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CONTINUATION:
Cleinias:
And how, Stranger, can we act most fairly
under the circumstances?
Athenian Stranger:
There must be arbiters chosen to deal with
such laws and the subjects of them.
Cleinias:
What do you mean?
Athenian Stranger:
I mean to say, that a case may occur in which
the nephew, having a rich father, will be
unwilling to marry the daughter of his uncle;
he will have a feeling of pride, and he will
wish to look higher. And there are cases
in which the legislator will be imposing
upon him the greatest calamity, and he will
be compelled to disobey the law, if he is
required, for example, to take a wife who
is mad, or has some other terrible malady
of soul or body, such as makes life intolerable
to the sufferer. Then let what we are saying
concerning these cases be embodied in a law:-If
any one finds fault with the established
laws respecting testaments, both as to other
matters and especially in what relates to
marriage, and asserts that the legislator,
if he were alive and present, would not compel
him to obey-that is to say, would not compel
those who are by our law required to marry
or be given in marriage, to do either-and
some kinsman or guardian dispute this, the
reply is that the legislator left fifteen
of the guardians of the law to be arbiters
and fathers of orphans, male or female, and
to them let the disputants have recourse,
and by their aid determine any matters of
the kind, admitting their decision to be
final. But if any one thinks that too great
power is thus given to the guardians of the
law, let him bring his adversaries into the
court of the select judges, and there have
the points in dispute determined.
And he who loses the cause shall have censure
and blame from the legislator, which, by
a man of sense, is felt to be a penalty far
heavier than a great loss of money. Thus
will orphan children have a second birth.
After their first birth we spoke of their
nurture and education, and after their second
birth, when they have lost their parents,
we ought to take measures that the misfortune
of orphanhood may be as little sad to them
as possible. In the first place, we say that
the guardians of the law are lawgivers and
fathers to them, not inferior to their natural
fathers. Moreover, they shall take charge
of them year by year as of their own kindred;
and we have given both to them and to the
children's own guardians a suitable admonition
concerning the nurture of orphans. And we
seem to have spoken opportunely in our former
discourse, when we said that the souls of
the dead have the power after death of taking
an interest in human affairs, about which
there are many tales and traditions, long
indeed, but true; and seeing that they are
so many and so ancient, we must believe them,
and we must also believe the lawgivers, who
tell us that these things are true, if they
are not to be regarded as utter fools.
But if these things are really so, in the
first place men should have a fear of the
Gods above, who regard the loneliness of
the orphans; and in the second place of the
souls of the departed, who by nature incline
to take an especial care of their own children,
and are friendly to those who honour, and
unfriendly to those who dishonour them. Men
should also fear the souls of the living
who are aged and high in honour; wherever
a city is well ordered and prosperous, their
descendants cherish them, and so live happily;
old persons are quick to see and hear all
that relates to them, and are propitious
to those who are just in the fulfilment of
such duties, and they punish those who wrong
the orphan and the desolate, considering
that they are the greatest and most sacred
of trusts. To all which matters the guardian
and magistrate ought to apply his mind, if
he has any, and take heed of the nurture
and education of the orphans, seeking in
every possible way to do them good, for he
is making a contribution to his own good
and that of his children. He who obeys the
tale which precedes the law, and does no
wrong to an orphan, will never experience
the wrath of the legislator. But he who is
disobedient, and wrongs any one who is bereft
of father or mother, shall pay twice the
penalty which he would have paid if he had
wronged one whose parents had been alive.
As touching other legislation concerning
guardians in their relation to orphans, or
concerning magistrates and their superintendence
of the guardians, if they did not possess
examples of the manner in which children
of freemen should be brought up in the bringing
up of their own children, and of the care
of their property in the care of their own,
or if they had not just laws fairly stated
about these very things-there would have
been reason in making laws for them, under
the idea that they were a peculiar-class,
and we might distinguish and make separate
rules for the life of those who are orphans
and of those who are not orphans. But as
the case stands, the condition of orphans
with us not different from the case of those
who have father, though in regard to honour
and dishonour, and the attention given to
them, the two are not usually placed upon
a level. Wherefore, touching the legislation
about orphans, the law speaks in serious
accents, both of persuasion and threatening,
and such a threat as the following will be
by no means out of place:-He who is the guardian
of an orphan of either sex, and he among
the guardians of the law to whom the superintendence
of this guardian has been assigned, shall
love the unfortunate orphan as though he
were his own child, and he shall be as careful
and diligent in the management of his possessions
as he would be if they were his own, or even
more careful and dilligent.
Let every one who has the care of an orphan
observe this law. But any one who acts contrary
to the law on these matters, if he be a guardian
of the child, may be fined by a magistrate,
or, if he be himself a magistrate, the guardian
may bring him before the court of select
judges, and punish him, if convicted, by
exacting a fine of double the amount of that
inflicted by the court. And if a guardian
appears to the relations of the orphan, or
to any other citizen, to act negligently
or dishonestly, let them bring him before
the same court, and whatever damages are
given against him, let him pay fourfold,
and let half belong to the orphan and half
to him who procured the conviction. If any
orphan arrives at years of discretion, and
thinks that he has been ill-used by his guardians,
let him within five years of the expiration
of the guardianship be allowed to bring them
to trial; and if any of them be convicted,
the court shall determine what he shall pay
or suffer.
