"><span class="muchsmaller">[634]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Thucidides">Thuc.</abbr> <abbr title="eight">viii.</abbr> 92.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_635" id="footnote_635"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_635"><span class="muchsmaller">[635]</span></a>
-Lusias, <abbr title="thirteen">xiii.</abbr> 71.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_636" id="footnote_636"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_636"><span class="muchsmaller">[636]</span></a>
-The force may also have included citizens, for the younger Alkibiades once
-served in it (<abbr title="Lusis">Lus.</abbr> <abbr title="fifteen">xv.</abbr> 6). But that was a special occasion, when the ordinary
-cavalry had refused to receive him.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_637" id="footnote_637"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_637"><span class="muchsmaller">[637]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Thucidides">Thuc.</abbr> <abbr title="two">ii.</abbr> 13. 6-7.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_638" id="footnote_638"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_638"><span class="muchsmaller">[638]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Lusis">Lus.</abbr> xvi. 13, xiv. 10.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_639" id="footnote_639"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_639"><span class="muchsmaller">[639]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Thucidides">Thuc.</abbr> <abbr title="two">ii.</abbr> 13. 6-7.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_640" id="footnote_640"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_640"><span class="muchsmaller">[640]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Xenophon">Xen.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Memorabilia">Mem.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="three">iii.</abbr> 5. 27.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_641" id="footnote_641"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_641"><span class="muchsmaller">[641]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Xenophon">Xen.</abbr> <cite>Revenues</cite>, <abbr title="four">iv.</abbr> 52.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_642" id="footnote_642"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_642"><span class="muchsmaller">[642]</span></a>
-<cite><abbr title="Corpus Inscriptionun Atticarum">C.I.A.</abbr></cite> <span class="sc"><abbr title="One">I.</abbr></span> 143. <abbr title="Compare">Cp.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Corpus Inscriptionun Atticarum">C.I.A.</abbr></cite> <span class="sc"><abbr title="One">I.</abbr></span> 79 for citizen-archers.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_643" id="footnote_643"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_643"><span class="muchsmaller">[643]</span></a>
-It is noticeable that in Aristotle’s time the epheboi were taught by a “Teacher
-of Archery.” He may be a survival.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_644" id="footnote_644"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_644"><span class="muchsmaller">[644]</span></a>
-In Boiotia and the Megarid the epheboi served as cavalry, hoplites, or peltasts
-(<cite><abbr title="Corpus Inscriptionum Graecarum">C.I.G.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="Boiotia">Boiot.</abbr> and <abbr title="Megarid">Meg.</abbr> 2715, 2717-21, 1747-48, etc.).</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_645" id="footnote_645"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_645"><span class="muchsmaller">[645]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Thucidides">Thuc.</abbr> <abbr title="one">i.</abbr> 105.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_646" id="footnote_646"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_646"><span class="muchsmaller">[646]</span></a>
-<cite>Ibid.</cite> <abbr title="four">iv.</abbr> 67.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_647" id="footnote_647"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_647"><span class="muchsmaller">[647]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Lukourgos">Luk.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="against Leokrates">ag. Leok.</abbr></cite> 76.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_648" id="footnote_648"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_648"><span class="muchsmaller">[648]</span></a>
-<cite><abbr title="Corpus Inscriptionun Atticarum">C.I.A.</abbr></cite> <span class="sc muchsmaller"><abbr title="Four">IV.</abbr></span> <abbr title="two">ii.</abbr> 563 b.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_649" id="footnote_649"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_649"><span class="muchsmaller">[649]</span></a>
-In 431 <span class="sc">B.C.</span> Athens had 13,000 hoplites of between twenty and forty years of
-age. On this average there would be perhaps about 1000 epheboi per year, or 2000
-altogether&mdash;the same number as here. The 16,000 of the reserve in 431 includes
-veterans and metics as well as epheboi.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_650" id="footnote_650"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_650"><span class="muchsmaller">[650]</span></a>
-The changes seem to have happened shortly before 305, for in an inscription
-of that year the numbers have dropped greatly and brothers serve together.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_651" id="footnote_651"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_651"><span class="muchsmaller">[651]</span></a>
-<cite><abbr title="Corpus Inscriptionun Atticarum">C.I.A.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="two">ii.</abbr> 466, 470.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_652" id="footnote_652"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_652"><span class="muchsmaller">[652]</span></a>
-<cite><abbr title="Corpus Inscriptionum Graecarum">C.I.G.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="Peloponesia">Pelop.</abbr> 589, 749, 753.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_653" id="footnote_653"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_653"><span class="muchsmaller">[653]</span></a>
-See <a href="#footnote_644">note 2</a> on <abbr title="page">p.</abbr> 218.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_654" id="footnote_654"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_654"><span class="muchsmaller">[654]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Thucidides">Thuc.</abbr> <abbr title="six">vi.</abbr> 45, <abbr title="seven">vii.</abbr> 48.</p>
-</div><!--end chapter-->
-
-<div class="chapter"><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221"></a><span class="pageno">221</span>
-<h4 class="p4 h3head">
-THE EPHEBIC INSCRIPTIONS OF THE
-FOURTH CENTURY</h4>
-
-<p class="center">(Dealing with Attica only)</p>
-
-<p class="p2 center"><abbr title="One">I.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Corpus Inscriptionun Atticarum">C.I.A.</abbr></cite> <span class="sc muchsmaller"><abbr title="Four">IV.</abbr></span> <abbr title="two">ii.</abbr> 574 d.</p>
-
-<p>“The epheboi of the Hippothontid tribe, who were enrolled
-when Ktesikles was Archon (334-333 <span class="sc">B.C.</span>), having been
-crowned by the Boule and Demos, offered this offering.”</p>
-
-<p>Then follows a mutilated vote of thanks from the people
-of Eleusis to the epheboi for the discipline which they had
-preserved while garrisoning the town, and to their Sophronistes,
-who is to receive a crown, and to have a front seat at local
-festivals.</p>
-
-<p class="p2 center"><abbr title="Two">II.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Corpus Inscriptionun Atticarum">C.I.A.</abbr></cite> <span class="sc muchsmaller"><abbr title="Four">IV.</abbr></span> <abbr title="two">ii.</abbr> 563 b.</p>
-
-<p>Decrees in honour of the epheboi of the Kekropid tribe.</p>
-
-<p>(<span class="decoration">a</span>) By the Kekropid tribe.</p>
-
-<p>“Kallikrates of Aixoné proposed. Whereas the epheboi
-of the Kekropid tribe, who were enrolled when Ktesikles was
-Archon (334-333 <span class="sc">B.C.</span>), are orderly and do everything that the
-laws enjoin upon them, and are obedient to the Sophronistes
-appointed by the people, we pass a vote of thanks to them and
-crown them with a golden crown of 500 drachmas for their
-excellent discipline and behaviour. We also pass a vote of
-thanks to the Sophronistes, Adeistos, son of Antimachos, and
-award him a golden crown of the aforesaid weight, for that he
-hath well and diligently directed the epheboi of the Kekropid
-tribe. This vote to be recorded on a stone pillar and set
-up in the shrine of Kekrops.”</p>
-
-<p><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222"></a><span class="pageno">222</span>
-(<span class="decoration">b</span>) Vote of the Athenian people.</p>
-
-<p>“Hegemachos, son of Chairemon, proposed. Whereas the
-epheboi of the Kekropid tribe stationed at Eleusis do well and
-diligently pay heed to the orders of the Boule and Demos,
-and do behave themselves orderly, we pass a vote of thanks
-to them for their good discipline and behaviour, and enact that
-each of them be crowned with an olive crown. We also
-pass a vote of thanks to their Sophronistes, Adeistos, son of
-Antimachos, and decree to him a crown of olive, when he has
-passed his scrutiny. This vote to be recorded on the offering
-which the epheboi of the Kekropid tribe offer.”</p>
-
-<p>(<span class="decoration">c</span>) Vote of Eleusinians.</p>
-
-<p>“Protias proposed. Whereas the epheboi of the Kekropid
-tribe and their Sophronistes, Adeistos, son of Antimachos, do
-well and diligently garrison Eleusis, the people of the deme
-pass a vote of thanks to them and crown each of them with
-a crown of olive.”</p>
-
-<p>The vote to be recorded as before.</p>
-
-<p>(<span class="decoration">d</span>) Similar vote of the Athmonian deme in honour of their
-fellow-demesman, Adeistos.</p>
-
-<p>With this is a list of the epheboi in question, much
-mutilated.</p>
-
-<p class="p2 center"><abbr title="Three">III.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Corpus Inscriptionun Atticarum">C.I.A.</abbr></cite> <span class="sc muchsmaller"><abbr title="Four">IV.</abbr></span> <abbr title="two">ii.</abbr> 1571 b.</p>
-
-<p>“Theophanes, son of Hierophon, offered this to Hermes,
-having been crowned by the epheboi and Sophronistai and
-Kosmetai.”</p>
-
-<p>This is signed by the epheboi for the years 333-332, 332-331,
-and 331-330.</p>
-
-<p class="p2 center"><abbr title="Four">IV.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Corpus Inscriptionun Atticarum">C.I.A.</abbr></cite> <span class="sc muchsmaller"><abbr title="Four">IV.</abbr></span> <abbr title="two">ii.</abbr> 251 b.</p>
-
-<p>A vote of thanks from the Boule and Demos to the epheboi
-as a whole for their exemplary behaviour, and to their Kosmetes
-and Sophronistai and teachers. A mutilated list of epheboi
-follows. This belongs to the year 305-304 <span class="sc">B.C.</span></p>
-
-<p class="p2 center"><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223"></a><span class="pageno">223</span>
-<abbr title="Five">V.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Corpus Inscriptionun Atticarum">C.I.A.</abbr></cite> <span class="sc muchsmaller"><abbr title="Four">IV.</abbr></span> <abbr title="two">ii.</abbr> 565 b.</p>
-
-<p>A vote of thanks of the Pandionid tribe to Philonides, who
-had been elected by the people Sophronistes of their epheboi,
-and had performed his duty well.</p>
-
-<p class="p2 center"><abbr title="Six">VI.</abbr> Böckh, 214 (belonging to 320 <span class="sc muchsmaller">B.C.</span>).</p>
-
-<p class="center">(Dug up at Aixoné.)</p>
-
-<p>An extract:&mdash;“We pass a vote of thanks to the Sophronistai
-and crown each of them with a crown of olive, namely, Kimon,
-son of Megakles, and Puthodoros, son of Putheas … for the
-zeal they showed in regard to the all-night revel.”</p>
-
-<p>The epheboi took part in a sacrifice and revel in honour
-of Hebe. Apparently, as a rule, they were noisy and gave
-trouble to the inhabitants of the neighbourhood. But this
-year they were kept in order by the Sophronistai. Hence the
-vote.</p>
-</div><!--end chapter-->
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<a name="Page_224" id="Page_224"></a><span class="pageno">224</span><br /><!--Blank Page-->
-<a name="Page_225" id="Page_225"></a><span class="pageno">225</span>
-<h3 class="p4 h3head">PART II<br />
-
-THE THEORY OF EDUCATION</h3>
-</div><!--end chapter-->
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<a name="Page_226" id="Page_226"></a><span class="pageno">226</span><br /><!--Blank Page-->
-<a name="Page_227" id="Page_227"></a><span class="pageno">227</span>
-<h3 class="p4 h3head">CHAPTER VIII</h3>
-
-<h4 class="p2 h4head">RELIGION AND EDUCATION IN HELLAS</h4>
-
-<p class="p2"><span class="sc">The</span> greater part of the religious instruction in Hellas
-was given outside the schools, in the home and in public
-life. The child learnt the current ritual observances
-proper to each particular deity or occasion by participating
-in them himself. His religious devotion was
-practised and stimulated by the festivals and sacred
-songs and dances which made up so large a part of
-Hellenic life. In a religion like the Hellenic, which
-was so largely a matter of forms and ceremonies, there
-was little dogma to be learnt by children; no catechism,
-no sectarian teaching was necessary. Such dogma as
-there was consisted in the myths which were current
-about the various deities and heroes; and of these
-myths there were so many varieties that heterodoxy
-about them became almost impossible.</p>
-
-<p>Such as it was, this dogma, consisting of manifold
-and often contradictory myths, was enshrined in the
-poetry of the race, so that most of the poems became
-sacred books, regarded by the orthodox as inspired.
-This sacred literature, as we have seen, was the chief
-object of study in the primary schools at Athens, where
-it was read, written, and learnt by heart. At Sparta
-almost the whole of literary and intellectual education
-consisted of sacred songs in honour of gods and heroes.
-<a name="Page_228" id="Page_228"></a><span class="pageno">228</span>
-The myths were the very essence of primary education
-in Hellas.</p>
-
-<p>In order to understand the attitude of the educational
-theorists towards these myths which run through
-most of the Hellenic poetry, it is necessary to
-realise the extraordinary authority which was given to
-the poets, and especially to Homer and Hesiod. Every
-word of them was regarded as inspired and strictly
-true: their authority was indisputable. At the beginning
-of the sixth century an interpolated line in the
-<cite>Iliad</cite> was made the main support of the Athenian
-claim to the Island of Salamis. Gelon, the tyrant of
-Syracuse, according to the current legend, was refused
-the command of the Hellenic forces against Persia
-because, as the Spartan envoy put it, Agamemnon
-would groan if he heard of such a thing, and because
-Homer had said that an Athenian was the best man at
-drawing up and marshalling a host, for which cause the
-Athenians now claimed the command.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_655" id="fnanchor_655"></a><a href="#footnote_655" class="fnanchor">[655]</a></span>
-That such
-arguments could be employed shows in what veneration
-Homer was held. He was considered to be especially
-inspired.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_656" id="fnanchor_656"></a><a href="#footnote_656" class="fnanchor">[656]</a></span>
-His admirers asserted that he had educated
-Hellas, and that his works provided fit instruction for
-the whole conduct of life.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_657" id="fnanchor_657"></a><a href="#footnote_657" class="fnanchor">[657]</a></span>
-More specifically, it was said
-that “The divine Homer won his glory and renown
-from this, that he taught good things, drill, valour and
-the arming of troops.”<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_658" id="fnanchor_658"></a><a href="#footnote_658" class="fnanchor">[658]</a></span>
-He was misquoted to support
-peculiar views, as in Plato.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_659" id="fnanchor_659"></a><a href="#footnote_659" class="fnanchor">[659]</a></span>
-People had their favourite
-texts: Sokrates’ was “In due proportion to thy means
-pay honour to the gods.” It was a not unheard-of accomplishment
-to know the whole <cite>Iliad</cite> and <cite>Odyssey</cite> by heart.
-<a name="Page_229" id="Page_229"></a><span class="pageno">229</span>
-Moral lessons were drawn from them. Thus the story
-of Kirké was a warning against self-indulgence. Kirké
-made the companions of Odusseus swine through their
-over-indulgence in the pleasures of the table; Odusseus
-himself, by Hermes’ advice and his own self-restraint
-in such matters, escaped this fate.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_660" id="fnanchor_660"></a><a href="#footnote_660" class="fnanchor">[660]</a></span>
-</p>
-
-<p>In time, however, the higher morality of the leading
-Hellenic thinkers revolted against the low morality, to
-say nothing more, of much of the mythology embodied
-in the poets. Xenophanes began the attack.
-“Homer and Hesiod,” he cries, “ascribed to the
-gods all that is considered disgraceful among men.”
-Herakleitos declared that Homer deserved a thrashing.
-Even the pious Pindar tried to alter some of the myths
-to suit his own morality, and Aeschylus fights hard
-for an underlying monotheism. In the next generation
-the storm broke: awakening intelligence, fostered
-by the Sophists and the philosophers, shrank away
-from the horrors of the <cite>Theogony</cite>. Tragedy, by
-bringing mythology before the eyes, had made its
-impossibility more apparent. The researches of the
-earlier historians in comparative mythology had undermined
-the bases of belief. Herodotos had found that a
-god named Herakles had been recognised in Egypt
-17,000 years before his time; consequently the Hellenic
-Herakles, only six centuries before the historian’s age,
-must be only a man of the same name.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_661" id="fnanchor_661"></a><a href="#footnote_661" class="fnanchor">[661]</a></span>
-Rationalism
-began to master the mythology: Thucydides tried to
-apply scientific methods to the Trojan War, making, for
-<a name="Page_230" id="Page_230"></a><span class="pageno">230</span>
-example, its duration due to the difficulty of obtaining
-supplies for so large a force. The rationalism of
-Euripides is well known. Metrodoros, a pupil of
-Anaxagoras, made the gods natural forces and varieties
-of matter&mdash;a device already employed by Empedokles
-for poetical convenience. In this way Sokrates
-rationalises the Boreas-myth in the <cite>Phaidros</cite>,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_662" id="fnanchor_662"></a><a href="#footnote_662" class="fnanchor">[662]</a></span>
-where
-Plato states that the wise disbelieve such tales; but
-Sokrates was too busy studying his own personality
-to raise all these numerous questions, so he accepts
-the customary belief. The defenders of Homer, led
-by Metrodoros and Stesimbrotos,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_663" id="fnanchor_663"></a><a href="#footnote_663" class="fnanchor">[663]</a></span>
-tried to allegorise
-him, declaring that the worst myths had a moral
-meaning in the background. The allegories were
-often ludicrous: Plato rejects them wholly for educational
-purposes, as children always take the literal
-interpretation.</p>
-
-<p>But public opinion was still fiercely attached to the
-old deities, as the incident of the Hermai and the
-condemnation of Anaxagoras, Protagoras, and Sokrates
-showed. The deities could not be sacrificed: consequently
-it was the myths that had to go. The myths
-said that Zeus dethroned his own father and committed
-adultery: if the myth is true, since Zeus is Supreme
-God, these crimes are justifiable.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_664" id="fnanchor_664"></a><a href="#footnote_664" class="fnanchor">[664]</a></span>
-Therefore the myth
-must be untrue. Homer and Hesiod lied: their works
-are mainly a blasphemous fiction.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_665" id="fnanchor_665"></a><a href="#footnote_665" class="fnanchor">[665]</a></span>
-Isokrates<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_666" id="fnanchor_666"></a><a href="#footnote_666" class="fnanchor">[666]</a></span>
-sums
-up this new attitude. “The poets,” he declares,
-“blasphemously represented the sons of the Immortals
-as having done and suffered worse deeds than the most
-impious of men: they spoke such things about the
-<a name="Page_231" id="Page_231"></a><span class="pageno">231</span>
-gods as no one would venture to allege of his worst
-enemy; not only do they make them steal, commit
-adultery, and fall into slavery to mortals, but even
-represent them as eating their children, mutilating their
-fathers, and binding their mothers in chains.… For
-this the poets did not go unpunished, but some of them
-were wanderers and begged their bread, some became
-blind, another was an exile all his life long, and Orpheus,
-who devoted himself especially to such stories, was torn
-in pieces.”<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_667" id="fnanchor_667"></a><a href="#footnote_667" class="fnanchor">[667]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The greatest objection to these immoral legends was
-that they were taught in the nursery and the elementary
-school, at the most impressionable age.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_668" id="fnanchor_668"></a><a href="#footnote_668" class="fnanchor">[668]</a></span>
-Hence Plato
-wishes to lay down strict canons for the myths, legends,
-and fables which are to be taught to children. “For
-the beginning of everything is half the battle, especially
-in the case of what is young and tender. Young
-children are like soft wax, ready to take a clear and
-deep impression of any seal which is laid upon them.
-Hence the immense importance of the earliest stages of
-education, the myths and stories taught in the nursery
-and at school.… The compositions of Homer and
-Hesiod are fiction, and unlovely fiction at that; even
-if true, they had better not be told to the young and
-undiscerning.… The myths must be improving on
-the surface, not by allegory.”<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_669" id="fnanchor_669"></a><a href="#footnote_669" class="fnanchor">[669]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Plato is not prepared to rewrite the Hellenic Bible:
-he will only draw up the canons which the poets must
-follow. It is to be noticed that these canons are
-peculiar, and would exclude not merely most of Homer
-and Hesiod, but a large part of the Old and some of
-<a name="Page_232" id="Page_232"></a><span class="pageno">232</span>
-the New Testament. The first canon is that God, being
-good, cannot be the cause or originator of any harm or
-evil to mankind; for these things some other cause
-must be discovered. The greater part of the human
-lot is evil: so God is not the cause of the majority of
-human events.</p>
-
-<p>This excludes Homer’s lines:</p>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="i2">Two butts of human fortunes by the gates of Heaven stood,</div>
- <div class="i2">One full of all things evil, and one of all things good.</div>
- <div class="i2">To whom God gives a mixture, his life is weal and woe,</div>
- <div class="i2">But to whom He gives of the evil alone, he lives as a beggar below.</div>
- </div><!--end poem-->
-</div><!--end container-->
-
-<p class="unindent">And</p>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="i2">Zeus is the world’s housekeeper, who serves out weal and woe.</div>
- </div><!--end poem-->
-</div><!--end container-->
-
-<p class="unindent">And Aeschylus’</p>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="i2">God plants the seed of sin among mankind,</div>
- <div class="i2">Whene’er He wills to bring a race to naught.</div>
- </div><!--end poem-->
-</div><!--end container-->
-
-<p>If God is represented as the cause of misfortunes,
-the poet must say that the misfortunes were good for
-the sufferers, making them better and happier.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_670" id="fnanchor_670"></a><a href="#footnote_670" class="fnanchor">[670]</a></span>
-</p>
-
-<p>The second canon is that God is not a wizard,
-appearing now in one form, now in another. Why
-should He change? External forces are not likely to
-change Him: He would not change Himself, since it
-would necessarily be a transition to the less good and
-less beautiful, since He is perfect. So the <span class="lock">lines&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="i2">Disguised as human strangers, in many a changing guise,</div>
- <div class="i2">Gods roam about the cities, to spy iniquities,</div>
- </div><!--end poem-->
-</div><!--end container-->
-
-<p class="unindent">and the tales of Proteus and other metamorphoses, are
-false. Consequently mothers should not tell their
-children that a god may always be present in disguise,
-for it is a lie and is also likely to make the children
-<a name="Page_233" id="Page_233"></a><span class="pageno">233</span>
-cowardly. Lying is only useful in dealing with enemies,
-for managing lunatics, and for making a satisfactory
-explanation where certainty is impossible. God has no
-such reason for lying or deception.</p>
-
-<p>The character of the Deity having been thus purged
-of mythological accretions, Plato passes on to the treatment
-of the future state. This must not be described
-as in any way terrible, or the children will learn to
-prefer dishonourable life to honourable death. So
-reject<span class="lock">&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="i2">O better be a poor man’s serf, and share his scanty bread,</div>
- <div class="i2">Than be the crownèd king of all the nations of the dead.</div>
- </div><!--end poem-->
-</div><!--end container-->
-
-<p class="unindent">And</p>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="i2">From him his soul bewailing her hapless fortunes fled,</div>
- <div class="i2">Her youth and beauty leaving, to the kingdoms of the dead!</div>
- </div><!--end poem-->
-</div><!--end container-->
-
-<p>All such passages must be expurgated from school
-editions; nor is it right to admit the fearful scenery of
-Hell, the rivers of Hate (Styx) and Wailing (Kokutos),
-ghosts, banshees, and other terrible words, for fear of
-making the children nervous.</p>
-
-<p>Then comes the discussion of the ideal man, in which
-Achilles falls from the pedestal which he had previously
-occupied as the ideal of Hellenic manhood. Great men
-must not indulge in immoderate lamentations for their
-dead friends. The lament of Achilles for Patroklos
-and of Priam for Hektor, when he rolled in the dust
-and the dungheap, must be rejected. “For if the
-young should take such stories seriously and not
-laugh them to scorn as contemptibly improbable, they
-would be most unlikely to consider such lamentations
-degrading, or to check themselves when they felt any
-impulse to act in such a way, but, without shame or
-<a name="Page_234" id="Page_234"></a><span class="pageno">234</span>
-restraint, they would whine out many dirges over tiny
-misfortunes.”<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_671" id="fnanchor_671"></a><a href="#footnote_671" class="fnanchor">[671]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Nor must the heroes be made too fond of laughing.
