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1205 lines
72 KiB
Plaintext
1205 lines
72 KiB
Plaintext
360 BC
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THE SEVENTH LETTER
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by Plato
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translated by J. Harward
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PLATO TO THE RELATIVES AND FRIENDS OF DION. WELFARE.
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You write to me that I must consider your views the same as those of
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Dion, and you urge me to aid your cause so far as I can in word and
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deed. My answer is that, if you have the same opinion and desire as he
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had, I consent to aid your cause; but if not, I shall think more
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than once about it. Now what his purpose and desire was, I can
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inform you from no mere conjecture but from positive knowledge. For
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when I made my first visit to Sicily, being then about forty years
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old, Dion was of the same age as Hipparinos is now, and the opinion
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which he then formed was that which he always retained, I mean the
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belief that the Syracusans ought to be free and governed by the best
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laws. So it is no matter for surprise if some God should make
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Hipparinos adopt the same opinion as Dion about forms of government.
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But it is well worth while that you should all, old as well as
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young, hear the way in which this opinion was formed, and I will
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attempt to give you an account of it from the beginning. For the
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present is a suitable opportunity.
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In my youth I went through the same experience as many other men.
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I fancied that if, early in life, I became my own master, I should
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at once embark on a political career. And I found myself confronted
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with the following occurrences in the public affairs of my own city.
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The existing constitution being generally condemned, a revolution took
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place, and fifty-one men came to the front as rulers of the
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revolutionary government, namely eleven in the city and ten in the
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Peiraeus-each of these bodies being in charge of the market and
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municipal matters-while thirty were appointed rulers with full
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powers over public affairs as a whole. Some of these were relatives
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and acquaintances of mine, and they at once invited me to share in
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their doings, as something to which I had a claim. The effect on me
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was not surprising in the case of a young man. I considered that
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they would, of course, so manage the State as to bring men out of a
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bad way of life into a good one. So I watched them very closely to see
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what they would do.
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And seeing, as I did, that in quite a short time they made the
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former government seem by comparison something precious as gold-for
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among other things they tried to send a friend of mine, the aged
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Socrates, whom I should scarcely scruple to describe as the most
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upright man of that day, with some other persons to carry off one of
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the citizens by force to execution, in order that, whether he wished
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it, or not, he might share the guilt of their conduct; but he would
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not obey them, risking all consequences in preference to becoming a
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partner in their iniquitous deeds-seeing all these things and others
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of the same kind on a considerable scale, I disapproved of their
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proceedings, and withdrew from any connection with the abuses of the
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time.
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Not long after that a revolution terminated the power of the
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thirty and the form of government as it then was. And once more,
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though with more hesitation, I began to be moved by the desire to take
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part in public and political affairs. Well, even in the new
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government, unsettled as it was, events occurred which one would
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naturally view with disapproval; and it was not surprising that in a
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period of revolution excessive penalties were inflicted by some
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persons on political opponents, though those who had returned from
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exile at that time showed very considerable forbearance. But once more
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it happened that some of those in power brought my friend Socrates,
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whom I have mentioned, to trial before a court of law, laying a most
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iniquitous charge against him and one most inappropriate in his
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case: for it was on a charge of impiety that some of them prosecuted
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and others condemned and executed the very man who would not
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participate in the iniquitous arrest of one of the friends of the
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party then in exile, at the time when they themselves were in exile
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and misfortune.
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As I observed these incidents and the men engaged in public affairs,
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the laws too and the customs, the more closely I examined them and the
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farther I advanced in life, the more difficult it seemed to me to
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handle public affairs aright. For it was not possible to be active
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in politics without friends and trustworthy supporters; and to find
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these ready to my hand was not an easy matter, since public affairs at
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Athens were not carried on in accordance with the manners and
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practices of our fathers; nor was there any ready method by which I
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could make new friends. The laws too, written and unwritten, were
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being altered for the worse, and the evil was growing with startling
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rapidity. The result was that, though at first I had been full of a
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strong impulse towards political life, as I looked at the course of
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affairs and saw them being swept in all directions by contending
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currents, my head finally began to swim; and, though I did not stop
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looking to see if there was any likelihood of improvement in these
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symptoms and in the general course of public life, I postponed
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action till a suitable opportunity should arise. Finally, it became
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clear to me, with regard to all existing cornmunities, that they
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were one and all misgoverned. For their laws have got into a state
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that is almost incurable, except by some extraordinary reform with
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good luck to support it. And I was forced to say, when praising true
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philosophy that it is by this that men are enabled to see what justice
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in public and private life really is. Therefore, I said, there will be
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no cessation of evils for the sons of men, till either those who are
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pursuing a right and true philosophy receive sovereign power in the
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States, or those in power in the States by some dispensation of
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providence become true philosophers.
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With these thoughts in my mind I came to Italy and Sicily on my
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first visit. My first impressions on arrival were those of strong
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disapproval-disapproval of the kind of life which was there called the
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life of happiness, stuffed full as it was with the banquets of the
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Italian Greeks and Syracusans, who ate to repletion twice every day,
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and were never without a partner for the night; and disapproval of the
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habits which this manner of life produces. For with these habits
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formed early in life, no man under heaven could possibly attain to
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wisdom-human nature is not capable of such an extraordinary
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combination. Temperance also is out of the question for such a man;
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and the same applies to virtue generally. No city could remain in a
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state of tranquillity under any laws whatsoever, when men think it
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right to squander all their property in extravagant, and consider it a
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duty to be idle in everything else except eating and drinking and
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the laborious prosecution of debauchery. It follows necessarily that
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the constitutions of such cities must be constantly changing,
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tyrannies, oligarchies and democracies succeeding one another, while
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those who hold the power cannot so much as endure the name of any form
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of government which maintains justice and equality of rights.
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With a mind full of these thoughts, on the top of my previous
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convictions, I crossed over to Syracuse-led there perhaps by
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chance-but it really looks as if some higher power was even then
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planning to lay a foundation for all that has now come to pass with
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regard to Dion and Syracuse-and for further troubles too, I fear,
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unless you listen to the advice which is now for the second time
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offered by me. What do I mean by saying that my arrival in Sicily at
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that movement proved to be the foundation on which all the sequel
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rests? I was brought into close intercourse with Dion who was then a
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young man, and explained to him my views as to the ideals at which men
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should aim, advising him to carry them out in practice. In doing
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this I seem to have been unaware that I was, in a fashion, without
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knowing it, contriving the overthrow of the tyranny which;
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subsequently took place. For Dion, who rapidly assimilated my teaching
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as he did all forms of knowledge, listened to me with an eagerness
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which I had never seen equalled in any young man, and resolved to live
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for the future in a better way than the majority of Italian and
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Sicilian Greeks, having set his affection on virtue in preference to
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pleasure and self-indulgence. The result was that until the death of
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Dionysios he lived in a way which rendered him somewhat unpopular
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among those whose manner of life was that which is usual in the courts
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of despots.
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After that event he came to the conclusion that this conviction,
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which he himself had gained under the influence of good teaching,
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was not likely to be confined to himself. Indeed, he saw it being
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actually implanted in other minds-not many perhaps, but certainly in
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some; and he thought that with the aid of the Gods, Dionysios might
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perhaps become one of these, and that, if such a thing did come to
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pass, the result would be a life of unspeakable happiness both for
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himself and for the rest of the Syracusans. Further, he thought it
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essential that I should come to Syracuse by all manner of means and
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with the utmost possible speed to be his partner in these plans,
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remembering in his own case how readily intercourse with me had
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produced in him a longing for the noblest and best life. And if it
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should produce a similar effect on Dionysios, as his aim was that it
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should, he had great hope that, without bloodshed, loss of life, and
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those disastrous events which have now taken place, he would be able
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to introduce the true life of happiness throughout the whole
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territory.
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Holding these sound views, Dion persuaded Dionysios to send for
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me; he also wrote himself entreating me to come by all manner of means
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and with the utmost possible speed, before certain other persons
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coming in contact with Dionysios should turn him aside into some way
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of life other than the best. What he said, though perhaps it is rather
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long to repeat, was as follows: "What opportunities," he said,
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"shall we wait for, greater than those now offered to us by
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Providence?" And he described the Syracusan empire in Italy and
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Sicily, his own influential position in it, and the youth of Dionysios
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and how strongly his desire was directed towards philosophy and
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education. His own nephews and relatives, he said, would be readily
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attracted towards the principles and manner of life described by me,
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and would be most influential in attracting Dionysios in the same
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direction, so that, now if ever, we should see the accomplishment of
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every hope that the same persons might actually become both
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philosophers and the rulers of great States. These were the appeals
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addressed to me and much more to the same effect.
