I
| II | III
| IV | V
| VI | VII
| VIII
Book Seven
Part I
He who
would duly inquire about the best form of a state ought first to determine
which is the most eligible life; while this remains uncertain the best
form of the state must also be uncertain; for, in the natural order
of things, those may be expected to lead the best life who are governed
in the best manner of which their circumstances admit. We ought therefore
to ascertain, first of all, which is the most generally eligible life,
and then whether the same life is or is not best for the state and for
individuals.
Assuming
that enough has been already said in discussions outside the school
concerning the best life, we will now only repeat what is contained
in them. Certainly no one will dispute the propriety of that partition
of goods which separates them into three classes, viz., external goods,
goods of the body, and goods of the soul, or deny that the happy man
must have all three. For no one would maintain that he is happy who
has not in him a particle of courage or temperance or justice or prudence,
who is afraid of every insect which flutters past him, and will commit
any crime, however great, in order to gratify his lust of meat or drink,
who will sacrifice his dearest friend for the sake of half-a-farthing,
and is as feeble and false in mind as a child or a madman. These propositions
are almost universally acknowledged as soon as they are uttered, but
men differ about the degree or relative superiority of this or that
good. Some think that a very moderate amount of virtue is enough, but
set no limit to their desires of wealth, property, power, reputation,
and the like. To whom we reply by an appeal to facts, which easily prove
that mankind do not acquire or preserve virtue by the help of external
goods, but external goods by the help of virtue, and that happiness,
whether consisting in pleasure or virtue, or both, is more often found
with those who are most highly cultivated in their mind and in their
character, and have only a moderate share of external goods, than among
those who possess external goods to a useless extent but are deficient
in higher qualities; and this is not only matter of experience, but,
if reflected upon, will easily appear to be in accordance with reason.
For, whereas external goods have a limit, like any other instrument,
and all things useful are of such a nature that where there is too much
of them they must either do harm, or at any rate be of no use, to their
possessors, every good of the soul, the greater it is, is also of greater
use, if the epithet useful as well as noble is appropriate to such subjects.
No proof is required to show that the best state of one thing in relation
to another corresponds in degree of excellence to the interval between
the natures of which we say that these very states are states: so that,
if the soul is more noble than our possessions or our bodies, both absolutely
and in relation to us, it must be admitted that the best state of either
has a similar ratio to the other. Again, it is for the sake of the soul
that goods external and goods of the body are eligible at all, and all
wise men ought to choose them for the sake of the soul, and not the
soul for the sake of them.
Let us
acknowledge then that each one has just so much of happiness as he has
of virtue and wisdom, and of virtuous and wise action. God is a witness
to us of this truth, for he is happy and blessed, not by reason of any
external good, but in himself and by reason of his own nature. And herein
of necessity lies the difference between good fortune and happiness;
for external goods come of themselves, and chance is the author of them,
but no one is just or temperate by or through chance. In like manner,
and by a similar train of argument, the happy state may be shown to
be that which is best and which acts rightly; and rightly it cannot
act without doing right actions, and neither individual nor state can
do right actions without virtue and wisdom. Thus the courage, justice,
and wisdom of a state have the same form and nature as the qualities
which give the individual who possesses them the name of just, wise,
or temperate.
Thus much
may suffice by way of preface: for I could not avoid touching upon these
questions, neither could I go through all the arguments affecting them;
these are the business of another science.
Let us
assume then that the best life, both for individuals and states, is
the life of virtue, when virtue has external goods enough for the performance
of good actions. If there are any who controvert our assertion, we will
in this treatise pass them over, and consider their objections hereafter.
Part II
There remains
to be discussed the question whether the happiness of the individual
is the same as that of the state, or different. Here again there can
be no doubt- no one denies that they are the same. For those who hold
that the well-being of the individual consists in his wealth, also think
that riches make the happiness of the whole state, and those who value
most highly the life of a tyrant deem that city the happiest which rules
over the greatest number; while they who approve an individual for his
virtue say that the more virtuous a city is, the happier it is. Two
points here present themselves for consideration: first (1), which is
the more eligible life, that of a citizen who is a member of a state,
or that of an alien who has no political ties; and again (2), which
is the best form of constitution or the best condition of a state, either
on the supposition that political privileges are desirable for all,
or for a majority only? Since the good of the state and not of the individual
is the proper subject of political thought and speculation, and we are
engaged in a political discussion, while the first of these two points
has a secondary interest for us, the latter will be the main subject
of our inquiry.
Now it
is evident that the form of government is best in which every man, whoever
he is, can act best and live happily. But even those who agree in thinking
that the life of virtue is the most eligible raise a question, whether
the life of business and politics is or is not more eligible than one
which is wholly independent of external goods, I mean than a contemplative
life, which by some is maintained to be the only one worthy of a philosopher.
For these two lives- the life of the philosopher and the life of the
statesman- appear to have been preferred by those who have been most
keen in the pursuit of virtue, both in our own and in other ages. Which
is the better is a question of no small moment; for the wise man, like
the wise state, will necessarily regulate his life according to the
best end. There are some who think that while a despotic rule over others
is the greatest injustice, to exercise a constitutional rule over them,
even though not unjust, is a great impediment to a man's individual
wellbeing. Others take an opposite view; they maintain that the true
life of man is the practical and political, and that every virtue admits
of being practiced, quite as much by statesmen and rulers as by private
individuals. Others, again, are of opinion that arbitrary and tyrannical
rule alone consists with happiness; indeed, in some states the entire
aim both of the laws and of the constitution is to give men despotic
power over their neighbors. And, therefore, although in most cities
the laws may be said generally to be in a chaotic state, still, if they
aim at anything, they aim at the maintenance of power: thus in Lacedaemon
and Crete the system of education and the greater part of the of the
laws are framed with a view to war. And in all nations which are able
to gratify their ambition military power is held in esteem, for example
among the Scythians and Persians and Thracians and Celts.