And if magistrate shall appear to have wronged
the orphan by neglect, and he be convicted,
let the court determine what he shall suffer
or pay to the orphan, and if there be dishonesty
in addition to neglect, besides paying the
fine, let him be deposed from his office
of guardian of the law, and let the state
appoint another guardian of the law for the
city and for the country in his room. Greater
differences than there ought to be sometimes
arise between fathers and sons, on the part
either of fathers who will be of opinion
that the legislator should enact that they
may, if they wish, lawfully renounce their
son by the proclamation of a herald in the
face of the world, or of sons who think that
they should be allowed to indict their fathers
on the charge of imbecility when they are
disabled by disease or old age. These things
only happen, as a matter of fact, where the
natures of men are utterly bad; for where
only half is bad, as, for example, if the
father be not bad, but the son be bad, or
conversely, no great calamity is the result
of such an amount of hatred as this. In another
state, a son disowned by his father would
not of necessity cease to be a citizen, but
in our state, of which these are to be the
laws, the disinherited must necessarily emigrate
into another country, for no addition can
be made even of a single family to the 5040
households; and, therefore, he who deserves
to suffer these things must be renounced
not only by his father, who is a single person,
but by the whole family, and what is done
in these cases must be regulated by some
such law as the following:-He who in the
sad disorder of his soul has a mind, justly
or unjustly, to expel from his family a son
whom he has begotten and brought up, shall
not lightly or at once execute his purpose;
but first of all he shall collect together
his own kinsmen extending to cousins, and
in like manner his son's kinsmen by the mother's
side, and in their presence he shall accuse
his son, setting forth that he deserves at
the hands of them all to be dismissed from
the family; and the son shall be allowed
to address them in a similar manner, and
show that he does not deserve to suffer any
of these things.
And if the father persuades them, and obtains
the suffrages of more than half of his kindred,
exclusive of the father and mother and the
offender himself-I say, if he obtains more
than half the suffrages of all the other
grown-up members of the family, of both sexes,
the father shall be permitted to put away
his son, but not otherwise. And if any other
citizen is willing to adopt the son who is
put away, no law shall hinder him; for the
characters of young men are subject to many
changes in the course of their lives. And
if he has been put away, and in a period
of ten years no one is willing to adopt him,
let those who have the care of the superabundant
population which is sent out into colonies,
see to him, in order that he may be suitably
provided for in the colony. And if disease
or age or harshness of temper, or all these
together, makes a man to be more out of his
mind than the rest of the world are-but this
is not observable, except to those who live
with him-and he, being master of his property,
is the ruin of the house, and his son doubts
and hesitates about indicting his father
for insanity, let the law in that case or,
that he shall first of all go to the eldest
guardians of the law and tell them of his
father's misfortune, and they shall duly
look into the matter, and take counsel as
to whether he shall indict him or not.
And if they advise him to proceed, they shall
be both his witnesses and his advocates;
and if the father is cast, he shall henceforth
be incapable of ordering the least particular
of his life; let him be as a child dwelling
in the house for the remainder of his days.
And if a man and his wife have an unfortunate
incompatibility of temper, ten of the guardians
of the law, who are impartial, and ten of
the women who regulate marriages, shall look
to the matter, and if they are able to reconcile
them they shall be formally reconciled; but
if their souls are too much tossed with passion,
they shall endeavour to find other partners.
Now they are not likely to have very gentle
tempers; and, therefore, we must endeavour
to associate with them deeper and softer
natures. Those who have no children, or only
a few, at the time of their separation, should
choose their new partners with a view to
the procreation of children; but those who
have a sufficient number of children should
separate and marry again in order that they
may have some one to grow old with and that
the pair may take care of one another in
age. If a woman dies, leaving children, male
or female, the law will advise rather than
compel the husband to bring up the children
without introducing into the house a stepmother.
But if he have no children, then he shall
be compelled to marry until he has begotten
a sufficient number of sons to his family
and to the state. And if a man dies leaving
a sufficient number of children, the mother
of his children shall remain with them and
bring, them up. But if she appears to be
too young to live virtuously without a husband,
let her relations communicate with the women
who superintend marriage, and let both together
do what they think best in these matters;
if there is a lack of children, let the choice
be made with a view to having them; two children,
one of either sex, shall be deemed sufficient
in the eye of the law. When a child is admitted
to be the offspring of certain parents and
is acknowledged by them, but there is need
of a decision as to which parent the child
is to follow-in case a female slave have
intercourse with a male slave, or with a
freeman or freedman, the offspring shall
always belong to the master of the female
slave.