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My own opinion, so far as the young men were concerned, and the
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probable line which their conduct would take, was full of
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apprehension-for young men are quick in forming desires, which often
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take directions conflicting with one another. But I knew that the
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character of Dion's mind was naturally a stable one and had also the
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advantage of somewhat advanced years.
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Therefore, I pondered the matter and was in two minds as to
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whether I ought to listen to entreaties and go, or how I ought to act;
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and finally the scale turned in favour of the view that, if ever
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anyone was to try to carry out in practice my ideas about laws and
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constitutions, now was the time for making the attempt; for if only
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I could fully convince one man, I should have secured thereby the
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accomplishment of all good things.
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With these views and thus nerved to the task, I sailed from home, in
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the spirit which some imagined, but principally through a feeling of
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shame with regard to myself, lest I might some day appear to myself
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wholly and solely a mere man of words, one who would never of his
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own will lay his hand to any act. Also there was reason to think
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that I should be betraying first and foremost my friendship and
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comradeship with Dion, who in very truth was in a position of
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considerable danger. If therefore anything should happen to him, or if
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he were banished by Dionysios and his other enemies and coming to us
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as exile addressed this question to me: "Plato, I have come to you
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as a fugitive, not for want of hoplites, nor because I had no
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cavalry for defence against my enemies, but for want of words and
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power of persuasion, which I knew to be a special gift of yours,
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enabling you to lead young men into the path of goodness and
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justice, and to establish in every case relations of friendship and
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comradeship among them. It is for the want of this assistance on
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your part that I have left Syracuse and am here now. And the
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disgrace attaching to your treatment of me is a small matter. But
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philosophy-whose praises you are always singing, while you say she
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is held in dishonour by the rest of mankind-must we not say that
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philosophy along with me has now been betrayed, so far as your
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action was concerned? Had I been living at Megara, you would certainly
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have come to give me your aid towards the objects for which I asked
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it; or you would have thought yourself the most contemptible of
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mankind. But as it is, do you think that you will escape the
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reputation of cowardice by making excuses about the distance of the
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journey, the length of the sea voyage, and the amount of labour
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involved? Far from it." To reproaches of this kind what creditable
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reply could I have made? Surely none.
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I took my departure, therefore, acting, so far as a man can act,
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in obedience to reason and justice, and for these reasons leaving my
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own occupations, which were certainly not discreditable ones, to put
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myself under a tyranny which did not seem likely to harmonise with
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my teaching or with myself. By my departure I secured my own freedom
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from the displeasure of Zeus Xenios, and made myself clear of any
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charge on the part of philosophy, which would have been exposed to
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detraction, if any disgrace had come upon me for faint-heartedness and
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cowardice.
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On my arrival, to cut a long story short, I found the court of
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Dionysios full of intrigues and of attempts to create in the sovereign
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ill-feeling against Dion. I combated these as far as I could, but with
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very little success; and in the fourth month or thereabouts,
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charging Dion with conspiracy to seize the throne, Dionysios put him
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on board a small boat and expelled him from Syracuse with ignominy.
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All of us who were Dion's friends were afraid that he might take
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vengeance on one or other of us as an accomplice in Dion's conspiracy.
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With regard to me, there was even a rumour current in Syracuse that
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I had been put to death by Dionysios as the cause of all that had
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occurred. Perceiving that we were all in this state of mind and
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apprehending that our fears might lead to some serious consequence, he
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now tried to win all of us over by kindness: me in particular he
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encouraged, bidding me be of good cheer and entreating me on all
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grounds to remain. For my flight from him was not likely to redound to
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his credit, but my staying might do so. Therefore, he made a great
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pretence of entreating me. And we know that the entreaties of
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sovereigns are mixed with compulsion. So to secure his object he
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proceeded to render my departure impossible, bringing me into the
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acropolis, and establishing me in quarters from which not a single
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ship's captain would have taken me away against the will of Dionysios,
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nor indeed without a special messenger sent by him to order my
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removal. Nor was there a single merchant, or a single official in
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charge of points of departure from the country, who would have allowed
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me to depart unaccompanied, and would not have promptly seized me
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and taken me back to Dionysios, especially since a statement had now
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been circulated contradicting the previous rumours and giving out that
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Dionysios was becoming extraordinarily attached to Plato. What were
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the facts about this attachment? I must tell the truth. As time went
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on, and as intercourse made him acquainted with my disposition and
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character, he did become more and more attached to me, and wished me
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to praise him more than I praised Dion, and to look upon him as more
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specially my friend than Dion, and he was extraordinarily eager
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about this sort of thing. But when confronted with the one way in
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which this might have been done, if it was to be done at all, he
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shrank from coming into close and intimate relations with me as a
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pupil and listener to my discourses on philosophy, fearing the
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danger suggested by mischief-makers, that he might be ensnared, and so
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Dion would prove to have accomplished all his object. I endured all
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this patiently, retaining the purpose with which I had come and the
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hope that he might come to desire the philosophic life. But his
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resistance prevailed against me.
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The time of my first visit to Sicily and my stay there was taken
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up with all these incidents. On a later occasion I left home and again
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came on an urgent summons from Dionysios. But before giving the
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motives and particulars of my conduct then and showing how suitable
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and right it was, I must first, in order that I may not treat as the
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main point what is only a side issue, give you my advice as to what
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your acts should be in the present position of affairs; afterwards, to
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satisfy those who put the question why I came a second time, I will
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deal fully with the facts about my second visit; what I have now to
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say is this.
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He who advises a sick man, whose manner of life is prejudicial to
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health, is clearly bound first of all to change his patient's manner
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of life, and if the patient is willing to obey him, he may go on to
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give him other advice. But if he is not willing, I shall consider
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one who declines to advise such a patient to be a man and a physician,
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and one who gives in to him to be unmanly and unprofessional. In the
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same way with regard to a State, whether it be under a single ruler or
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more than one, if, while the government is being carried on
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methodically and in a right course, it asks advice about any details
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of policy, it is the part of a wise man to advise such people. But
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when men are travelling altogether outside the path of right
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government and flatly refuse to move in the right path, and start by
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giving notice to their adviser that he must leave the government alone
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and make no change in it under penalty of death-if such men should
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order their counsellors to pander to their wishes and desires and to
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advise them in what way their object may most readily and easily be
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once for all accomplished, I should consider as unmanly one who
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accepts the duty of giving such forms of advice, and one who refuses
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it to be a true man.
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Holding these views, whenever anyone consults me about any of the
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weightiest matters affecting his own life, as, for instance, the
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acquisition of property or the proper treatment of body or mind, if it
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seems to me that his daily life rests on any system, or if he seems
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likely to listen to advice about the things on which he consults me, I
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advise him with readiness, and do not content myself with giving him a
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merely perfunctory answer. But if a man does not consult me at all, or
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evidently does not intend to follow my advice, I do not take the
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initiative in advising such a man, and will not use compulsion to him,
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even if he be my own son. I would advise a slave under such
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circumstances, and would use compulsion to him if he were unwilling.
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To a father or mother I do not think that piety allows one to offer
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compulsion, unless they are suffering from an attack of insanity;
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and if they are following any regular habits of life which please them
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but do not please me, I would not offend them by offering useless,
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advice, nor would I flatter them or truckle to them, providing them
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with the means of satisfying desires which I myself would sooner die
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than cherish. The wise man should go through life with the same
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attitude of mind towards his country. If she should appear to him to
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be following a policy which is not a good one, he should say so,
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provided that his words are not likely either to fall on deaf ears
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or to lead to the loss of his own life. But force against his native
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land he should not use in order to bring about a change of
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constitution, when it is not possible for the best constitution to
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be introduced without driving men into exile or putting them to death;
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he should keep quiet and offer up prayers for his own welfare and
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for that of his country.
