Against
Aristogiton
There
is nothing, it appears, Athenians, which we must not expect either to
hear or see in connection with the reports which have been made; but
the most remarkable fact of all, in my opinion, confronts us now. The
worst character in the city, I should say in the whole world, Aristogiton,
has come to pit himself in law against the Areopagus on the subject
of truth and justice; and the council which has made the report is now
in greater danger than this man who takes bribes against you and who
sold for twenty minas the right of free speech in the cause of justice.
It will
be no new or alarming experience for the defendant if he is convicted,
for he has committed in the past many other crimes meriting the death
penalty and has spent more time in prison than out of it. While he has
been in debt to the state he has prosecuted men with citizen rights,
though not entitled to do so, and has committed numerous other offences
of which you have a more exact knowledge than I. It is a most shameful
and monstrous thing for this council to be suspected of making a false
report against Aristogiton and for him to be considered among you as
having more justice on his side than it has.
For this
reason, Athenians, thinking that the trial holds no dangers for him,
this man is coming forward, I believe, to test your attitude. He has
often undergone all sorts of suffering short of death, which, if God
so wills it and you are wise, he will undergo today. For you must assume,
by Heracles, that there will be no improvement in him if he is pardoned
by you now, and that in future he will not abstain from taking bribes
against you if you now acquit him. For when wickedness is in its infancy
perhaps it can be checked by punishment, but when it has grown old and
has sampled the usual penalties, it is said to be incurable.
If therefore
you wish depravity to grow up ingrained in Athens, you should preserve
Aristogiton and allow him to act there as he pleases. But if you hate
the wicked and accursed and can recall with resentment what this man
has done in the past, kill him, for he dared to take money from Harpalus,
who he knew was coming to seize your city. Cut short his excuses and
deceptive arguments, on which he now depends when he appears before
you.
Do you
realize that, awkward though the arrival of Harpalus was, it has been
an advantage to the city in one respect, because it has given you a
sure means of testing those who give up everything to the enemies of
Athens for a payment of silver or gold? Do not be lax, Athenians, or
weary of punishing the guilty; purge the city of bribery to the utmost
of your ability. Do not ask for arguments from me when you see that
the crimes have been plainly attributed to those whom the council has
reported.
Or ought
you to spare the defendant on account of his ancestry and his moderation,
or because he has done you many public and private services?]1 What
information do you lack that makes you ask for arguments against the
defendant here before you? What if we, the accusers, all ten of us,
use up all the water in our clocks and proclaim that it is a terrible
thing to release men who have been caught with bribes against the city
in their very hands; will that make the council's report against Aristogiton
true and just?
Or suppose
that each of us assumes that you are just as well aware as we on which
side justice lies in the present trials, and so leaves the platform
after a short speech; will the report then be a false one, unjustly
made by the Areopagites? Or don't you realize that to take bribes in
order to betray the city's interests is one of the greatest crimes causing
the most irreparable harm to cities?
No doubt
I shall be told that the defendant is himself a man of sober character
coming of a good family, that he has done you many noble services in
private and in public life and that therefore you are justified in sparing
him. You must all have often heard that, when Aristogiton's father Cydimachus
was condemned to death and fled from the city, this admirable son allowed
his own father to lack the bare necessities of life, while he survived,
and do without a proper burial when he died: a fact for which evidence
was often brought against him; or again, that the man himself, on being
taken to prison for the first time,--no doubt you realize that he has
often been imprisoned--dared to behave in such a way there that the
inmates voted that no one should either light a fire for him or sit
at meals or share the usual sacrifices with him. Reflect, Athenians;
what sort of character must we suppose this man to have, who was thrown
into prison for criminal conduct and when he was there, among those
who had been segregated from the rest of the world as felons, was looked
upon as so debased that even there he was not thought worthy of the
same treatment as the rest? It is said, in fact, that he was caught
thieving among them and that, if there had been any other place more
degraded where they could have isolated men who stole in prison, this
monster would have been conducted there. These facts, as I said just
now, were established by evidence against Aristogiton, as is well known,
when the lot fell to him to be custodian of the exchange but he was
rejected by those who then decided the appointment to that office.
Do you
then feign ignorance among yourselves and give way to pity when the
man concerning whom you are about to vote is Aristogiton, who did not
pity his own father when reduced to starvation? Do you still wish to
hear us talk about the damages he must pay, when you know quite well
that his whole life, as well as his recent conduct, justifies the extreme
penalty?
Was it
not Aristogiton, Athenians, who made in writing such lying assertions
about the priestess of Artemis Brauronia and her relatives, that when
you discovered the truth from his accusers, you fined him five talents,
a sum equal to the fine set down in an indictment for illegal proposals?
Has he not persisted in maligning every one of you he meets, though
he has not yet paid up, and in speaking and proposing measures in the
Assembly, regardless of all the penalties against wrongdoers which the
laws prescribe?
And finally,
when an information was lodged against him by Lycurgus, and he was convicted,
a debtor to the state without the right to speak in public, when he
had been handed over to the Eleven in accordance with the laws, <was
he not seen> walking about in the front of the lawcourts, and used
he not to sit on the seat of the Prytanes?