-For immoderate laughter leads by reaction to immoderate
-grief. So <span class="lock">reject&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="i2">Then rose among the blessed gods a laugh unquenchable.</div>
- </div><!--end poem-->
-</div><!--end container-->
-
-<p>The myths must instil self-control, obedience to
-rulers and elders and to the better instincts. This
-leads Plato to <span class="lock">expurgate&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="i2">Thou drunkard, shameless as a dog, and fearful as a deer:</div>
- </div><!--end poem-->
-</div><!--end container-->
-
-<p class="unindent">but <span class="lock">commend&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="i2">Good father, sit in silence, and hearken to what I say.</div>
- </div><!--end poem-->
-</div><!--end container-->
-
-<p>Then Homer teaches gluttony, by making Odusseus,
-the wisest of men, <span class="lock">say&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="i2">Best thing in life I count it, a heavy-laden board,</div>
- <div class="i2">While in the goblets ceaselessly the good strong wine is poured.</div>
- </div><!--end poem-->
-</div><!--end container-->
-
-<p>Still worse are the tales of the lusts of Zeus or of
-Ares and Aphrodite, and of the covetousness of the
-gods.</p>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="i2">Gifts win the heart of gods: gifts win the heart of kings.</div>
- </div><!--end poem-->
-</div><!--end container-->
-
-<p>Nor must the heroes be allowed to blaspheme. “My
-respect for Homer makes me shrink from saying it,
-but it is impious to state or to believe that Achilles was
-ready to fight against the river, a god, or that he
-dragged Hektor’s body round Patroklos’ tomb or
-slaughtered captives upon it, or that he gave to the
-dead Patroklos the hair which he had dedicated to the
-river god Spercheios.”<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_672" id="fnanchor_672"></a><a href="#footnote_672" class="fnanchor">[672]</a></span>
-Nor must poets say that
-<a name="Page_235" id="Page_235"></a><span class="pageno">235</span>
-wicked men are enviable, if they are not found out, or
-that justice does good to others but is a loss to oneself.
-On the contrary, they must invent myths to establish
-the opposite, whether it be true or not, because it is
-profitable.</p>
-
-<p>Plato cares very little for literal truth in mythology;
-he is only desirous that the fiction should be
-improving and in accordance with sound ethics. It
-is impossible to know the truth, he thinks, about things
-primeval and the gods, so it is necessary to invent stories
-as near the truth as possible and such that they will be
-improving. The majority of men, as Isokrates also
-noticed, prefer myths to anything else; for their intelligence
-can only grasp ethical and metaphysical truths
-when they are embodied in stories and parables and
-fables.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_673" id="fnanchor_673"></a><a href="#footnote_673" class="fnanchor">[673]</a></span>
-These fictions, however, are like powerful drugs:
-their concoction must only be entrusted to competent
-hands, or the result will be deadly. The rulers of the
-State, the philosophers, must construct the national
-mythology, not unskilled and irresponsible persons like
-poets.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_674" id="fnanchor_674"></a><a href="#footnote_674" class="fnanchor">[674]</a></span>
-Plato himself gives a good many instances
-of such profitable myths; he enshrines in them, as in
-a popular form, many of his deepest beliefs, his
-psychology,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_675" id="fnanchor_675"></a><a href="#footnote_675" class="fnanchor">[675]</a></span>
-his views of the immortality of the soul,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_676" id="fnanchor_676"></a><a href="#footnote_676" class="fnanchor">[676]</a></span>
-his political theory that all men are not equal.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_677" id="fnanchor_677"></a><a href="#footnote_677" class="fnanchor">[677]</a></span>
-In his
-opinion mythology was the proper food for the unenlightened
-many who were incapable of philosophic
-certainty; the philosopher, by the light of his exact
-<a name="Page_236" id="Page_236"></a><span class="pageno">236</span>
-knowledge of ethics and metaphysics, was to concoct
-this food.</p>
-
-<p>In pursuance of this theory an ideal character, in
-history or fiction, was required to personify and make
-real to the multitude the disembodied ideals of Ethics.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_678" id="fnanchor_678"></a><a href="#footnote_678" class="fnanchor">[678]</a></span>
-Achilles had been tumbled from his pedestal by philosophy.
-Who was to replace him? Plato tries to
-put an idealised Sokrates in this position, but he could
-not square the historical personality with the ideal
-man postulated in the <cite>Republic</cite>. Xenophon, also
-thinking that a pattern man is “an excellent invention
-for the study of morality,” proposes Agesilaos.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_679" id="fnanchor_679"></a><a href="#footnote_679" class="fnanchor">[679]</a></span>
-Prodikos tried to make Herakles the model of the
-young. Aristotle formulated the <ins title="megalopsychos">μεγαλόψυχος</ins>, but
-never personified him. Stoicism sought for its Wise
-Man or Perfect Saint, but never found him; Epicureanism
-was satisfied with its founder. But the
-search for the personification of the ethical ideal becomes
-the central feature of Hellenic philosophy and religion
-from the time of Plato onwards.</p>
-
-<p class="p2 footnote"> <a name="footnote_655" id="footnote_655"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_655"><span class="muchsmaller">[655]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Herodotos">Herod.</abbr> <abbr title="seven">vii.</abbr> 159-161.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_656" id="footnote_656"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_656"><span class="muchsmaller">[656]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite>Ion</cite>, 24 <span class="sc lowercase">C</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_657" id="footnote_657"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_657"><span class="muchsmaller">[657]</span></a>
-<cite><abbr title="Republic">Rep.</abbr></cite> 606 <span class="sc lowercase">E</span>. So in Isokrates, <cite>To Nikokles</cite>, 530 <span class="sc lowercase">B</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_658" id="footnote_658"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_658"><span class="muchsmaller">[658]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Aristophanes">Aristoph.</abbr> <cite>Frogs</cite>, 1034-1036.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_659" id="footnote_659"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_659"><span class="muchsmaller">[659]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite><abbr title="Republic">Rep.</abbr></cite> 391 <span class="sc lowercase">B</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_660" id="footnote_660"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_660"><span class="muchsmaller">[660]</span></a>
-Sokrates in Xenophon, <cite><abbr title="Memorabilia">Mem.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="one">i.</abbr> 3, 7. The moralisation is quite un-Homeric.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_661" id="footnote_661"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_661"><span class="muchsmaller">[661]</span></a>
-Herod, <abbr title="two">ii.</abbr> 43-46. This tendency culminated in Euhemeros, at the end of the
-fourth century, who claimed to have found inscriptions in Crete giving the careers of
-mortal kings named Ouranos, Kronos, and Zeus. He argued that the gods were
-distinguished men, deified by admiring posterity. His theory passed to Rome in
-Ennius’ translation and supported the imperial cult.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_662" id="footnote_662"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_662"><span class="muchsmaller">[662]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite><abbr title="Phaidros">Phaedr.</abbr></cite> 229 <span class="sc lowercase">C</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_663" id="footnote_663"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_663"><span class="muchsmaller">[663]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite>Ion</cite>, 530. <abbr title="Compare">Cp.</abbr> <abbr title="Xenophon">Xen.</abbr> <cite>Banquet</cite>, <abbr title="three">iii.</abbr> 6, where Anaximandros is mentioned.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_664" id="footnote_664"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_664"><span class="muchsmaller">[664]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Compare">Cp.</abbr> <abbr title="Aristophanes">Aristoph.</abbr> <cite>Clouds</cite>, 905, 1080, representing “Sophist” arguments.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_665" id="footnote_665"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_665"><span class="muchsmaller">[665]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite><abbr title="Republic">Rep.</abbr></cite> 377 <span class="sc lowercase">D</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_666" id="footnote_666"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_666"><span class="muchsmaller">[666]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Isokrates">Isok.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Bousiris">Bous.</abbr></cite> 228 <span class="sc lowercase">D</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_667" id="footnote_667"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_667"><span class="muchsmaller">[667]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Compare">Cp.</abbr> the statement of Herodotos (<abbr title="two">ii.</abbr> 53) that Homer and Hesiod created the
-details of Hellenic mythology, even the names and functions of the deities.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_668" id="footnote_668"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_668"><span class="muchsmaller">[668]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite><abbr title="Republic">Rep.</abbr></cite> 377 <span class="sc lowercase">B</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_669" id="footnote_669"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_669"><span class="muchsmaller">[669]</span></a>
-<cite>Ibid.</cite> 378.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_670" id="footnote_670"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_670"><span class="muchsmaller">[670]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite><abbr title="Republic">Rep.</abbr></cite> 380.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_671" id="footnote_671"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_671"><span class="muchsmaller">[671]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite><abbr title="Republic">Rep.</abbr></cite> 388 <span class="sc lowercase">D</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_672" id="footnote_672"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_672"><span class="muchsmaller">[672]</span></a>
-<cite>Ibid.</cite> 391 <span class="sc lowercase">B</span>. Plato maligns Achilles. He only promised the hair to Spercheios
-on condition that he returned home alive, which he knew he would not do if he
-slew Hektor.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_673" id="footnote_673"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_673"><span class="muchsmaller">[673]</span></a>
-Compare Tennyson, <cite>In Memoriam</cite>, <abbr title="thirty-six">xxxvi.</abbr>:</p>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="i0">For Wisdom dealt with mortal powers,</div>
- <div class="i2">Where truth in closest words shall fail,</div>
- <div class="i2">When truth embodied in a tale</div>
- <div class="i0">Shall enter in at lowly doors.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_674" id="footnote_674"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_674"><span class="muchsmaller">[674]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite><abbr title="Republic">Rep.</abbr></cite> 389 <span class="sc lowercase">C</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_675" id="footnote_675"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_675"><span class="muchsmaller">[675]</span></a>
-In the <cite>Phaidros</cite>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_676" id="footnote_676"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_676"><span class="muchsmaller">[676]</span></a>
-In the <cite>Republic</cite>, and elsewhere.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_677" id="footnote_677"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_677"><span class="muchsmaller">[677]</span></a>
-<cite><abbr title="Republic">Rep.</abbr></cite> 414-417, etc. For the use which Plato made of myths as popular expositions
-of his views, <abbr title="compare">cp.</abbr> <cite>Laws</cite>, 663, 664, 713, 714, 716.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_678" id="footnote_678"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_678"><span class="muchsmaller">[678]</span></a>
-Isokrates recognised this too, <cite><abbr title="Antidemocracy">Antid.</abbr></cite> 105 <span class="sc lowercase">C</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_679" id="footnote_679"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_679"><span class="muchsmaller">[679]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Xenophon">Xen.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Agesilaus">Ag.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="ten">x.</abbr> 2.</p>
-</div><!--end chapter-->
-
-<div class="chapter"><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237"></a><span class="pageno">237</span>
-<h3 class="p4 h3head">CHAPTER IX</h3>
-
-<h4 class="p2 h4head">ART, MUSIC, AND POETRY</h4>
-
-<p class="p2"><span class="sc">Since</span> poetry, music, singing, and dancing were the
-chief components of a Hellenic boy’s education, the
-æsthetic canons by which these were regulated came to
-be of great importance in the moral history of Hellas,
-and were the objects of much thought and inquiry on
-the part of the educational theorists. It is hard for a
-modern reader to understand the attitude which Plato
-and Aristotle adopt towards poetry, art, and music,
-partly owing to the way in which these subjects are
-neglected in many modern schools, and still more
-owing to the immense changes which have taken place
-both in the subjects themselves and in their relations
-to the State as a whole.</p>
-
-<p>In ancient Hellas art, literature, and music were
-addressed to the whole citizen-body, not to a cultured
-upper class. The epics were recited to crowds that
-might number thousands. The choral lyrics were
-danced and sung by large choruses in the presence of a
-whole city. Tragedy and Comedy were acted before
-the whole Athenian populace, swollen by crowds from
-every part of Hellas. The great orations were spoken
-either to the national assembly, where every grown
-man might be present, or to a jury of several hundred
-<a name="Page_238" id="Page_238"></a><span class="pageno">238</span>
-citizens. So with Hellenic art. The statues and
-pictures were not created for private drawing-rooms,
-but for public temples, colonnades, or gymnasia.</p>
-
-<p>Thus it was national, not individual taste which
-was the standard of Hellenic art and literature: they
-had to follow the taste of the city, not of a clique. But
-every city in Hellas, as in the Italy of the Renaissance,
-had an intense individuality of its own, which dominated
-its poets, artists, and musicians. The art-schools of
-the islands, of Argos, of Athens were as distinct from
-one another as those of Venice, Florence, Perugia.
-The greater centres had types of music so far distinct
-that they required different instruments. Language,
-character, and politics in like manner presented a
-different aspect in each community. But underneath
-this ubiquitous local individuality lay the fundamental
-distinction between the Dorian, on the one hand, and the
-Ionian, with whom for æsthetic purposes may be classed
-the Aeolian, on the other. For Hellenism began to
-run its course in two distinct channels, the Doric and
-the Ionic.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_680" id="fnanchor_680"></a><a href="#footnote_680" class="fnanchor">[680]</a></span>
-</p>
-
-<p>The Doric characteristics were the sacrifice of
-the detail and the individual to the whole and
-the community, a love of terseness and simplicity, a
-strong sense of harmony, order, and proportion, a hatred
-of complexity, mystery, vagueness, and luxury, and a
-preference for the perfect body over the developed
-intellect. The Dorians were essentially one-sided, and
-lacking in imagination, intellect, and invention; they
-were strong conservatives, and any innovation was
-repugnant to them.</p>
-
-<p>The Ionians were a very different people. Individualism
-<a name="Page_239" id="Page_239"></a><span class="pageno">239</span>
-was strong in them from the first. They
-had a tendency to floridity, to exaggeration of detail,
-and to luxury. A quick-witted and imaginative race,
-they were fond of perpetual innovation. Versatility
-was characteristic of them. They preferred intellectual
-to physical success. Their imagination outran their
-powers of execution. They had none of the solidity
-of the less brilliant Dorian, none of his discipline, self-restraint,
-directness, or perseverance. They were his
-inferiors in most physical and ethical qualities, his
-superiors in all intellectual pursuits.</p>
-
-<p>Till the fifth century the two conflicting types
-exercise little influence upon one another. The Ionians
-produce a sensuous, dreamy, refined, and imaginative
-sculpture; the Dorians a series of physically excellent
-but wholly unintellectual athlete-statues. The Aeolians
-produce the personal lyrics of love and wine; the
-Dorians the choral poetry of athletic triumphs and
-gymnastic dances. The Dorians can claim the ethical
-and collectivist philosophy of Pythagoras; the Ionians
-the intellectual and individualist philosophy of the so-called
-Ionian schools.</p>
-
-<p>Athens during this period was purely Ionic, as her
-statues, the remains of which are now being recovered
-from the rubbish heaps where Xerxes threw them,
-abundantly testify. Further evidence comes from the
-style of dress shown in these statues and in other works
-of art of the period: it is almost oriental.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_681" id="fnanchor_681"></a><a href="#footnote_681" class="fnanchor">[681]</a></span>
-The statues
-reveal an excess of detail and over-refinement: the
-most common type was a draped woman. The Dorians,
-on the other hand, were most successful in the nude
-male type; and the great Aeginetan school quite failed
-to represent the goddess Athena.</p>
-
-<p><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240"></a><span class="pageno">240</span>
-The same principle of differentiation applied to
-music as well as to art, in Hellas: the Dorian, the
-Ionian, the Aeolian, as well as the neighbouring Phrygian
-and Lydian, each produced a type of their own, or
-“harmony,” as it was called. Each “harmony” bore the
-mark of the “ethos,” or moral character, of the tribe or
-race which produced it, plainly and unmistakably. Music
-in early Hellas must have been of a primitive type, and
-an acute musical ear had not yet been developed by long
-training. Consequently, the average Hellenic audience
-was in the position of the utterly unmusical man of
-modern times: the complicated music of modern masters
-would have been wholly unintelligible to them, and the
-only meanings which they could extract from music were
-certain broad ethical impressions. The unmusical man
-is stirred by a good marching tune, moved to a certain
-depression by a dirge or dead march, enlivened and
-excited by a rollicking bacchanalian song, and reduced
-to a solemn and half-religious frame of mind by the
-tones of a great organ. So with the average Hellene:
-he extracted this amount of impressions from his music,
-and no more. Any idea of music as the voice of the
-unutterable was quite foreign to his mind; in fact, he
-disliked any music that was unaccompanied by singing:
-tunes without words were unknown in earlier Hellas.</p>
-
-<p>How these different harmonies were produced, by
-what combination of notes and scales each was regulated,
-may be left to the specialists: it is one of those
-questions which will probably never be settled conclusively.
-The fact remains that they existed, each
-with an unmistakable moral characteristic of its own.
-But what exactly the moral characteristic of each was,
-is rendered doubtful by the conflicting evidence of
-different writers; probably, as musical taste changed
-<a name="Page_241" id="Page_241"></a><span class="pageno">241</span>
-and developed, the same “harmony” came to cause a
-different impression. Plato’s ear, accustomed to the
-prevalent Dorian, found the Lydian doleful and depressing;
-Aristotle and his contemporaries, more used
-to softer music, praised it as valuable for educational
-purposes.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_682" id="fnanchor_682"></a><a href="#footnote_682" class="fnanchor">[682]</a></span>
-Herakleides of Pontos,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_683" id="fnanchor_683"></a><a href="#footnote_683" class="fnanchor">[683]</a></span>
-who made a
-special study of music, gives, in a fragment, a sketch
-of the old Hellenic “harmonies.” The Dorian,
-according to him, was manly, dignified, stern, and
-robust, not effeminate nor merry nor variegated nor
-versatile.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_684" id="fnanchor_684"></a><a href="#footnote_684" class="fnanchor">[684]</a></span>
-The Aeolic, afterwards called “Hypo-Dorian,”
-was haughty and pretentious, rather conceited,
-not, however, base in any way, but inflated and
-confident. It was the right music for “woman, wine,
-and song.” The Ionic, representing the old Ionic
-character before the race degenerated, was passionate,
-headstrong, contentious, showing no signs of benevolence
-or merriment, but revealing a certain hardness of heart
-and temperament. It was not florid nor cheerful, but
-austere and harsh, with a not ignoble dignity which
-fitted it to accompany Tragedy. Later, the race and
-the “harmony” seem to have degenerated, and are
-charged with being luxurious and effeminate. There
-used also to be a Locrian “harmony,” which was used
-by Pindar and Simonides, but afterwards it fell into
-contempt and died out.</p>
-
-<p>Besides these purely Hellenic types, there were two
-which came from barbarian races, the Lydian and the
-Phrygian. Of the Lydian there were several varieties.
-The Mixed-Lydian was doleful and suitable to dirges:
-<a name="Page_242" id="Page_242"></a><span class="pageno">242</span>
-it made the audience feel mournful and grave. The
-Syntono-Lydian was very similar. The pure Lydian is
-rejected as effeminate by Plato;<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_685" id="fnanchor_685"></a><a href="#footnote_685" class="fnanchor">[685]</a></span>
-but Aristotle, resting
-on the musical experts, declares that it involves order
-and arrangement (<ins title="kosmos">κόσμος</ins>) and is well adapted for
-education. About the Phrygian opinion is still more
-divided. Plato commends it. According to him it
-suitably represents the notes and accents of a self-controlled
-man “in peaceful and unconstrained circumstances,
-trying to persuade some one or making a
-request, praying to a god or advising a man, or giving
-his attention to the request or advice or arguments of
-some one else; and if he attains his object, not puffed
-up, but in all things acting, and accepting the consequences
-of his actions, with moderation and self-control.”
-The philosopher then goes on to reject
-the flute, as suitable only to hysterical enthusiasm.
-But this, as Aristotle pointed out, was inconsistent.
-For the Phrygian harmony and the flute went hand in
-hand: the wild orgies of Dionusos and other worships
-of an enthusiastic nature were usually accompanied by
-the flute and could only be set to the Phrygian
-harmony. The dithyramb, for instance, could only be
-set in this way; when Philoxenos definitely tried to
-write one to the Dorian, he slid back without being able
-to prevent it into the Phrygian. Aristotle therefore,
-accounting it an enthusiastic harmony, reserves it as a
-“purge” (<ins title="katharsis">κάθαρσις</ins>), which, by providing under well-regulated
-conditions an occasional outlet for hysteria, will
-work such affections out of the system for a long period:
-at the end of which another dose will be required.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_686" id="fnanchor_686"></a><a href="#footnote_686" class="fnanchor">[686]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243"></a><span class="pageno">243</span>
-In Hellas music was held to be an efficacious medicine
-for the ills alike of body, soul, and mind. Even the
-grave and learned philosopher Theophrastos, the pupil of
-Aristotle, asserted that the Phrygian “harmony” on the
-flute was the proper means of curing lumbago.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_687" id="fnanchor_687"></a><a href="#footnote_687" class="fnanchor">[687]</a></span>
-Pindar
-states that Apollo “gives to men and women cures for
-grievous sickness, and invented the harp, and gives the
-Muse to whom he will, bringing warless peace into the
-heart”:<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_688" id="fnanchor_688"></a><a href="#footnote_688" class="fnanchor">[688]</a></span>
-the god of medicine is the son of the god of
-the harp. The Pythagorean philosopher Kleinias, when
-he was in a bad temper, used to take up his harp, saying,
-“I am calming myself.”<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_689" id="fnanchor_689"></a><a href="#footnote_689" class="fnanchor">[689]</a></span>
-He and his school regarded
-the harp as the true means of attaining that peace
-and solemn orderliness of soul which as true Dorian
-musicians they desired. Lukourgos produced at Sparta
-the state of mind necessary to enable his reforms to
-be carried, by sending from Crete a lyric poet named
-Thales, whose songs, by their calm and orderly tune
-and rhythm, were an incentive to discipline and concord:
-by this means the Spartans were imperceptibly
-calmed in character.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_690" id="fnanchor_690"></a><a href="#footnote_690" class="fnanchor">[690]</a></span>
-The Arcadians, according to
-their compatriot Polubios, from ancient times onwards
-“made music their foster-brother” from their cradles
-till they were thirty years of age, in order to counteract
-the brutalising tendencies of their rough life and harsh
-climate; and the inhabitants of one district, Kunaitha,
-which neglected this preventive, were notorious for
-their wickedness.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_691" id="fnanchor_691"></a><a href="#footnote_691" class="fnanchor">[691]</a></span>
-</p>
-
-<p>Thus music came to be regarded as the best means
-of forming character. It was only necessary to apply
-the right sort of “harmony” to the young and susceptible
-personality, and the right “ethos” would be
-<a name="Page_244" id="Page_244"></a><span class="pageno">244</span>
-produced. The Dorian was most in request for
-educational purposes: its merits were universally
-recognised. For it “suitably represented the notes and
-accents of a brave man in the presence of war or of any
-other violent action, going to meet wounds or death or
-fallen into any other misfortune, facing his fate with
-unflinching resolution.”<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_692" id="fnanchor_692"></a><a href="#footnote_692" class="fnanchor">[692]</a></span>
-Of the others, as has been
-said, Plato preferred the Phrygian and Aristotle the
-Lydian.</p>
-
-<p class="center">* * * * *</p>
-
-<p>Not only beautiful music, but beautiful art also, was
-believed to produce, by an unconscious but irresistible
-influence, beautiful characters in those who came into
-contact with it; while, on the other hand, bad art, as
-well as bad music, was the cause of vice and low moral
-ideals.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_693" id="fnanchor_693"></a><a href="#footnote_693" class="fnanchor">[693]</a></span>
-This, they naturally thought, was particularly
-true in the case of children, who are so sensitive to all
-external influences; moreover, it is the early impressions
-that make most difference in a man’s life. To serve
-this educational end, the Hellenes expected every statue
-and painting, as well as every poem and tune, to have
-<ins title="êthos">ἦθος</ins>, that is, according to Aristotle’s definition,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_694" id="fnanchor_694"></a><a href="#footnote_694" class="fnanchor">[694]</a></span>
-to be
-such that its moral purpose was manifest to the average
-man. For this purpose Hellenic art had to become
-impersonal: the great statues represent a single trait
-of character. The smaller individualising traits are
-omitted: the single trait chosen is then idealised and
-carried to its utmost possible development. This
-produced a single and easily intelligible effect. The
-frieze on the Parthenon represented the perfect knight
-in various attitudes, not So-and-so and Somebody-else.