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These are the principles in accordance with which I should advise
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you, as also, jointly with Dion, I advised Dionysios, bidding him in
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the first place to live his daily life in a way that would make him as
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far as possible master of himself and able to gain faithful friends
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and supporters, in order that he might not have the same experience as
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his father. For his father, having taken under his rule many great
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cities of Sicily which had been utterly destroyed by the barbarians,
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was not able to found them afresh and to establish in them trustworthy
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governments carried on by his own supporters, either by men who had no
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ties of blood with him, or by his brothers whom he had brought up when
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they were younger, and had raised from humble station to high office
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and from poverty to immense wealth. Not one of these was he able to
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work upon by persuasion, instruction, services and ties of kindred, so
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as to make him a partner in his rule; and he showed himself inferior
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to Darius with a sevenfold inferiority. For Darius did not put his
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trust in brothers or in men whom he had brought up, but only in his
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confederates in the overthrow of the Mede and Eunuch; and to these
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he assigned portions of his empire, seven in number, each of them
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greater than all Sicily; and they were faithful to him and did not
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attack either him or one another. Thus he showed a pattern of what the
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good lawgiver and king ought to be; for he drew up laws by which he
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has secured the Persian empire in safety down to the present time.
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Again, to give another instance, the Athenians took under their rule
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very many cities not founded by themselves, which had been hard hit by
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the barbarians but were still in existence, and maintained their
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rule over these for seventy years, because they had in each them men
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whom they could trust. But Dionysios, who had gathered the whole of
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Sicily into a single city, and was so clever that he trusted no one,
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only secured his own safety with great difficulty. For he was badly
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off for trustworthy friends; and there is no surer criterion of virtue
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and vice than this, whether a man is or is not destitute of such
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friends.
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This, then, was the advice which Dion and I gave to Dionysios,
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since, owing to bringing up which he had received from his father,
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he had had no advantages in the way of education or of suitable
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lessons, in the first place...; and, in the second place, that,
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after starting in this way, he should make friends of others among his
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connections who were of the same age and were in sympathy with his
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pursuit of virtue, but above all that he should be in harmony with
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himself; for this it was of which he was remarkably in need. This we
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did not say in plain words, for that would not have been safe; but
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in covert language we maintained that every man in this way would save
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both himself and those whom he was leading, and if he did not follow
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this path, he would do just the opposite of this. And after proceeding
|
|
on the course which we described, and making himself a wise and
|
|
temperate man, if he were then to found again the cities of Sicily
|
|
which had been laid waste, and bind them together by laws and
|
|
constitutions, so as to be loyal to him and to one another in their
|
|
resistance to the attacks of the barbarians, he would, we told him,
|
|
make his father's empire not merely double what it was but many
|
|
times greater. For, if these things were done, his way would be
|
|
clear to a more complete subjugation of the Carthaginians than that
|
|
which befell them in Gelon's time, whereas in our own day his father
|
|
had followed the opposite course of levying attribute for the
|
|
barbarians. This was the language and these the exhortations given
|
|
by us, the conspirators against Dionysios according to the charges
|
|
circulated from various sources-charges which, prevailing as they
|
|
did with Dionysios, caused the expulsion of Dion and reduced me to a
|
|
state of apprehension. But when-to summarise great events which
|
|
happened in no great time-Dion returned from the Peloponnese and
|
|
Athens, his advice to Dionysios took the form of action.
|
|
|
|
To proceed-when Dion had twice over delivered the city and
|
|
restored it to the citizens, the Syracusans went through the same
|
|
changes of feeling towards him as Dionysios had gone through, when
|
|
Dion attempted first to educate him and train him to be a sovereign
|
|
worthy of supreme power and, when that was done, to be his coadjutor
|
|
in all the details of his career. Dionysios listened to those who
|
|
circulated slanders to the effect that Dion was aiming at the
|
|
tyranny in all the steps which he took at that time his intention
|
|
being that Dionysios, when his mind had fallen under the spell of
|
|
culture, should neglect the government and leave it in his hands,
|
|
and that he should then appropriate it for himself and treacherously
|
|
depose Dionysios. These slanders were victorious on that occasion;
|
|
they were so once more when circulated among the Syracusans, winning a
|
|
victory which took an extraordinary course and proved disgraceful to
|
|
its authors. The story of what then took place is one which deserves
|
|
careful attention on the part of those who are inviting me to deal
|
|
with the present situation.
|
|
|
|
I, an Athenian and friend of Dion, came as his ally to the court
|
|
of Dionysios, in order that I might create good will in place of a
|
|
state war; in my conflict with the authors of these slanders I was
|
|
worsted. When Dionysios tried to persuade me by offers of honours
|
|
and wealth to attach myself to him, and with a view to giving a decent
|
|
colour to Dion's expulsion a witness and friend on his side, he failed
|
|
completely in his attempt. Later on, when Dion returned from exile, he
|
|
took with him from Athens two brothers, who had been his friends,
|
|
not from community in philosophic study, but with the ordinary
|
|
companionship common among most friends, which they form as the result
|
|
of relations of hospitality and the intercourse which occurs when
|
|
one man initiates the other in the mysteries. It was from this kind of
|
|
intercourse and from services connected with his return that these two
|
|
helpers in his restoration became his companions. Having come to
|
|
Sicily, when they perceived that Dion had been misrepresented to the
|
|
Sicilian Greeks, whom he had liberated, as one that plotted to
|
|
become monarch, they not only betrayed their companion and friend, but
|
|
shared personally in the guilt of his murder, standing by his
|
|
murderers as supporters with weapons in their hands. The guilt and
|
|
impiety of their conduct I neither excuse nor do I dwell upon it.
|
|
For many others make it their business to harp upon it, and will
|
|
make it their business in the future. But I do take exception to the
|
|
statement that, because they were Athenians, they have brought shame
|
|
upon this city. For I say that he too is an Athenian who refused to
|
|
betray this same Dion, when he had the offer of riches and many
|
|
other honours. For his was no common or vulgar friendship, but
|
|
rested on community in liberal education, and this is the one thing in
|
|
which a wise man will put his trust, far more than in ties of personal
|
|
and bodily kinship. So the two murderers of Dion were not of
|
|
sufficient importance to be causes of disgrace to this city, as though
|
|
they had been men of any note.
|
|
|
|
All this has been said with a view to counselling the friends and
|
|
family of Dion. And in addition to this I give for the third time to
|
|
you the same advice and counsel which I have given twice before to
|
|
others-not to enslave Sicily or any other State to despots-this my
|
|
counsel but-to put it under the rule of laws-for the other course is
|
|
better neither for the enslavers nor for the enslaved, for themselves,
|
|
their children's children and descendants; the attempt is in every way
|
|
fraught with disaster. It is only small and mean natures that are bent
|
|
upon seizing such gains for themselves, natures that know nothing of
|
|
goodness and justice, divine as well as human, in this life and in the
|
|
next.
|
|
|
|
These are the lessons which I tried to teach, first to Dion,
|
|
secondly to Dionysios, and now for the third time to you. Do you
|
|
obey me thinking of Zeus the Preserver, the patron of third
|
|
ventures, and looking at the lot of Dionysios and Dion, of whom the
|
|
one who disobeyed me is living in dishonour, while he who obeyed me
|
|
has died honourably. For the one thing which is wholly right and noble
|
|
is to strive for that which is most honourable for a man's self and
|
|
for his country, and to face the consequences whatever they may be.
|
|
For none of us can escape death, nor, if a man could do so, would
|
|
it, as the vulgar suppose, make him happy. For nothing evil or good,
|
|
which is worth mentioning at all, belongs to things soulless; but good
|
|
or evil will be the portion of every soul, either while attached to
|
|
the body or when separated from it.
|
|
|
|
And we should in very truth always believe those ancient and
|
|
sacred teachings, which declare that the soul is immortal, that it has
|
|
judges, and suffers the greatest penalties when it has been
|
|
separated from the body. Therefore also we should consider it a lesser
|
|
evil to suffer great wrongs and outrages than to do them. The covetous
|
|
man, impoverished as he is in the soul, turns a deaf ear to this
|
|
teaching; or if he hears it, he laughs it to scorn with fancied
|
|
superiority, and shamelessly snatches for himself from every source
|
|
whatever his bestial fancy supposes will provide for him the means
|
|
of eating or drinking or glutting himself with that slavish and
|
|
gross pleasure which is falsely called after the goddess of love. He
|
|
is blind and cannot see in those acts of plunder which are accompanied
|
|
by impiety what heinous guilt is attached to each wrongful deed, and
|
|
that the offender must drag with him the burden of this impiety
|
|
while he moves about on earth, and when he has travelled beneath the
|
|
earth on a journey which has every circumstance of shame and misery.