In some
nations there are even laws tending to stimulate the warlike virtues,
as at Carthage, where we are told that men obtain the honor of wearing
as many armlets as they have served campaigns. There was once a law
in Macedonia that he who had not killed an enemy should wear a halter,
and among the Scythians no one who had not slain his man was allowed
to drink out of the cup which was handed round at a certain feast. Among
the Iberians, a warlike nation, the number of enemies whom a man has
slain is indicated by the number of obelisks which are fixed in the
earth round his tomb; and there are numerous practices among other nations
of a like kind, some of them established by law and others by custom.
Yet to a reflecting mind it must appear very strange that the statesman
should be always considering how he can dominate and tyrannize over
others, whether they will or not. How can that which is not even lawful
be the business of the statesman or the legislator? Unlawful it certainly
is to rule without regard to justice, for there may be might where there
is no right. The other arts and sciences offer no parallel a physician
is not expected to persuade or coerce his patients, nor a pilot the
passengers in his ship. Yet most men appear to think that the art of
despotic government is statesmanship, and what men affirm to be unjust
and inexpedient in their own case they are not ashamed of practicing
towards others; they demand just rule for themselves, but where other
men are concerned they care nothing about it. Such behavior is irrational;
unless the one party is, and the other is not, born to serve, in which
case men have a right to command, not indeed all their fellows, but
only those who are intended to be subjects; just as we ought not to
hunt mankind, whether for food or sacrifice, but only the animals which
may be hunted for food or sacrifice, this is to say, such wild animals
as are eatable. And surely there may be a city happy in isolation, which
we will assume to be well-governed (for it is quite possible that a
city thus isolated might be well-administered and have good laws); but
such a city would not be constituted with any view to war or the conquest
of enemies- all that sort of thing must be excluded. Hence we see very
plainly that warlike pursuits, although generally to be deemed honorable,
are not the supreme end of all things, but only means. And the good
lawgiver should inquire how states and races of men and communities
may participate in a good life, and in the happiness which is attainable
by them. His enactments will not be always the same; and where there
are neighbors he will have to see what sort of studies should be practiced
in relation to their several characters, or how the measures appropriate
in relation to each are to be adopted. The end at which the best form
of government should aim may be properly made a matter of future consideration.
Part III
Let us
now address those who, while they agree that the life of virtue is the
most eligible, differ about the manner of practicing it. For some renounce
political power, and think that the life of the freeman is different
from the life of the statesman and the best of all; but others think
the life of the statesman best. The argument of the latter is that he
who does nothing cannot do well, and that virtuous activity is identical
with happiness. To both we say: 'you are partly right and partly wrong.'
first class are right in affirming that the life of the freeman is better
than the life of the despot; for there is nothing grand or noble in
having the use of a slave, in so far as he is a slave; or in issuing
commands about necessary things. But it is an error to suppose that
every sort of rule is despotic like that of a master over slaves, for
there is as great a difference between the rule over freemen and the
rule over slaves as there is between slavery by nature and freedom by
nature, about which I have said enough at the commencement of this treatise.
And it is equally a mistake to place inactivity above action, for happiness
is activity, and the actions of the just and wise are the realization
of much that is noble.
But perhaps
some one, accepting these premises, may still maintain that supreme
power is the best of all things, because the possessors of it are able
to perform the greatest number of noble actions. if so, the man who
is able to rule, instead of giving up anything to his neighbor, ought
rather to take away his power; and the father should make no account
of his son, nor the son of his father, nor friend of friend; they should
not bestow a thought on one another in comparison with this higher object,
for the best is the most eligible and 'doing eligible' and 'doing well'
is the best. There might be some truth in such a view if we assume that
robbers and plunderers attain the chief good. But this can never be;
their hypothesis is false. For the actions of a ruler cannot really
be honorable, unless he is as much superior to other men as a husband
is to a wife, or a father to his children, or a master to his slaves.
And therefore he who violates the law can never recover by any success,
however great, what he has already lost in departing from virtue. For
equals the honorable and the just consist in sharing alike, as is just
and equal. But that the unequal should be given to equals, and the unlike
to those who are like, is contrary to nature, and nothing which is contrary
to nature is good. If, therefore, there is any one superior in virtue
and in the power of performing the best actions, him we ought to follow
and obey, but he must have the capacity for action as well as virtue.