-<a name="Page_245" id="Page_245"></a><span class="pageno">245</span>
-The same idealised abstractions can be traced in the
-“Theseus” of the Pediment, and in most of the dramas
-of Sophocles.</p>
-
-<p>The realisation of this artistic ideal was made possible
-by the fusion of the two currents, Doric and Ionic. At
-the end of the sixth century a wave of Doricism passes
-over Athens, and the first competent athlete-sculptors
-arise there. A second wave came in the middle of the
-next century, in the period of Perikles. The Dorian
-characteristics now dominate Attic artists alike in poetry,
-sculpture, and vase-painting. Aeschylus had possessed
-the best traits of the Ionic temperament, chastened by
-the great crisis of the Persian wars: his imagination is
-half oriental, and he has often been compared to a
-Hebrew prophet. But the canons of Sophocles are
-purely Doric, as are those of Pheidias. The mixture
-of Doric ethics with Ionic imagination produces the
-great age of Hellenic art and literature. With art in
-such an educative condition, the effect of the great
-public buildings and temples, which adorned even quite
-humble villages, and of the glorious statues of which
-every temple, agora, and gymnasium formed a perfect
-treasure-house, must have been very great upon the
-Hellenes, who were probably the most susceptible of all
-peoples to artistic influences. Moderns vaguely realise
-that a great Gothic Cathedral does direct the emotions
-quite perceptibly. The more susceptible Athenians
-must have been much more strongly influenced by
-the Parthenon and the Propulaia. In fact, it is related
-that Epaminondas declared that his countrymen could
-never become great unless they removed these buildings
-bodily to Thebes. Strangers visiting Athens were so
-overcome by her architectural glories that they thought
-her the natural capital of the world&mdash;an effect which
-<a name="Page_246" id="Page_246"></a><span class="pageno">246</span>
-Perikles may well have intended. Great works of art
-produce great effects: it is not unnatural to suppose
-that smaller works produce a not inconsiderable, if
-smaller, effect. Modern theorists often declare that
-the pictures and wall-paper of the nursery ought to be
-in the best taste. Plato and Aristotle ruled that
-everything, however humble, which surrounds the
-growing child should be in accordance with the best
-canons of art, since art influenced morality so strongly.
-“Ought we not to keep an eye,” says Plato,<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_695" id="fnanchor_695"></a><a href="#footnote_695" class="fnanchor">[695]</a></span>
- “on the
-craftsmen also, and prevent them from representing
-moral evil or disorderliness or bad taste or lack of grace
-or lack of harmony either in their imitations of animals
-or in their buildings or in any other object of their
-craft? If they are unable to carry out our directions
-in this matter, ought we not to expel them from the
-community, lest boys who are brought up in the bad
-pasture of these bad representations may pluck poison
-daily from everything around them, and little by little
-insensibly accumulate a large amount of evil in their
-souls? Must we not rather search for such craftsmen
-as are able, by their native genius, to discover what is
-beautiful and graceful? For in this way our children,
-dwelling in a region of health, will be influenced for
-good by every sound and every sight of these works of
-beauty, inhaling as it were a healthy breeze that blows
-to them from a goodly land.” Every article of
-furniture, every detail of architecture, is to take its part
-in educating the citizens. But if art and music are so
-potent a factor in education, they require to be carefully
-regulated: a depravation of popular taste, which
-will cause a depravation of the dependent artists,
-will by its educating influence increase the national
-<a name="Page_247" id="Page_247"></a><span class="pageno">247</span>
-decadence both of taste and of morals, in an ever-widening
-degree.</p>
-
-<p class="center">* * * * *</p>
-
-<p>Poetry had at least an equally potent influence upon
-contemporary ethics. The works of the great poets
-were the chief medium of education, and large quantities
-of them were learned by heart in all the elementary
-schools.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_696" id="fnanchor_696"></a><a href="#footnote_696" class="fnanchor">[696]</a></span>
-What the boys learned, they then recited,
-with as much dramatic action as they were capable of:
-the rhapsodes provided them with models. Thus the
-boys really <em>acted</em> the poets as far as they could.
-Acting was a new thing in Hellas in Solon’s time, and
-it was received with apprehension. When Thespis first
-acted one of his plays, Solon asked him if he was not
-ashamed to tell such lies in public, making himself out
-to be what he was not. Thespis replied that it was
-only in fun. Then Solon struck the ground with his
-stick and said, “We shall soon find this fun of yours
-invading our commercial transactions.” Later, when
-Peisistratos obtained the bodyguard, to which he owed
-his tyranny, by pretending to have been wounded by
-his enemies, Solon said the stratagem was a case of
-acting.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_697" id="fnanchor_697"></a><a href="#footnote_697" class="fnanchor">[697]</a></span>
-This objection was echoed by Plato, and is
-not wholly unjustified by the course of history. For
-the great vice of Hellenic life was its insincerity: it is
-impossible to tell how far a Hellene is in earnest. It
-is this vice which ruins their oratory; it is this which,
-in later times, made the “hungry little Greek” the type
-of a fawning liar in Roman opinion. It was not only
-in recitations that acting played a great part. The
-<a name="Page_248" id="Page_248"></a><span class="pageno">248</span>
-dances were essentially dramatic: it was this quality
-which enabled them to give birth to the drama. In
-the war-dance all the gestures and attitudes of attack
-and defence in actual battle were represented. The
-Dionysiac dances were originally the acts of devotees
-trying to assimilate themselves to the god in his
-sufferings and triumphs.</p>
-
-<p>How vividly a Hellene entered into the dramatisation
-may be seen from the case of the rhapsode Ion.
-When he recited Homer, his eyes filled with water and
-his hair stood on end; and his audience were in much
-the same condition. The effect in the “Mimetic”
-dances, where music, gestures, rhythm, and poetry all
-combined to produce a single impression, must have
-been greater still; the audience, as well as the performers,
-must often have been quite carried away.
-Such performances were very frequent. Is it unnatural
-to suppose that such frequent assimilation had an
-important effect on the Hellenes, with their artistic
-temperament and great susceptibility? At any rate,
-Plato, Aristotle, and Aristophanes, not to mention lesser
-names, believed that it had.</p>
-
-<p>Among these potent poetic influences, the drama
-must certainly not be forgotten. Sokrates regarded the
-<cite>Clouds</cite> of Aristophanes as a far more deadly attack
-upon his career than anything that Anutos and Meletos
-could say. To Plato, the theatre plays the part of the
-“Great Sophist,” the educating influence which forms
-the opinion and the character of the young.</p>
-
-<p>It must be remembered that Hellenic poetry enshrined
-the religion of the race: this fact gave it an
-enormous influence. The characters in Aeschylus and
-Sophocles are divine or semi-divine; many of the audience
-in the theatre were wont to revere Agamemnon
-<a name="Page_249" id="Page_249"></a><span class="pageno">249</span>
-or Theseus; all paid worship to Athena and Apollo.
-The Athenian drama was sacred to a Hellene as is the
-play at Oberammergau to a Christian. Had Shakespeare
-dramatised the Bible, modern children might have
-recited his speeches and acted his plays with somewhat
-similar feelings to those with which Hellenic boys
-recited Homer or Aeschylus. Suppose Shakespeare had
-thus dramatised the story of Esau and Jacob, and an
-imaginative child was set to learn Jacob’s speeches and
-repeat them; suppose he was also in the habit of
-hearing them recited by a first-class actor who knew
-how to bring out the minuter traits of character.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_698" id="fnanchor_698"></a><a href="#footnote_698" class="fnanchor">[698]</a></span>
-Is
-it not, at any rate, quite rational to argue that the
-child would gradually absorb some of these traits of
-character, just as children often pick up the peculiarities
-of nurses and others with whom they have no hereditary
-connection? Might not underhand habits be reasonably
-attributed to frequent acting of the part of Jacob?
-Yet in ancient Hellas the influence was much stronger,
-for the people were more susceptible and the characters
-were believed to be half-divine.</p>
-
-<p class="center">* * * * *</p>
-
-<p>Thus in ancient Hellas music, art, and poetry had
-an immense effect on the characters and morals of the
-race. This influence may well have been exaggerated
-by Hellenic thinkers. Damon the musician declared
-that every change in artistic standards produced a
-change in the tone and constitution of a State; and
-Plato agreed with him.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_699" id="fnanchor_699"></a><a href="#footnote_699" class="fnanchor">[699]</a></span>
-The danger of such innovations
-is a large part of the theme of the <cite>Laws</cite>, and,
-in a less degree, of the <cite>Republic</cite>. Sparta accepted
-<a name="Page_250" id="Page_250"></a><span class="pageno">250</span>
-this attitude and forbade all change. The opinion
-was certainly widely held, and must have rested on
-experience.</p>
-
-<p>Just as the thinkers were beginning to realise this
-principle, it happened that a very great change in the
-artistic canons did take place. Sophocles is succeeded
-by Euripides, Pheidias by Praxiteles: music suffers a
-similar transformation. Idealism gives way to realism:
-Sophocles and Pheidias had represented men as they
-ought to be, Euripides and Praxiteles represent them
-as they are. Poets and sculptors still pretend to be
-delineating deities, but in reality they are delineating
-contemporary life.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_700" id="fnanchor_700"></a><a href="#footnote_700" class="fnanchor">[700]</a></span>
-Their creations not only cease to
-be idealised, they cease to have only a single trait.
-The “Hermes” of Praxiteles is a dreamy but vigorous
-young Athenian who might have been met in the
-Akademeia or Lukeion; the “Herakles” of Euripides is
-now a homicidal maniac, now a reckless mercenary.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_701" id="fnanchor_701"></a><a href="#footnote_701" class="fnanchor">[701]</a></span>
-The characters become human by losing their divineness.
-In the next generation the divine names are dropped,
-and Menander can depict contemporary life without
-having to call his characters Orestes or Phaidra. Music
-also ceased to be so severely separated off into types.
-All manner of musical innovations arise, which it is
-very hard for a modern to grasp. But the result is
-clear enough. It became no longer possible to detect
-the ethical meaning of a tune: music was becoming
-complex, just as characters in drama and sculpture were
-becoming complex. It was also more homely in subject.
-It became daringly “mimetic” also, imitating all the
-sounds of nature. This was an age of daring experiments,
-and musicians shared the general movement.</p>
-
-<p><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251"></a><span class="pageno">251</span>
-To the Conservative party in Hellas and to the
-educational theorists these changes naturally appeared
-ruinous. In their opinion, Euripides was practically
-parodying the Bible and making divine characters share
-all the follies and weaknesses, and use the homely
-language, of mere men. Boys, learning such poetry by
-heart, would cease to have ideals: everything would be
-commonplace to them. They would recite the most
-homely language, and act the most homely parts, under
-the idea that they were half-divine. Moreover, with
-the attack of the new school upon the old religion, the
-more immoral parts of Hellenic mythology were brought
-into undue prominence. Euripides seems to have
-chosen some questionable subjects; the dithyrambic
-poets were worse, and chose themes quite unsuitable for
-children to act or hear. And music ceased to have any
-ethical value; it was all trills and onomatopœia. Such
-changes meant a revolution in the results of education.</p>
-
-<p>The poet Aristophanes is the first to raise his voice
-against the change. A few months before the utter
-ruin of Athens, he produces the <cite>Frogs</cite>, which really
-repeats the attack of the <cite>Clouds</cite>, with Euripides
-instead of Sokrates for the defendant. The poet is
-attacked as at once the prophet of the new culture of
-the Sophists and of the new artistic standards. The
-following are some of the chief faults which Aristophanes
-finds with the new school represented by Euripides:<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_702" id="fnanchor_702"></a><a href="#footnote_702" class="fnanchor">[702]</a></span>
-(1) an undignified style of music, worthy only of the
-bones as an accompaniment; (2) its habit of mixing all
-sorts of incongruous musical rubbish together, “lewd
-love-songs, drinking catches of Meletos, Karian flute-music,
-dirges, and dances”; (3) its trills or shakes, as
-in <ins title="eieieieieilissete">εἰειειειειλίσσετε</ins>; (4) its mixture of incongruous
-<a name="Page_252" id="Page_252"></a><span class="pageno">252</span>
-pictures, “dolphins, spiders, halcyons, prophet-chambers,
-and race-courses,” pathos and bathos, commonplace and
-solemnity; (5) bad metre, licenses of every sort, and
-frequent “resolved” feet. As a parody of its habitual
-incongruity Aristophanes gives:</p>
-
-<p class="blockquote">“O God of the sea, that’s what it is. O ye neighbours,
-behold yon monstrous deed: Gluke’s gone off
-with my cock. Nymphs, ye daughters of the hills!
-Mary Ann, lend a hand.”</p>
-
-<p>Aristophanes’ voice comes with a certain pathos, for
-the play is the last utterance of Periclean Athens,
-just at the point of falling and trying to find a scapegoat
-on whom to lay the responsibility of its ruin:
-and the scapegoat chosen is the new artistic and musical
-standard. The Ionic temperament had, in fact,
-broken away from all restraint. The Doric canons of
-order, symmetry, regularity, and solidity were thrown
-aside. Everything antique was treated with disdain;
-all authority was rejected with scorn. No standards,
-ethical or artistic, were tolerated. Perpetual change,
-daily novelty, became the one desire of Athens. The
-foundations of belief, the bases of the moral code, were
-broken down. The whole world seemed to be
-crumbling away, and nothing was arising to take its
-place. Spectators became dizzy with the eternal
-fluctuations. What wonder if they turned longing eyes
-towards the one centre of gravity in Hellas, towards
-the one place where politics, art, and ethics retained
-their old stability, towards Sparta? So Sparta becomes
-the philosopher’s ideal, and it is the Spartan canon that
-Plato tries to reimpose on Ionicism running riot.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_703" id="fnanchor_703"></a><a href="#footnote_703" class="fnanchor">[703]</a></span>
-The
-fault which he finds with contemporary art and music
-<a name="Page_253" id="Page_253"></a><span class="pageno">253</span>
-is that they simply try to please and amuse the audience,
-not to educate and improve it.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_704" id="fnanchor_704"></a><a href="#footnote_704" class="fnanchor">[704]</a></span>
-They are like parents
-who try to soothe a fractious child with sweetmeats
-when his health requires castor oil. But the poets and
-artists are the slaves of the mob which pays them.
-They must be freed from this control, and made the
-servants of the government. Strict canons must be
-drawn up, which they must follow on pain of being
-expelled from the State. The canons must be drawn
-up by a select body of experts; the mob is incapable of
-judging in such matters; the critic must guide their
-taste, not follow it.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_705" id="fnanchor_705"></a><a href="#footnote_705" class="fnanchor">[705]</a></span>
-Good music and art must
-bear the stamp of a good “ethos,” and, since men
-appreciate the character most which most resembles
-their own, it will be the good man who will most
-appreciate good music:<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_706" id="fnanchor_706"></a><a href="#footnote_706" class="fnanchor">[706]</a></span>
-so the good man becomes the
-standard. In order to point his moral, Plato sketches
-the history of the Athenian drama, showing how its
-dependence on popular opinion ruined it<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_707" id="fnanchor_707"></a><a href="#footnote_707" class="fnanchor">[707]</a>:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<p>“At the time of the Persian wars Athens was a
-limited democracy, with the magistracies arranged
-according to a property qualification. The spirit of
-obedience and discipline prevailed in those days, and was
-strengthened by the dread of Persia. The populace
-willingly obeyed the laws that fixed the artistic and
-musical standards. By these regulations the different
-types of song and accompaniment, hymns or prayers to
-the gods, lamentations, pæans, dithyrambs, and so forth
-were kept quite distinct, no one being allowed to mix
-them together; the standard, too, was not fixed, as now,
-by the shouts and stampings and confused applause of
-the mob, but every one listened in silence until the end
-<a name="Page_254" id="Page_254"></a><span class="pageno">254</span>
-of the play, the educated classes from preference, and
-boys and their paidagogoi, and the mob generally,
-under the direction of the rod. Thus the mass of the
-citizens were ready to obey in an orderly manner, not
-venturing to make noisy criticisms. In course of time
-some poets, who ought to have known better, led the
-way in breaking down these laws. Frenzied and distracted
-by their desire for pleasure, they mixed lamentations
-with hymns and pæans with dithyrambs, they
-imitated the flute on the lyre, they confused everything
-with everything else. Blinded by ignorance, they lied
-and said that there was no question of accuracy of representation
-in music: the only standard was the pleasure
-of the hearer, whatever sort of man he might be. With
-such style of poetry, and arguments to match, they
-inspired the many with contempt for the laws of Art,
-and gave them the idea that they were capable of
-criticising it. So the audience was no longer silent but
-noisy, since it supposed that it knew what was good and
-what was bad. Art was no longer governed by good
-taste, but by the bad taste of the mob. Nor was this
-the worst of it. From Art the infection spread to other
-spheres, and every one began to think that he knew
-everything, and consequently to break the laws. For,
-thinking themselves wiser than the laws, they no longer
-feared them.… Next comes a refusal to obey the
-Archons, then contempt for the orders of parents and
-elders, then a desire to be free from the restraints of a
-constitution. The end is utter contempt for oaths and
-covenants and the gods.”</p>
-
-<p>It is the lack of order and system in contemporary
-music which Plato dislikes.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_708" id="fnanchor_708"></a><a href="#footnote_708" class="fnanchor">[708]</a></span>
-In modern dances, he
-<a name="Page_255" id="Page_255"></a><span class="pageno">255</span>
-complains, manly words are set to effeminate tunes or
-gestures, and the voices of men and beasts and instruments
-are mixed together into a confused and unintelligible
-hodgepodge.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_709" id="fnanchor_709"></a><a href="#footnote_709" class="fnanchor">[709]</a></span>
-Music without words is equally
-detestable. Music that runs on without the proper
-pauses and loves mere speed and meaningless clamour,
-using flutes and harps without words, is in the worst
-taste. The meaning must be quite plain.</p>
-
-<p>Music must also be good. Poets say much that is
-good, much that is bad: they are irresponsible beings.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_710" id="fnanchor_710"></a><a href="#footnote_710" class="fnanchor">[710]</a></span>
-The State ought to appoint censors who will reject all
-unsuitable poems and tunes and dances. Those which
-are already in existence must be selected and expurgated.
-If this ruins the poetry, never mind: moral tone is far
-more important than poetical skill. In fact, poetry
-ought to be written by moral citizens without any
-regard being paid to their poetical talents: it would
-also be well if they did not compose till they were fifty!<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_711" id="fnanchor_711"></a><a href="#footnote_711" class="fnanchor">[711]</a></span>
-A sketch of a Platonic Censor re-editing Homer is
-given in Books <abbr title="two">ii.</abbr> and <abbr title="three">iii.</abbr> of the <cite>Republic</cite>: his methods
-are drastic.</p>
-
-<p>But Plato’s chief denunciation is reserved for the
-“mimetic” or imitative aspect of poetry. The poet
-teaches “posing.” Homer, when he described the siege
-of Troy, is posing as a skilled tactician (as his admirers
-often claimed that he was), when really the silence of
-history proves that he was nothing of the sort. So too
-the painter who represents a plough is posing as an
-authority upon agriculture: question him, and he will
-prove to be completely ignorant of the subject. Both
-poetry and painting are a fraud and a deception; by
-their pretence of knowledge, they encourage the mind
-in the habit, to which it is so prone, of accepting vague
-<a name="Page_256" id="Page_256"></a><span class="pageno">256</span>
-opinions as certainties without testing their truth.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_712" id="fnanchor_712"></a><a href="#footnote_712" class="fnanchor">[712]</a></span>
-They foster that belief in the sense-perceptions which
-it is the object of Platonic education to destroy.</p>
-
-<p>But the poet not only poses himself: he makes his
-audience, his reader, his performer pose. The boy
-who recites the dying speech of Aias in Sophocles’ play
-is posing as Aias, pretending to be Aias, and adopting
-the tone and the traits of Aias. The boy who dances
-in the dithyramb <cite>Semelé</cite> is trying to enter into
-Semelé’s feelings and moods, being helped by the music
-and the gestures and the words.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_713" id="fnanchor_713"></a><a href="#footnote_713" class="fnanchor">[713]</a></span>
-Such posing, if
-begun in early years, will invade the character and
-change it: the boy will become like the personages
-whom he is accustomed to act. Hence Plato lays
-down strict laws dealing with the recitations and dances
-of the young.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_714" id="fnanchor_714"></a><a href="#footnote_714" class="fnanchor">[714]</a></span>
- “If they speak in character, it must
-only be in the character of those who are, what they
-themselves must be when they are grown up, brave,
-temperate, pious gentlemen. They must have no skill
-in taking unsuitable characters, lest from their dramatic
-representation of what is vulgar and base they become
-infected with the reality of vulgarity and baseness. For
-imitation, if begun in early years and carried far, sinks
-into a boy’s habits and nature, and influences his voice,
-his gestures, and his ideas.… So boys must not be
-allowed to take the character of a woman, young or
-old, abusing her husband or blaspheming against the
-gods or uttering lamentations,&mdash;certainly not of a
-woman in sickness or in love or in pangs; nor the
-<a name="Page_257" id="Page_257"></a><span class="pageno">257</span>
-character of slaves performing slavish duties; nor of
-bad men, cowards, insulting or mocking one another,
-using foul language, drunk or sober; nor yet of madmen.”<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_715" id="fnanchor_715"></a><a href="#footnote_715" class="fnanchor">[715]</a></span>
-It will be seen that this will exclude much of
-Hellenic drama, especially of the plays of Euripides
-and Aristophanes. Comedy, according to Plato, should
-only be acted by foreigners, and should serve as an
-awful warning of everything that a gentleman ought
-not to do. The new music is subjected to similar
-rules. “Boys must not imitate blacksmiths at the
-forge, or craftsmen occupied in any trade, or sailors
-rowing, or boatswains giving them orders, or anything
-of the sort; nor yet horses neighing, or bulls roaring,
-or the noise of rivers or the sea or thunder or wind or
-hail or chariot-wheels or pulleys or trumpets or flutes
-or pipes …; nor the sounds made by dogs and
-sheep and birds.” So the proper style of poetry for
-educational purposes will be mostly narrative, with
-occasional dramatisation of virtuous men. To accompany
-this simplified and purified poetry only the Dorian
-and Phrygian “harmonies” will be required: all the
-others may be rejected. Simple instruments alone will
-be wanted: many-stringed lyres and the flute can be
-banished. The seven-stringed lyre and the shepherd’s
-pipe will be left.</p>
-
-<p>Plato finds it too difficult to carry these principles
-into rhythm, since he is not an expert in the subject.