|
|
|
|
It was by urging these and other like truths that I convinced
|
|
Dion, and it is I who have the best right to be angered with his
|
|
murderers in much the same way as I have with Dionysios. For both they
|
|
and he have done the greatest injury to me, and I might almost say
|
|
to all mankind, they by slaying the man that was willing to act
|
|
righteously, and he by refusing to act righteously during the whole of
|
|
his rule, when he held supreme power, in which rule if philosophy
|
|
and power had really met together, it would have sent forth a light to
|
|
all men, Greeks and barbarians, establishing fully for all the true
|
|
belief that there can be no happiness either for the community or
|
|
for the individual man, unless he passes his life under the rule of
|
|
righteousness with the guidance of wisdom, either possessing these
|
|
virtues in himself, or living under the rule of godly men and having
|
|
received a right training and education in morals. These were the aims
|
|
which Dionysios injured, and for me everything else is a trifling
|
|
injury compared with this.
|
|
|
|
The murderer of Dion has, without knowing it, done the same as
|
|
Dionysios. For as regards Dion, I know right well, so far as it is
|
|
possible for a man to say anything positively about other men, that,
|
|
if he had got the supreme power, he would never have turned his mind
|
|
to any other form of rule, but that, dealing first with Syracuse,
|
|
his own native land, when he had made an end of her slavery, clothed
|
|
her in bright apparel, and given her the garb of freedom, he would
|
|
then by every means in his power have ordered aright the lives of
|
|
his fellow-citizens by suitable and excellent laws; and the thing next
|
|
in order, which he would have set his heart to accomplish, was to
|
|
found again all the States of Sicily and make them free from the
|
|
barbarians, driving out some and subduing others, an easier task for
|
|
him than it was for Hiero. If these things had been accomplished by
|
|
a man who was just and brave and temperate and a philosopher, the same
|
|
belief with regard to virtue would have been established among the
|
|
majority which, if Dionysios had been won over, would have been
|
|
established, I might almost say, among all mankind and would have
|
|
given them salvation. But now some higher power or avenging fiend
|
|
has fallen upon them, inspiring them with lawlessness, godlessness and
|
|
acts of recklessness issuing from ignorance, the seed from which all
|
|
evils for all mankind take root and grow and will in future bear the
|
|
bitterest harvest for those who brought them into being. This
|
|
ignorance it was which in that second venture wrecked and ruined
|
|
everything.
|
|
|
|
And now, for good luck's sake, let us on this third venture
|
|
abstain from words of ill omen. But, nevertheless, I advise you, his
|
|
friends, to imitate in Dion his love for his country and his temperate
|
|
habits of daily life, and to try with better auspices to carry out his
|
|
wishes-what these were, you have heard from me in plain words. And
|
|
whoever among you cannot live the simple Dorian life according to
|
|
the customs of your forefathers, but follows the manner of life of
|
|
Dion's murderers and of the Sicilians, do not invite this man to
|
|
join you, or expect him to do any loyal or salutary act; but invite
|
|
all others to the work of resettling all the States of Sicily and
|
|
establishing equality under the laws, summoning them from Sicily
|
|
itself and from the whole Peloponnese-and have no fear even of Athens;
|
|
for there, also, are men who excel all mankind in their devotion to
|
|
virtue and in hatred of the reckless acts of those who shed the
|
|
blood of friends.
|
|
|
|
But if, after all, this is work for a future time, whereas immediate
|
|
action is called for by the disorders of all sorts and kinds which
|
|
arise every day from your state of civil strife, every man to whom
|
|
Providence has given even a moderate share of right intelligence ought
|
|
to know that in times of civil strife there is no respite from trouble
|
|
till the victors make an end of feeding their grudge by combats and
|
|
banishments and executions, and of wreaking their vengeance on their
|
|
enemies. They should master themselves and, enacting impartial laws,
|
|
framed not to gratify themselves more than the conquered party, should
|
|
compel men to obey these by two restraining forces, respect and
|
|
fear; fear, because they are the masters and can display superior
|
|
force; respect, because they rise superior to pleasures and are
|
|
willing and able to be servants to the laws. There is no other way
|
|
save this for terminating the troubles of a city that is in a state of
|
|
civil strife; but a constant continuance of internal disorders,
|
|
struggles, hatred and mutual distrust is the common lot of cities
|
|
which are in that plight.
|
|
|
|
Therefore, those who have for the time being gained the upper
|
|
hand, when they desire to secure their position, must by their own act
|
|
and choice select from all Hellas men whom they have ascertained to be
|
|
the best for the purpose. These must in the first place be men of
|
|
mature years, who have children and wives at home, and, as far as
|
|
possible, a long line of ancestors of good repute, and all must be
|
|
possessed of sufficient property. For a city of ten thousand
|
|
householders their numbers should be fifty; that is enough. These they
|
|
must induce to come from their own homes by entreaties and the promise
|
|
of the highest honours; and having induced them to come they must
|
|
entreat and command them to draw up laws after binding themselves by
|
|
oath to show no partiality either to conquerors or to conquered, but
|
|
to give equal and common rights to the whole State.
|
|
|
|
When laws have been enacted, what everything then hinges on is this.
|
|
If the conquerors show more obedience to the laws than the
|
|
conquered, the whole State will be full of security and happiness, and
|
|
there will be an escape from all your troubles. But if they do not,
|
|
then do not summon me or any other helper to aid you against those who
|
|
do not obey the counsel I now give you. For this course is akin to
|
|
that which Dion and I attempted to carry out with our hearts set on
|
|
the welfare of Syracuse. It is indeed a second best course. The
|
|
first and best was that scheme of welfare to all mankind which we
|
|
attempted to carry out with the co-operation of Dionysios; but some
|
|
chance, mightier than men, brought it to nothing. Do you now, with
|
|
good fortune attending you and with Heaven's help, try to bring your
|
|
efforts to a happier issue.
|
|
|
|
Let this be the end of my advice and injunction and of the narrative
|
|
of my first visit to Dionysios. Whoever wishes may next hear of my
|
|
second journey and voyage, and learn that it was a reasonable and
|
|
suitable proceeding. My first period of residence in Sicily was
|
|
occupied in the way which I related before giving my advice to the
|
|
relatives and friends of Dion. After those events I persuaded
|
|
Dionysios by such arguments as I could to let me go; and we made an
|
|
agreement as to what should be done when peace was made; for at that
|
|
time there was a state of war in Sicily. Dionysios said that, when
|
|
he had put the affairs of his empire in a position of greater safety
|
|
for himself, he would send for Dion and me again; and he desired
|
|
that Dion should regard what had befallen him not as an exile, but
|
|
as a change of residence. I agreed to come again on these conditions.
|
|
|
|
When peace had been made, he began sending for me; he requested that
|
|
Dion should wait for another year, but begged that I should by all
|
|
means come. Dion now kept urging and entreating me to go. For
|
|
persistent rumours came from Sicily that Dionysios was now once more
|
|
possessed by an extraordinary desire for philosophy. For this reason
|
|
Dion pressed me urgently not to decline his invitation. But though I
|
|
was well aware that as regards philosophy such symptoms were not
|
|
uncommon in young men, still it seemed to me safer at that time to
|
|
part company altogether with Dion and Dionysios; and I offended both
|
|
of them by replying that I was an old man, and that the steps now
|
|
being taken were quite at variance with the previous agreement.
|
|
|
|
After this, it seems, Archytes came to the court of Dionysios.
|
|
Before my departure I had brought him and his Tarentine circle into
|
|
friendly relations with Dionysios. There were some others in
|
|
Syracuse who had received some instruction from Dion, and others had
|
|
learnt from these, getting their heads full of erroneous teaching on
|
|
philosophical questions. These, it seems, were attempting to hold
|
|
discussions with Dionysios on questions connected with such
|
|
subjects, in the idea that he had been fully instructed in my views.