If we are
right in our view, and happiness is assumed to be virtuous activity,
the active life will be the best, both for every city collectively,
and for individuals. Not that a life of action must necessarily have
relation to others, as some persons think, nor are those ideas only
to be regarded as practical which are pursued for the sake of practical
results, but much more the thoughts and contemplations which are independent
and complete in themselves; since virtuous activity, and therefore a
certain kind of action, is an end, and even in the case of external
actions the directing mind is most truly said to act. Neither, again,
is it necessary that states which are cut off from others and choose
to live alone should be inactive; for activity, as well as other things,
may take place by sections; there are many ways in which the sections
of a state act upon one another. The same thing is equally true of every
individual. If this were otherwise, God and the universe, who have no
external actions over and above their own energies, would be far enough
from perfection. Hence it is evident that the same life is best for
each individual, and for states and for mankind collectively
Part IV
Thus far
by way of introduction. In what has preceded I have discussed other
forms of government; in what remains the first point to be considered
is what should be the conditions of the ideal or perfect state; for
the perfect state cannot exist without a due supply of the means of
life. And therefore we must presuppose many purely imaginary conditions,
but nothing impossible. There will be a certain number of citizens,
a country in which to place them, and the like. As the weaver or shipbuilder
or any other artisan must have the material proper for his work (and
in proportion as this is better prepared, so will the result of his
art be nobler), so the statesman or legislator must also have the materials
suited to him.
First among
the materials required by the statesman is population: he will consider
what should be the number and character of the citizens, and then what
should be the size and character of the country. Most persons think
that a state in order to be happy ought to be large; but even if they
are right, they have no idea what is a large and what a small state.
For they judge of the size of the city by the number of the inhabitants;
whereas they ought to regard, not their number, but their power. A city
too, like an individual, has a work to do; and that city which is best
adapted to the fulfillment of its work is to be deemed greatest, in
the same sense of the word great in which Hippocrates might be called
greater, not as a man, but as a physician, than some one else who was
taller And even if we reckon greatness by numbers, we ought not to include
everybody, for there must always be in cities a multitude of slaves
and sojourners and foreigners; but we should include those only who
are members of the state, and who form an essential part of it. The
number of the latter is a proof of the greatness of a city; but a city
which produces numerous artisans and comparatively few soldiers cannot
be great, for a great city is not to be confounded with a populous one.
Moreover, experience shows that a very populous city can rarely, if
ever, be well governed; since all cities which have a reputation for
good government have a limit of population. We may argue on grounds
of reason, and the same result will follow. For law is order, and good
law is good order; but a very great multitude cannot be orderly: to
introduce order into the unlimited is the work of a divine power- of
such a power as holds together the universe. Beauty is realized in number
and magnitude, and the state which combines magnitude with good order
must necessarily be the most beautiful. To the size of states there
is a limit, as there is to other things, plants, animals, implements;
for none of these retain their natural power when they are too large
or too small, but they either wholly lose their nature, or are spoiled.
For example, a ship which is only a span long will not be a ship at
all, nor a ship a quarter of a mile long; yet there may be a ship of
a certain size, either too large or too small, which will still be a
ship, but bad for sailing. In like manner a state when composed of too
few is not, as a state ought to be, self-sufficing; when of too many,
though self-sufficing in all mere necessaries, as a nation may be, it
is not a state, being almost incapable of constitutional government.
For who can be the general of such a vast multitude, or who the herald,
unless he have the voice of a Stentor?
A state,
then, only begins to exist when it has attained a population sufficient
for a good life in the political community: it may indeed, if it somewhat
exceed this number, be a greater state. But, as I was saying, there
must be a limit. What should be the limit will be easily ascertained
by experience. For both governors and governed have duties to perform;
the special functions of a governor to command and to judge. But if
the citizens of a state are to judge and to distribute offices according
to merit, then they must know each other's characters; where they do
not possess this knowledge, both the election to offices and the decision
of lawsuits will go wrong. When the population is very large they are
manifestly settled at haphazard, which clearly ought not to be. Besides,
in an over-populous state foreigners and metics will readily acquire
the rights of citizens, for who will find them out? Clearly then the
best limit of the population of a state is the largest number which
suffices for the purposes of life, and can be taken in at a single view.
Enough concerning the size of a state.
Part V
Much the
same principle will apply to the territory of the state: every one would
agree in praising the territory which is most entirely self-sufficing;
and that must be the territory which is all-producing, for to have all
things and to want nothing is sufficiency. In size and extent it should
be such as may enable the inhabitants to live at once temperately and
liberally in the enjoyment of leisure. Whether we are right or wrong
in laying down this limit we will inquire more precisely hereafter,
when we have occasion to consider what is the right use of property
and wealth: a matter which is much disputed, because men are inclined
to rush into one of two extremes, some into meanness, others into luxury.
It is not
difficult to determine the general character of the territory which
is required (there are, however, some points on which military authorities
should be heard); it should be difficult of access to the enemy, and
easy of egress to the inhabitants. Further, we require that the land
as well as the inhabitants of whom we were just now speaking should
be taken in at a single view, for a country which is easily seen can
be easily protected. As to the position of the city, if we could have
what we wish, it should be well situated in regard both to sea and land.
This then is one principle, that it should be a convenient center for
the protection of the whole country: the other is, that it should be
suitable for receiving the fruits of the soil, and also for the bringing
in of timber and any other products that are easily transported.
Part VI
Whether
a communication with the sea is beneficial to a well-ordered state or
not is a question which has often been asked. It is argued that the
introduction of strangers brought up under other laws, and the increase
of population, will be adverse to good order; the increase arises from
their using the sea and having a crowd of merchants coming and going,
and is inimical to good government. Apart from these considerations,
it would be undoubtedly better, both with a view to safety and to the
provision of necessaries, that the city and territory should be connected
with the sea; the defenders of a country, if they are to maintain themselves
against an enemy, should be easily relieved both by land and by sea;
and even if they are not able to attack by sea and land at once, they
will have less difficulty in doing mischief to their assailants on one
element, if they themselves can use both. Moreover, it is necessary
that they should import from abroad what is not found in their own country,
and that they should export what they have in excess; for a city ought
to be a market, not indeed for others, but for herself.