-But he thinks that the metres could be regulated in
-accordance with his canons; the expert Damon declared
-that some had a demoralising tendency.</p>
-
-<p>As a whole, Plato’s aim is to restore Doric standards,
-to combat amateurism and dabbling, by which boys
-<a name="Page_258" id="Page_258"></a><span class="pageno">258</span>
-were made Jacks-of-all-trades, and above all to insist
-that the refined few ought to set the standard of taste in
-matters musical, literary, and artistic, not the unrefined
-many. With his view may be contrasted Perikles’
-boast to the Athenian people, “We can all criticise
-adequately, if we cannot all invent,” and Aristotle’s
-belief that a crowd judges better than an individual
-because its judgment is compounded of many judgments.</p>
-
-<p>But when we come to Aristotle the creative instinct
-of the Hellenic nation, apart from a few gifted
-individuals, is dead. To him and his contemporaries
-music and painting are no longer rendered necessary
-parts of education owing to the irresistible craving
-of an artistic temperament for expression. Listen
-to his theory. Painting gives boys an eye for
-beauty, and prevents them from being cheated in
-art-dealing: there is no inward compulsion to paint.
-Boys had better learn to sing and play, since children
-must needs make a noise. All they really need is the
-power of criticising professional music. This power,
-unluckily, cannot be acquired without personal study.
-But let them drop their music as soon as they can,
-or they might be mistaken for vulgar professionals.
-Such words could hardly have been addressed to a
-nation that was still musical and artistic. So Aristotle’s
-æsthetic criticism is really a study of the past, the
-discussion of a dead age. He has no natural affinity
-for such things himself: he prefers to sum up the
-opinions of experts. Consequently his remarks on the
-subject are scientific but no more; for a real appreciation
-of the Hellenic artistic and musical spirit it is
-necessary to go to Plato, who combated it so fiercely
-just because he was more in sympathy with it than
-suited his philosophic desires.</p>
-<!--Blank Page-->
-
-<div class="figcenter together" style="width: 500px">
- <p class="captionleft">PLATE <abbr title="Ten">X.</abbr> <span class="sc lowercase">A.</span></p>
- <a name="i10a" id="i10a"></a>
- <img src="images/10a.jpg"
- width="500" height="266"
- alt="Illustration: In a Riding School"
- />
- <p class="caption">IN A RIDING-SCHOOL<br />
-From a Kulix by Euphronios, now in the Louvre. Hartwig’s <cite>Meisterschalen</cite>, Plate 53.</p>
-</div><!--end illustration-->
-
-<div class="p2 figcenter together" style="width: 500px">
- <p class="captionleft">PLATE <abbr title="Ten">X.</abbr> <span class="sc lowercase">B.</span></p>
- <a name="i10b" id="i10b"></a>
- <img src="images/10b.jpg"
- width="500" height="258"
- alt="Illustration: In a Riding School"
- />
- <p class="caption">IN A RIDING-SCHOOL<br />
-From a Kulix by Euphronios, now in the Louvre. Hartwig’s <cite>Meisterschalen</cite>, Plate 53.</p>
-</div><!--end illustration-->
-
-<!--Blank Page-->
-
-<p class="p2 footnote"> <a name="footnote_680" id="footnote_680"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_680"><span class="muchsmaller">[680]</span></a>
-The characteristics are sketched in <abbr title="Thucidides">Thuc.</abbr> <abbr title="one">i.</abbr> 70. <abbr title="Compare">Cp.</abbr> the difference between
-Florence and Venice in Renaissance Italy.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_681" id="footnote_681"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_681"><span class="muchsmaller">[681]</span></a>
-See also <abbr title="Thucidides">Thuc.</abbr> <abbr title="one">i.</abbr> 6; <abbr title="Athenaeus">Athen.</abbr> 512 <span class="sc">B.C.</span></p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_682" id="footnote_682"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_682"><span class="muchsmaller">[682]</span></a>
-No doubt all the theorists had a fatal temptation to judge the harmony by the
-opinion which they held of the race which produced it. The Lydian may have
-recovered prestige during the fourth century, for it included Karian, and Karia
-became a great power under Mausolos.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_683" id="footnote_683"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_683"><span class="muchsmaller">[683]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Athenaeus">Athen.</abbr> 624 <span class="sc lowercase">C</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_684" id="footnote_684"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_684"><span class="muchsmaller">[684]</span></a>
-It is the only true Hellenic harmony (Plato, <cite><abbr title="Laches">Lach.</abbr></cite> 188 <span class="sc lowercase">D</span>).</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_685" id="footnote_685"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_685"><span class="muchsmaller">[685]</span></a>
-Plato’s opinion of the harmonies is in <cite><abbr title="Republic">Rep.</abbr></cite> 398-399. Aristotle, who professes
-only to summarise the views of experts, discusses them in <cite><abbr title="Politics">Pol.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="eight">viii.</abbr> 7.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_686" id="footnote_686"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_686"><span class="muchsmaller">[686]</span></a>
-Plato apparently accepts this principle with regard to the Korubantic dances
-(<cite>Laws</cite>, 790 <span class="sc lowercase">D</span>).</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_687" id="footnote_687"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_687"><span class="muchsmaller">[687]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Athenaeus">Athen.</abbr> 624 b.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_688" id="footnote_688"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_688"><span class="muchsmaller">[688]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Pindar">Pind.</abbr> <cite>P.</cite> 5. 60-63. <abbr title="Compare">Cp.</abbr> the story of Saul and David.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_689" id="footnote_689"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_689"><span class="muchsmaller">[689]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Athenaeus">Athen.</abbr> 624 a.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_690" id="footnote_690"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_690"><span class="muchsmaller">[690]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Plutarch">Plut.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Lukourgos">Luk.</abbr></cite> 4.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_691" id="footnote_691"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_691"><span class="muchsmaller">[691]</span></a>
-<cite><abbr title="Politics">Pol.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="four">iv.</abbr> 20. 2.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_692" id="footnote_692"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_692"><span class="muchsmaller">[692]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite><abbr title="Republic">Rep.</abbr></cite> 399 <span class="sc lowercase">A</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_693" id="footnote_693"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_693"><span class="muchsmaller">[693]</span></a>
-Londoners must devoutly hope that the Hellenic theory is false.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_694" id="footnote_694"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_694"><span class="muchsmaller">[694]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Aristotle">Aristot.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Rhetoric">Rhet.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="two">ii.</abbr> 21. 16.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_695" id="footnote_695"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_695"><span class="muchsmaller">[695]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite><abbr title="Republic">Rep.</abbr></cite> 401 <span class="sc lowercase">B</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_696" id="footnote_696"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_696"><span class="muchsmaller">[696]</span></a>
-A poetical education probably develops the imagination at the expense of the
-logical mind. Plato is a good instance of this: his imagination, against his will,
-outweighs his reason. It may be this personal experience which gives so much
-bitterness to his attack on poetry.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_697" id="footnote_697"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_697"><span class="muchsmaller">[697]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Plutarch">Plut.</abbr> <cite>Solon</cite>, 29. 30.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_698" id="footnote_698"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_698"><span class="muchsmaller">[698]</span></a>
-Children have a natural tendency to act, and need little inducement or
-instruction.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_699" id="footnote_699"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_699"><span class="muchsmaller">[699]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite><abbr title="Republic">Rep.</abbr></cite> 424 <span class="sc lowercase">C</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_700" id="footnote_700"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_700"><span class="muchsmaller">[700]</span></a>
-So in the later Renaissance the “Madonna” is the artist’s wife.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_701" id="footnote_701"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_701"><span class="muchsmaller">[701]</span></a>
-According to Dr. Verrall.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_702" id="footnote_702"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_702"><span class="muchsmaller">[702]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Aristophanes">Aristoph.</abbr> <cite>Frogs</cite>, 1301, 1340.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_703" id="footnote_703"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_703"><span class="muchsmaller">[703]</span></a>
-Ionicism = Herakleiteanism, <ins title="panta rhei">πάντα ῥεῖ</ins>. Doricism = Parmenideanism, <ins title="to pan
-menei">τὸ πᾶν μένει</ins>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_704" id="footnote_704"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_704"><span class="muchsmaller">[704]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite><abbr title="Gorgias">Gorg.</abbr></cite> 501-502; <cite><abbr title="Politics">Polit.</abbr></cite> 288 <span class="sc lowercase">C</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_705" id="footnote_705"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_705"><span class="muchsmaller">[705]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite>Laws</cite>, 657-659.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_706" id="footnote_706"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_706"><span class="muchsmaller">[706]</span></a>
-<cite>Ibid.</cite> 656.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_707" id="footnote_707"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_707"><span class="muchsmaller">[707]</span></a>
-<cite>Ibid.</cite> 698-701 <span class="sc lowercase">C</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_708" id="footnote_708"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_708"><span class="muchsmaller">[708]</span></a>
-The essence of dancing is that it is <em>orderly</em> movement; of singing that it is
-<em>orderly</em> sound (<cite>Laws</cite>, 654).</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_709" id="footnote_709"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_709"><span class="muchsmaller">[709]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite>Laws</cite>, 669-70.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_710" id="footnote_710"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_710"><span class="muchsmaller">[710]</span></a>
-<cite>Ibid.</cite> 800-802.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_711" id="footnote_711"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_711"><span class="muchsmaller">[711]</span></a>
-<cite>Ibid.</cite> 829 c.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_712" id="footnote_712"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_712"><span class="muchsmaller">[712]</span></a>
-Consequently the painter and the poet are, in Plato’s opinion, allies of the
-Sophist.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_713" id="footnote_713"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_713"><span class="muchsmaller">[713]</span></a>
-This is true, in a less degree, of the audience. <abbr title="Compare">Cp.</abbr> Plutarch’s account of the
-Spartans (<cite><abbr title="Laconica Institutions">Lac. Inst.</abbr></cite> 239 <span class="lowercase">A</span>): “They did not listen to tragedies or comedies, in order
-that neither in earnest nor in jest they might hear men gainsaying the laws.”</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_714" id="footnote_714"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_714"><span class="muchsmaller">[714]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite><abbr title="Republic">Rep.</abbr></cite> 395 <abbr title="and following">ff.</abbr></p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_715" id="footnote_715"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_715"><span class="muchsmaller">[715]</span></a>
-Plato holds that no one likes to imitate his inferiors; so the good man will not
-care to imitate any but the good. He ascribes this attitude to the Deity.</p>
-</div><!--end chapter-->
-
-<div class="chapter"><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259"></a><span class="pageno">259</span>
-<h3 class="p4 h3head">CHAPTER X</h3>
-
-<h4 class="p2 h4head">XENOPHON: “THE EDUCATION OF KUROS”</h4>
-
-<p class="p2"><span class="sc">The</span> central figure in many parishes in England is a
-retired Major-General or Colonel. He constitutes the
-chief pillar of the neighbouring church, reads the
-Lessons on Sundays, teaches in the Sunday School,
-gives away the prizes at School-treats held in his own
-grounds, and heads every subscription list; while his
-leisure is given to the compilation of a military memoir
-or two, and perhaps, if he is very literary, of a few
-short stories. Just such a man was Xenophon. On
-retiring from active service, he withdrew to the little
-village of Skillous in Elis, where he owned a house and
-a park. The whole country swarmed with fish and
-game, so that he and his sons could have as much
-hunting as they pleased. Guests were numerous, for
-past his gates ran the great high-road from Lakedaimon
-to Olympia. In his grounds he built a chapel to
-Artemis, the expenses being defrayed from a tithe of
-the spoils he had taken in the heart of the Persian
-Empire. The tenth of the produce of his land was
-paid to the goddess, and once a year he gave a great
-sacrificial feast in her honour, to which all the neighbours
-were invited. In this way the retired General
-lived for twenty years, devoted to his religion, his
-hunting, and the composition of his books. Having
-<a name="Page_260" id="Page_260"></a><span class="pageno">260</span>
-two sons of his own, he naturally gave some attention
-to the problems of education. His treatise on the
-constitution of Lakedaimon is simply a sketch of the
-Spartan school system, no doubt intended for his boys,
-who were brought up at Sparta. A curious passage in
-his <cite>Economics</cite><span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_716" id="fnanchor_716"></a><a href="#footnote_716" class="fnanchor">[716]</a></span>
-shows that he considered the most
-effective mode of teaching to be a series of appeals, by
-means of question and answer, to personal observation
-and common-sense. Ischomachos asks Sokrates whether
-he knows how to plant trees. Sokrates at first replies
-“No,” but when he is questioned point by point,
-whether on his excursions to Lukabettos, he has noticed
-the depth of the trenches in the orchards, and some
-similar details, and when his common-sense has shown
-him that plants grow quicker through soft than
-through hard soil, he finds that he is an expert nurseryman,
-and decides that questioning must be the way to
-teach.</p>
-
-<p>But the most important of Xenophon’s educational
-works is the <cite>Education of Kuros</cite>. In this he becomes
-the classical Miss Edgeworth and Henty combined. The
-book is really an historical novel, mostly fiction, embodying
-a moral story for the young, an ideal system of
-education, and a practical treatise on the whole duty of
-a general. The ideal system comes first, as a sort of
-preface, and presents a curious parallel to the rival
-schemes of his contemporary Plato. Xenophon makes
-the reader suppose that his system was practised in
-Persia in the time of Kuros’ boyhood, but there is no
-authority for his statement. Persia is in this case a
-convenient title for Utopia.</p>
-
-<p>The ordinary State, according to Xenophon, leaves
-its citizens to form their own characters; but the
-<a name="Page_261" id="Page_261"></a><span class="pageno">261</span>
-Persian system definitely aims at producing virtue. In
-every Persian city there is what is called the “Free
-Agora.”<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_717" id="fnanchor_717"></a><a href="#footnote_717" class="fnanchor">[717]</a></span>
-This is an open square, like the ordinary
-market-place, but unlike it in being without shops or
-booths, for the vulgar bustle and clamour of buying and
-selling is forbidden here, as likely to disturb the peace
-and calm of the educated. Round it lie the royal palace
-and the State buildings, so that it would be a place of
-some architectural pretensions and not unlike the quadrangle
-of a College at an English University. The
-square is divided into four parts&mdash;one for the children,
-one for the epheboi, one for full-grown men, and one
-for the old; for men of all ages have their place in
-this College. Any Persian is at liberty to send his son
-to school here, but only the rich can afford to support
-their sons while they attend the classes: the poor man’s
-children, in Utopian Persia as in modern England, must
-needs work for their living at an early age. The schools
-are apparently only for boys: Xenophon has nothing to
-say here about feminine education, although he approves
-of the Spartan system.</p>
-
-<p>All boys under sixteen are ranged together in twelve
-companies, according to the number of Persian tribes;
-of arrangement in classes by age or intelligence nothing
-is said. They have to be in their quarter of the Free
-Agora at daybreak. Their education is under the control
-of twelve masters chosen from the elder men. What
-they learn in school is <em>Justice</em>, as boys elsewhere learn
-letters. The system is as curious as the subject. A sort
-of miniature law-court is constituted, where the masters
-act as judges and the boys accuse one another before
-them. The accusations must not be concocted for the
-<a name="Page_262" id="Page_262"></a><span class="pageno">262</span>
-occasion, for any one found guilty of bringing a false
-charge against a schoolfellow is severely punished.
-Smith Major has stolen Brown’s bow and arrows, or
-Jones has called Robinson various opprobrious names;
-the offenders are hauled up before the tribunal, duly
-tried, and, if convicted, flogged.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_718" id="fnanchor_718"></a><a href="#footnote_718" class="fnanchor">[718]</a></span>
-Ingratitude is regarded
-as a particularly heinous crime. It appears that
-promising pupils were allowed to act as judges sometimes.
-The boy Kuros tells his mother how he received
-this honour and once gave a wrong verdict, to
-his own discomfiture. “The case was like this,
-mother,” he is made to say. “A big boy wearing a
-small coat met a small boy wearing a big coat, and
-compelled him to exchange. I was told to decide the
-case, and said that it was best that each should have the
-coat which fitted him. Then the master flogged me.
-For the point was, To whom did the big coat belong?
-not, Whom did it fit best? It belonged to the boy who
-bought or made it, not to the boy who took it by force,
-breaking the law.”</p>
-
-<p>Besides “Justice,” the children were taught the
-properties of plants, in order that they might avoid those
-that were harmful and use those which were good.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_719" id="fnanchor_719"></a><a href="#footnote_719" class="fnanchor">[719]</a></span>
-This seems a curious anticipation of “Nature-study,”
-with a strictly utilitarian object, and Xenophon deserves
-credit for an original suggestion.</p>
-
-<p>The boys are assisted in the formation of good habits
-by the sight of their elders in the adjacent quarter of the
-Free Agora, setting them an example in temperance and
-obedience and self-restraint. They also learn not to be
-greedy, by taking their meals, when ordered, in the
-school, under supervision, off the very simple fare of
-<a name="Page_263" id="Page_263"></a><span class="pageno">263</span>
-bread, water, and a sort of seed resembling the modern
-mustard, which is all that they are allowed to bring with
-them from home for the purpose. What is more, this
-probably constituted the only meal which the children
-had on such days. It must have been a pretty stiff
-lesson in abstinence! How they would have hated a
-master who ordered it too often! For games and
-exercise they had shooting with the bow and hurling
-the javelin&mdash;that is, military training.</p>
-
-<p>The other three ages are also organised each under
-twelve masters in its own quarter of the Agora of Education.
-The epheboi, who in Utopia include all from
-sixteen to twenty-six, even sleep there, acting as a standing
-army and a police force to guard the palace and the
-State buildings. Xenophon thinks it well that the men
-of this age, who need more attention, in his opinion, than
-even the boys, should be always under the eye of the
-authorities. They are organised into twelve companies,
-one from each of the Persian tribes. Their time is
-largely occupied in police-work, such as catching brigands,
-and in hunting. Xenophon attaches great importance
-to hunting of all sorts, as being the best training
-for war.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_720" id="fnanchor_720"></a><a href="#footnote_720" class="fnanchor">[720]</a></span>
-For it involves exposure to heat and cold and
-other hardships, training in marching and running, and
-skill with bow and javelin;<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_721" id="fnanchor_721"></a><a href="#footnote_721" class="fnanchor">[721]</a></span>
-it also requires courage, to
-meet the sudden charge of a panther; and long and
-patient strategy, to catch birds and hares.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_722" id="fnanchor_722"></a><a href="#footnote_722" class="fnanchor">[722]</a></span>
-So, several
-times a month, the king goes out hunting and takes six
-companies of the epheboi with him, armed with bows and
-arrows, a dagger, a light shield, and two spears&mdash;one for
-throwing and one for stabbing. When not engaged in
-hunting or in police-work, the epheboi revise what they
-learned as boys, and practise shooting, competing with
-<a name="Page_264" id="Page_264"></a><span class="pageno">264</span>
-one another; there are also public contests, with prizes.
-Prizes are also given to the officer in charge of the
-company which shows itself the most intelligent,
-courageous, and trustworthy; the master who taught
-this company in its school-days is also commended.</p>
-
-<p>The men from twenty-six to fifty occupy the third,
-and the elders the fourth, quarter of the Agora. The
-former act as a standing army of heavy infantry; the
-latter as a reserve force for home defence, as Judges, as
-the electors to the offices of State, and as the teachers
-of the children. The other offices are filled by the
-third age. Any freeborn Persian can climb this four-runged
-Ladder of Education to the very top; but no
-one may enter a higher class without having served his
-full time in those below it. To Xenophon, it appears,
-belongs the credit of being the first theorist to recognise
-the merits of this Thessalian custom of the “Free
-Agora,” the State-provided centre of culture, afterwards
-adopted so extensively in Alexandria, where the
-educated classes of all ages might meet in an intellectual
-atmosphere and amid beautiful surroundings, and
-provide that exchange and mart of ideas by personal
-intercourse which Newman considered to be the essence
-of a University. In the Free Agora of Utopian Persia
-all the educated spend their days, influencing one
-another by talk and example, exchanging and criticising
-ideas, competing in warlike exercises&mdash;and all
-in an atmosphere untainted by the vulgarity of money-making.
-On the other hand, culture there does not mean
-idleness; to Xenophon, as to Plato, education seemed
-to entail great responsibilities, and the educated classes
-provide the sole standing army of the State and have to
-give their countrymen the benefit of their intelligence
-by serving as Rulers and Judges.</p>
-
-<p><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265"></a><span class="pageno">265</span>
-But Xenophon’s University provides only legal and
-military instruction; intellectual culture is not recognised
-in his “Persia.” The boys learn the principles
-of their national law; for, as Xenophon is careful to
-proclaim, the Justice which they are taught is no
-Platonic elaboration, but simple conformity to the law
-of the land.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_723" id="fnanchor_723"></a><a href="#footnote_723" class="fnanchor">[723]</a></span>
-Their other lessons aim solely at the
-soldier’s life: this is the object of their severe diet,
-their botany, and their training in arms. General
-morality is to be imbibed from contact in the Agora with
-their exemplary seniors, not by ethical contemplation.
-The system has the merit of being extremely practical,
-as would be expected from a man of Xenophon’s
-stamp. The boys are to be soldiers all their lives, and
-Rulers and Judges in their old age. Consequently they
-are to be taught only what is essential to this calling.
-The soldier must be well versed in the use of arms and
-capable of enduring hardships; so the boys are taught
-to use the bow and javelin and lead a sternly simple
-life. The chief essential to the Ruler and Judge is a
-sound knowledge of the national law: the boys are
-taught law from the first, in a highly practical way, and
-even learn to administer it, acting as judges to their
-schoolfellows. No better means could be devised for
-teaching boys the legal procedure of their native land
-than this of constituting them into a miniature Court.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_724" id="fnanchor_724"></a><a href="#footnote_724" class="fnanchor">[724]</a></span>
-It is a scheme, however, which would be repugnant to
-the whole idea of an English public school, where the
-boys are expected to fight their own battles and set
-their own tone without calling in the master’s assistance
-except in grave cases. But the Hellenic boy was never
-<a name="Page_266" id="Page_266"></a><span class="pageno">266</span>
-left without supervision: the paidagogos, or some elder,
-was always in attendance.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_725" id="fnanchor_725"></a><a href="#footnote_725" class="fnanchor">[725]</a></span>
-Probably the chief criticism
-which it would have occurred to an Athenian of that
-age to urge against Xenophon’s system would be, not
-that it encouraged tale-bearing, nor that it failed to
-teach self-reliance, but that his countrymen were quite
-sufficiently litigious already without any teaching.
-The absence of literature and music would also have
-seemed a fatal objection.</p>
-
-<p>The “Persian” schools are apparently open, free of
-charge, to any boy whose father chooses to send him.
-For the only expense which the parents are mentioned
-as incurring is the loss of any wages which their son
-might have been earning if set to a trade instead of being
-sent to school. Xenophon thus institutes free education
-without compulsion. Pupils may be withdrawn at any
-age; if they or their families have enough private
-means to enable them to live in leisure all their lives
-they can rise through the various stages to the highest
-offices of the State, provided that they are not rejected
-as unfit during their upward passage. Theoretically the
-educational ladder is open to all; practically it is closed
-to all but those who are well-to-do and fairly capable
-to boot. But the education provided is not a general
-culture, intellectually and morally good for all children,
-nor yet utilitarian knowledge, such as arithmetic or
-writing, which will serve as a useful, or even necessary,
-basis for a trade or profession: it is a strictly
-technical education in the work of War and Government.