|
|
Now is not at all devoid of natural gifts for learning, and he has a
|
|
great craving for honour and glory. What was said probably pleased
|
|
him, and he felt some shame when it became clear that he had not taken
|
|
advantage of my teaching during my visit. For these reasons he
|
|
conceived a desire for more definite instruction, and his love of
|
|
glory was an additional incentive to him. The real reasons why he
|
|
had learnt nothing during my previous visit have just been set forth
|
|
in the preceding narrative. Accordingly, now that I was safe at home
|
|
and had refused his second invitation, as I just now related,
|
|
Dionysios seems to have felt all manner of anxiety lest certain people
|
|
should suppose that I was unwilling to visit him again because I had
|
|
formed a poor opinion of his natural gifts and character, and because,
|
|
knowing as I did his manner of life, I disapproved of it.
|
|
|
|
It is right for me to speak the truth, and make no complaint if
|
|
anyone, after hearing the facts, forms a poor opinion of my
|
|
philosophy, and thinks that the tyrant was in the right. Dionysios now
|
|
invited me for the third time, sending a trireme to ensure me
|
|
comfort on the voyage; he sent also Archedemos-one of those who had
|
|
spent some time with Archytes, and of whom he supposed that I had a
|
|
higher opinion than of any of the Sicilian Greeks-and, with him, other
|
|
men of repute in Sicily. These all brought the same report, that
|
|
Dionysios had made progress in philosophy. He also sent a very long
|
|
letter, knowing as he did my relations with Dion and Dion's
|
|
eagerness also that I should take ship and go to Syracuse. The
|
|
letter was framed in its opening sentences to meet all these
|
|
conditions, and the tenor of it was as follows: "Dionysios to
|
|
Plato," here followed the customary greeting and immediately after
|
|
it he said, "If in compliance with our request you come now, in the
|
|
first place, Dion's affairs will be dealt with in whatever way you
|
|
yourself desire; I know that you will desire what is reasonable, and I
|
|
shall consent to it. But if not, none of Dion's affairs will have
|
|
results in accordance with your wishes, with regard either to Dion
|
|
himself or to other matters." This he said in these words; the rest it
|
|
would be tedious and inopportune to quote. Other letters arrived
|
|
from Archytes and the Tarentines, praising the philosophical studies
|
|
of Dionysios and saying that, if I did not now come, I should cause
|
|
a complete rupture in their friendship with Dionysios, which had
|
|
been brought about by me and was of no small importance to their
|
|
political interests.
|
|
|
|
When this invitation came to me at that time in such terms, and
|
|
those who had come from Sicily and Italy were trying to drag me
|
|
thither, while my friends at Athens were literally pushing me out with
|
|
their urgent entreaties, it was the same old tale-that I must not
|
|
betray Dion and my Tarentine friends and supporters. Also I myself had
|
|
a lurking feeling that there was nothing surprising in the fact that a
|
|
young man, quick to learn, hearing talk of the great truths of
|
|
philosophy, should feel a craving for the higher life. I thought
|
|
therefore that I must put the matter definitely to the test to see
|
|
whether his desire was genuine or the reverse, and on no account leave
|
|
such an impulse unaided nor make myself responsible for such a deep
|
|
and real disgrace, if the reports brought by anyone were really
|
|
true. So blindfolding myself with this reflection, I set out, with
|
|
many fears and with no very favourable anticipations, as was natural
|
|
enough. However, I went, and my action on this occasion at any rate
|
|
was really a case of "the third to the Preserver," for I had the
|
|
good fortune to return safely; and for this I must, next to the God,
|
|
thank Dionysios, because, though many wished to make an end of me,
|
|
he prevented them and paid some proper respect to my situation.
|
|
|
|
On my arrival, I thought that first I must put to the test the
|
|
question whether Dionysios had really been kindled with the fire of
|
|
philosophy, or whether all the reports which had come to Athens were
|
|
empty rumours. Now there is a way of putting such things to the test
|
|
which is not to be despised and is well suited to monarchs, especially
|
|
to those who have got their heads full of erroneous teaching, which
|
|
immediately my arrival I found to be very much the case with
|
|
Dionysios. One should show such men what philosophy is in all its
|
|
extent; what their range of studies is by which it is approached,
|
|
and how much labour it involves. For the man who has heard this, if he
|
|
has the true philosophic spirit and that godlike temperament which
|
|
makes him a kin to philosophy and worthy of it, thinks that he has
|
|
been told of a marvellous road lying before him, that he must
|
|
forthwith press on with all his strength, and that life is not worth
|
|
living if he does anything else. After this he uses to the full his
|
|
own powers and those of his guide in the path, and relaxes not his
|
|
efforts, till he has either reached the end of the whole course of
|
|
study or gained such power that he is not incapable of directing his
|
|
steps without the aid of a guide. This is the spirit and these are the
|
|
thoughts by which such a man guides his life, carrying out his work,
|
|
whatever his occupation may be, but throughout it all ever cleaving to
|
|
philosophy and to such rules of diet in his daily life as will give
|
|
him inward sobriety and therewith quickness in learning, a good
|
|
memory, and reasoning power; the kind of life which is opposed to this
|
|
he consistently hates. Those who have not the true philosophic temper,
|
|
but a mere surface colouring of opinions penetrating, like sunburn,
|
|
only skin deep, when they see how great the range of studies is, how
|
|
much labour is involved in it, and how necessary to the pursuit it
|
|
is to have an orderly regulation of the daily life, come to the
|
|
conclusion that the thing is difficult and impossible for them, and
|
|
are actually incapable of carrying out the course of study; while some
|
|
of them persuade themselves that they have sufficiently studied the
|
|
whole matter and have no need of any further effort. This is the
|
|
sure test and is the safest one to apply to those who live in luxury
|
|
and are incapable of continuous effort; it ensures that such a man
|
|
shall not throw the blame upon his teacher but on himself, because
|
|
he cannot bring to the pursuit all the qualities necessary to it. Thus
|
|
it came about that I said to Dionysios what I did say on that
|
|
occasion.
|
|
|
|
I did not, however, give a complete exposition, nor did Dionysios
|
|
ask for one. For he professed to know many, and those the most
|
|
important, points, and to have a sufficient hold of them through
|
|
instruction given by others. I hear also that he has since written
|
|
about what he heard from me, composing what professes to be his own
|
|
handbook, very different, so he says, from the doctrines which he
|
|
heard from me; but of its contents I know nothing; I know indeed
|
|
that others have written on the same subjects; but who they are, is
|
|
more than they know themselves. Thus much at least, I can say about
|
|
all writers, past or future, who say they know the things to which I
|
|
devote myself, whether by hearing the teaching of me or of others,
|
|
or by their own discoveries-that according to my view it is not
|
|
possible for them to have any real skill in the matter. There
|
|
neither is nor ever will be a treatise of mine on the subject. For
|
|
it does not admit of exposition like other branches of knowledge;
|
|
but after much converse about the matter itself and a life lived
|
|
together, suddenly a light, as it were, is kindled in one soul by a
|
|
flame that leaps to it from another, and thereafter sustains itself.
|
|
Yet this much I know-that if the things were written or put into
|
|
words, it would be done best by me, and that, if they were written
|
|
badly, I should be the person most pained. Again, if they had appeared
|
|
to me to admit adequately of writing and exposition, what task in life
|
|
could I have performed nobler than this, to write what is of great
|
|
service to mankind and to bring the nature of things into the light
|
|
for all to see? But I do not think it a good thing for men that
|
|
there should be a disquisition, as it is called, on this
|
|
topic-except for some few, who are able with a little teaching to find
|
|
it out for themselves. As for the rest, it would fill some of them
|
|
quite illogically with a mistaken feeling of contempt, and others with
|
|
lofty and vain-glorious expectations, as though they had learnt
|
|
something high and mighty.
|
|
|
|
On this point I intend to speak a little more at length; for
|
|
perhaps, when I have done so, things will be clearer with regard to my
|
|
present subject. There is an argument which holds good against the man
|
|
ventures to put anything whatever into writing on questions of this
|
|
nature; it has often before been stated by me, and it seems suitable
|
|
to the present occasion.