Those who
make themselves a market for the world only do so for the sake of revenue,
and if a state ought not to desire profit of this kind it ought not
to have such an emporium. Nowadays we often see in countries and cities
dockyards and harbors very conveniently placed outside the city, but
not too far off; and they are kept in dependence by walls and similar
fortifications. Cities thus situated manifestly reap the benefit of
intercourse with their ports; and any harm which is likely to accrue
may be easily guarded against by the laws, which will pronounce and
determine who may hold communication with one another, and who may not.
There can
be no doubt that the possession of a moderate naval force is advantageous
to a city; the city should be formidable not only to its own citizens
but to some of its neighbors, or, if necessary, able to assist them
by sea as well as by land. The proper number or magnitude of this naval
force is relative to the character of the state; for if her function
is to take a leading part in politics, her naval power should be commensurate
with the scale of her enterprises. The population of the state need
not be much increased, since there is no necessity that the sailors
should be citizens: the marines who have the control and command will
be freemen, and belong also to the infantry; and wherever there is a
dense population of Perioeci and husbandmen, there will always be sailors
more than enough. Of this we see instances at the present day. The city
of Heraclea, for example, although small in comparison with many others,
can man a considerable fleet. Such are our conclusions respecting the
territory of the state, its harbors, its towns, its relations to the
sea, and its maritime power.
Part VII
Having
spoken of the number of the citizens, we will proceed to speak of what
should be their character. This is a subject which can be easily understood
by any one who casts his eye on the more celebrated states of Hellas,
and generally on the distribution of races in the habitable world. Those
who live in a cold climate and in Europe are full of spirit, but wanting
in intelligence and skill; and therefore they retain comparative freedom,
but have no political organization, and are incapable of ruling over
others. Whereas the natives of Asia are intelligent and inventive, but
they are wanting in spirit, and therefore they are always in a state
of subjection and slavery. But the Hellenic race, which is situated
between them, is likewise intermediate in character, being high-spirited
and also intelligent. Hence it continues free, and is the best-governed
of any nation, and, if it could be formed into one state, would be able
to rule the world. There are also similar differences in the different
tribes of Hellas; for some of them are of a one-sided nature, and are
intelligent or courageous only, while in others there is a happy combination
of both qualities. And clearly those whom the legislator will most easily
lead to virtue may be expected to be both intelligent and courageous.
Some say that the guardians should be friendly towards those whom they
know, fierce towards those whom they do not know. Now, passion is the
quality of the soul which begets friendship and enables us to love;
notably the spirit within us is more stirred against our friends and
acquaintances than against those who are unknown to us, when we think
that we are despised by them; for which reason Archilochus, complaining
of his friends, very naturally addresses his soul in these words:
"For
surely thou art plagued on account of friends. "
The power
of command and the love of freedom are in all men based upon this quality,
for passion is commanding and invincible. Nor is it right to say that
the guardians should be fierce towards those whom they do not know,
for we ought not to be out of temper with any one; and a lofty spirit
is not fierce by nature, but only when excited against evil-doers. And
this, as I was saying before, is a feeling which men show most strongly
towards their friends if they think they have received a wrong at their
hands: as indeed is reasonable; for, besides the actual injury, they
seem to be deprived of a benefit by those who owe them one. Hence the
saying:
"Cruel
is the strife of brethren, "
and again:
"They
who love in excess also hate in excess. "
Thus we
have nearly determined the number and character of the citizens of our
state, and also the size and nature of their territory. I say 'nearly,'
for we ought not to require the same minuteness in theory as in the
facts given by perception.
Part VIII
As in other
natural compounds the conditions of a composite whole are not necessarily
organic parts of it, so in a state or in any other combination forming
a unity not everything is a part, which is a necessary condition. The
members of an association have necessarily some one thing the same and
common to all, in which they share equally or unequally for example,
food or land or any other thing. But where there are two things of which
one is a means and the other an end, they have nothing in common except
that the one receives what the other produces. Such, for example, is
the relation which workmen and tools stand to their work; the house
and the builder have nothing in common, but the art of the builder is
for the sake of the house. And so states require property, but property,
even though living beings are included in it, is no part of a state;
for a state is not a community of living beings only, but a community
of equals, aiming at the best life possible. Now, whereas happiness
is the highest good, being a realization and perfect practice of virtue,
which some can attain, while others have little or none of it, the various
qualities of men are clearly the reason why there are various kinds
of states and many forms of government; for different men seek after
happiness in different ways and by different means, and so make for
themselves different modes of life and forms of government. We must
see also how many things are indispensable to the existence of a state,
for what we call the parts of a state will be found among the indispensables.
Let us then enumerate the functions of a state, and we shall easily
elicit what we want:
First,
there must be food; secondly, arts, for life requires many instruments;
thirdly, there must be arms, for the members of a community have need
of them, and in their own hands, too, in order to maintain authority
both against disobedient subjects and against external assailants; fourthly,
there must be a certain amount of revenue, both for internal needs,
and for the purposes of war; fifthly, or rather first, there must be
a care of religion which is commonly called worship; sixthly, and most
necessary of all there must be a power of deciding what is for the public
interest, and what is just in men's dealings with one another.