Again, if a free woman have intercourse with
a male slave, the offspring shall belong
to the master of the slave; but if a child
be born either of a slave by her master,
or of his mistress by a slave-and this be
provence offspring of the woman and its father
shall be sent away by the women who superintend
marriage into another country, and the guardians
of the law shall send away the offspring
of the man and its mother. Neither God, nor
a man who has understanding, will ever advise
any one to neglect his parents. To a discourse
concerning the honour and dishonour of parents,
a prelude such as the following, about the
service of the Gods, will be a suitable introduction:-There
are ancient customs about the Gods which
are universal, and they are of two kinds:
some of the Gods we see with our eyes and
we honour them, of others we honour the images,
raising statues of them which we adore; and
though they are lifeless, yet we imagine
that the living Gods have a good will and
gratitude to us on this account. Now, if
a man has a father or mother, or their fathers
or mothers treasured up in his house stricken
in years, let him consider that no statue
can be more potent to grant his requests
than they are, who are sitting at his hearth
if only he knows how to show true service
to them.
Cleinias:
And what do you call the true mode of service?
Athenian Stranger:
I will tell you, O my friend, for such things
are worth listening to.
Cleinias:
Proceed.
Athenian Stranger:
Oedipus, as tradition says, when dishonoured
by his sons, invoked on them curses which
every one declares to have been heard and
ratified by the Gods, and Amyntor in his
wrath invoked curses on his son Phoenix,
and Theseus upon Hippolytus, and innumerable
others have also called down wrath upon their
children, whence it is clear that the Gods
listen to the imprecations of parents; for
the curses of parents are, as they ought
to be, mighty against their children as no
others are. And shall we suppose that the
prayers of a father or mother who is specially
dishonoured by his or her children, are heard
by the Gods in accordance with nature; and
that if a parent is honoured by them, and
in the gladness of his heart earnestly entreats
the Gods in his prayers to do them good,
he is not equally heard, and that they do
not minister to his request? If not, they
would be very unjust ministers of good, and
that we affirm to be contrary to their nature.
Cleinias:
Certainly.
Athenian Stranger:
May we not think, as I was saying just now,
that we can possess no image which is more
honoured by the Gods, than that of a father
or grandfather, or of a mother stricken in
years? whom when a man honours, the heart
of the God rejoices, and he is ready to answer
their prayers. And, truly, the figure of
an ancestor is a wonderful thing, far higher
than that of a lifeless image. For the living,
when they are honoured by us, join in our
prayers, and when they are dishonoured, they
utter imprecations against us; but lifeless
objects do neither. And therefore, if a man
makes a right use of his father and grandfather
and other aged relations, he will have images
which above all others will win him the favour
of the Gods.
Cleinias:
Excellent.
Athenian Stranger:
Every man of any understanding fears and
respects the prayers of parents, knowing
well that many times and to many persons
they have been accomplished. Now these things
being thus ordered by nature, good men think
it a blessing from heaven if their parents
live to old age and reach the utmost limit
of human life, or if taken away before their
time they are deeply regretted by them; but
to bad men parents are always a cause of
terror. Wherefore let every man honour with
every sort of lawful honour his own parents,
agreeably to what has now been said. But
if this prelude be an unmeaning sound in
the cars of any one, let the law follow,
which may be rightly imposed in these terms:-If
any one in this city be not sufficiently
careful of his parents, and do not regard
and gratify in every respect their wishes
more than those of his sons and of his other
offspring or of himself-let him who experiences
this sort of treatment either come himself,
or send some one to inform the three eldest
guardians of the law, and three of the women
who have the care of marriages; and let them
look to the matter and punish youthful evil-doers
with stripes and bonds if they are under
thirty years of age, that is to say, if they
be men, or if they be women, let them undergo
the same punishment up to forty years of
age.
But if, when they are still more advanced
in years, they continue the same neglect
of their parents, and do any hurt to any
of them, let them be brought before a court
in which every single one of the eldest citizens
shall be the judges, and if the offender
be convicted, let the court determine what
he ought to pay or suffer, and any penalty
may be imposed on him which a man can pay
or suffer. If the person who has been wronged
be unable to inform the magistrates, let
any freeman who hears of his case inform,
and if he do not, he shall be deemed base,
and shall be liable to have a suit for damage
brought against him by any one who likes.
And if a slave inform, he shall receive freedom;
and if he be the slave of the injurer or
injured party, he shall be set free by the
magistrates, or if he belong to any other
citizen, the public shall pay a price on
his behalf to the owner; and let the magistrates
take heed that no one wrongs him out of revenge,
because he has given information. Cases in
which one man injures another by poisons,
and which prove fatal, have been already
discussed; but about other cases in which
a person intentionally and of malice harms
another with meats, or drinks, or ointments,
nothing has as yet been determined. For there
are two kinds of poisons used among men,
which cannot clearly be distinguished. There
is the kind just now explicitly mentioned,
which injures bodies by the use of other
bodies according to a natural law; there
is also another kind which persuades the
more daring class that they can do injury
by sorceries, and incantations, and magic
knots, as they are termed, and makes others
believe that they above all persons are injured
by the powers of the magician.
Now it is not easy to know the nature of
all these things; nor if a man do know can
he readily persuade others to believe him.