|
|
|
|
For everything that exists there are three instruments by which
|
|
the knowledge of it is necessarily imparted; fourth, there is the
|
|
knowledge itself, and, as fifth, we must count the thing itself
|
|
which is known and truly exists. The first is the name, the, second
|
|
the definition, the third. the image, and the fourth the knowledge. If
|
|
you wish to learn what I mean, take these in the case of one instance,
|
|
and so understand them in the case of all. A circle is a thing
|
|
spoken of, and its name is that very word which we have just
|
|
uttered. The second thing belonging to it is its definition, made up
|
|
names and verbal forms. For that which has the name "round,"
|
|
"annular," or, "circle," might be defined as that which has the
|
|
distance from its circumference to its centre everywhere equal. Third,
|
|
comes that which is drawn and rubbed out again, or turned on a lathe
|
|
and broken up-none of which things can happen to the circle
|
|
itself-to which the other things, mentioned have reference; for it
|
|
is something of a different order from them. Fourth, comes
|
|
knowledge, intelligence and right opinion about these things. Under
|
|
this one head we must group everything which has its existence, not in
|
|
words nor in bodily shapes, but in souls-from which it is dear that it
|
|
is something different from the nature of the circle itself and from
|
|
the three things mentioned before. Of these things intelligence
|
|
comes closest in kinship and likeness to the fifth, and the others are
|
|
farther distant.
|
|
|
|
The same applies to straight as well as to circular form, to
|
|
colours, to the good, the, beautiful, the just, to all bodies
|
|
whether manufactured or coming into being in the course of nature,
|
|
to fire, water, and all such things, to every living being, to
|
|
character in souls, and to all things done and suffered. For in the
|
|
case of all these, no one, if he has not some how or other got hold of
|
|
the four things first mentioned, can ever be completely a partaker
|
|
of knowledge of the fifth. Further, on account of the weakness of
|
|
language, these (i.e., the four) attempt to show what each thing is
|
|
like, not less than what each thing is. For this reason no man of
|
|
intelligence will venture to express his philosophical views in
|
|
language, especially not in language that is unchangeable, which is
|
|
true of that which is set down in written characters.
|
|
|
|
Again you must learn the point which comes next. Every circle, of
|
|
those which are by the act of man drawn or even turned on a lathe,
|
|
is full of that which is opposite to the fifth thing. For everywhere
|
|
it has contact with the straight. But the circle itself, we say, has
|
|
nothing in either smaller or greater, of that which is its opposite.
|
|
We say also that the name is not a thing of permanence for any of
|
|
them, and that nothing prevents the things now called round from being
|
|
called straight, and the straight things round; for those who make
|
|
changes and call things by opposite names, nothing will be less
|
|
permanent (than a name). Again with regard to the definition, if it is
|
|
made up of names and verbal forms, the same remark holds that there is
|
|
no sufficiently durable permanence in it. And there is no end to the
|
|
instances of the ambiguity from which each of the four suffers; but
|
|
the greatest of them is that which we mentioned a little earlier,
|
|
that, whereas there are two things, that which has real being, and
|
|
that which is only a quality, when the soul is seeking to know, not
|
|
the quality, but the essence, each of the four, presenting to the soul
|
|
by word and in act that which it is not seeking (i.e., the quality), a
|
|
thing open to refutation by the senses, being merely the thing
|
|
presented to the soul in each particular case whether by statement
|
|
or the act of showing, fills, one may say, every man with puzzlement
|
|
and perplexity.
|
|
|
|
Now in subjects in which, by reason of our defective education, we
|
|
have not been accustomed even to search for the truth, but are
|
|
satisfied with whatever images are presented to us, we are not held up
|
|
to ridicule by one another, the questioned by questioners, who can
|
|
pull to pieces and criticise the four things. But in subjects where we
|
|
try to compel a man to give a clear answer about the fifth, any one of
|
|
those who are capable of overthrowing an antagonist gets the better of
|
|
us, and makes the man, who gives an exposition in speech or writing or
|
|
in replies to questions, appear to most of his hearers to know nothing
|
|
of the things on which he is attempting to write or speak; for they
|
|
are sometimes not aware that it is not the mind of the writer or
|
|
speaker which is proved to be at fault, but the defective nature of
|
|
each of the four instruments. The process however of dealing with
|
|
all of these, as the mind moves up and down to each in turn, does
|
|
after much effort give birth in a well-constituted mind to knowledge
|
|
of that which is well constituted. But if a man is ill-constituted
|
|
by nature (as the state of the soul is naturally in the majority
|
|
both in its capacity for learning and in what is called moral
|
|
character)-or it may have become so by deterioration-not even
|
|
Lynceus could endow such men with the power of sight.
|
|
|
|
In one word, the man who has no natural kinship with this matter
|
|
cannot be made akin to it by quickness of learning or memory; for it
|
|
cannot be engendered at all in natures which are foreign to it.
|
|
Therefore, if men are not by nature kinship allied to justice and
|
|
all other things that are honourable, though they may be good at
|
|
learning and remembering other knowledge of various kinds-or if they
|
|
have the kinship but are slow learners and have no memory-none of
|
|
all these will ever learn to the full the truth about virtue and vice.
|
|
For both must be learnt together; and together also must be learnt, by
|
|
complete and long continued study, as I said at the beginning, the
|
|
true and the false about all that has real being. After much effort,
|
|
as names, definitions, sights, and other data of sense, are brought
|
|
into contact and friction one with another, in the course of
|
|
scrutiny and kindly testing by men who proceed by question and
|
|
answer without ill will, with a sudden flash there shines forth
|
|
understanding about every problem, and an intelligence whose efforts
|
|
reach the furthest limits of human powers. Therefore every man of
|
|
worth, when dealing with matters of worth, will be far from exposing
|
|
them to ill feeling and misunderstanding among men by committing
|
|
them to writing. In one word, then, it may be known from this that, if
|
|
one sees written treatises composed by anyone, either the laws of a
|
|
lawgiver, or in any other form whatever, these are not for that man
|
|
the things of most worth, if he is a man of worth, but that his
|
|
treasures are laid up in the fairest spot that he possesses. But if
|
|
these things were worked at by him as things of real worth, and
|
|
committed to writing, then surely, not gods, but men "have
|
|
themselves bereft him of his wits."
|
|
|
|
Anyone who has followed this discourse and digression will know well
|
|
that, if Dionysios or anyone else, great or small, has written a
|
|
treatise on the highest matters and the first principles of things, he
|
|
has, so I say, neither heard nor learnt any sound teaching about the
|
|
subject of his treatise; otherwise, he would have had the same
|
|
reverence for it, which I have, and would have shrunk from putting
|
|
it forth into a world of discord and uncomeliness. For he wrote it,
|
|
not as an aid to memory-since there is no risk of forgetting it, if
|
|
a man's soul has once laid hold of it; for it is expressed in the
|
|
shortest of statements-but if he wrote it at all, it was from a mean
|
|
craving for honour, either putting it forth as his own invention, or
|
|
to figure as a man possessed of culture, of which he was not worthy,
|
|
if his heart was set on the credit of possessing it. If then Dionysios
|
|
gained this culture from the one lesson which he had from me, we may
|
|
perhaps grant him the possession of it, though how he acquired
|
|
it-God wot, as the Theban says; for I gave him the teaching, which I
|
|
have described, on that one occasion and never again.
|
|
|
|
The next point which requires to be made clear to anyone who
|
|
wishes to discover how things really happened, is the reason why it
|
|
came about that I did not continue my teaching in a second and third
|
|
lesson and yet oftener. Does Dionysios, after a single lesson, believe
|
|
himself to know the matter, and has he an adequate knowledge of it,
|
|
either as having discovered it for himself or learnt it before from
|
|
others, or does he believe my teaching to be worthless, or, thirdly,
|
|
to be beyond his range and too great for him, and himself to be really
|
|
unable to live as one who gives his mind to wisdom and virtue? For
|
|
if he thinks it worthless, he will have to contend with many who say
|
|
the opposite, and who would be held in far higher repute as judges
|
|
than Dionysios, if on the other hand, he thinks he has discovered or
|
|
learnt the things and that they are worth having as part of a
|
|
liberal education, how could he, unless he is an extraordinary person,
|
|
have so recklessly dishonoured the master who has led the way in these
|
|
subjects? How he dishonoured him, I will now state.