These are
the services which every state may be said to need. For a state is not
a mere aggregate of persons, but a union of them sufficing for the purposes
of life; and if any of these things be wanting, it is as we maintain
impossible that the community can be absolutely self-sufficing. A state
then should be framed with a view to the fulfillment of these functions.
There must be husbandmen to procure food, and artisans, and a warlike
and a wealthy class, and priests, and judges to decide what is necessary
and expedient.
Part IX
Having
determined these points, we have in the next place to consider whether
all ought to share in every sort of occupation. Shall every man be at
once husbandman, artisan, councillor, judge, or shall we suppose the
several occupations just mentioned assigned to different persons? or,
thirdly, shall some employments be assigned to individuals and others
common to all? The same arrangement, however, does not occur in every
constitution; as we were saying, all may be shared by all, or not all
by all, but only by some; and hence arise the differences of constitutions,
for in democracies all share in all, in oligarchies the opposite practice
prevails. Now, since we are here speaking of the best form of government,
i.e., that under which the state will be most happy (and happiness,
as has been already said, cannot exist without virtue), it clearly follows
that in the state which is best governed and possesses men who are just
absolutely, and not merely relatively to the principle of the constitution,
the citizens must not lead the life of mechanics or tradesmen, for such
a life is ignoble, and inimical to virtue. Neither must they be husbandmen,
since leisure is necessary both for the development of virtue and the
performance of political duties.
Again,
there is in a state a class of warriors, and another of councillors,
who advise about the expedient and determine matters of law, and these
seem in an especial manner parts of a state. Now, should these two classes
be distinguished, or are both functions to be assigned to the same persons?
Here again there is no difficulty in seeing that both functions will
in one way belong to the same, in another, to different persons. To
different persons in so far as these i.e., the physical and the employments
are suited to different primes of life, for the one requires mental
wisdom and the other strength. But on the other hand, since it is an
impossible thing that those who are able to use or to resist force should
be willing to remain always in subjection, from this point of view the
persons are the same; for those who carry arms can always determine
the fate of the constitution. It remains therefore that both functions
should be entrusted by the ideal constitution to the same persons, not,
however, at the same time, but in the order prescribed by nature, who
has given to young men strength and to older men wisdom. Such a distribution
of duties will be expedient and also just, and is founded upon a principle
of conformity to merit. Besides, the ruling class should be the owners
of property, for they are citizens, and the citizens of a state should
be in good circumstances; whereas mechanics or any other class which
is not a producer of virtue have no share in the state. This follows
from our first principle, for happiness cannot exist without virtue,
and a city is not to be termed happy in regard to a portion of the citizens,
but in regard to them all. And clearly property should be in their hands,
since the husbandmen will of necessity be slaves or barbarian Perioeci.
Of the
classes enumerated there remain only the priests, and the manner in
which their office is to be regulated is obvious. No husbandman or mechanic
should be appointed to it; for the Gods should receive honor from the
citizens only. Now since the body of the citizen is divided into two
classes, the warriors and the councillors and it is beseeming that the
worship of the Gods should be duly performed, and also a rest provided
in their service for those who from age have given up active life, to
the old men of these two classes should be assigned the duties of the
priesthood.
We have
shown what are the necessary conditions, and what the parts of a state:
husbandmen, craftsmen, and laborers of an kinds are necessary to the
existence of states, but the parts of the state are the warriors and
councillors. And these are distinguished severally from one another,
the distinction being in some cases permanent, in others not.
Part X
It is not
a new or recent discovery of political philosophers that the state ought
to be divided into classes, and that the warriors should be separated
from the husbandmen. The system has continued in Egypt and in Crete
to this day, and was established, as tradition says, by a law of Sesostris
in Egypt and of Minos in Crete. The institution of common tables also
appears to be of ancient date, being in Crete as old as the reign of
Minos, and in Italy far older. The Italian historians say that there
was a certain Italus, king of Oenotria, from whom the Oenotrians were
called Italians, and who gave the name of Italy to the promontory of
Europe lying within the Scylletic and Lametic Gulfs, which are distant
from one another only half a day's journey. They say that this Italus
converted the Oenotrians from shepherds into husbandmen, and besides
other laws which he gave them, was the founder of their common meals;
even in our day some who are derived from him retain this institution
and certain other laws of his. On the side of Italy towards Tyrrhenia
dwelt the Opici, who are now, as of old, called Ausones; and on the
side towards Iapygia and the Ionian Gulf, in the district called Siritis,
the Chones, who are likewise of Oenotrian race. From this part of the
world originally came the institution of common tables; the separation
into castes from Egypt, for the reign of Sesostris is of far greater
antiquity than that of Minos. It is true indeed that these and many
other things have been invented several times over in the course of
ages, or rather times without number; for necessity may be supposed
to have taught men the inventions which were absolutely required, and
when these were provided, it was natural that other things which would
adorn and enrich life should grow up by degrees. And we may infer that
in political institutions the same rule holds. Egypt witnesses to the
antiquity of all these things, for the Egyptians appear to be of all
people the most ancient; and they have laws and a regular constitution
existing from time immemorial. We should therefore make the best use
of what has been already discovered, and try to supply defects.
I have
already remarked that the land ought to belong to those who possess
arms and have a share in the government, and that the husbandmen ought
to be a class distinct from them; and I have determined what should
be the extent and nature of the territory. Let me proceed to discuss
the distribution of the land, and the character of the agricultural
class; for I do not think that property ought to be common, as some
maintain, but only that by friendly consent there should be a common
use of it; and that no citizen should be in want of subsistence.