And when men are disturbed in their minds
at the sight of waxen images fixed either
at their doors, or in a place where three
ways meet, or on the sepulchres of parents,
there is no use in trying to persuade them
that they should despise all such things
because they have no certain knowledge about
them. But we must have a law in two parts,
concerning poisoning, in whichever of the
two ways the attempt is made, and we must
entreat, and exhort, and advise men not to
have recourse to such practices, by which
they scare the multitude out of their wits,
as if they were children, compelling the
legislator and the judge to heal the fears
which the sorcerer arouses, and to tell them
in the first place, that he who attempts
to poison or enchant others knows not what
he is doing, either as regards the body (unless
he has a knowledge of medicine), or as regards
his enchantments (unless he happens to be
a prophet or diviner).
Let the law, then, run as follows about poisoning
or witchcraft:-He who employs poison to do
any injury, not fatal, to a man himself,
or to his servants, or any injury, whether
fatal or not, to his cattle or his bees,
if he be a physician, and be convicted of
poisoning, shall be punished with death;
or if he be a private person, the court shall
determine what he is to pay or suffer. But
he who seems to be the sort of man injures
others by magic knots, or enchantments, or
incantations, or any of the like practices,
if he be a prophet or diviner, let him die;
and if, not being a prophet, he be convicted
of witchcraft, as in the previous case, let
the court fix what he ought to pay or suffer.
When a man does another any injury by theft
or violence, for the greater injury let him
pay greater damages to the injured man, and
less for the smaller injury; but in all cases,
whatever the injury may have been, as much
as will compensate the loss. And besides
the compensation of the wrong, let a man
pay a further penalty for the chastisement
of his offence: he who has done the wrong
instigated by the folly of another, through
the lightheartedness of youth or the like,
shall pay a lighter penalty; but he who has
injured another through his own folly, when
overcome by pleasure or pain, in cowardly
fear, or lust, or envy, or implacable anger,
shall endure a heavier punishment.
Not that he is punished because he did wrong,
for that which is done can never be undone,
but in order that in future times, he, and
those who see him corrected, may utterly
hate injustice, or at any rate abate much
of their evil-doing. Having an eye to all
these things, the law, like a good archer,
should aim at the right measure of punishment,
and in all cases at the deserved punishment.
In the attainment of this the judge shall
be a fellow-worker with the legislator, whenever
the law leaves to him to determine what the
offender shall suffer or pay; and the legislator,
like a painter, shall give a rough sketch
of the cases in which the law is to be applied.
This is what we must do, Megillus and Cleinias,
in the best and fairest manner that we can,
saying what the punishments are to be of
all actions of theft and violence, and giving
laws of such a kind as the Gods and sons
of Gods would have us give. If a man is mad
he shall not be at large in the city, but
his relations shall keep him at home in any
way which they can; or if not, let them pay
a penalty-he who is of the highest class
shall pay a penalty of one hundred drachmae,
whether he be a slave or a freeman whom he
neglects; and he of the second class shall
pay four-fifths of a mina; and he of the
third class three-fifths; and he of the fourth
class two-fifths.
Now there are many sorts of madness, some
arising out of disease, which we have already
mentioned; and there are other kinds, which
originate in an evil and passionate temperament,
and are increased by bad education; out of
a slight quarrel this class of madmen will
often raise a storm of abuse against one
another, and nothing of that sort ought to
be allowed to occur in a well-ordered state.
Let this, then, be the law about abuse, which
shall relate to all cases:-No one shall speak
evil of another; and when a man disputes
with another he shall teach and learn of
the disputant and the company, but he shall
abstain from evilspeaking; for out of the
imprecations which men utter against one
another, and the feminine habit of casting
aspersions on one another, and using foul
names, out of words light as air, in very
deed the greatest enmities and hatreds spring
up.
For the speaker gratifies his anger, which
is an ungracious element of his nature; and
nursing up his wrath by the entertainment
of evil thoughts, and exacerbating that part
of his soul which was formerly civilized
by education, he lives in a state of savageness
and moroseness, and pays a bitter penalty
for his anger. And in such cases almost all
men take to saying something ridiculous about
their opponent, and there is no man who is
in the habit of laughing at another who does
not miss virtue and earnestness altogether,
or lose the better half of greatness. Wherefore
let no one utter any taunting word at a temple,
or at the public sacrifices, or at games,
or in the agora, or in a court of justice,
or in any public assembly. And let the magistrate
who presides on these occasions chastise
an offender, and he shall be blameless; but
if he fails in doing so, he shall not claim
the prize of virtue; for he is one who heeds
not the laws, and does not do what the legislator
commands. And if in any other place any one
indulges in these sort of revilings, whether
he has begun the quarrel or is only retaliating,
let any elder who is present support the
law, and control with blows those who indulge
in passion, which is another great evil;
and if he do not, let him be liable to pay
the appointed penalty.