-Few parents, therefore, would send their boys to
-Xenophon’s schools, at any rate for a longer period
-than would be required for learning just the rudiments
-<a name="Page_267" id="Page_267"></a><span class="pageno">267</span>
-of national law and morality, unless they designed them
-for a public career.</p>
-
-<p>Thus Xenophon, like his beloved Spartans, has made
-war the main object of education, and, like the Romans,
-uses law as the chief instrument of instruction. But he
-has seen the demerits of the Spartan “Mess-clubs,” and
-his boys take their meals and sleep, as a rule, at home;
-only the epheboi, as in Crete, dine and sleep always in
-the agora. His chief merit is that he recognised that
-an educational atmosphere, <ins title="eukosmia tôn pepaideumenôn">εὐκοσμία τῶν πεπαιδευμένων</ins>,
-free from the associations of money-making, is essential
-to an educational establishment.</p>
-
-<p>After this deeply interesting sketch of Xenophon’s
-educational ideals, the <cite>Education of Kuros</cite> becomes a
-historical novel with a purpose, an idealised Kuros
-acting as example throughout. In Book <abbr title="one">i.</abbr> there is the
-description of him as the model boy, courteous to his
-elders, quick and eager to learn, brave, impetuous,
-loved by all, but rather a prig. The description is full
-of improving anecdotes and little sermons. The book
-concludes with a lecture on the duties of a general,
-dealing with tactics and the best means of training
-the army and providing supplies. Xenophon puts
-all his personal experience into this, and there is plenty
-of adventure to make the book palatable to his young
-readers.</p>
-
-<p>A few extracts will make the characteristics of this
-curious work plain.</p>
-
-<p>When quite young, Kuros went with his mother
-Mandané to stay with his grandfather Astuages, King of
-Media. The old man, thinking that the boy would be
-homesick and wishing to comfort him, sent for him at
-dinner the first evening and set all sorts of rich meats
-and sauces before him. Then Kuros said, “Grandfather,
-<a name="Page_268" id="Page_268"></a><span class="pageno">268</span>
-you must find it a great nuisance, if you have to help
-yourself to so many courses and taste so many kinds of
-food.” His grandfather replied, “Why, don’t you
-think this a much finer dinner than what you get at
-home?” “No, grandfather,” replied Kuros; “at home
-we satisfy our appetites by a short-cut, just bread and
-meat, but here, although your object is the same, you
-wind in and out so much on the way that it takes you
-ever so much longer to reach it.” “But, my boy, the
-delay is only so much pleasure, as you will see if you
-try.” Kuros, however, persisted in refusing the unwholesome
-dainties, so his grandfather compensated him by
-giving him an enormous help of meat. “Is all this
-meant for me,” asked Kuros, “to do what I like with?”
-“Yes, my boy.” Then Kuros took the meat and distributed
-it to the servants who were waiting at table,
-saying to one, “This is because you taught me to ride”;
-to another, “This is because you gave me a javelin”; to
-a third, “This is for waiting on my grandfather so nicely.”
-From this example the young reader doubtless learned
-not to desire too many courses or too rich sweets at
-table, and perhaps also to be grateful to every one, even
-servants. After this Kuros remained in Media, while
-his mother returned home. “He soon won the love of
-his schoolfellows, and quite charmed their parents when
-invited to their houses by the affection which he showed
-for their sons.” A good moral, this, for little boys who
-go out to parties.</p>
-
-<p>This model boy does not die young, but grows up.
-He had been rather a chatterbox when small (a warning
-to the young readers), but only owing to his desire for
-knowledge and his readiness to answer questions;
-besides, he chattered in such a nice way that it was a
-pleasure to hear him. But as he grew older, he grew
-<a name="Page_269" id="Page_269"></a><span class="pageno">269</span>
-more bashful. “He always blushed when he met his
-elders, and he talked in a quieter tone. When he
-played with his schoolfellows, he chose the games
-where he expected to be beaten, not those in which he
-expected to win; and he was always ready to lead the
-laugh against himself when beaten.” Model youth!
-Of course, he soon became the champion at every form
-of sport, just as in a modern book of the kind he
-would have won at least five “Blues.”</p>
-
-<p>Kuros next appears as a mighty hunter, and then at
-the age of fifteen takes a leading part in a battle
-against the Assyrians; in fact, it is his strategy and
-prowess that decide the day. What more could be
-wanted in a book for boys? The modern author
-would give him a grizzly bear, a lion, and a <abbr title="Victoria Cross">V.C.</abbr>:
-Xenophon gives him the Persian equivalents.</p>
-
-<p>After this, little more is said of Kuros’ boyhood.
-He is next introduced as a man of twenty-six, just put
-into command of a Persian expedition to help Media
-against the Assyrians.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_726" id="fnanchor_726"></a><a href="#footnote_726" class="fnanchor">[726]</a></span>
-Henceforth Xenophon’s object
-is no longer to point a moral, but to instruct budding
-generals and princes in strategy and government. The
-remaining books are a “Handbook of Tactics, with hints
-on the proper treatment of inferiors”; so they fitly
-begin with a long lecture by Kuros’ father on the
-whole duty of a general.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_727" id="fnanchor_727"></a><a href="#footnote_727" class="fnanchor">[727]</a></span>
-There is, however, a good
-deal of moral advice and occasional allegory interspersed
-amid the tactics. For instance, a certain Gobruas came
-to dine with the Persian army. “Seeing how plain the
-food was, he regarded the Persians as rather <em>bourgeois</em>.
-But then he observed what good manners the guests
-had. No educated Persian would allow himself to
-be seen staring at a dish, or helping himself hurriedly,
-<a name="Page_270" id="Page_270"></a><span class="pageno">270</span>
-or acting at table without proper deliberation. For
-they think it piggish to be excited by the presence
-of food or drink. He noticed, too, that they never
-asked one another questions which might cause pain,
-that their jests were never malicious nor their wit rude,
-that everything that they did was in the best taste, and
-that they never lost their tempers with one another.”
-And so on. “Manners for men,” we might call it, by
-Xenophon.</p>
-
-<p>A curiously interesting case of allegory, which well
-shows how imaginary most of the history is, may be
-found in the third book.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_728" id="fnanchor_728"></a><a href="#footnote_728" class="fnanchor">[728]</a></span>
-The son of the king
-of Armenia had had for a companion and tutor a
-certain Sophist, of whose wisdom he was very proud.
-But his father condemned the Sophist for corrupting<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_729" id="fnanchor_729"></a><a href="#footnote_729" class="fnanchor">[729]</a></span>
-the boy. When he was being led to execution, the
-man showed what a saint and hero he was by calling
-the boy and saying, “Do not be angry with your father
-for putting me to death. For it is no wicked purpose
-which makes him do it, but only ignorance. All sins
-which men commit in ignorance I rank as involuntary
-errors.” Later, the father confesses that he put the
-Sophist to death for stealing away his son’s affections,
-“for I feared that my boy might love him more than
-he loved me.” Kuros admits that such jealousy is an
-explanation and regards it as pardonable.</p>
-
-<p>The analogy to Sokrates is obvious to any one.
-The half-apology for the Athenian people is very
-interesting in the mouth of the old Socratic companion
-Xenophon.</p>
-
-<p>But the object of the <cite>Education of Kuros</cite> is, after
-all, to teach generalship. A couple of examples of the
-way in which this is done will suffice. On one
-<a name="Page_271" id="Page_271"></a><span class="pageno">271</span>
-occasion<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_730" id="fnanchor_730"></a><a href="#footnote_730" class="fnanchor">[730]</a></span>
-Kuros orders the foot-cuirassiers to lead the
-way in a forced march, and kindly explains the object
-of such a manœuvre. “This command I give,” he
-says, “because they are the heaviest part of the army.
-When the heaviest part is in the van, obviously it is
-quite easy for the other arms, being lighter, to keep
-up. But if the quickest detachment is in front on a
-night march, it is not surprising if the army straggles,
-for the vanguard goes faster than the rest.” Again,
-Kuros could call all his officers by name, to their great
-surprise.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_731" id="fnanchor_731"></a><a href="#footnote_731" class="fnanchor">[731]</a></span>
- “For he thought it very absurd that
-tradesmen should know the names of all their tools,
-and yet a general should be so stupid as not to know
-the names of his officers whom he must use as his
-tools in the most serious emergencies. Soldiers who
-thought that their general knew their names would,
-he considered, be more eager to do heroic deeds in his
-presence, and less eager to play the coward. It seemed
-also to be foolish to be obliged to give orders, when
-he wanted something done, in the way some masters
-do in their households, ‘Fetch me some water, Somebody’;
-or ‘Cut some firewood, Someone.’ For when
-the order is addressed to no one in particular, each
-stands looking at his neighbour and expecting him to
-carry it out.”</p>
-
-<p>The military part is exceedingly well done. Xenophon
-was one of the few good strategists whom Hellas
-produced, and his remarks on tactics, the hygiene of an
-army, and discipline are sound and useful. What is
-more, his novel is interesting and occasionally witty:
-it is distinctly good reading. He has disguised his
-powder in the most appetising jam, and so has achieved
-with success the difficult task of writing a novel with
-<a name="Page_272" id="Page_272"></a><span class="pageno">272</span>
-a purpose. Had books been common then, his work
-would have been both popular and useful in Boys’
-Libraries, and have done good service as a school prize.
-But from Plato it only provoked the malicious and not
-very deep criticism that it was unhistorical and unsound.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_732" id="fnanchor_732"></a><a href="#footnote_732" class="fnanchor">[732]</a></span>
-“Of Kuros,” he says, “I conjecture that, though he
-was a good general and a patriot, he had not come
-across the merest scrap of sound education, and never
-applied his mind to the art of managing a household.<span class="lock"><a name="fnanchor_733" id="fnanchor_733"></a><a href="#footnote_733" class="fnanchor">[733]</a></span>
-For, being absent on campaigns all his life, he allowed
-the women to bring up his children. The women
-spoilt the boys, letting no one gainsay them, and
-made them effeminate, not teaching them the Persian
-habits or their father’s profession, but Median luxury.
-Hence the collapse of Persia under Kambuses.”</p>
-
-<p class="p2 footnote"> <a name="footnote_716" id="footnote_716"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_716"><span class="muchsmaller">[716]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Xenophon">Xen.</abbr> <cite><abbr title="Economics">Econ.</abbr></cite> 19.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_717" id="footnote_717"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_717"><span class="muchsmaller">[717]</span></a>
-Aristotle (<cite><abbr title="Politics">Pol.</abbr></cite> <abbr title="seven">vii.</abbr> 12) says that “Free Agoras” were customary in Thessaly.
-He adopts the system for his ideal state&mdash;a clear compliment to Xenophon.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_718" id="footnote_718"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_718"><span class="muchsmaller">[718]</span></a>
-Floggings were apparently to be frequent. “Tears are a master’s instruments
-of instruction” (<abbr title="two">ii.</abbr> 2. 14).</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_719" id="footnote_719"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_719"><span class="muchsmaller">[719]</span></a>
-<abbr title="eight">viii.</abbr> 8. 14.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_720" id="footnote_720"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_720"><span class="muchsmaller">[720]</span></a>
-Hence his treatise on hunting.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_721" id="footnote_721"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_721"><span class="muchsmaller">[721]</span></a>
-<abbr title="one">i.</abbr> 2. 10.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_722" id="footnote_722"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_722"><span class="muchsmaller">[722]</span></a>
-<abbr title="one">i.</abbr> 6. 39-40.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_723" id="footnote_723"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_723"><span class="muchsmaller">[723]</span></a>
-<abbr title="one">i.</abbr> 3. 17.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_724" id="footnote_724"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_724"><span class="muchsmaller">[724]</span></a>
-<abbr title="Compare">Cp.</abbr> the experiment which was, I believe, tried in an American school, where
-the boys learned the national constitution by themselves electing in due form a
-President, Congress, etc.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_725" id="footnote_725"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_725"><span class="muchsmaller">[725]</span></a>
-“The perpetual presence of masters,” according to Xenophon, “best inculcates
-proper modesty and discipline.”</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_726" id="footnote_726"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_726"><span class="muchsmaller">[726]</span></a>
-<abbr title="one">i.</abbr> 5. 5.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_727" id="footnote_727"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_727"><span class="muchsmaller">[727]</span></a>
-<abbr title="one">i.</abbr> 6. 1-46.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_728" id="footnote_728"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_728"><span class="muchsmaller">[728]</span></a>
-<abbr title="three">iii.</abbr> 1. 38.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_729" id="footnote_729"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_729"><span class="muchsmaller">[729]</span></a>
-<ins title="diaphtheirein">διαφθείρειν</ins>, the word used in Sokrates’ accusation.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_730" id="footnote_730"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_730"><span class="muchsmaller">[730]</span></a>
-<abbr title="five">v.</abbr> 3. 37.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_731" id="footnote_731"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_731"><span class="muchsmaller">[731]</span></a>
-<abbr title="five">v.</abbr> 3. 46. Notice the Socratic comparison.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_732" id="footnote_732"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_732"><span class="muchsmaller">[732]</span></a>
-Plato, <cite>Laws</cite>, 694 <span class="sc lowercase">C</span>-<span class="sc lowercase">D</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_733" id="footnote_733"></a>
-<a href="#fnanchor_733"><span class="muchsmaller">[733]</span></a>
-A hit at Xenophon’s <cite>Economics</cite>.</p>
-</div><!--end chapter-->
-
-<div class="chapter"><a name="Page_273" id="Page_273"></a><span class="pageno">273</span><br />
-<a name="Page_274" id="Page_274"></a><span class="pageno">274</span><!--Blank Page-->
-<h3 class="p4 h3head">PART III</h3>
-<a name="Page_275" id="Page_275"></a><span class="pageno">275</span>
-<h3 class="p4 h3head">CHAPTER XI</h3>
-
-<h4 class="p2 h4head">CONCLUDING ESSAY: THE SCHOOLS OF HELLAS</h4>
-
-<p class="p2"><span class="sc">The</span> preceding chapters have sufficiently established, as
-it seems to me, that Hellenic education alike at Sparta
-and at Athens, in theory and in practice, aimed at producing
-the best possible citizen, not the best possible
-money-maker; it sought the good of the community,
-not the good of the individual. The methods and
-materials of education naturally differed with the conception
-of good citizenship held in each locality, but
-the ideal object was always the same.</p>
-
-<p>The Spartan, with his schoolboy conception of life,
-believed that the whole duty of man was to be brave,
-to be indifferent to hardships and pain, to be a good
-soldier, and to be always in perfect physical condition;
-when his Hellenic instincts needed æsthetic satisfaction,
-he made his military drill into a musical dance and
-sang songs in honour of valour. Long speaking and
-lengthy meditation he regarded with contempt, for he
-preferred deeds to words or thoughts, and the essence
-of a situation could always be expressed in a single
-sentence. This Spartan conception of citizenship fixed
-the aim of Spartan education. Daily hardships, endless
-physical training, perpetual tests of pluck and endurance,
-were the lot of the Spartan boy. He did not
-<a name="Page_276" id="Page_276"></a><span class="pageno">276</span>
-learn to read or write or count; he was trained to
-speak only in single words or in the shortest of
-sentences, for what need had a Spartan of letters or of
-chattering? His imagination had also to be subordinated
-to the national ideal: his dances, his songs, his
-very deities, were all military.</p>
-
-<p>The Athenian’s conception of the perfect citizen was
-much wider and much more difficult of attainment.
-Pluck and harmony of physical development did not
-satisfy him: there must be equal training of mind and
-imagination, without any sacrifice of bodily health.
-He demanded of the ideal citizen perfection of body,
-extensive mental activity and culture, and irreproachable
-taste. “We love and pursue wisdom, yet avoid bodily
-sloth; we love and pursue beauty, yet avoid bad taste
-and extravagance,” proclaims Perikles in his summary
-of Athenian ideals. Consequently Athenian education
-was triple in its aims; its activities were divided
-between body, mind, and taste. The body of the
-young Athenian was symmetrically developed by the
-scientifically designed exercises of the palaistra. At
-eighteen the State imposed upon him two years of
-physical training at public cost. In after life he could
-exercise himself in the public gymnasia without any
-payment; there was no actual compulsion, except the
-perpetual imminence of military service, which, however,
-almost amounted to compulsion.</p>
-
-<p>As to mental instruction, every boy had to learn
-reading, writing, arithmetic, and gain such acquaintance
-with the national literature as these studies involved.
-The other branch of primary education, playing and
-singing, intended to develop the musical ear and taste,
-was optional, but rarely neglected. The secondary
-education given by the Sophists, rhetors, and philosophers
-<a name="Page_277" id="Page_277"></a><span class="pageno">277</span>
-was only intended for the comparatively few
-who had wealth and leisure.</p>
-
-<p>Taste and imagination were cultivated in the music- and
-art-schools, but the influences of the theatre, the
-Akropolis, the temples and public monuments, and the
-dances which accompanied every festival and religious
-occasion, were still more potent, and were exercised
-upon all alike. This æsthetic aspect of education was
-regarded as particularly important in Hellas owing to
-the prevalent idea that art and music had a strong
-influence over character.</p>
-
-<p>For the training of character was before all things
-the object of Hellenic education; it was this which
-Hellenic parents particularly demanded of the schoolmaster.
-So strongly did they believe that virtue could
-be taught, that they held the teacher responsible for any
-subsequent misdemeanour of his pupils. Alkibiades
-and Kritias had ruined Athens: they were Sokrates’
-pupils: therefore execute Sokrates; this seemed perfectly
-logical to an Athenian. If a Sophist sued a
-defaulting pupil for an unpaid bill, he was regarded as
-ridiculous, for it was his business to teach justice, and
-if those who had learned under him behaved unjustly,
-it was clearly because his teaching had been worthless.</p>
-
-<p>Since the main object of the schools of Hellas was
-to train and mould the character of the young, it would
-be natural to suppose that the schoolmasters and every
-one else who was to come into contact with the boys
-were chosen with immense care, special attention being
-given to their reputation for virtue and conduct. At
-Sparta this principle was certainly observed. Education
-was controlled by a paidonomos, selected from the
-citizens of the highest position and reputation, and the
-teaching was given, not by hired foreigners or slaves,
-<a name="Page_278" id="Page_278"></a><span class="pageno">278</span>
-but by the citizens themselves under his supervision.
-But then the teaching at Sparta dealt mostly with the
-manners and customs of the State, or with bodily and
-military exercises, known to every grown man, and the
-citizens had plenty of leisure. The Athenians were in
-a more difficult position. There were more subjects
-for the boy to learn, and some of them the parents
-might have neither the capacity nor the time to teach.
-Owing also to the day-school system at Athens and the
-peculiarities of Hellenic manners, the boys needed
-some one always at hand to take them to and from
-school and palaistra. Thus both paid teachers and
-attendants were needed. But it was also necessary not
-to let education become too expensive, lest the poor
-should be unable to afford it. Consequently the
-paidagogoi came often to be the cheapest and most
-worthless slaves, and the schoolmasters as a class to be
-regarded with supreme contempt. No doubt careful
-parents chose excellent paidagogoi, schoolmasters, and
-paidotribai for their sons, and made the choice a matter
-of much deliberation: the teachers at the best schools
-and palaistrai were often men of position and repute.
-But that the class as a whole was regarded with
-contempt there can be little doubt. The children went
-into a school as they would have gone into any other
-shop, with a sense of superiority, bringing with them
-their pets, leopards and cats and dogs, and playing
-with them during lesson-times. Idlers and loungers
-came into the schools and palaistrai, as they came into
-the market-booths, to chatter and look on, seriously
-interrupting the work. The schoolmasters and paidotribai
-at Athens were, in fact, too dependent upon their
-public for subsistence to take a strong line, and, in
-spite of their power, often exercised, of inflicting
-<a name="Page_279" id="Page_279"></a><span class="pageno">279</span>
-corporal punishment, they seem to have been distinctly
-at the mercy of the pupils and their friends. The paidagogoi
-too, though they seem to have kept their pupils
-in order, were often not the right people to control a
-boy’s conduct; they were apt to have a villainous
-accent, and still more villainous habits. It must be
-confessed that the Athenians, in their desire to make
-education cheap, ran a very great risk of spoiling what
-in their opinion was its chief object, the training of
-character.</p>
-
-<p>Otherwise, they sought this end whole-heartedly.
-The games, physical exercises, and hardships of a boy’s
-life were meant to develop his pluck, fortitude, and
-endurance. For, according to the Hellenic view, now
-too much neglected in many quarters, the condition and
-treatment of the body had a very important effect both
-upon mental activities and upon character. It was for
-this reason that physical training formed at least half of
-every system of education practised in Hellenic states
-or recommended by Hellenic philosophers. A National
-School which trained the minds only, and neglected the
-bodies of the pupils, would have been inconceivable to
-a Hellene. It was not merely that physical infirmities
-interrupted the free exercise of thought, or led to
-peevishness and lack of decision. Man was a whole to
-the Hellenes, and one part of him could not be sound
-if the other parts were not. So strongly did they hold
-this opinion, that they more than half believed that
-physical beauty was a sign of moral beauty; it was this
-latent idea which added an additional significance to the
-exercises of the palaistra with their symmetrical development
-of the body, and to the competitions for manly
-beauty which were prevalent throughout the country;
-it lent, moreover, a nobler aspect to that passion for
-<a name="Page_280" id="Page_280"></a><span class="pageno">280</span>
-the outward loveliness of youth which the vases,
-sculpture, and literature of ancient Hellas reveal so
-surprisingly. But, besides this vaguer and more
-doubtful connection with character, bodily exercise and
-development were supposed to have a special and indubitable
-effect in strengthening the resolution and
-will-power. The object of physical training was only
-in a minor degree to keep the body in good condition;
-its main aim was to develop strength of character,
-determination, fortitude, endurance, pluck, and energy.
-But, in accordance with that Hellenic canon of
-“moderation in all things,” which was worked out so
-thoroughly by Aristotle, there might be too much, as
-well as too little, of all these ethical qualities. Consequently
-physical exercise must be taken only in due
-moderation, and carefully balanced by artistic and
-musical training, which militated in an opposite
-direction, leading, if pursued in excess, to weakness of
-character, indecision, effeminacy, cowardice, and sloth.
-A scientifically arranged symmetry between the two
-would produce the perfect character.</p>
-
-<p>In the literary and æsthetic schools there were two
-elements of the subjects taught, both with an ethical
-effect, matter and form. The literature studied in the
-schools was expected to be full of improving suggestions
-and life-histories of heroes worthy of imitation, couched
-in the form most attractive to young minds, in order
-that they might appreciate and love its teaching and
-examples. The music which the boys played or heard,
-the songs which they sang, the dances which they performed
-or watched, the art which they copied or
-observed, must be such as would influence their
-characters for good&mdash;mould them, that is, in accordance
-with the national ideal. For Hellenic morality was
-<a name="Page_281" id="Page_281"></a><span class="pageno">281</span>
-æsthetic; they followed the course which appealed to
-their imagination and sense of beauty. It was therefore
-the object of education to make the children see
-and feel beauty in virtue, and good art in good ethics,
-in order that they might find satisfaction for their
-æsthetic cravings&mdash;the dominant instinct of a Hellene&mdash;in
-living good and upright lives.</p>
-
-<p>For the unanimous feeling of Hellas based ethics
-not upon duty, but upon happiness&mdash;upon the satisfaction,
-that is, of the instincts. But this eudæmonistic
-attitude was qualified by an important consideration
-which is often forgotten. Owing to the solidarity of
-Hellenic life, the happiness which was sought was
-primarily not that of the individual but that of the
-community. The readiness of the average Hellene,
-during the best period of the country, to sacrifice everything
-on behalf of his city is very remarkable. The
-real, if unformulated, basis of his ethics came thus to be
-not personal pleasure, but duty to the State. When the
-individualism of the Socratic age overthrew this basis,
-the Hellenes fell back from the happiness of the State
-to the happiness of the self, and both patriotism and
-personal morality suffered from the change.</p>
-
-<p>It was the sense of duty to the State, the resolution
-to promote the happiness of the whole citizen-body,
-which made parents willing to undergo any sacrifice in
-order to have their sons educated in the way which
-would best minister to this ideal. The bills of the
-masters of letters and music and of the paidotribai, and
-the lengthy loss of the son’s services in the shop or on
-the farm in Attica, the break-up of family life at Sparta,
-must have been a sore trial to the parents and have
-involved many sacrifices. Yet there is no trace of
-grumbling. The Hellene felt that it was quite as much
-<a name="Page_282" id="Page_282"></a><span class="pageno">282</span>
-his duty to the State to educate her future citizens
-properly as it was to be ready to die in her cause, and
-he did both ungrudgingly. If the laws which made
-the teaching of letters compulsory at Athens fell into
-desuetude, it was only because the citizens needed no
-compulsion to make them do their duty. Nor had the
-State to pay the school bills; for every citizen, however
-poor, was ready to make the necessary sacrifices of
-personal luxuries and amusements in order to do his
-duty to the community by having his children properly
-taught. The State only interfered to make schooling
-as cheap and as easy to obtain as possible.</p>
-
-<p>The solidarity of Hellenic life, which converted
-eudæmonism into patriotism, was carefully encouraged
-by the educational system. Sparta, with this object,
-invented the boarding-school, where boys learnt from
-early years to sink their individualities in a community
-of character and interests. The Athenians and most of
-the other Hellenes, on the other hand, had day-schools.