As to common
meals, there is a general agreement that a well ordered city should
have them; and we will hereafter explain what are our own reasons for
taking this view. They ought, however, to be open to all the citizens.
And yet it is not easy for the poor to contribute the requisite sum
out of their private means, and to provide also for their household.
The expense of religious worship should likewise be a public charge.
The land must therefore be divided into two parts, one public and the
other private, and each part should be subdivided, part of the public
land being appropriated to the service of the Gods, and the other part
used to defray the cost of the common meals; while of the private land,
part should be near the border, and the other near the city, so that,
each citizen having two lots, they may all of them have land in both
places; there is justice and fairness in such a division, and it tends
to inspire unanimity among the people in their border wars. Where there
is not this arrangement some of them are too ready to come to blows
with their neighbors, while others are so cautious that they quite lose
the sense of honor. Wherefore there is a law in some places which forbids
those who dwell near the border to take part in public deliberations
about wars with neighbors, on the ground that their interests will pervert
their judgment. For the reasons already mentioned, then, the land should
be divided in the manner described. The very best thing of all would
be that the husbandmen should be slaves taken from among men who are
not all of the same race and not spirited, for if they have no spirit
they will be better suited for their work, and there will be no danger
of their making a revolution. The next best thing would be that they
should be Perioeci of foreign race, and of a like inferior nature; some
of them should be the slaves of individuals, and employed in the private
estates of men of property, the remainder should be the property of
the state and employed on the common land. I will hereafter explain
what is the proper treatment of slaves, and why it is expedient that
liberty should be always held out to them as the reward of their services.
Part XI
We have
already said that the city should be open to the land and to the sea,
and to the whole country as far as possible. In respect of the place
itself our wish would be that its situation should be fortunate in four
things. The first, health- this is a necessity: cities which lie towards
the east, and are blown upon by winds coming from the east, are the
healthiest; next in healthfulness are those which are sheltered from
the north wind, for they have a milder winter. The site of the city
should likewise be convenient both for political administration and
for war. With a view to the latter it should afford easy egress to the
citizens, and at the same time be inaccessible and difficult of capture
to enemies. There should be a natural abundance of springs and fountains
in the town, or, if there is a deficiency of them, great reservoirs
may be established for the collection of rainwater, such as will not
fail when the inhabitants are cut off from the country by by war. Special
care should be taken of the health of the inhabitants, which will depend
chiefly on the healthiness of the locality and of the quarter to which
they are exposed, and secondly, on the use of pure water; this latter
point is by no means a secondary consideration. For the elements which
we use most and oftenest for the support of the body contribute most
to health, and among these are water and air. Wherefore, in all wise
states, if there is a want of pure water, and the supply is not all
equally good, the drinking water ought to be separated from that which
is used for other purposes.
As to strongholds,
what is suitable to different forms of government varies: thus an acropolis
is suited to an oligarchy or a monarchy, but a plain to a democracy;
neither to an aristocracy, but rather a number of strong places. The
arrangement of private houses is considered to be more agreeable and
generally more convenient, if the streets are regularly laid out after
the modern fashion which Hippodamus introduced, but for security in
war the antiquated mode of building, which made it difficult for strangers
to get out of a town and for assailants to find their way in, is preferable.
A city should therefore adopt both plans of building: it is possible
to arrange the houses irregularly, as husbandmen plant their vines in
what are called 'clumps.' The whole town should not be laid out in straight
lines, but only certain quarters and regions; thus security and beauty
will be combined.
As to walls,
those who say that cities making any pretension to military virtue should
not have them, are quite out of date in their notions; and they may
see the cities which prided themselves on this fancy confuted by facts.
True, there is little courage shown in seeking for safety behind a rampart
when an enemy is similar in character and not much superior in number;
but the superiority of the besiegers may be and often is too much both
for ordinary human valor and for that which is found only in a few;
and if they are to be saved and to escape defeat and outrage, the strongest
wall will be the truest soldierly precaution, more especially now that
missiles and siege engines have been brought to such perfection. To
have no walls would be as foolish as to choose a site for a town in
an exposed country, and to level the heights; or as if an individual
were to leave his house unwalled, lest the inmates should become cowards.
Nor must we forget that those who have their cities surrounded by walls
may either take advantage of them or not, but cities which are unwalled
have no choice.
If our
conclusions are just, not only should cities have walls, but care should
be taken to make them ornamental, as well as useful for warlike purposes,
and adapted to resist modern inventions. For as the assailants of a
city do all they can to gain an advantage, so the defenders should make
use of any means of defense which have been already discovered, and
should devise and invent others, for when men are well prepared no enemy
even thinks of attacking them.
Part XII
As the
walls are to be divided by guardhouses and towers built at suitable
intervals, and the body of citizens must be distributed at common tables,
the idea will naturally occur that we should establish some of the common
tables in the guardhouses. These might be arranged as has been suggested;
while the principal common tables of the magistrates will occupy a suitable
place, and there also will be the buildings appropriated to religious
worship except in the case of those rites which the law or the Pythian
oracle has restricted to a special locality. The site should be a spot
seen far and wide, which gives due elevation to virtue and towers over
the neighborhood. Below this spot should be established an agora, such
as that which the Thessalians call the 'freemen's agora'; from this
all trade should be excluded, and no mechanic, husbandman, or any such
person allowed to enter, unless he be summoned by the magistrates. It
would be a charming use of the place, if the gymnastic exercises of
the elder men were performed there. For in this noble practice different
ages should be separated, and some of the magistrates should stay with
the boys, while the grown-up men remain with the magistrates; for the
presence of the magistrates is the best mode of inspiring true modesty
and ingenuous fear. There should also be a traders' agora, distinct
and apart from the other, in a situation which is convenient for the
reception of goods both by sea and land.