And we say now, that he who deals in reproaches
against others cannot reproach them without
attempting to ridicule them; and this, when
done in a moment of anger, is what we make
matter of reproach against him. But then,
do we admit into our state the comic writers
who are so fond of making mankind ridiculous,
if they attempt in a good-natured manner
to turn the laugh against our citizens? or
do we draw the distinction of jest and earnest,
and allow a man to make use of ridicule in
jest and without anger about any thing or
person; though as we were saying, not if
he be angry have a set purpose? We forbid
earnest-that is unalterably fixed; but we
have still to say who are to be sanctioned
or not to be sanctioned by the law in the
employment of innocent humour. A comic poet,
or maker of iambic or satirical lyric verse,
shall not be permitted to ridicule any of
the citizens, either by word or likeness,
either in anger or without anger.
And if any one is disobedient, the judges
shall either at once expel him from the country,
or he shall pay a fine of three minae, which
shall be dedicated to the God who presides
over the contests. Those only who have received
permission shall be allowed to write verses
at one another, but they shall be without
anger and in jest; in anger and in serious
earnest they shall not be allowed. The decision
of this matter shall be left to the superintendent
of the general education of the young, and
whatever he may license, the writer shall
be allowed to produce, and whatever he rejects
let not the poet himself exhibit, or ever
teach anybody else, slave or freeman, under
the penalty of being dishonoured, and held
disobedient to the laws. Now he is not to
be pitied who is hungry, or who suffers any
bodily pain, but he who is temperate, or
has some other virtue, or part of a virtue,
and at the same time suffers from misfortune;
it would be an extraordinary thing if such
an one, whether slave or freeman, were utterly
forsaken and fell into the extremes of poverty
in any tolerably well-ordered city or government.
Wherefore the legislator may safely make
a law applicable to such cases in the following
terms:-Let there be no beggars in our state;
and if anybody begs, seeking to pick up a
livelihood by unavailing prayers, let the
wardens of the agora turn him out of the
agora, and the wardens of the city out of
the city, and the wardens of the country
send him out of any other parts of the land
across the border, in order that the land
may be cleared of this sort of animal. If
a slave of either sex injure anything, which
is not his or her own, through inexperience,
or some improper practice, and the person
who suffers damage be not himself in part
to blame, the master of the slave who has
done the harm shall either make full satisfaction,
or give up the the slave who has done has
done the injury. But if master argue that
the charge has arisen by collusion between
the injured party and the injurer, with the
view of obtaining the slave, let him sue
the person, who says that he has been injured,
for malpractices. And if he gain a conviction,
let him receive double the value which the
court fixes as the price of the slave; and
if he lose his suit, let him make amends
for the injury, and give up the slave.
And if a beast of burden, or horse, or dog,
or any other animal, injure the property
of a neighbour, the owner shall in like manner
pay for the injury. If any man refuses to
be a witness, he who wants him shall summon
him, and he who is summoned shall come to
the trial; and if he knows and is willing
to bear witness, let him bear witness, but
if he says he does not know let him swear
by the three divinities Zeus, and Apollo,
and Themis, that he does not, and have no
more to do with the cause. And he who is
summoned to give witness and does not answer
to his summoner, shall be liable for the
harm which ensues according to law. And if
a person calls up as a witness any one who
is acting as a judge, let him give his witness,
but he shall not afterwards vote in the cause.
A free woman may give her witness and plead,
if she be more than forty years of age, and
may bring an action if she have no husband;
but if her husband be alive she shall only
be allowed to bear witness. A slave of either
sex and a child shall be allowed to give
evidence and to plead, but only in cases
of murder; and they must produce sufficient
sureties that they will certainly remain
until the trial, in case they should be charged
with false witness. And either of the parties
in a cause may bring an accusation of perjury
against witnesses, touching their evidence
in whole or in part, if he asserts that such
evidence has been given; but the accusation
must be brought previous to the final decision
of the cause. The magistrates shall preserve
the accusations of false witness, and have
them kept under the seal of both parties,
and produce them on the day when the trial
for false witness takes place. If a man be
twice convicted of false witness, he shall
not be required, and if thrice, he shall
not be allowed to bear witness; and if he
dare to witness after he has been convicted
three times, let any one who pleases inform
against him to the magistrates, and let the
magistrates hand him over to the court, and
if he be convicted he shall be punished with
death.
And in any case in which the evidence is
rightly found to be false, and yet to have
given the victory to him who wins the suit,
and more than half the witnesses are condemned,
the decision which was gained by these means
shall be a discussion and a decision as to
whether the suit was determined by that false
evidence or and in whichever way the decision
may be given, the previous suit shall be
determined accordingly. There are many noble
things in human life, but to most of them
attach evils which are fated to corrupt and
spoil them. Is not justice noble, which has
been the civilizer of humanity? How then
can the advocate of justice be other than
noble? And yet upon this profession which
is presented to us under the fair name of
art has come an evil reputation. In the first
place; we are told that by ingenious pleas
and the help of an advocate the law enables
a man to win a particular cause, whether
just or unjust; and the power of speech which
is thereby imparted, are at the service of
him sho is willing to pay for them.