-This fact might seem to militate against the principle
-which I have stated. But Hellenic custom qualified
-the system of day-schools in a particular way. There
-were no home-influences in Hellas. The men-folk lived
-out of doors. The young Athenian or Ephesian from
-his sixth year onwards spent his whole day away from
-home (excepting possibly for an interval for the mid-day
-meal), in the company of his contemporaries, at
-school or palaistra or in the streets. When he came
-home, there was no home-life. His father was hardly
-ever in the house. His mother was a nonentity, living
-in the women’s apartments; he probably saw little of
-her. His real home was the palaistra, his chief
-companions his contemporaries and his paidagogos.
-He learned to dissociate himself from his family and
-<a name="Page_283" id="Page_283"></a><span class="pageno">283</span>
-associate himself with his fellow-citizens. No doubt he
-lost much by this system, but the solidarity of the State
-gained.</p>
-
-<p>The duties of citizenship were also impressed upon
-the boys in other and more direct ways, especially its
-supreme duty, at any rate in those days, of military
-service. The schools of Sparta and Crete were one
-long training for war. The other States set apart two
-years of the boy’s life, those from eighteen to twenty,
-as a period of conscription, during which he was at the
-service of his city and under the orders of the military
-authorities, learning tactics and the use of arms, and
-being practised in the life of camps and forts. The
-young recruit took a solemn oath of allegiance to his
-country and its constitution: the sacredness of his civic
-duties was impressed upon him from the first. The
-first function of his new officers was to take him on a
-personally conducted tour, so to speak, of the national
-temples, that he might realise something of the religious
-life and history of his country. His weapons were
-solemnly presented to him in the theatre of Dionusos,
-before the assembled people; they were sacred, and to
-lose them in battle or disgrace them by cowardice was
-not only dishonourable, it was impious. Nor were the
-boys allowed to grow up in ignorance of the constitution
-of their city: the ephebos of eighteen had to be
-acquainted with the laws, some of which he had
-probably learnt in the music-school, set to a tune.
-Every means was taken of making the boys realise that
-they were members of a community, to whose prosperity
-and happiness their own advantage or pleasure must be
-subordinated. In this way grew up the strong Hellenic
-sense of an obligation of utter self-sacrifice on behalf of
-the State.</p>
-
-<p><a name="Page_284" id="Page_284"></a><span class="pageno">284</span>
-But education had also to consult the happiness of
-the children as well as the happiness of the community,
-although in a lesser degree. This may seem a startling
-statement to make with regard to Spartan education.
-Nevertheless, I believe it to be strictly true. It must
-be remembered that all our accounts of the rigours and
-horrors of Spartan methods come from Athenian writers
-who in all probability had never been to Lakedaimon.
-Xenophon, who had his sons educated there, gives a
-much milder, and wholly eulogistic, account. The
-somewhat hedonistic Attic visitor must have watched
-Spartan games and exercises with much the feelings of a
-French visitor at an English public school; he found
-it difficult to realise that the boys underwent such hardships
-of their own free will. Then we must remember
-what the Spartan boys were. They were a picked breed
-of peculiar toughness, strength, and health; for centuries
-every invalid had been exposed at birth or rejected
-as incapable of the school-system. Generation after
-generation had been trained to be thick-skinned and
-stout-hearted; pluck and endurance were hereditary,
-and asceticism was a national characteristic. The whole
-system, with its perpetual fighting, its rough games, its
-hardships, its fagging and “roughing-it” in the woods, is
-just what boys of this sort might be expected to evolve
-for themselves because they liked it. I have already
-pointed out, in my account of the Spartan schools, how
-very similar are many of the customs which grew up at
-the older English public schools, mainly on the boys’
-own initiative. If English boys, brought up on the
-whole much less roughly, evolved such customs of their
-own free will, the young Spartans may reasonably be
-supposed to have accepted them gladly. One significant
-token of this survives. The violent and sometimes
-<a name="Page_285" id="Page_285"></a><span class="pageno">285</span>
-fatal floggings of the epheboi at the altar of Artemis
-Orthia were entirely voluntary on the part of the
-victims; yet there was no lack of candidates even in
-Plutarch’s days. The Spartan school-system was, in
-fact, an exact expression of the national characteristics,
-and accordingly was entirely acceptable to the Spartan
-boys.</p>
-
-<p>That the Athenian system was designed to suit the
-wishes of the Athenian children is less difficult to
-establish. It is only necessary to think what the
-primary schools were like. When once the letters and
-rudiments of reading and writing had been mastered,
-the process perhaps being aided by metrical alphabets
-and dramatised spelling, the boys began to read, learn
-by heart, and write down the fascinating stories of
-adventure and the romantic tales of Homer. There
-was no grammar to be studied; that, when invented,
-came at a later age as a voluntary subject. There were
-no years wasted over “Primary Readers” consisting of
-dull and second-rate stories. The boys began at once
-upon the best and most attractive literature in their
-language, and it remained their study for many years,
-and was still remembered and loved in after life. Nor
-can it be doubted that the music- and art-schools were
-attractive to Athenian boys, sons of a people who filled
-their whole city with art, and made their year a round
-of musical festivals. A large part, too, of Athenian
-schooling was what now would be called play; for the
-Hellene recognised the importance of physical exercise
-in the upbringing of the young, and included it in his
-conception of education.</p>
-
-<p>The effect upon Hellenic culture of thus making
-education attractive was far-reaching. Instead of
-regarding with aversion or a bored indifference the
-<a name="Page_286" id="Page_286"></a><span class="pageno">286</span>
-subjects which they had studied at school, the Hellenes
-had an affection for them and continued to practise and
-improve themselves in them. Throughout their lives
-they were eager to hear recitations of Homer. At
-banquets they sang the songs and played the music on
-the lyre which they had learnt at school. Elderly men
-would return to a music-master, to improve their style,
-or rush off to hear a Sophist lecture on geography or
-astronomy. The exercises of the palaistra were pursued
-till old age made them impossible. Grown citizens
-retained throughout an affection for education, and went
-on educating themselves all their lives. Thus an
-Hellenic city formed a centre of widely diffused culture,
-a home where literature and art and music and research
-could flourish surrounded by appreciation and capable
-criticism. Children, too, seeing how much their
-elders were preoccupied with education, found it even
-more attractive than its designers had made it, since
-they were not constrained by nursery-logic to see in it
-one of the plagues of youth from which “grown-ups”
-were set free. No doubt the Hellenic schoolmaster
-was much assisted in his endeavour to make education
-attractive by the intellectual curiosity which was a
-feature of all those States where the intellect was
-systematically trained. The young Athenian or young
-Chian was exceedingly eager to learn. In fact, his
-eagerness was excessive; he was too much in a hurry;
-he desired to have his information given to him ready-made,
-not having the patience to think or to undertake
-researches on his own account. Hence the phenomenal
-success and educational unsoundness of those prototypes
-of the modern “crammer,” the Sophists, who supplied
-their pupils with a superficial knowledge of many subjects
-ready-made, and already dressed in striking phraseology.
-<a name="Page_287" id="Page_287"></a><span class="pageno">287</span>
-This intellectual appetite for the accumulation
-of facts made secondary education at Athens attractive
-without much effort on the part of the teachers, but it
-was not allowed to influence the primary schools; a
-sound and symmetrical development of mind and body,
-artistic taste and moral character, had to precede the
-accumulation of facts. This latter stage too was
-universally treated as optional. In unintellectual
-districts it found no place, and even in Athens it was
-only for those who felt a desire for it; it was not forced
-upon the unwilling and incapable. For education was
-regarded as the development of the latent powers of
-the individual personality, it was no vain attempt to
-excite or implant non-existent faculties. Every one had
-a body, which he must make as efficient as possible, for
-the service of the State; every one, in an æsthetic people,
-had a taste which could be developed; every one had
-enough intellect to learn his letters; and every one,
-above all, had a character to be formed. But not
-every one could be an international athlete or a first-class
-artist or musician, and not every one had sufficient
-mental gifts to combine the accumulation of facts with
-profit or enjoyment.</p>
-
-<p>In fact, Hellenic sentiment was distinctly adverse to
-great development in any one direction: the Hellenes
-had a reasonable horror of undue specialisation at school.
-The object of education was to make symmetrical,
-all-round men, sound alike in body, mind, character,
-and taste, not professional athletes who were mentally
-vacuous and without any appreciation of art, nor great
-thinkers of stunted physique, nor celebrated musicians
-who lacked brains. Opponents of the Spartan system
-tried to condemn it on this ground, as a specialisation
-intended only to produce good soldiers; but the
-<a name="Page_288" id="Page_288"></a><span class="pageno">288</span>
-pro-Spartans seemed to have claimed in return that it
-developed both character and good taste in judging art
-and music, even if it produced small capacity for painting
-or playing, while Laconian terseness involved a greater
-depth of mental exercise than Athenian verbosity.</p>
-
-<p>Thus Hellenic education was not intended to produce
-professional knowledge of a single subject; such
-technical instruction was deemed unworthy of the name
-of education, and was excluded from the schools. The
-subjects studied were for the most part a means, not
-an end. Just as a walk is sometimes taken not for the
-sake of reaching any particular place, but in order to
-keep the muscles of the body in good condition, so
-education in Hellas was meant to develop and exercise
-the muscles of mind, imagination, and character, not to
-inculcate so-called “useful” information. The literature
-read at school was imaginative poetry, like that of Homer
-or Simonides, not the practical prose treatises upon
-Agriculture and Economics which utilitarian motives
-would have demanded. For the poetry was both attractive
-to the boys and improving for their characters,
-while the handbooks, however excellent, only enhanced
-their financial prospects. The immediate future of the
-individual boy may, it is true, depend somewhat largely
-upon the utilitarian knowledge which he has learnt at
-school, although a sound education in the Hellenic sense
-of the word will prove more advantageous to him in
-the long run; but the future of a State depends upon
-the character of its citizens. Thus a truly national
-education like that of Sparta or of Athens seeks to train
-the characters of the future citizens; having formed
-their characters, it leaves them with well-justified confidence
-to gain what technical instruction they need for
-themselves. At a national crisis it was not skill in trade
-<a name="Page_289" id="Page_289"></a><span class="pageno">289</span>
-or profession, not good cobbling, nor good weaving,
-that Athens required of her citizens; but pluck, energy,
-self-sacrifice, obedience, and loyalty. Money was, it is
-true, required for building the triremes and for fortifying
-the city: it was therefore well that Athenian trade
-and manufactures should prosper. But Athens recognised,
-and rightly, that her financial resources would be
-better served if she trained her boys to be industrious
-and thrifty and ascetic, if she made it repugnant to their
-taste to fling their money away upon luxury and self-indulgence,
-than if she founded the finest system of
-technical instruction possible.</p>
-
-<p>But whether Sparta and Athens could have ignored
-technical and utilitarian subjects so wholly in their
-schools, if they had been educating the whole population
-of the State, is another question. It must be
-remembered that the Spartan and Athenian citizens who
-attended the schools were only a fraction of the
-inhabitants of Laconia and Attica. They corresponded
-pretty closely to the upper classes, the aristocracy and
-gentlemen, of a modern State. The bulk of the middle
-and lower classes in a Hellenic State were either foreign
-immigrants, who possessed no civic rights and did not
-usually attend the schools, or serfs and slaves. Athens,
-like mediæval Florence, was only a democracy in the
-very limited sense that her full citizens&mdash;a governing
-class, that is, and a mere fraction of the population&mdash;had
-equality of civic rights among themselves: the rest
-had no rights at all. Sparta was a “mixed constitution”;
-but that did not mean that the middle and lower classes,
-the Perioikoi and Helots, had any share in it whatever.</p>
-
-<p>Consequently education in Hellas is the education of
-a small upper class, not of the whole population of the
-State. The schools of Hellas were not necessarily for
-<a name="Page_290" id="Page_290"></a><span class="pageno">290</span>
-the wealthiest inhabitants of the country, for there were
-plenty of rich Metoikoi and poor citizens at Athens;
-not necessarily for the boys who had most leisure, for
-the sausage-seller goes to school as well as a Nikias or
-Alkibiades; but for a hereditary aristocracy of birth,
-for that is what Hellenic “citizenship” means. The
-boys who attended the lessons of Dionusios or Elpias
-were the sons and grandsons of a cultured class, no
-matter how humble their circumstances might be; their
-families had lived in Attica, they believed, from time
-immemorial, and were probably descended from the
-local deities. They had the views of an hereditary
-caste, including a certain preoccupation with physical
-and military activities, and a contempt for trade.</p>
-
-<p>For the duties of such an aristocracy did not consist
-in heaping up riches; their position was comparatively
-independent of their financial successes. Their work
-was, in brief, to govern and to fight. They composed
-the electorate of the State, which chose the magistrates;
-they alone were members of the public Assembly; they
-alone were eligible for office. They sat as dikastai&mdash;jurymen
-and justices in one&mdash;in the law-courts; they
-made the laws and they administered them. The
-national honour and morality lay in their hands, for
-they controlled alike the foreign and the home policy
-of the State. They formed, too, the cultured circle
-which governed natural taste; it was their criticism
-which shaped the art of the vase-painters, the architects,
-the sculptors, the bronze-makers, and the countless
-other artistic tradesmen, the style of the orators, the
-literature of dramatists and dithyrambists, the music
-of the choric composers. When governors and administrators
-were needed for the outlying districts of
-the Athenian or Spartan Empires, or if officers were
-<a name="Page_291" id="Page_291"></a><span class="pageno">291</span>
-required to lead local levies to battle, any citizen, rich
-or poor, might be sent. The citizens, too, formed the
-core of the fleets and armies in the best days of Hellas.
-The object of Hellenic education was to produce this
-type of citizen&mdash;a man capable of governing, of fighting,
-and of setting the taste and standards of his country.</p>
-
-<p>Thus the schools of Hellas correspond in England
-not to the national schools, but to the “public schools.”
-I do not mean to assert that the English public-school
-boy stands, in after life, in the position of the Hellenic
-citizen to the bulk of the population. English democracy
-rests on a wider basis than Athenian or
-Florentine, and, in theory at any rate, the exclusive
-power of the “upper classes” is at an end. None the
-less it is true that from among the boys educated at
-the public schools comes a very considerable part of
-the generals and military officers, of the clergy, of the
-squires, of the Justices of the Peace and other administrators
-of the law, of the governors and officials
-required by the Indian Empire and the various
-dependencies and Crown Colonies, of the members of
-Parliament and statesmen at home. If the influence of
-the public schools of England upon the governing and
-fighting of the nation is less than that which the schools
-of Hellas were able to exercise, their influence upon
-national taste and standards in art and culture and
-literature is probably in no way inferior. It is therefore
-their duty to train their pupils’ characters, that they
-may be fit and able administrators, governors, and
-justices; and their tastes, that their criticism and demands
-may rightly direct the culture of the nation.
-In striving after these ends, the public schools of
-England may, I think, take not a few hints from the
-like-motived schools of Hellas.</p>
-</div><!--end chapter-->
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<a name="Page_292" id="Page_292"></a><span class="pageno">292</span><br /><!--Blank Page-->
-<a name="Page_293" id="Page_293"></a><span class="pageno">293</span>
-<h3 class="p4 h3head">
-INDEX</h3>
-
-<ul class="none">
-<li>Abacus, illustrated, <a href="#Page_104">104</a></li>
-
-<li>Aegina pediment, <a href="#Page_5">5</a></li>
-
-<li>Aeolian harmony, <a href="#Page_240">240</a>, <a href="#Page_241">241</a></li>
-
-<li>Aeschylus, <a href="#Page_245">245</a></li>
-
-<li>Aesop, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>, <a href="#Page_96">96</a></li>
-
-<li>Agesilaos, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>, <a href="#Page_138">138</a>, <a href="#Page_236">236</a></li>
-
-<li>Aglauros, temple of, <a href="#Page_210">210</a></li>
-
-<li>Aineias Tacticus, <a href="#Page_208">208</a></li>
-
-<li>Aischines, father of, an usher, <a href="#Page_83">83</a></li>
-
-<li>Akademeia, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>
- <ul class="none">
- <li>description of scene in, <a href="#Page_134">134</a>-142</li>
- <li>Plato’s teaching in the, <a href="#Page_196">196</a>-207</li>
- <li>Plato’s lectures in the, described by Epikrates, <a href="#Page_199">199</a></li>
- <li>Plato’s lectures, reference by Ephippos and Antiphanes, <a href="#Page_200">200</a></li>
- <li>Plato’s lectures in the, reference by Amphis, <a href="#Page_201">201</a></li>
- <li>Plato’s lectures in the, references in Comedy, <a href="#Page_201">201</a></li>
- <li>Plato’s lectures in the, reference by Alexis, <a href="#Page_200">200</a>-201</li>
- <li>Plato’s pupils described by Ephippos, <a href="#Page_200">200</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Alexander, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>, <a href="#Page_203">203</a></li>
-
-<li>Alexis, <a href="#Page_207">207</a>
- <ul class="none">
- <li>his catalogue of a school library, <a href="#Page_95">95</a></li>
- <li>on the Akademeia, <a href="#Page_200">200</a>-201</li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Alkibiades, <a href="#Page_207">207</a>, <a href="#Page_277">277</a>
- <ul class="none">
- <li>plays the flute, <a href="#Page_111">111</a></li>
- <li>in the pankration, <a href="#Page_133">133</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Alphabet, metrical, <a href="#Page_88">88</a></li>
-
-<li>Amphis, on the Akademeia, <a href="#Page_201">201</a></li>
-
-<li>Anaxagoras, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>, <a href="#Page_158">158</a>, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>, <a href="#Page_230">230</a></li>
-
-<li>Angelo, Michel, <a href="#Page_5">5</a></li>
-
-<li>Anthology, on wrestling, <a href="#Page_132">132</a></li>
-
-<li><span class="person">Antidosis</span> of Isokrates, <a href="#Page_190">190</a></li>
-
-<li>Antigenes, palaistra of, <a href="#Page_60">60</a></li>
-
-<li>Antipater, <a href="#Page_192">192</a></li>
-
-<li>Antiphanes, on the Akademeia, <a href="#Page_200">200</a></li>
-
-<li>Antiphon the Sophist, <a href="#Page_172">172</a>-173</li>
-
-<li>Apelles, <a href="#Page_115">115</a></li>
-
-<li>Apollodoros, <a href="#Page_208">208</a></li>
-
-<li>Apprenticeship, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>-45</li>
-
-<li>Arcadia, <a href="#Page_243">243</a>
-</li>
-
-<li>Archephebos, <a href="#Page_220">220</a></li>
-
-<li>Archon Eponumos, <a href="#footnote_192">71</a> <span class="decoration">n.</span></li>
-
-<li><cite>Areiopagitikos</cite> of Isokrates, <a href="#Page_190">190</a></li>
-
-<li>Areiopagos, supervision of the young, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>
- <ul class="none">
- <li>and the epheboi, <a href="#Page_213">213</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Ares, <a href="#Page_211">211</a></li>
-
-<li>Argos, <a href="#footnote_3">12</a> <span class="decoration">n.</span>
- <ul class="none">
- <li>foot-races for girls at, <a href="#Page_142">142</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Aristophanes, supports athleticism, <a href="#Page_123">123</a>
- <ul class="none">
- <li>criticism of Sophists in the <cite>Clouds</cite>, <a href="#Page_166">166</a>-167</li>
- <li>attacks new artistic standards, <a href="#Page_251">251</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Aristotle, <a href="#Page_202">202</a>
- <ul class="none">
- <li>condemns professional athletes, <a href="#Page_123">123</a></li>
- <li>at Plato’s lecture on “The Good,” 198</li>
- <li>his school in the Lukeion, <a href="#Page_203">203</a></li>
- <li>views on art in education, <a href="#Page_117">117</a>, <a href="#Page_258">258</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Aristoxenos, <a href="#Page_171">171</a></li>
-
-<li>Arithmetic, teaching of, <a href="#Page_100">100</a>-107</li>
-
-<li>Arkadia, schools in, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>, <a href="#Page_243">243</a></li>
-
-<li>Art, characteristics of Greek, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>-239
- <ul class="none">
- <li>teaching of, in primary schools, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>-117</li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Artemis Koruthalia, <a href="#Page_40">40</a></li>
-
-<li>Artemis Orthia, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_285">285</a></li>
-
-<li>Artistic education, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>-258
- <ul class="none">
- <li>Aristotle on, <a href="#Page_117">117</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Art-schools, date of the rise of, <a href="#Page_115">115</a></li>
-
-<li>Aster, Plato’s pupil, <a href="#Page_201">201</a>-202</li>
-