But in
speaking of the magistrates we must not forget another section of the
citizens, viz., the priests, for whom public tables should likewise
be provided in their proper place near the temples. The magistrates
who deal with contracts, indictments, summonses, and the like, and those
who have the care of the agora and of the city, respectively, ought
to be established near an agora and some public place of meeting; the
neighborhood of the traders' agora will be a suitable spot; the upper
agora we devote to the life of leisure, the other is intended for the
necessities of trade.
The same
order should prevail in the country, for there too the magistrates,
called by some 'Inspectors of Forests' and by others 'Wardens of the
Country,' must have guardhouses and common tables while they are on
duty; temples should also be scattered throughout the country, dedicated,
some to Gods, and some to heroes.
But it
would be a waste of time for us to linger over details like these. The
difficulty is not in imagining but in carrying them out. We may talk
about them as much as we like, but the execution of them will depend
upon fortune. Wherefore let us say no more about these matters for the
present.
Part XIII
Returning
to the constitution itself, let us seek to determine out of what and
what sort of elements the state which is to be happy and well-governed
should be composed. There are two things in which all which all well-being
consists: one of them is the choice of a right end and aim of action,
and the other the discovery of the actions which are means towards it;
for the means and the end may agree or disagree. Sometimes the right
end is set before men, but in practice they fail to attain it; in other
cases they are successful in all the means, but they propose to themselves
a bad end; and sometimes they fail in both. Take, for example, the art
of medicine; physicians do not always understand the nature of health,
and also the means which they use may not effect the desired end. In
all arts and sciences both the end and the means should be equally within
our control.
The happiness
and well-being which all men manifestly desire, some have the power
of attaining, but to others, from some accident or defect of nature,
the attainment of them is not granted; for a good life requires a supply
of external goods, in a less degree when men are in a good state, in
a greater degree when they are in a lower state. Others again, who possess
the conditions of happiness, go utterly wrong from the first in the
pursuit of it. But since our object is to discover the best form of
government, that, namely, under which a city will be best governed,
and since the city is best governed which has the greatest opportunity
of obtaining happiness, it is evident that we must clearly ascertain
the nature of happiness.
We maintain,
and have said in the Ethics, if the arguments there adduced are of any
value, that happiness is the realization and perfect exercise of virtue,
and this not conditional, but absolute. And I used the term 'conditional'
to express that which is indispensable, and 'absolute' to express that
which is good in itself. Take the case of just actions; just punishments
and chastisements do indeed spring from a good principle, but they are
good only because we cannot do without them- it would be better that
neither individuals nor states should need anything of the sort- but
actions which aim at honor and advantage are absolutely the best. The
conditional action is only the choice of a lesser evil; whereas these
are the foundation and creation of good. A good man may make the best
even of poverty and disease, and the other ills of life; but he can
only attain happiness under the opposite conditions (for this also has
been determined in accordance with ethical arguments, that the good
man is he for whom, because he is virtuous, the things that are absolutely
good are good; it is also plain that his use of these goods must be
virtuous and in the absolute sense good). This makes men fancy that
external goods are the cause of happiness, yet we might as well say
that a brilliant performance on the lyre was to be attributed to the
instrument and not to the skill of the performer.
It follows
then from what has been said that some things the legislator must find
ready to his hand in a state, others he must provide. And therefore
we can only say: May our state be constituted in such a manner as to
be blessed with the goods of which fortune disposes (for we acknowledge
her power): whereas virtue and goodness in the state are not a matter
of chance but the result of knowledge and purpose. A city can be virtuous
only when the citizens who have a share in the government are virtuous,
and in our state all the citizens share in the government; let us then
inquire how a man becomes virtuous. For even if we could suppose the
citizen body to be virtuous, without each of them being so, yet the
latter would be better, for in the virtue of each the virtue of all
is involved.
There are
three things which make men good and virtuous; these are nature, habit,
rational principle. In the first place, every one must be born a man
and not some other animal; so, too, he must have a certain character,
both of body and soul. But some qualities there is no use in having
at birth, for they are altered by habit, and there are some gifts which
by nature are made to be turned by habit to good or bad. Animals lead
for the most part a life of nature, although in lesser particulars some
are influenced by habit as well. Man has rational principle, in addition,
and man only. Wherefore nature, habit, rational principle must be in
harmony with one another; for they do not always agree; men do many
things against habit and nature, if rational principle persuades them
that they ought. We have already determined what natures are likely
to be most easily molded by the hands of the legislator. An else is
the work of education; we learn some things by habit and some by instruction.
Part XIV
Since every
political society is composed of rulers and subjects let us consider
whether the relations of one to the other should interchange or be permanent.