Now in our state this so-called art, whether
really an art or only an experience and practice
destitute of any art, ought if possible never
to come into existence, or if existing among
us should litten to the request of the legislator
and go away into another land, and not speak
contrary to justice. If the offenders obey
we say no more; but those who disobey, the
voice of the law is as follows:-If anyone
thinks that he will pervert the power of
justice in the minds of the judges, and unseasonably
litigate or advocate, let any one who likes
indict him for malpractices of law and dishonest
advocacy, and let him be judged in the court
of select judges; and if he be convicted,
let the court determine whether he may be
supposed to act from a love of money or from
contentiousness. And if he is supposed to
act from contentiousness, the court shall
fix a time during which he shall not be allowed
to institute or plead a cause; and if he
is supposed to act as be does from love of
money, in case he be a stranger, he shall
leave the country, and never return under
penalty of death; but if he be a citizen,
he shall die, because he is a lover of money,
in whatever manner gained; and equally, if
he be judged to have acted more than once
from contentiousness, he shall die.
BOOK XII
If a herald or an ambassador carry a false
message from our city to any other, or bring
back a false message from the city to which
he is sent, or be proved to have brought
back, whether from friends or enemies, in
his capacity of herald or ambassador, what
they have never said, let him be indicted
for having violated, contrary to the law,
the commands and duties imposed upon him
by Hermes and Zeus, and let there be a penalty
fixed, which he shall suffer or pay if he
be convicted. Theft is a mean, and robbery
a shameless thing; and none of the sons of
Zeus delight in fraud and violence, or ever
practised, either. Wherefore let no one be
deluded by poets or mythologers into a mistaken
belief of such such things, nor let him suppose,
when he thieves or is guilty of violence,
that he is doing nothing base, but only what
the Gods themselves do. For such tales are
untrue and improbable; and he who steals
or robs contrary to the law, is never either
a God or the son of a God; of this the legislator
ought to be better informed than all the,
poets put together.
Happy is he and may he be forever happy,
who is persuaded and listens to our words;
but he who disobeys shall have to contend
against the following law:-If a man steal
anything belonging to the public, whether
that which he steals be much or little, he
shall have the same punishment. For he who
steals a little steals with the same wish
as he who steals much, but with less power,
and he who takes up a greater amount; not
having deposited it, is wholly unjust. Wherefore
the law is not disposed to inflict a less
penalty on the one than on the other because
his theft, is less, but on the ground that
the thief may possibly be in one case still
curable, and may in another case be incurable.
If any one convict in a court of law a stranger
or a slave of a theft of public property,
let the court determine what punishment he
shall suffer, or what penalty he shall pay,
bearing in mind that he is probably not incurable.
But the citizen who has been brought up as
our citizens will have been, if he be found
guilty of robbing his country by fraud or
violence, whether he be caught in the act
or not, shall be punished with death; for
he is incurable.
Now for expeditions of war much consideration
and many laws are required; the great principle
of all is that no one of either sex should
be without a commander; nor should the mind
of any one be accustomed to do anything,
either in jest or earnest, of his own motion,
but in war and in peace he should look to
and follow his leader, even in the least
things being under his guidance; for example,
he should stand or move, or exercise, or
wash, or take his meals, or get up in the
night to keep guard and deliver messages
when he is bidden; and in the hour of danger
he should not pursue and not retreat except
by order of his superior; and in a word,
not teach the soul or accustom her to know
or understand how to do anything apart from
others. Of all soldiers the life should be
always and in all things as far as possible
in common and together; there neither is
nor ever will be a higher, or better, or
more scientific principle than this for the
attainment of salvation and victory in war.
And we ought in time of peace from youth
upwards to practise this habit of commanding
others, and of being commanded by others;
anarchy should have no place in the life
of man or of the beasts who are subject to
man.
I may add that all dances ought to be performed
with view to military excellence; and agility
and ease should be cultivated for the same
object, and also endurance of the want of
meats and drinks, and of winter cold and
summer heat, and of hard couches; and, above
all, care should be taken not to destroy
the peculiar qualities of the head and the
feet by surrounding them with extraneous
coverings, and so hindering their natural
growth of hair and soles. For these are the
extremities, and of all the parts of the
body, whether they are preserved or not is
of the greatest consequence; the one is the
servant of the whole body, and the other
the master, in whom all the ruling senses
are by nature set. Let the young man imagine
that he hears in what has preceded the praises
of the military life; the law shall be as
follows:-He shall serve in war who is on
the roll or appointed to some special service,
and if any one is absent from cowardice,
and without the leave of the generals; he
shall be indicted before the military commanders
for failure of service when the army comes
home; and the soldiers shall be his judges;
the heavy armed, and the cavalry, and the
other arms of the service shall form separate
courts; and they shall bring the heavy-armed
before the heavy-armed, and the horsemen
before the horsemen, and the others in like
manner before their peers; and he who is
found guilty shall never be allowed to compete
for any prize of valour, or indict another
for not serving on an expedition, or be an
accuser at all in any military matters.