-<li>Astupalaia, school in, <a href="#Page_77">77</a></li>
-
-<li>Athleticism at Sparta, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>-34
- <ul class="none">
- <li>in Crete, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>-38</li>
- <li>at Athens and the rest of Greece, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>-156</li>
- <li>revolt against excessive, <a href="#Page_75">75</a></li>
- <li>excessive addiction to, <a href="#Page_119">119</a>-132</li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Autokrator, <a href="#Page_192">192</a></li>
-
-<li>Autolukos, <a href="#Page_75">75</a>-76</li>
-
-<li>Auxo, <a href="#Page_211">211</a></li>
-
-<li>Axiothea, <a href="#Page_197">197</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="none">
-<li>Barbitos, <a href="#Page_108">108</a></li>
-
-<li>Bathing-room in the gymnasium, <a href="#Page_137">137</a></li>
-
-<li>Boiotia, schools in, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>
-<a name="Page_294" id="Page_294"></a><span class="pageno">294</span></li>
-
-<li>Books, use of, in education, <a href="#Page_204">204</a>-209
- <ul class="none">
- <li>Isokrates’ opinion of, <a href="#Page_204">204</a></li>
- <li>Plato’s opinion of, <a href="#Page_205">205</a></li>
- <li>rare before the Periclean age, <a href="#Page_207">207</a></li>
- <li>trade in, <a href="#Page_207">207</a></li>
- <li>prices of, <a href="#Page_208">208</a>-209</li>
- <li>variety of, <a href="#Page_208">208</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li><span class="person">Bousiris</span> of Isokrates, <a href="#Page_185">185</a>, <a href="#Page_187">187</a>, <a href="#Page_195">195</a></li>
-
-<li>Boxing in the palaistra, <a href="#Page_132">132</a>-133</li>
-
-<li>Bribery, among professional athletes, <a href="#Page_121">121</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="none">
-<li>Cavalry, training for, <a href="#Page_143">143</a>, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>-152</li>
-
-<li>Chabrias, <a href="#Page_202">202</a></li>
-
-<li>Chancellor (Kosmetes) of the epheboi, <a href="#Page_212">212</a>-213</li>
-
-<li>Chares, <a href="#Page_208">208</a></li>
-
-<li>Charondas, <a href="#Page_62">62</a></li>
-
-<li><cite>Cheiron, Precepts of</cite>, <a href="#Page_96">96</a></li>
-
-<li>Chess (<ins title="pessoi">πεσσοί</ins>), <a href="#Page_105">105</a></li>
-
-<li>Children, exposure of Spartan, <a href="#Page_13">13</a></li>
-
-<li>Chios, Isokrates in, <a href="#Page_181">181</a>
- <ul class="none">
- <li>collapse of a school of letters in, <a href="#Page_76">76</a></li>
- <li>girls wrestling in, <a href="#Page_142">142</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Choirilos, <a href="#Page_95">95</a>, <a href="#Page_207">207</a></li>
-
-<li>Choregia, description of, <a href="#Page_148">148</a>-149</li>
-
-<li>Choregos, <a href="#Page_60">60</a>, <a href="#Page_148">148</a></li>
-
-<li>Competitions, local, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>-65</li>
-
-<li>Conscription, <a href="#Page_283">283</a>
- <ul class="none">
- <li>at Athens, <a href="#Page_55">55</a>-56</li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Cookery-book, <a href="#Page_207">207</a>
- <ul class="none">
- <li>by Simos, <a href="#Page_96">96</a></li>
- <li>by Mithaikos, <a href="#Page_208">208</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Cookery-schools, <a href="#Page_45">45</a></li>
-
-<li>Corporal punishment, <a href="#Page_18">18</a>, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>, <a href="#Page_68">68</a>, <a href="#Page_98">98</a>-100, <a href="#Page_262">262</a> and <a href="#footnote_718"><span class="decoration">n.</span></a>, <a href="#Page_285">285</a></li>
-
-<li>Crete, education at, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>-38</li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="none">
-<li>Damon, a music-teacher, <a href="#Page_113">113</a>, <a href="#Page_249">249</a></li>
-
-<li>Dancing at Sparta, <a href="#Page_22">22</a>, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>-32
- <ul class="none">
- <li>dithuramboi, <a href="#Page_144">144</a>-145</li>
- <li>religious aspect of, <a href="#Page_143">143</a>-144, <a href="#Page_248">248</a></li>
- <li>dramatic aspects of, <a href="#Page_144">144</a>-145</li>
- <li>systems of, <a href="#Page_145">145</a></li>
- <li>the War-dance, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>-147</li>
- <li>the Naked-dance, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>, <a href="#Page_147">147</a></li>
- <li>universal throughout Hellas, <a href="#Page_143">143</a></li>
- <li>educational importance of, <a href="#Page_143">143</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Delphoi, educational endowments at, <a href="#Page_62">62</a></li>
-
-<li>Demosthenes, <a href="#Page_195">195</a>, <a href="#Page_202">202</a></li>
-
-<li>Derkulos, <a href="#Page_71">71</a></li>
-
-<li>Diaulos, <a href="#Page_133">133</a></li>
-
-<li>Dictation, <a href="#Page_87">87</a></li>
-
-<li>Diodotos, <a href="#Page_192">192</a></li>
-
-<li>Dion, <a href="#Page_202">202</a></li>
-
-<li>Dionusia, epheboi at, <a href="#Page_214">214</a></li>
-
-<li>Dionusios, Plato’s master, <a href="#Page_158">158</a>, <a href="#Page_160">160</a>
- <ul class="none">
- <li>Plato’s pupil, <a href="#Page_202">202</a>, <a href="#Page_203">203</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Dionusodoros the Sophist, <a href="#Page_173">173</a></li>
-
-<li>Dionusos, <a href="#Page_144">144</a>, <a href="#Page_283">283</a>
-</li>
-
-<li>Diskos in the palaistra, <a href="#Page_134">134</a></li>
-
-<li>Dorian harmony, <a href="#Page_240">240</a>-241</li>
-
-<li>Douris, Vase of, <a href="#Page_52">52</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_92">92</a></li>
-
-<li>Drama, influence of, in education, <a href="#Page_248">248</a>-249</li>
-
-<li>Drawing, teaching of, in primary schools, <a href="#Page_114">114</a></li>
-
-<li>Dresden Gallery, <a href="#Page_5">5</a></li>
-
-<li>Dusting-room in the gymnasium, <a href="#Page_137">137</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="none">
-<li>Edgeworth, Maria, <a href="#Page_74">74</a>, <a href="#Page_260">260</a></li>
-
-<li>Egypt, in Plato’s <cite>Laws</cite>, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>-103</li>
-
-<li>Eleusis, education at, <a href="#Page_71">71</a></li>
-
-<li>Elgin marbles, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_5">5</a></li>
-
-<li>Elpias, school of, <a href="#Page_83">83</a></li>
-
-<li>Empedokles, <a href="#Page_230">230</a></li>
-
-<li>Enualios, <a href="#Page_211">211</a></li>
-
-<li>Epaminondas, <a href="#Page_245">245</a></li>
-
-<li>Ephebarchos, <a href="#Page_220">220</a></li>
-
-<li>Ephebic inscriptions, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>-223</li>
-
-<li>Epheboi, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>, <a href="#Page_263">263</a>
- <ul class="none">
- <li>examination and oath, <a href="#Page_210">210</a>-211</li>
- <li>decline in number, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>-220</li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Ephippos, on the Akademeia, <a href="#Page_200">200</a></li>
-
-<li>Epicharmos, <a href="#Page_95">95</a>, <a href="#Page_207">207</a></li>
-
-<li>Epikrates, on Plato’s lectures, <a href="#Page_199">199</a></li>
-
-<li>Eponumos, Archon, <a href="#footnote_192">71</a> <span class="decoration">n.</span></li>
-
-<li>Eretria, school in, <a href="#Page_77">77</a></li>
-
-<li>Eros, <a href="#Page_135">135</a></li>
-
-<li>Eruthrai, school in, <a href="#Page_77">77</a></li>
-
-<li>Euagoras, <a href="#Page_191">191</a></li>
-
-<li>Eudikos, son of Apemantos, <a href="#Page_98">98</a></li>
-
-<li>Euenos of Paros, <a href="#Page_168">168</a>, <a href="#Page_176">176</a></li>
-
-<li>Euhemeros, <a href="#footnote_661">229</a> <span class="decoration">n.</span></li>
-
-<li>Euripides, his alphabetical puzzle, <a href="#Page_90">90</a>
- <ul class="none">
- <li>denunciation of athleticism, <a href="#Page_122">122</a></li>
- <li>his rationalism, <a href="#Page_230">230</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Euthudemos the Sophist, <a href="#Page_173">173</a></li>
-
-<li>Euthudemos, companion of Sokrates, <a href="#Page_207">207</a></li>
-
-<li>Eutuchides, <a href="#Page_155">155</a></li>
-
-<li>Exposure of Spartan children on Taügetos, <a href="#Page_13">13</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="none">
-<li>Fees, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>, <a href="#Page_278">278</a>, <a href="#Page_281">281</a>
- <ul class="none">
- <li>paid to schoolmasters, <a href="#Page_81">81</a></li>
- <li>of the paidotribes, <a href="#Page_134">134</a></li>
- <li>paid to Sophists, <a href="#Page_168">168</a>-169</li>
- <li>of permanent secondary teachers, <a href="#Page_182">182</a></li>
- <li>in the Akademeia, <a href="#Page_202">202</a>-203</li>
- <li>to the Sophronistai, <a href="#Page_213">213</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Festivals, school, <a href="#Page_80">80</a>-81</li>
-
-<li>Flute, teaching of, <a href="#Page_110">110</a>
- <ul class="none">
- <li>condemned by Pratinas, <a href="#Page_110">110</a></li>
- <li>condemned by Plato, <a href="#Page_242">242</a></li>
- <li>particulars of, <a href="#Page_112">112</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Flute-girls, professional, <a href="#Page_111">111</a></li>
-
-<li>“Foreign Legion,” <a href="#Page_216">216</a>, <a href="#Page_218">218</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="none">
-<li>Gelon of Syracuse, <a href="#Page_228">228</a>
-<a name="Page_295" id="Page_295"></a><span class="pageno">295</span></li>
-
-<li>Gesticulation, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>-130</li>
-
-<li>Girls at Sparta, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>-30
- <ul class="none">
- <li>wrestle at Chios, <a href="#Page_142">142</a></li>
- <li>foot-races for, at Argos, <a href="#Page_142">142</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Gorgias the Sophist, <a href="#Page_168">168</a>, <a href="#Page_169">169</a>, <a href="#Page_174">174</a>-176, <a href="#Page_208">208</a>
- <ul class="none">
- <li>his euphuistic style, <a href="#Page_176">176</a></li>
- <li>his influence on later writers, <a href="#Page_176">176</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Grammatistes, <a href="#Page_50">50</a></li>
-
-<li>Gumnasiarchos, <a href="#Page_213">213</a>-214, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>
- <ul class="none">
- <li>excursus on, <a href="#Page_154">154</a>-156</li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Gumnastes, distinct from paidotribes, <a href="#footnote_363">126</a> <span class="decoration">n.</span></li>
-
-<li>Gumnopaidia, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>-147</li>
-
-<li>Gymnasium, description of, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>
- <ul class="none">
- <li>cost, <a href="#Page_124">124</a></li>
- <li>description of scene in, <a href="#Page_134">134</a>-142</li>
- <li><ins title="apodytêrion">ἀποδυτήριον</ins>, <a href="#Page_135">135</a></li>
- <li>patron deities, <a href="#Page_135">135</a></li>
- <li>the oil-room, <a href="#Page_136">136</a></li>
- <li>the dusting-room, <a href="#Page_137">137</a></li>
- <li>the bathing-room, <a href="#Page_137">137</a></li>
- <li>the punch-ball room, <a href="#Page_137">137</a></li>
- <li>Sophists’ lectures, <a href="#Page_138">138</a></li>
- <li>central courtyard, <a href="#Page_138">138</a>-139</li>
- <li>the xustos, <a href="#Page_141">141</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Gymnastics, excessive addiction to, <a href="#Page_119">119</a>-123
- <ul class="none">
- <li>professional, disadvantages of, <a href="#Page_120">120</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="none">
-<li>Haltêres, <a href="#Page_128">128</a></li>
-
-<li>Hegemone, <a href="#Page_211">211</a></li>
-
-<li><span class="person">Helen</span> of Isokrates, <a href="#Page_185">185</a>, <a href="#Page_195">195</a></li>
-
-<li>Hellas, educator of the world, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>-3</li>
-
-<li>Hellenism, two currents of, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>
- <ul class="none">
- <li>spread by Alexander, Rome, and the Renaissance, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>-3</li>
- <li>spirit of, <a href="#Page_3">3</a></li>
- <li>methods of teaching, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>, <a href="#Page_275">275</a>-291</li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Henty, G. A., <a href="#Page_260">260</a></li>
-
-<li>Hephaisteia, <a href="#Page_155">155</a></li>
-
-<li>Herakleides of Pontos, <a href="#footnote_83">36</a> <span class="decoration">n.</span>, <a href="#Page_198">198</a>, <a href="#Page_202">202</a>, <a href="#Page_241">241</a></li>
-
-<li>Herakleitos, <a href="#Page_229">229</a></li>
-
-<li>Hermann, K. F., an emendation of, <a href="#Page_125">125</a></li>
-
-<li>“Hermes” of Praxiteles, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>, <a href="#Page_250">250</a></li>
-
-<li>Herondas, third Mime of, <a href="#Page_98">98</a>-100</li>
-
-<li>Hesiod, <a href="#Page_207">207</a>
- <ul class="none">
- <li>authority of, <a href="#Page_228">228</a></li>
- <li>teaching of, in primary schools, <a href="#Page_95">95</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Hestiaios, <a href="#Page_198">198</a></li>
-
-<li>Hippias of Elis, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>, <a href="#Page_168">168</a>, <a href="#Page_169">169</a>, <a href="#Page_172">172</a></li>
-
-<li>Hippokleides, <a href="#Page_129">129</a></li>
-
-<li>Hippokrates, <a href="#Page_208">208</a>, <a href="#Page_215">215</a></li>
-
-<li>Hippothontid tribe, <a href="#Page_215">215</a></li>
-
-<li>Holidays, on festivals, <a href="#Page_80">80</a>-81</li>
-
-<li>Homer, <a href="#Page_207">207</a>
- <ul class="none">
- <li>teaching of, in primary schools, <a href="#Page_93">93</a>-95</li>
- <li>authority of, <a href="#Page_228">228</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Horace, <a href="#Page_2">2</a></li>
-
-<li>Hunting, <a href="#Page_142">142</a>-143, <a href="#Page_259">259</a></li>
-
-<li>Hupereides, <a href="#Page_202">202</a></li>
-
-<li>Hypo-Dorian harmony, <a href="#Page_241">241</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="none">
-<li>Iliaca, Tabula, <a href="#Page_84">84</a></li>
-
-<li>Ink, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>, <a href="#Page_87">87</a></li>
-
-<li>Inscriptions, ephebic, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>-223</li>
-
-<li>Inukos, <a href="#Page_168">168</a></li>
-
-<li>Ion, the rhapsode, <a href="#Page_97">97</a></li>
-
-<li>Ionian harmony, <a href="#Page_240">240</a>-241</li>
-
-<li>Iphikrates, <a href="#Page_202">202</a></li>
-
-<li>Isaios, <a href="#Page_195">195</a></li>
-
-<li>Isokrates, <a href="#Page_161">161</a>
- <ul class="none">
- <li>pupil of Gorgias, <a href="#Page_169">169</a></li>
- <li>his school near the Lukeion, <a href="#Page_180">180</a></li>
- <li>teaching in Chios, <a href="#Page_181">181</a></li>
- <li>on the theory of education, <a href="#Page_182">182</a></li>
- <li>on the nature of philosophy, <a href="#Page_184">184</a></li>
- <li>his school described, <a href="#Page_185">185</a>-195</li>
- <li>his methods, <a href="#Page_186">186</a>-190</li>
- <li>his pupils, <a href="#Page_191">191</a>, <a href="#Page_192">192</a></li>
- <li>on theory of education, <a href="#Page_192">192</a></li>
- <li>definition of the educated man, <a href="#Page_192">192</a>-193</li>
- <li>on religious myths, <a href="#Page_230">230</a>-231</li>
- </ul></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="none">
-<li>Javelin and spear throwing in the palaistra, <a href="#Page_134">134</a></li>
-
-<li>Jiu-jitsu, <a href="#Page_131">131</a></li>
-
-<li>Jump, long, in the palaistra, <a href="#Page_133">133</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="none">
-<li>Kallias, his metrical alphabet, <a href="#Page_88">88</a>
- <ul class="none">
- <li>his spelling drama, <a href="#Page_88">88</a>-90</li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Kameiros, in Rhodes, <a href="#Page_53">53</a></li>
-
-<li>Karia, <a href="#footnote_682">241</a> <span class="decoration">n.</span></li>
-
-<li>Karneia, <a href="#Page_40">40</a></li>
-
-<li>Kekropid tribe, <a href="#Page_215">215</a>, <a href="#Page_219">219</a></li>
-
-<li>Kikunna, <a href="#Page_166">166</a></li>
-
-<li>Kitharistes, <a href="#Page_50">50</a></li>
-
-<li>Klazomenai, <a href="#Page_81">81</a></li>
-
-<li>Kleinias, <a href="#Page_243">243</a></li>
-
-<li>Kleon, <a href="#Page_113">113</a></li>
-
-<li>Knucklebones, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>, <a href="#Page_105">105</a></li>
-
-<li>Kolonos, <a href="#Page_196">196</a></li>
-
-<li>Konnaros, <a href="#Page_65">65</a></li>
-
-<li>Konnos, his music-school, <a href="#Page_113">113</a></li>
-
-<li>Korax, <a href="#Page_208">208</a></li>
-
-<li>Korubantic dances, <a href="#footnote_686">242</a> <span class="decoration">n.</span></li>
-
-<li>Kôrukoi, <a href="#Page_128">128</a>, <a href="#Page_137">137</a></li>
-
-<li>Kos, <a href="#Page_215">215</a></li>
-
-<li>Kosmetes of the epheboi, <a href="#Page_212">212</a>-213</li>
-
-<li>Kottalos, in Herondas, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>-100</li>
-
-<li>Kritias, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>, <a href="#Page_277">277</a>
- <ul class="none">
- <li>plays the flute, <a href="#Page_111">111</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Kunaitha, <a href="#Page_243">243</a></li>
-
-<li>Kuretic dance in Crete, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>
-<a name="Page_296" id="Page_296"></a><span class="pageno">296</span></li>
-
-<li><cite>Kuros, The Education of</cite>, <a href="#Page_259">259</a>-272</li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="none">
-<li>Lampriskos, in Herondas, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>-100</li>
-
-<li>Lampros, a music-teacher, <a href="#Page_113">113</a>, <a href="#Page_164">164</a></li>
-
-<li>Lastheneia, <a href="#Page_197">197</a></li>
-
-<li>Laughter, statue of, in Sparta, <a href="#Page_12">12</a></li>
-
-<li>Leap-frog in the palaistra, <a href="#Page_130">130</a></li>
-
-<li>Lectures in primary schools, <a href="#Page_97">97</a></li>
-
-<li>Leitourgiai, <a href="#Page_60">60</a>-61, <a href="#Page_148">148</a>
- <ul class="none">
- <li>excursus on gumnasiarchoi, <a href="#Page_154">154</a>-156</li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Leokrates, <a href="#Page_219">219</a></li>
-
-<li>Lesbos, schools in, <a href="#Page_77">77</a></li>
-
-<li>Leschai at Sparta, <a href="#Page_11">11</a></li>
-
-<li>Libanius, <a href="#Page_178">178</a></li>
-
-<li>Libraries of Euthudemos, <a href="#Page_207">207</a>
- <ul class="none">
- <li>of Peisistratos at Athens, <a href="#Page_207">207</a></li>
- <li>of Polukrates at Samos, <a href="#Page_207">207</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Library, a school, <a href="#Page_95">95</a></li>
-
-<li>Likumnios the Sophist, <a href="#Page_176">176</a></li>
-
-<li>Linos, <a href="#Page_207">207</a></li>
-
-<li>Literature, teaching of, in primary schools, <a href="#Page_93">93</a>-97
- <ul class="none">
- <li>in secondary schools, <a href="#Page_161">161</a>-162</li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Logographoi, <a href="#Page_180">180</a>-181, <a href="#Page_193">193</a></li>
-
-<li>Long jump in the palaistra, <a href="#Page_133">133</a></li>
-
-<li>Lukeion, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>
- <ul class="none">
- <li>description of scene in, <a href="#Page_134">134</a>-142</li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Lukourgos the orator, <a href="#Page_202">202</a>, <a href="#Page_211">211</a></li>
-
-<li>Lusandros, <a href="#Page_16">16</a></li>
-
-<li>Lusias, the logographos, <a href="#Page_193">193</a></li>
-
-<li>Lusis, <a href="#Page_54">54</a></li>
-
-<li>Lydian harmony, <a href="#Page_240">240</a>-242</li>
-
-<li>Lyre, and lyric-schools, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>-114</li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="none">
-<li>Mantitheos, <a href="#Page_60">60</a></li>
-
-<li>Marathon, <a href="#Page_3">3</a></li>
-
-<li>Marriage customs, <a href="#Page_48">48</a></li>
-
-<li>Mathematics, teaching of, <a href="#Page_100">100</a>-107
- <ul class="none">
- <li>in secondary schools, <a href="#Page_159">159</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Meals, hours of, <a href="#Page_80">80</a></li>
-
-<li>Medical beliefs, <a href="#Page_243">243</a></li>
-
-<li>Menander, <a href="#Page_250">250</a></li>
-
-<li>Menedemos, <a href="#Page_196">196</a></li>
-
-<li>Metrodoros, <a href="#Page_230">230</a></li>
-
-<li>Metrotimé, in Herondas, <a href="#Page_98">98</a>-100</li>
-
-<li>Michel Angelo, <a href="#Page_5">5</a></li>
-
-<li>Mikkos, <a href="#footnote_420">138</a> n.</li>
-
-<li>Mithaikos, <a href="#Page_208">208</a></li>
-
-<li>Mixed-Lydian harmony, <a href="#Page_241">241</a></li>
-
-<li>Moderators (Sophronistai), <a href="#Page_70">70</a>, <a href="#Page_212">212</a>-213, <a href="#Page_220">220</a></li>
-
-<li>Mounuchia, <a href="#Page_213">213</a></li>
-
-<li>Mousaios, <a href="#Page_164">164</a></li>
-
-<li>Mukalessos, schools at, <a href="#Page_76">76</a></li>
-
-<li>Muronides, <a href="#Page_218">218</a></li>
-
-<li>Music, <a href="#Page_240">240</a>-244
- <ul class="none">
- <li>in Crete, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>-37</li>
- <li>in primary schools, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>-114</li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>
-Music, Plato on the value of, <a href="#Page_113">113</a>
- <ul class="none">
- <li>Aristotle on the value of, <a href="#Page_114">114</a></li>
- <li>characteristics of Greek, <a href="#Page_240">240</a>-244</li>
- <li>Greek views of the properties of, <a href="#Page_243">243</a></li>
- <li>in Arkadia, <a href="#Page_243">243</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Music-schools, experiments in, <a href="#Page_110">110</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="none">
-<li>“Nature-study,” <a href="#Page_262">262</a></li>
-
-<li>Nikeratos, <a href="#Page_94">94</a></li>
-
-<li>Nikostratos, archonship of, <a href="#Page_212">212</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="none">
-<li>Oberammergau, <a href="#Page_249">249</a></li>
-
-<li>Oil-room in the gymnasium, <a href="#Page_136">136</a></li>
-
-<li>Oinopides, <a href="#Page_158">158</a></li>
-
-<li>Orpheus, <a href="#Page_95">95</a>, <a href="#Page_164">164</a>, <a href="#Page_207">207</a></li>
-
-<li>Oxurhunchos, fragment on wrestling unearthed at, <a href="#Page_131">131</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="none">
-<li>Paidagogos, <a href="#Page_266">266</a>, <a href="#Page_278">278</a>-279
- <ul class="none">
- <li>duties of, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>-69</li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Paidonomos, <a href="#Page_277">277</a></li>
-
-<li>Paidotribes, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>, <a href="#Page_278">278</a>
- <ul class="none">
- <li>duties of, <a href="#Page_126">126</a></li>
- <li>his symbol of office, <a href="#Page_128">128</a></li>
- <li>his fee, <a href="#Page_134">134</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Painting, teaching of, in primary schools, <a href="#Page_114">114</a></li>
-