|
|
|
|
Up to this time he had allowed Dion to remain in possession of his
|
|
property and to receive the income from it. But not long after the
|
|
foregoing events, as if he had entirely forgotten his letter to that
|
|
effect, he no longer allowed Dion's trustees to send him remittances
|
|
to the Peloponnese, on the pretence that the owner of the property was
|
|
not Dion but Dion's son, his own nephew, of whom he himself was
|
|
legally the trustee. These were the actual facts which occurred up
|
|
to the point which we have reached. They had opened my eyes as to
|
|
the value of Dionysios' desire for philosophy, and I had every right
|
|
to complain, whether I wished to do so or not. Now by this time it was
|
|
summer and the season for sea voyages; therefore I decided that I must
|
|
not be vexed with Dionysios rather than with myself and those who
|
|
had forced me to come for the third time into the strait of Scylla,
|
|
|
|
that once again I might
|
|
|
|
To fell Charybdis measure back my course,
|
|
|
|
but must tell Dionysios that it was impossible for me to remain
|
|
after this outrage had been put upon Dion. He tried to soothe me and
|
|
begged me to remain, not thinking it desirable for himself that I
|
|
should arrive post haste in person as the bearer of such tidings. When
|
|
his entreaties produced no effect, he promised that he himself would
|
|
provide me with transport. For my intention was to embark on one of
|
|
the trading ships and sail away, being indignant and thinking it my
|
|
duty to face all dangers, in case I was prevented from going-since
|
|
plainly and obviously I was doing no wrong, but was the party wronged.
|
|
|
|
Seeing me not at all inclined to stay, he devised the following
|
|
scheme to make me stay during that sading season. On the next day he
|
|
came to me and made a plausible proposal: "Let us put an end," he
|
|
said, "to these constant quarrels between you and me about Dion and
|
|
his affairs. For your sake I will do this for Dion. I require him to
|
|
take his own property and reside in the Peloponnese, not as an
|
|
exile, but on the understanding that it is open for him to migrate
|
|
here, when this step has the joint approval of himself, me, and you
|
|
his friends; and this shall be open to him on the understanding that
|
|
he does not plot against me. You and your friends and Dion's friends
|
|
here must be sureties for him in this, and he must give you
|
|
security. Let the funds which he receives be deposited in the
|
|
Peloponnese and at Athens, with persons approved by you, and let
|
|
Dion enjoy the income from them but have no power to take them out
|
|
of deposit without the approval of you and your friends. For I have no
|
|
great confidence in him, that, if he has this property at his
|
|
disposal, he will act justly towards me, for it will be no small
|
|
amount; but I have more confidence in you and your friends. See if
|
|
this satisfies you; and on these conditions remain for the present
|
|
year, and at the next season you shall depart taking the property with
|
|
you. I am quite sure that Dion will be grateful to you, if you
|
|
accomplish so much on his behalf."
|
|
|
|
When I heard this proposal I was vexed, but after reflection said
|
|
I would let him know my view of it on the following day. We agreed
|
|
to that effect for the moment, and afterwards when I was by myself I
|
|
pondered the matter in much distress. The first reflection that came
|
|
up, leading the way in my self-communing, was this: "Come suppose that
|
|
Dionysios intends to do none of the things which he has mentioned, but
|
|
that, after my departure, he writes a plausible letter to Dion, and
|
|
orders several of his creatures to write to the same effect, telling
|
|
him of the proposal which he has now made to me, making out that he
|
|
was willing to do what he proposed, but that I refused and
|
|
completely neglected Dion's interests. Further, suppose that he is not
|
|
willing to allow my departure, and without giving personal orders to
|
|
any of the merchants, makes it clear, as he easily can, to all that he
|
|
not wish me to sail, will anyone consent to take me as a passenger,
|
|
when I leave the house: of Dionysios?"
|
|
|
|
For in addition to my other troubles, I was lodging at that time
|
|
in the garden which surround his house, from which even the gatekeeper
|
|
would have refused to let me go, unless an order had been sent to
|
|
him from Dionysios. "Suppose however that I wait for the year, I shall
|
|
be able to write word of these things to Dion, stating the position in
|
|
which I am, and the steps which I am trying to take. And if
|
|
Dionysios does any of the things which he says, I shall have
|
|
accomplished something that is not altogether to be sneered at; for
|
|
Dion's property is, at a fair estimate, perhaps not less than a
|
|
hundred talents. If however the prospect which I see looming in the
|
|
future takes the course which may reasonably be expected, I know not
|
|
what I shall do with myself. Still it is perhaps necessary to go on
|
|
working for a year, and to attempt to prove by actual fact the
|
|
machinations of Dionysios."
|
|
|
|
Having come to this decision, on the following day I said to
|
|
Dionysios, "I have decided to remain. But," I continued, "I must ask
|
|
that you will not regard me as empowered to act for Dion, but will
|
|
along with me write a letter to him, stating what has now been
|
|
decided, and enquire whether this course satisfies him. If it does
|
|
not, and if he has other wishes and demands, he must write particulars
|
|
of them as soon as possible, and you must not as yet take any hasty
|
|
step with regard to his interests."
|
|
|
|
This was what was said and this was the agreement which was made,
|
|
almost in these words. Well, after this the trading-ships took their
|
|
departure, and it was no longer possible for me to take mine, when
|
|
Dionysios, if you please, addressed me with the remark that half the
|
|
property must be regarded as belonging to Dion and half to his son.
|
|
Therefore, he said, he would sell it, and when it was sold would
|
|
give half to me to take away, and would leave half on the spot for the
|
|
son. This course, he said, was the most just. This proposal was a blow
|
|
to me, and I thought it absurd to argue any longer with him;
|
|
however, I said that we must wait for Dion's letter, and then once
|
|
more write to tell him of this new proposal. His next step was the
|
|
brilliant one of selling the whole of Dion's property, using his own
|
|
discretion with regard to the manner and terms of the sale and of
|
|
the purchasers. He spoke not a word to me about the matter from
|
|
beginning to end, and I followed his example and never talked to him
|
|
again about Dion's affairs; for I did not think that I could do any
|
|
good by doing so. This is the history so far of my efforts to come
|
|
to the rescue of philosophy and of my friends.
|
|
|
|
After this Dionysios and I went on with our daily life, I with my
|
|
eyes turned abroad like a bird yearning to fly from its perch, and
|
|
he always devising some new way of scaring me back and of keeping a
|
|
tight hold on Dion's property. However, we gave out to all Sicily that
|
|
we were friends. Dionysios, now deserting the policy of his father,
|
|
attempted to lower the pay of the older members of his body guard. The
|
|
soldiers were furious, and, assembling in great numbers, declared that
|
|
they would not submit. He attempted to use force to them, shutting the
|
|
gates of the acropolis; but they charged straight for the walls,
|
|
yelling out an unintelligible and ferocious war cry. Dionysios took
|
|
fright and conceded all their demands and more to the peltasts then
|
|
assembled.
|
|
|
|
A rumour soon spread that Heracleides had been the cause of all
|
|
the trouble. Hearing this, Heracleides kept out of the way.
|
|
Dionysios was trying to get hold of him, and being unable to do so,
|
|
sent for Theodotes to come to him in his garden. It happened that I
|
|
was walking in the garden at the same time. I neither know nor did I
|
|
hear the rest of what passed between them, but what Theodotes said
|
|
to Dionysios in my presence I know and remember. "Plato," he said,
|
|
"I am trying to convince our friend Dionysios that, if I am able to
|
|
bring Heracleides before us to defend himself on the charges which
|
|
have been made against him, and if he decides that Heracleides must no
|
|
longer live in Sicily, he should be allowed (this is my point) to take
|
|
his son and wife and sail to the Peloponnese and reside there,
|
|
taking no action there against Dionysios and enjoying the income of
|
|
his property. I have already sent for him and will send for him again;
|
|
and if he comes in obedience either to my former message or to this
|
|
one-well and good. But I beg and entreat Dionysios that, if anyone
|
|
finds Heracleides either in the country or here, no harm shall come to
|
|
him, but that he may retire from the country till Dionysios comes to
|
|
some other decision. Do you agree to this?" he added, addressing
|
|
Dionysios. "I agree," he replied, "that even if he is found at your
|
|
house, no harm shall be done to him beyond what has now been said."