Moreover, the court shall further determine
what punishment he shall suffer, or what
penalty he shall pay. When the suits for
failure of service are completed, the leaders
of the several kinds of troops shall again
hold an assembly, and they shall adjudge
the prizes of valour; and he who likes shall
give judgment in his own branch of the service,
saying nothing about any former expedition,
nor producing any proof or witnesses to confirm
his statement, but speaking only of the present
occasion. The crown of victory shall be an
olive wreath which the victor shall offer
up the temple of any war-god whom he likes,
adding an inscription for a testimony to
last during life, that such an one has received
the first, the second, or prize. If any one
goes on an expedition, and returns home before
the appointed time, when the generals. have
not withdrawn the army, be shall be indicted
for desertion before the same persons who
took cognisance of failure of service, and
if he be found guilty, the same punishment
shall be inflicted on him. Now every man
who is engaged in any suit ought to be very
careful of bringing false witness against
any one, either intentionally or unintentionally,
if he can help; for justice is truly said
to be an honourable maiden, and falsehood
is naturally repugnant to honour and justice.
A witness ought to be very careful not to
sift against justice, as for example in what
relates to the throwing away of arms-he must
distinguish the throwing them away when necessary,
and not make that a reproach, or bring in
action against some innocent person on that
account. To make the distinction maybe difficult;
but still the law must attempt to define
the different kinds in some way. Let me endeavour
to explain my meaning by an ancient tale:-If
Patroclus had been brought to the tent still
alive but without his arms (and this has
happened to innumerable persons), the original
arms, which the poet says were presented
to Peleus by the Gods as a nuptial gift when
he married. Thetis, remaining in the hands
of Hector, then the base spirits of that
day might have reproached the son of Menoetius
with having cast away his arms. Again, there
is the case of those who have been thrown
down precipices and lost their arms; and
of those who at sea, and in stormy places,
have been suddenly overwhelmed by floods
of water; and there are numberless things
of this kind which one might adduce by way
of extenuation, and with the view of justifying
a misfortune which is easily misrepresented.
We must, therefore, endeavour to divide to
the best of our power the greater and more
serious evil from the lesser. And a distinction
may be drawn in the use of terms of reproach.
A man does not always deserve to be called
the thrower away of his shield; he may be
only the loser of his arms. For there is
a great or rather absolute difference between
him who is deprived of his arms by a sufficient
force, and him who voluntarily lets his shield
go. Let the law then be as follows:-If a
person having arms is overtaken by the enemy
and does not turn round and defend himself,
but lets them go voluntarily or throws them
away, choosing a base life and a swift escape
rather than a courageous and noble and blessed
death-in such a case of the throwing away
of arms let justice be done, but the judge
need take no note of the case just now mentioned;
for the bad man ought always to be punished,
in the hope that he may be improved, but
not the unfortunate, for there is no advantage
in that. And what shall be the punishment
suited to him who has thrown away his weapons
of defence? Tradition says that Caeneus,
the Thessalian, was changed by a God from
a woman into a man; but the converse miracle
cannot now be wrought, or no punishment would
be more proper than that the man who throws
away his shield should be changed into a
woman. This however is impossible, and therefore
let us make a law as nearly like this as
we can-that he who loves his life too well
shall be in no danger for the remainder of
his days, but shall live for ever under the
stigma of cowardice.
And let the law be in the following terms:-When
a man is found guilty of disgracefully throwing
away his arms in war, no general or military
officer shall allow him to serve as a soldier,
or give him any place at all in the ranks
of soldiers; and the officer who gives the
coward any place, shall suffer a penalty
which the public examiner shall exact of
him; and if he be of the highest dass, he
shall pay a thousand drachmae; or if he be
of the second class, five minae; or if he
be of the third, three minae; or if he be
of the fourth class, one mina. And he who
is found guilty of cowardice, shall not only
be dismissed from manly dangers, which is
a disgrace appropriate to his nature, but
he shall pay a thousand drachmae, if he be
of the highest class, and five minae if he
be of the second class, and three if he be
of the third class, and a mina, like the
preceding, if he be of the fourth class.
What regulations will be proper about examiners,
seeing that some of our magistrates are elected
by lot, and for a year, and some for a longer
time and from selected persons? Of such magistrates,
who will be a sufficient censor or examiner,
if any of them, weighed down by the pressure
of office or his own inability to support
the dignity of his office, be guilty of any
crooked practice? It is by no means easy
to find a magistrate who excels other magistrates
in virtue, but still we must endeavour to
discover some censor or examiner who is more
than man.