-<li>Palaistra, distinct from gymnasium, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>
- <ul class="none">
- <li>life in the, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>-134</li>
- <li>teaching of gesticulation (<ins title="to cheironomein">τὸ χειρονομεῖν</ins>), <a href="#Page_129">129</a></li>
- <li>wrestling (<ins title="palê">πάλη</ins>), <a href="#Page_130">130</a>-132</li>
- <li>leap-frog, <a href="#Page_130">130</a></li>
- <li>rope-climbing, <a href="#Page_130">130</a></li>
- <li>boxing, <a href="#Page_132">132</a></li>
- <li>pankration, <a href="#Page_132">132</a>-133</li>
- <li>long jump, <a href="#Page_133">133</a></li>
- <li>running, <a href="#Page_133">133</a></li>
- <li>javelin and spear, <a href="#Page_134">134</a></li>
- <li>diskos, <a href="#Page_134">134</a></li>
- <li>fees of the paidotribes, <a href="#Page_134">134</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Pamphilos the Macedonian, <a href="#Page_115">115</a></li>
-
-<li>Panathenaic festival, <a href="#Page_148">148</a>, <a href="#Page_152">152</a>, <a href="#Page_155">155</a></li>
-
-<li><span class="person">Panathenaikos</span> of Isokrates, <a href="#Page_187">187</a>, <a href="#Page_189">189</a></li>
-
-<li>Pankration in the palaistra, <a href="#Page_132">132</a>-133</li>
-
-<li>Parthenon, <a href="#Page_244">244</a>, <a href="#Page_245">245</a>
- <ul class="none">
- <li>the “Theseus” of the, <a href="#Page_5">5</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Peiraieus, <a href="#Page_213">213</a></li>
-
-<li>Peisistratos, <a href="#Page_247">247</a>
- <ul class="none">
- <li>popularisation of Homer by, <a href="#Page_52">52</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Pencils, <a href="#Page_84">84</a></li>
-
-<li>Perikles, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_246">246</a>, <a href="#Page_276">276</a></li>
-
-<li>Peripoloi, <a href="#Page_214">214</a> and n., <a href="#footnote_632">215</a></li>
-
-<li>Permanent secondary schools, <a href="#Page_179">179</a>-209
- <ul class="none">
- <li>their natural growth at Athens, <a href="#Page_179">179</a></li>
- <li>fees, <a href="#Page_182">182</a></li>
- <li>of Isokrates, <a href="#Page_185">185</a>-195</li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Phaüllos, <a href="#Page_139">139</a></li>
-
-<li>Pheidias, <a href="#Page_245">245</a>, <a href="#Page_250">250</a></li>
-
-<li>Pheiditia at Sparta, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>-15
-<a name="Page_297" id="Page_297"></a><span class="pageno">297</span></li>
-
-<li>Pheidostratos, schoolroom of, <a href="#Page_98">98</a></li>
-
-<li>Pherekrates, <span class="person">The Slave-Teacher</span>, <a href="#Page_45">45</a></li>
-
-<li>Philosophy, schools of, <a href="#Page_195">195</a>-207
- <ul class="none">
- <li>their feuds, <a href="#Page_203">203</a>-204</li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Philoxenos, <a href="#Page_242">242</a></li>
-
-<li>Phokion, <a href="#Page_202">202</a></li>
-
-<li>Phrunichos, <a href="#Page_215">215</a></li>
-
-<li>Phrunis, <a href="#Page_12">12</a></li>
-
-<li>Phrygian harmony, <a href="#Page_240">240</a></li>
-
-<li>Physical education, <a href="#Page_279">279</a>
- <ul class="none">
- <li>in Athens and the rest of Hellas, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>-156</li>
- <li>contemporary criticism of excess, <a href="#Page_119">119</a>-123</li>
- <li>dancing, <a href="#Page_143">143</a>-149</li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Pindar, eulogy of athleticism, <a href="#Page_121">121</a>-122</li>
-
-<li>Pittalos, <a href="#Page_45">45</a></li>
-
-<li>Plataea, oath of the army at, <a href="#Page_211">211</a></li>
-
-<li>Plato, denounces excessive athleticism, <a href="#Page_123">123</a>
- <ul class="none">
- <li>criticism of Sophists, <a href="#Page_174">174</a></li>
- <li>his teaching in the Akademeia, <a href="#Page_196">196</a>-207</li>
- <li>his teaching in the Akademeia described by Epikrates, <a href="#Page_199">199</a></li>
- <li>teaching in the Akademeia: his affection for his pupils, <a href="#Page_201">201</a>-202</li>
- <li>teaching in the Akademeia: names of his pupils, <a href="#Page_202">202</a></li>
- <li>teaching in the Akademia, gratuitous, <a href="#Page_203">203</a></li>
- <li>on the theory of education, <a href="#Page_205">205</a>-206</li>
- <li>criticism of religious myths, <a href="#Page_231">231</a>-233</li>
- <li>on the value of myths, <a href="#Page_235">235</a></li>
- <li>on the educative value of artistic environment, <a href="#Page_246">246</a></li>
- <li>his excessive imagination, <a href="#Page_247">247</a></li>
- <li>on the Athenian drama, <a href="#Page_253">253</a></li>
- <li>criticism of art, <a href="#Page_255">255</a>-258</li>
- <li>on Xenophon’s Kuros, <a href="#Page_272">272</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Playgrounds, <a href="#Page_83">83</a></li>
-
-<li>Plecktron, <a href="#Page_107">107</a></li>
-
-<li>Poetry, place of, in education, <a href="#Page_247">247</a>-249</li>
-
-<li>Polemon, <a href="#Page_201">201</a></li>
-
-<li>Polos the Sophist, <a href="#Page_168">168</a>, <a href="#Page_176">176</a>, <a href="#Page_208">208</a></li>
-
-<li>Polugnotos, <a href="#Page_115">115</a></li>
-
-<li>Polybios, on Arcadian music, <a href="#Page_243">243</a></li>
-
-<li>Pratinas, on the flute, <a href="#Page_110">110</a></li>
-
-<li>Praxiteles, the “Hermes” of, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>, <a href="#Page_250">250</a></li>
-
-<li>Prizes, <a href="#Page_65">65</a></li>
-
-<li>Prodikos the Sophist, <a href="#Page_168">168</a>, <a href="#Page_171">171</a>-172
- <ul class="none">
- <li><cite>Choice of Herakles</cite>, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>, <a href="#Page_98">98</a>, <a href="#Page_171">171</a>-172</li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Propulaia, <a href="#Page_245">245</a></li>
-
-<li>Protagoras the Sophist, <a href="#Page_167">167</a>-168, <a href="#Page_170">170</a>, <a href="#Page_230">230</a></li>
-
-<li>Proverbs, Greek, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>, <a href="#footnote_142">57</a> <span class="decoration">n.</span>, <a href="#Page_110">110</a>, <a href="#Page_111">111</a>, <a href="#Page_152">152</a></li>
-
-<li>Public schools, English, compared, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>, <a href="#footnote_620">212</a> <span class="decoration">n.</span>, <a href="#Page_265">265</a></li>
-
-<li>Punch-ball, <a href="#Page_137">137</a></li>
-
-<li>Pyrrhic dance, <a href="#Page_36">36</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="none">
-<li>Raphael, <a href="#Page_5">5</a></li>
-
-<li>Rationalism, spread of, <a href="#Page_229">229</a>-230</li>
-
-<li>Reading, teaching of, <a href="#Page_87">87</a>-92</li>
-
-<li>Religious education, <a href="#Page_228">228</a>-236
- <ul class="none">
- <li>Plato’s revision, <a href="#Page_231">231</a>-233</li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Rhetoric in secondary schools, <a href="#Page_160">160</a>-161
- <ul class="none">
- <li>weaknesses of Greek, <a href="#Page_174">174</a>-175</li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Riding, <a href="#Page_143">143</a>, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>-152</li>
-
-<li>Rope-climbing in the palaistra, <a href="#Page_130">130</a></li>
-
-<li>Rowing, <a href="#Page_143">143</a>, <a href="#Page_153">153</a>-154</li>
-
-<li>Running, long-distance, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>
- <ul class="none">
- <li>in the palaistra, <a href="#Page_133">133</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="none">
-<li>Salmudessos, <a href="#Page_207">207</a></li>
-
-<li>Schoolmaster, status of, <a href="#Page_81">81</a></li>
-
-<li>Secondary education, <a href="#Page_157">157</a>-209
- <ul class="none">
- <li>secondary classes in primary schools, <a href="#Page_157">157</a>-158</li>
- <li>Sophists, <a href="#Page_157">157</a>-178</li>
- <li>permanent schools, <a href="#Page_179">179</a>-209</li>
- <li>variety of subjects, <a href="#Page_159">159</a></li>
- <li>rhetoric, <a href="#Page_160">160</a>-161</li>
- <li>literary subjects, <a href="#Page_161">161</a></li>
- <li>the education voluntary, <a href="#Page_163">163</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li><cite>Semelé</cite>, <a href="#Page_145">145</a>, <a href="#Page_256">256</a></li>
-
-<li>Shakespeare, <a href="#Page_249">249</a></li>
-
-<li>Shelley, translation of epigram, <a href="#Page_202">202</a></li>
-
-<li>Siburtios, palaistra of, <a href="#Page_60">60</a></li>
-
-<li>Sicily, education in Chalcidian cities of, <a href="#Page_62">62</a></li>
-
-<li>Sikinnos, <a href="#Page_67">67</a></li>
-
-<li>Simon, <a href="#Page_208">208</a></li>
-
-<li>Simos, his cookery-book, <a href="#Page_96">96</a></li>
-
-<li>Sistine Chapel, <a href="#Page_5">5</a></li>
-
-<li>Skias, council-chamber at Sparta, <a href="#Page_12">12</a></li>
-
-<li>Skillous, <a href="#Page_259">259</a></li>
-
-<li><span class="person">Slave-Teacher, The</span>, of Pherekrates, <a href="#Page_45">45</a></li>
-
-<li>Sokrates, <a href="#Page_167">167</a>, <a href="#Page_230">230</a>, <a href="#Page_270">270</a>, <a href="#Page_277">277</a></li>
-
-<li>Solon, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>, <a href="#Page_247">247</a>
- <ul class="none">
- <li>enactment on handicraft, <a href="#Page_45">45</a></li>
- <li>regulations about paidagogoi, <a href="#Page_67">67</a></li>
- <li>enactments to safeguard morality, <a href="#Page_68">68</a>-69</li>
- <li>archaic phrases in his laws, <a href="#Page_95">95</a></li>
- <li>on courtiers, <a href="#Page_104">104</a></li>
- <li>metrical version of Athenian laws, <a href="#Page_109">109</a></li>
- <li>? on gumnasiarchai, <a href="#Page_155">155</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Sophists, <a href="#Page_157">157</a>-178, <a href="#Page_286">286</a>
- <ul class="none">
- <li>and mathematics, <a href="#Page_102">102</a></li>
- <li>subjects taught, <a href="#Page_165">165</a></li>
- <li>criticism of Aristophanes, <a href="#Page_166">166</a></li>
- <li>criticism of Plato, <a href="#Page_174">174</a></li>
- <li>scale of fees, <a href="#Page_169">169</a></li>
- <li>secret of their power, <a href="#Page_170">170</a></li>
- <li>their undemocratic influence, <a href="#Page_177">177</a></li>
- <li>their rationalism, <a href="#Page_177">177</a></li>
- <li>criticised by Isokrates, <a href="#Page_182">182</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Sophokles, <a href="#Page_3">3</a></li>
-
-<li>Sophronistai, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>, <a href="#Page_212">212</a>-213, <a href="#Page_220">220</a></li>
-
-<li>Sparta, education at, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>-34
- <a name="Page_298" id="Page_298"></a><span class="pageno">298</span>
- <ul class="none">
- <li>character of people, <a href="#Page_11">11</a></li>
- <li>importance of education at, <a href="#Page_12">12</a></li>
- <li>details of Pheiditia, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>-15</li>
- <li>the State a military machine, <a href="#Page_12">12</a></li>
- <li>conservatism of, <a href="#Page_12">12</a></li>
- <li>strictness of discipline, <a href="#Page_13">13</a></li>
- <li>Spartan nurses, <a href="#Page_13">13</a></li>
- <li>system of State schools, <a href="#Page_14">14</a></li>
- <li>Syssitia, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>-40</li>
- <li>ideals in education, <a href="#Page_275">275</a></li>
- <li>educational methods, <a href="#Page_285">285</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Spelling, teaching of, <a href="#Page_88">88</a>-90</li>
-
-<li>Spelling-book, terra-cotta fragment of, <a href="#footnote_239">89</a> <span class="decoration">n.</span></li>
-
-<li>Speusippos, <a href="#Page_202">202</a></li>
-
-<li>Stadion, <a href="#Page_133">133</a></li>
-
-<li>Stesimbrotos, <a href="#Page_230">230</a></li>
-
-<li>Swimming, <a href="#Page_143">143</a>, <a href="#Page_152">152</a>-153</li>
-
-<li>Syntono-Lydian harmony, <a href="#Page_242">242</a></li>
-
-<li>Syssitia at Sparta, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>-40, <a href="#Page_267">267</a>
- <ul class="none">
- <li>at Crete, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>-41</li>
- </ul></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="none">
-<li>Tabula Iliaca, <a href="#Page_84">84</a></li>
-
-<li>Taügetos, exposure of Spartan children on, <a href="#Page_13">13</a></li>
-
-<li>Taureas, palaistra of, <a href="#Page_60">60</a></li>
-
-<li>Technical instruction, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>-46
- <ul class="none">
- <li>of the logographoi, <a href="#Page_180">180</a>-181</li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Teles, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>, <a href="#Page_160">160</a></li>
-
-<li>Tennyson, quoted, <a href="#Page_235">235</a></li>
-
-<li>Teos, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>
- <ul class="none">
- <li>educational endowments in, <a href="#Page_62">62</a></li>
- <li>prizemen in competitions, <a href="#Page_63">63</a></li>
- <li>recitations of boys at, <a href="#Page_96">96</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Tertiary education, <a href="#Page_210">210</a>-223</li>
-
-<li>Thales (Cretan poet), <a href="#Page_243">243</a></li>
-
-<li>Thallo, <a href="#Page_211">211</a></li>
-
-<li>Thargelia, <a href="#Page_148">148</a>, <a href="#Page_155">155</a></li>
-
-<li>Theodoros, <a href="#Page_160">160</a>, <a href="#Page_176">176</a></li>
-
-<li>Theognis, <a href="#Page_96">96</a></li>
-
-<li>Theophanes, <a href="#Page_212">212</a></li>
-
-<li>Theophrastos, <a href="#Page_243">243</a></li>
-
-<li>Theory of education, <a href="#Page_227">227</a>-272, <a href="#Page_275">275</a>-291
- <ul class="none">
-
- <li>Plato’s views on, <a href="#Page_205">205</a>-206</li>
- <li>Xenophon’s views on, <a href="#Page_259">259</a>-272</li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Thermopylae, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>
-
-“Theseus,” of the Parthenon, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>, <a href="#Page_245">245</a></li>
-
-<li>Thespis, <a href="#Page_247">247</a></li>
-
-<li>Thrasuboulos of Kaludon, <a href="#Page_215">215</a></li>
-
-<li>Thrasumachos, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>, <a href="#Page_208">208</a></li>
-
-<li>Timeas, palaistra of, <a href="#Page_60">60</a></li>
-
-<li>Timotheos, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>, <a href="#Page_145">145</a></li>
-
-<li>Timotheos the general, <a href="#Page_196">196</a></li>
-
-<li>Timotheos of Herakleia, <a href="#Page_192">192</a></li>
-
-<li>Tisias, <a href="#Page_208">208</a></li>
-
-<li>Tithenidia, <a href="#Page_40">40</a></li>
-
-<li>Torch-race, <a href="#Page_155">155</a></li>
-
-<li>Trade, Greek views on, <a href="#Page_43">43</a></li>
-
-<li>Troizen, schools in, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>, <a href="#Page_220">220</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="none">
-<li>Undressing-room in the gymnasium, <a href="#Page_135">135</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="none">
-<li>Virgil, <a href="#Page_2">2</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="none">
-<li>Wax, tablets of, <a href="#Page_84">84</a></li>
-
-<li>Women, gymnastics for, at Sparta, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>
- <ul class="none">
- <li>seclusion of, <a href="#Page_46">46</a></li>
- <li>duties of, <a href="#Page_47">47</a></li>
- <li>excluded from athletics in Athens, <a href="#Page_142">142</a></li>
- <li>admitted to the Akademeia, <a href="#Page_197">197</a></li>
- <li>position of, <a href="#Page_282">282</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Wrestling in the palaistra described, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>-132</li>
-
-<li>Writing, teaching of, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>-87</li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="none">
-<li>Xenokrates, <a href="#Page_196">196</a>, <a href="#Page_201">201</a>, <a href="#Page_202">202</a>, <a href="#Page_203">203</a></li>
-
-<li>Xenophanes, <a href="#Page_229">229</a></li>
-
-<li>Xenophanes of Kolophon, criticises athleticism, <a href="#Page_121">121</a></li>
-
-<li>Xenophon, treatise on <cite>The Horse</cite>, <a href="#Page_208">208</a>
- <ul class="none">
- <li>handbooks on educational subjects, <a href="#Page_208">208</a></li>
- <li><cite>The Education of Kuros</cite>, <a href="#Page_259">259</a>-272</li>
- <li>character of, <a href="#Page_259">259</a>-260</li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Xerxes, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>, <a href="#Page_239">239</a></li>
-
-<li>Xustos, in the gymnasium, <a href="#Page_141">141</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="none">
-<li>Zeuxippos of Heraklea, <a href="#Page_114">114</a></li>
-</ul>
-</div><!--end chapter-->
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<ul class="none">
-
-<li><ins title="abakos">ἄβακος</ins>, <a href="#Page_104">104</a></li>
-
-<li><ins title="agelai">ἀγέλαι</ins>, <a href="#Page_37">37</a></li>
-
-<li><ins title="aleiptês">ἀλειπτής </ins>, <a href="#footnote_359">126</a> <span class="decoration">n.</span></li>
-
-<li><ins title="andreia">ἀνδρεῖα</ins>, <a href="#Page_35">35</a></li>
-
-<li><ins title="apergazesthai">ἀπεργάζεσθαι</ins>, <a href="#Page_116">116</a></li>
-
-<li><ins title="apodromoi">ἀπόδρομοι</ins>, <a href="#Page_38">38</a></li>
-
-<li><ins title="apodytêrion">ἀποδυτήριον</ins>, <a href="#Page_135">135</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="none">
-<li><ins title="grammai">γραμμαί</ins>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a></li>
-
-<li><ins title="grammatistês">γραμματιστής</ins>, <a href="#Page_165">165</a></li>
-
-<li><ins title="gymnasiarchein">γυμνασιαρχεῖν</ins>, <a href="#Page_155">155</a></li>
-
-<li><ins title="gymnopaidia">γυμνοπαιδία</ins>, <a href="#Page_146">146</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="none">
-<li><ins title="elaiothesion">ἐλαιοθέσιον</ins>, <a href="#footnote_412">136</a> <span class="decoration">n.</span></li>
-
-<li><ins title="exaleiphein">ἐξαλείφειν</ins>, <a href="#Page_116">116</a></li>
-
-<li><ins title="epaiklon">ἔπαικλον</ins>, <a href="#Page_39">39</a></li>
-
-<li><ins title="epikrotos">ἐπίκροτος</ins>, <a href="#Page_151">151</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="none">
-<li><ins title="êthos">ἦθος</ins>, <a href="#Page_244">244</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="none">
-<li><ins title="katharsis">κάθαρσις</ins>, <a href="#Page_242">242</a>
-<a name="Page_299" id="Page_299"></a><span class="pageno">299</span></li>
-
-<li><ins title="katastegos dromos">κατάστεγος δρόμος]</ins>, <a href="#Page_136">136</a></li>
-
-<li><ins title="kitharistês">κιθαριστής</ins>, <a href="#Page_165">165</a></li>
-
-<li><ins title="kopides">κοπίδες</ins>, <a href="#Page_40">40</a></li>
-
-<li><ins title="kryptoi">κρυπτοί</ins>, <a href="#Page_215">215</a>, <a href="#Page_220">220</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="none">
-<li><ins title="lêxiarchikon grammateion">ληξιαρχικὸν γραμματεῖον</ins>, <a href="#Page_210">210</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="none">
-<li><ins title="megalopsychos">μεγαλόψυχος</ins>, <a href="#Page_236">236</a></li>
-
-<li><ins title="meirakion">μειράκιον</ins>, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>, <a href="#Page_191">191</a></li>
-
-<li><ins title="metoikoi isoteleis">μέτοικοι ἰσοτελεῖς</ins>, <a href="#Page_216">216</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="none">
-<li><ins title="xêraloiphein">ξηραλοιφεῖν</ins>, <a href="#footnote_412">136</a> <span class="decoration">n.</span></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="none">
-<li><ins title="homonoia">ὁμόνοια</ins>, <a href="#Page_172">172</a></li>
-
-<li><ins title="hormos">ὄρμος</ins>, <a href="#footnote_69">30</a> <span class="decoration">n.</span></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="none">
-<li><ins title="paidagôgeion">παιδαγωγεῖον</ins>, <a href="#Page_84">84</a></li>
-
-<li><ins title="paidonomos">παιδονόμος</ins>, <a href="#Page_36">36</a></li>
-
-<li><ins title="palê">πάλη</ins>, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>-132</li>
-
-<li><ins title="pempazein">πεμπάζειν</ins>, <a href="#Page_104">104</a></li>
-
-<li><ins title="perigraphê">περιγραφή</ins>, <a href="#Page_116">116</a></li>
-
-<li><ins title="peripolia">περιτόλια</ins>, <a href="#Page_215">215</a></li>
-
-<li><ins title="pessoi">πεσσοί</ins>, <a href="#Page_105">105</a></li>
-
-<li><ins title="plexon">πλέξον</ins>, <a href="#Page_131">131</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="none">
-<li><ins title="skiagraphia">σκιαγραφία</ins>, <a href="#Page_116">116</a></li>
-
-<li><ins title="sophistês">σοφιστής</ins>, <a href="#Page_164">164</a>, <a href="#Page_165">165</a></li>
-
-<li><ins title="stlengis">στλεγγίς</ins>, <a href="#Page_142">142</a></li>
-
-<li><ins title="schêma">σχῆμα</ins>, <a href="#Page_131">131</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="none">
-<li><ins title="hypaithrioi">ὑπαίθριοι</ins>, <a href="#Page_215">215</a></li>
-
-<li><ins title="hypogrammos">ὑπογραμμός</ins>, <a href="#Page_85">85</a></li>
-
-<li><ins title="hypographêin">ὑπογράφειν</ins>, <a href="#Page_116">116</a></li>
-
-<li><ins title="hypographê">ὑπογραφή</ins>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="none">
-<li><ins title="phorbeia">φορβέια</ins>, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>, <a href="#Page_128">128</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="none">
-<li><ins title="cheironomein">χειρονομεῖν</ins>, <a href="#Page_129">129</a></li>
-
-<li><ins title="chytlousthai">χυτλοῦσθαι</ins>, <a href="#footnote_412">136</a> <span class="decoration">n.</span></li>
-</ul>
-
-<h3 class="p4 h3head">THE END</h3>
-
-<p class="p4 center"><span class="decoration">Printed by</span> <span class="sc">R. &amp; R. Clark, Limited</span>, <span class="decoration">Edinburgh</span>.</p>
-</div><!--end chapter-->
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h4 class="p4 h4head">Transcriber’s Note</h4>
-
-<p>Footnotes were renumbered sequentially and were moved to the
-end of the chapter in which related anchors occur. Dialect,
-obsolete words and misspellings were left unchanged. Obvious
-printing errors, such as backwards, upside down, or partially
-printed letters, were corrected. Final stops missing at the end
-of sentences were added. Transliterations of words and phrases in
-Greek are provided as inserts; scroll cursor over the Greek and
-transliteration will appear.</p>
-
-<ul>
-<li>The following items were noted or changed:</li>
-
-<li>There are two anchors to Footnotes <a href="#footnote_28">[28]</a>,
- <a href="#footnote_291">[291]</a>, <a href="#footnote_449">[449]</a>,
- <a href="#footnote_537">[537]</a>, and <a href="#footnote_548">[548]</a>.
- Footnote <a href="#footnote_585">[585]</a> has 3 anchors.
- Return links are to the first anchor.</li>
-<li>Unprinted “<abbr title="One">I.</abbr>” added at the beginning of the list of Illustrations.</li>
-<li>In Footnote <a href="#footnote_513">[513]</a>,
- the reference letter after 384 is unclear; it could be either E or B.</li>
-<li>In Footnote <a href="#footnote_651">[651]</a>, changed stop to comma in list: “… 466, 470”.</li>
-</ul>
-
-</div><!--end chapter-->
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
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