|
|
|
|
On the following day Eurybios and Theodotes came to me in the
|
|
evening, both greatly disturbed. Theodotes said, "Plato, you were
|
|
present yesterday during the promises made by Dionysios to me and to
|
|
you about Heracleides?" "Certainly," I replied. "Well," he
|
|
continued, "at this moment peltasts are scouring the country seeking
|
|
to arrest Heracleides; and he must be somewhere in this neighbourhood.
|
|
For Heaven's sake come with us to Dionysios." So we went and stood
|
|
in the presence of Dionysios; and those two stood shedding silent
|
|
tears, while I said: "These men are afraid that you may take strong
|
|
measures with regard to Heracleides contrary to what was agreed
|
|
yesterday. For it seems that he has returned and has been seen
|
|
somewhere about here." On hearing this he blazed up and turned all
|
|
colours, as a man would in a rage. Theodotes, falling before him in
|
|
tears, took his hand and entreated him to do nothing of the sort.
|
|
But I broke in and tried to encourage him, saying: "Be of good
|
|
cheer, Theodotes; Dionysios will not have the heart to take any
|
|
fresh step contrary to his promises of yesterday." Fixing his eye on
|
|
me, and assuming his most autocratic air he said, "To you I promised
|
|
nothing small or great." "By the gods," I said, "you did promise
|
|
that forbearance for which our friend here now appeals." With these
|
|
words I turned away and went out. After this he continued the hunt for
|
|
Heracleides, and Theodotes, sending messages, urged Heracleides to
|
|
take flight. Dionysios sent out Teisias and some peltasts with
|
|
orders to pursue him. But Heracleides, as it was said, was just in
|
|
time, by a small fraction of a day, in making his escape into
|
|
Carthaginian territory.
|
|
|
|
After this Dionysios thought that his long cherished scheme not to
|
|
restore Dion's property would give him a plausible excuse for
|
|
hostility towards me; and first of all he sent me out of the
|
|
acropolis, finding a pretext that the women were obliged to hold a
|
|
sacrificial service for ten days in the garden in which I had my
|
|
lodging. He therefore ordered me to stay outside in the house of
|
|
Archedemos during this period. While I was there, Theodotes sent for
|
|
me and made a great outpouring of indignation at these occurrences,
|
|
throwing the blame on Dionysios. Hearing that I had been to see
|
|
Theodotes he regarded this, as another excuse, sister to the
|
|
previous one, for quarrelling with me. Sending a messenger he enquired
|
|
if I had really been conferring with Theodotes on his invitation
|
|
"Certainly," I replied, "Well," continued the messenger, "he ordered
|
|
me to tell you that you are not acting at all well in preferring
|
|
always Dion and Dion's friends to him." And he did not send for me
|
|
to return to his house, as though it were now clear that Theodotes and
|
|
Heracleides were my friends, and he my enemy. He also thought that I
|
|
had no kind feelings towards him because the property of Dion was
|
|
now entirely done for.
|
|
|
|
After this I resided outside the acropolis among the mercenaries.
|
|
Various people then came to me, among them those of the ships' crews
|
|
who came from Athens, my own fellow citizens, and reported that I
|
|
was evil spoken of among the peltasts, and that some of them were
|
|
threatening to make an end of me, if they could ket hold of me
|
|
Accordingly I devised the following plan for my safety.
|
|
|
|
I sent to Archytes and my other friends in Taras, telling them the
|
|
plight I was in. Finding some excuse for an embassy from their city,
|
|
they sent a thirty-oared galley with Lamiscos, one of themselves,
|
|
who came and entreated Dionysios about me, saying that I wanted to go,
|
|
and that he should on no account stand in my way. He consented and
|
|
allowed me to go, giving me money for the journey. But for Dion's
|
|
property I made no further request, nor was any of it restored.
|
|
|
|
I made my way to the Peloponnese to Olympia, where I found Dion a
|
|
spectator at the Games, and told him what had occurred. Calling Zeus
|
|
to be his witness, he at once urged me with my relatives and friends
|
|
to make preparations for taking vengeance on Dionysios-our ground
|
|
for action being the breach of faith to a guest-so he put it and
|
|
regarded it, while his own was his unjust expulsion and banishment.
|
|
Hearing this, I told him that he might call my friends to his aid,
|
|
if they wished to go; "But for myself," I continued, "you and others
|
|
in a way forced me to be the sharer of Dionysios' table and hearth and
|
|
his associate in the acts of religion. He probably believed the
|
|
current slanders, that I was plotting with you against him and his
|
|
despotic rule; yet feelings of scruple prevailed with him, and he
|
|
spared my life. Again, I am hardly of the age for being comrade in
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arms to anyone; also I stand as a neutral between you, if ever you
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desire friendship and wish to benefit one another; so long as you
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aim at injuring one another, call others to your aid." This I said,
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because I was disgusted with my misguided journeyings to Sicily and my
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ill-fortune there. But they disobeyed me and would not listen to my
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attempts at reconciliation, and so brought on their own heads all
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the evils which have since taken place. For if Dionysios had
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restored to Dion his property or been reconciled with him on any
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|
terms, none of these things would have happened, so far as human
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foresight can foretell. Dion would have easily been kept in check by
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my wishes and influence. But now, rushing upon one another, they
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have caused universal disaster.
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|
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Dion's aspiration however was the same that I should say my own or
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that of any other right-minded man ought to be. With regard to his own
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power, his friends and his country the ideal of such a man would be to
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|
win the greatest power and honour by rendering the greatest
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|
services. And this end is not attained if a man gets riches for
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|
himself, his supporters and his country, by forming plots and
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|
getting together conspirators, being all the while a poor creature,
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|
not master of himself, overcome by the cowardice which fears to
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|
fight against pleasures; nor is it attained if he goes on to kill
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|
the men of substance, whom he speaks of as the enemy, and to plunder
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|
their possessions, and invites his confederates and supporters to do
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|
the same, with the object that no one shall say that it is his
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|
fault, if he complains of being poor. The same is true if anyone
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|
renders services of this kind to the State and receives honours from
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|
her for distributing by decrees the property of the few among the
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|
many-or if, being in charge the affairs of a great State which rules
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|
over many small ones, he unjustly appropriates to his own State the
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|
possessions of the small ones. For neither a Dion nor any other man
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|
will, with his eyes open, make his way by steps like these to a
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|
power which will be fraught with destruction to himself and his
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|
descendants for all time; but he will advance towards constitutional
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|
government and the framing of the justest and best laws, reaching
|
|
these ends without executions and murders even on the smallest scale.
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|
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|
This course Dion actually followed, thinking it preferable to suffer
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|
iniquitous deeds rather than to do them; but, while taking precautions
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|
against them, he nevertheless, when he had reached the climax of
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|
victory over his enemies, took a false step and fell, a catastrophe
|
|
not at all surprising. For a man of piety, temperance and wisdom, when
|
|
dealing with the impious, would not be entirely blind to the character
|
|
of such men, but it would perhaps not be surprising if he suffered the
|
|
catastrophe that might befall a good ship's captain, who would not
|
|
be entirely unaware of the approach of a storm, but might be unaware
|
|
of its extraordinary and startling violence, and might therefore be
|
|
overwhelmed by its force. The same thing caused Dion's downfall. For
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|
he was not unaware that his assailants were thoroughly bad men, but he
|
|
was unaware how high a pitch of infatuation and of general
|
|
wickedness and greed they had reached. This was the cause of his
|
|
downfall, which has involved Sicily in countless sorrows.
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|
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|
As to the steps which should be taken after the events which I
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|
have now related, my advice has been given pretty fully and may be
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|
regarded as finished; and if you ask my reasons for recounting the
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|
story of my second journey to Sicily, it seemed to me essential that
|
|
an account of it must be given because of the strange and
|
|
paradoxical character of the incidents. If in this present account
|
|
of them they appear to anyone more intelligible, and seem to anyone to
|
|
show sufficient grounds in view of the circumstances, the present
|
|
statement is adequate and not too lengthy.
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-THE END-
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.
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