For the truth is, that there are many elements
of dissolution in a state, as there are also
in a ship, or in an animal; they all have
their cords, and girders, and sinews-one
nature diffused in many places, and called
by many names; and the office of examiner
is a most important element in the preservation
and dissolution of states. For if the examiners
are better than the magistrates, and their
duty is fulfilled justly and without blame,
then the whole state and country flourishes
and is happy; but if the examination of the
magistrates is carried on in a wrong way,
then, by the relaxation of that justice which
is the uniting principle of all constitutions,
every power in the state is rent asunder
from every other; they no longer incline
in the same direction, but fill the city
with faction, and make many cities out of
one, and soon bring all to destruction. Wherefore
the examiners ought to be admirable in every
sort of virtue. Let us invent a mode of creating
them, which shall be as follows:-Every year,
after the summer solstice, the whole city
shall meet in the common precincts of Helios
and Apollo, and shall present to the God
three men out of their own number in the
manner following:-Each citizen shall select,
not himself, but some other citizen whom
he deems in every way the best, and who is
not less than fifty years of age. And out
of the selected persons who have the greatest
number of votes, they shall make a further
selection until they reduce them to one-half,
if they are an even number; but if they are
not an even number, they shall subtract the
one who has the smallest number of votes,
and make them an even number, and then leave
the half which have the great number of votes.
And if two persons have an equal number of
votes, and thus increase the number beyond
one-half, they shall withdraw the younger
of the two and do away with the excess; and
then including all the rest they shall again
vote, until there are left three having an
unequal number of votes. But if all the three,
or two out of the three, have equal votes,
let them commit the election to good fate
and fortune, and separate off by lot the
first, and the second, and the third; these
they shall crown with an olive wreath and
give them the prize of excellence, at the
same time proclaiming to all the world that
the city of the Magnetes, by providence of
the Gods, is again preserved, and presents
to the Sun and to Apollo her three best men
as first-fruits, to be a common offering
to them, according to the ancient law, as
long as their lives answer to the judgment
formed of them.
And these shall appoint in their first year
twelve examiners, to continue until each
has completed seventy-five years, to whom
three shall afterwards be added yearly; and
let these divide all the magistracies into
twelve parts, and prove the holders of them
by every sort of test to which a freeman
may be subjected; and let them live while
they hold office in the precinct of Helios
and Apollo, in which they were chosen, and
let each one form a judgment of some things
individually, and of others in company with
his colleagues; and let him place a writing
in the agora about each magistracy, and what
the magistrate ought to suffer or pay, according
to the decision of the examiners. And if
a magistrate does not admit that he has been
justly judged, let him bring the examiners
before the select judges, and if he be acquitted
by their decision, let him, if he will, accuse
the examiners themselves; if, however, he
be convicted, and have been condemned to
death by the examiners, let him die (and
of course he can only die once):-but any
other penalties which admit of being doubled
let him suffer twice over. And now let us
pass under review the examiners themselves;
what will their examination be, and how conducted?
During the life of these men, whom the whole
state counts worthy of the rewards of virtue,
they shall have the first seat at all public
assemblies, and at all Hellenic sacrifices
and sacred missions, and other public and
holy ceremonies in which they share. The
chiefs of each sacred mission shall be selected
from them, and they only of all the citizens
shall be adorned with a crown of laurel;
they shall all be priests of Apollo and Helios;
and one of them, who is judged first of the
priests created in that year, shall be high
priest; and they shall write up his name
in each year to be a measure of time as long
as the city lasts; and after their death
they shall be laid out and carried to the
grave and entombed in a manner different
from the other citizens.
They shall be decked in a robe all of white,
and there shall be no crying or lamentation
over them; but a chorus of fifteen maidens,
and another of boys, shall stand around the
bier on either side, hymning the praises
of the departed priests in alternate responses,
declaring their blessedness in song all day
long; and at dawn a hundred of the youths
who practise gymnastic and whom the relations
of the departed shall choose, shall carry
the bier to the sepulchre, the young men
marching first, dressed in the garb of warriors-the
cavalry with their horses, the heavy-armed
with their arms, and the others in like manner.
And boys neat the bier and in front of it
shall sing their national hymn, and maidens
shall follow behind, and with them the women
who have passed the age of childbearing;
next, although they are interdicted from
other burials, let priests and priestesses
follow, unless the Pythian oracle forbid
them; for this burial is free from pollution.
The place of burial shall be an oblong vaulted
chamber underground, constructed of tufa,
which will last for ever, having stone couches
placed side by side. And here they will lay
the blessed person, and cover the sepulchre
with a circular mound of earth and plant
a grove of trees around on every side but
one; and on that side the sepulchre shall
be allowed to extend for ever, and a new
mound will not be required. Every year they
shall have contests in music and gymnastics,
and in horsemanship, in honour of the dead.
These are the honours which shall be given
to those who at the examination are found
blameless; but if any of them, trusting to
the scrutiny being over, should, after the
judgment has been given, manifest the wickedness
of human nature, let the law ordain that
he who pleases shall indict him, and let
the cause be tried in the following manner.
In the first place, the court shall be composed
of the guardians of the law, and to them
the surviving examiners shall be added, as
well as the court of select judges; and let
the pursuer lay his indictment in this form-he
shall say that so-and-so is unworthy of the
prize of virtue and of his office; and if
the defendant be convicted let him be deprived
of his office, and of the burial, and of
the other honours given him. But if the prosecutor
do not obtain the fifth part of the votes,
let him, if he be of the first dass, pay
twelve minae, and eight if he be of the second
class, and six if he be of the third dass,
and two minae if he be of the fourth class
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