Well then,
Athenians, if a man has often been committed to you lawfully for punishment,
condemned on information lodged by citizens, if neither the Eleven nor
the prison have been able to restrain him, will you want to use him
as a counsellor? The law demands that the herald shall first pray, amid
dead silence, before he surrenders to you the task of deliberating on
public affairs. Will you then allow an impious wretch, who has proved
wicked in his dealings with everyone, and in particular his own father,
to share in citizenship with you, with your families and kinsmen?
After rejecting
all thought of pardon for Demades and Demosthenes, because they were
proved to have been taking bribes against you, and punishing them,--quite
rightly, though you knew that they had served you during their administration,
certainly in many respects if not in everything,--will you acquit this
accursed man who has not done you a service ever since he has been in
politics but has been the greatest possible menace? Would not everyone
reproach you if you accepted such a person as your adviser? For when
you are addressed by a man whose wickedness is both notorious and undeniable
and a byword among all Athenians, the bystanders will wonder whether
you who listen to him have no better advisers or whether you enjoy hearing
such people.
Like the
early lawgivers, Athenians, who made laws to deal with those addressing
your ancestors in the Assembly, you too should try, by your behavior
as listeners, to make the speakers who come before you better. What
was the attitude of the lawgivers to these men? In the first place,
at every sitting of the Assembly they publicly proclaimed curses against
wrongdoers, calling down destruction on any who, after accepting bribes,
made speeches or proposals upon state affairs, and to that class Aristogiton
now belongs.
Secondly,
they provided in the laws for indictments for bribery, and this is the
only offence for which they imposed a payment equal to ten times the
assessment of damages, in the belief that one who is ready to be paid
for the opinions which he is going to express in the Assembly has at
heart, when he is speaking, not the interests of the people but the
welfare of those who have paid him. Now the council has reported Aristogiton
as guilty of this. Moreover, when choosing a man for public office they
used to ask what his personal character was, whether he treated his
parents well, whether he had served the city in the field, whether he
had an ancestral cult or paid taxes.
Aristogiton
could not claim one of these qualifications for himself. So far from
treating his parents well this man has ill-treated his own father. When
you were all serving in the army he was in prison; and, far from being
able to point to any memorial of his father, Athenians, he did not give
him a proper funeral even in Eretria where he died. While other Athenians
are contributing from their own purses this man has not even paid up
all the money to defray the public debts which he incurred. In fact
he has never ceased to contravene all the laws, and his is the one case
of those on which the Areopagus has reported where you had inquired
yourselves and already knew the answer. For your knowledge that this
man is a rogue and a criminal was not gained from the council; you are
all very well aware of his wickedness, and hence the statement so often
made applies here also, namely that, while you are passing judgement
on the defendant, the bystanders and everyone besides are passing judgement
on you.
Therefore
it is your duty as a sensible jury, Athenians, not to vote against yourselves
or the rest of Athens; you should sentence him unanimously to be handed
over to the executioners for the death penalty. Do not be traitors and
fail to give the honest verdict demanded by your oath. Remember that
this man has been convicted by the council of taking bribes against
you, convicted of ill-treating him, to use the mildest term, by his
father during his life and after his death, condemned by the people's
vote and handed over to you for punishment.
Remember
that this man has caused a deal of harm and has now been caught doing
wrong in circumstances which make it shameful for you, his judges, to
release him unpunished. For if you do so, how are you going to vote
on the other reports, Athenians? What justification will you give for
having condemned those men whom you have already tried? What reason
will you have, when you were clearly anxious for the council to report
those who had taken the money, for failing obviously to punish the men
whose names they submit?
You must
not imagine that these trials are private issues concerning no one but
the men reported; they are public and concern the rest of us as well.
A case of bribery and treason tried before you will affect others in
the future in two possible ways: either it will make them accept bribes
against you unhesitatingly in the knowledge that they will not be brought
to justice, or it will make them afraid to take them, since they will
know that those who are caught will be punished in a manner suited to
the crime.
Do you
not know that now the fear of what you will do restrains those who are
grasping for the money offered for use against you and often makes them
turn their backs on the bribe, and that the people's decree, ordering
the council to inquire about this money, has prevented even those who
brought the gold into the country from admitting their action?
It was
a noble decree, Athenians, a noble decree of your ancestors on this
question, providing for a pillar on the Acropolis at the time when Arthmius,
son of Pithonax, the Zelite, is said to have brought the gold from the
Persians to corrupt the Greeks. For before anyone had accepted it or
given proof of his character they sentenced the man who had brought
the gold to exile and banished him completely from the country. This
decision, as I said, they engraved on a bronze pillar and set up on
the Acropolis as a lesson for you their descendants; for they believed
that the man who accepted money in any way at all had in mind the interests
of the donors rather than those of the city.
His was
the only case in which they added the reason why the people banished
him from the city, explicitly writing on the pillar that Arthmius, son
of Pithonax, the Zelite, was an enemy of the people and its allies,
he and his descendants, and was exiled from Athens because he had brought
the Persian gold to the Peloponnese. And yet if the people regarded
the gold in the Peloponnese as a source of great danger to Greece, how
can we remain unmoved at the sight of bribery in the city itself? Please
attend to the inscription on the pillar.
Inscription
Now what
do you think those men would have done, Athenians, if they had caught
a general or an orator, one of their own citizens, accepting bribes
against the interests of their country, when they so justly and wisely
expelled a man who was alien to Greece in birth and character? That
is the reason why they faced danger against the barbarian worthily of
the city and their ancestors.