For the education of the citizens will necessarily vary with the answer
given to this question. Now, if some men excelled others in the same
degree in which gods and heroes are supposed to excel mankind in general
(having in the first place a great advantage even in their bodies, and
secondly in their minds), so that the superiority of the governors was
undisputed and patent to their subjects, it would clearly be better
that once for an the one class should rule and the other serve. But
since this is unattainable, and kings have no marked superiority over
their subjects, such as Scylax affirms to be found among the Indians,
it is obviously necessary on many grounds that all the citizens alike
should take their turn of governing and being governed. Equality consists
in the same treatment of similar persons, and no government can stand
which is not founded upon justice. For if the government be unjust every
one in the country unites with the governed in the desire to have a
revolution, and it is an impossibility that the members of the government
can be so numerous as to be stronger than all their enemies put together.
Yet that governors should excel their subjects is undeniable. How all
this is to be effected, and in what way they will respectively share
in the government, the legislator has to consider. The subject has been
already mentioned. Nature herself has provided the distinction when
she made a difference between old and young within the same species,
of whom she fitted the one to govern and the other to be governed. No
one takes offense at being governed when he is young, nor does he think
himself better than his governors, especially if he will enjoy the same
privilege when he reaches the required age.
We conclude
that from one point of view governors and governed are identical, and
from another different. And therefore their education must be the same
and also different. For he who would learn to command well must, as
men say, first of all learn to obey. As I observed in the first part
of this treatise, there is one rule which is for the sake of the rulers
and another rule which is for the sake of the ruled; the former is a
despotic, the latter a free government. Some commands differ not in
the thing commanded, but in the intention with which they are imposed.
Wherefore, many apparently menial offices are an honor to the free youth
by whom they are performed; for actions do not differ as honorable or
dishonorable in themselves so much as in the end and intention of them.
But since we say that the virtue of the citizen and ruler is the same
as that of the good man, and that the same person must first be a subject
and then a ruler, the legislator has to see that they become good men,
and by what means this may be accomplished, and what is the end of the
perfect life.
Now the
soul of man is divided into two parts, one of which has a rational principle
in itself, and the other, not having a rational principle in itself,
is able to obey such a principle. And we call a man in any way good
because he has the virtues of these two parts. In which of them the
end is more likely to be found is no matter of doubt to those who adopt
our division; for in the world both of nature and of art the inferior
always exists for the sake of the better or superior, and the better
or superior is that which has a rational principle. This principle,
too, in our ordinary way of speaking, is divided into two kinds, for
there is a practical and a speculative principle. This part, then, must
evidently be similarly divided. And there must be a corresponding division
of actions; the actions of the naturally better part are to be preferred
by those who have it in their power to attain to two out of the three
or to all, for that is always to every one the most eligible which is
the highest attainable by him. The whole of life is further divided
into two parts, business and leisure, war and peace, and of actions
some aim at what is necessary and useful, and some at what is honorable.
And the preference given to one or the other class of actions must necessarily
be like the preference given to one or other part of the soul and its
actions over the other; there must be war for the sake of peace, business
for the sake of leisure, things useful and necessary for the sake of
things honorable. All these points the statesman should keep in view
when he frames his laws; he should consider the parts of the soul and
their functions, and above all the better and the end; he should also
remember the diversities of human lives and actions. For men must be
able to engage in business and go to war, but leisure and peace are
better; they must do what is necessary and indeed what is useful, but
what is honorable is better. On such principles children and persons
of every age which requires education should be trained. Whereas even
the Hellenes of the present day who are reputed to be best governed,
and the legislators who gave them their constitutions, do not appear
to have framed their governments with a regard to the best end, or to
have given them laws and education with a view to all the virtues, but
in a vulgar spirit have fallen back on those which promised to be more
useful and profitable. Many modern writers have taken a similar view:
they commend the Lacedaemonian constitution, and praise the legislator
for making conquest and war his sole aim, a doctrine which may be refuted
by argument and has long ago been refuted by facts. For most men desire
empire in the hope of accumulating the goods of fortune; and on this
ground Thibron and all those who have written about the Lacedaemonian
constitution have praised their legislator, because the Lacedaemonians,
by being trained to meet dangers, gained great power. But surely they
are not a happy people now that their empire has passed away, nor was
their legislator right. How ridiculous is the result, if, when they
are continuing in the observance of his laws and no one interferes with
them, they have lost the better part of life! These writers further
err about the sort of government which the legislator should approve,
for the government of freemen is nobler and implies more virtue than
despotic government. Neither is a city to be deemed happy or a legislator
to be praised because he trains his citizens to conquer and obtain dominion
over their neighbors, for there is great evil in this. On a similar
principle any citizen who could, should obviously try to obtain the
power in his own state- the crime which the Lacedaemonians accuse king
Pausanias of attempting, although he had so great honor already. No
such principle and no law having this object is either statesmanlike
or useful or right. For the same things are best both for individuals
and for states, and these are the things which the legislator ought
to implant in the minds of his citizens.
Neither
should men study war with a view to the enslavement of those who do
not deserve to be enslaved; but first of all they should provide against
their own enslavement, and in the second place obtain empire for the
good of the governed, and not for the sake of exercising a general despotism,
and in the third place they should seek to be masters only over those
who deserve to be slaves. Facts, as well as arguments, prove that the
legislator should direct all his military and other measures to the
provision of leisure and the establishment of peace. For most of these
military states are safe only while they are at war, but fall when they
have acquired their empire; like unused iron they lose their temper
in time of peace. And for this the legislator is to blame, he never
having taught them how to lead the life of peace.
Part XV
Since the
end of individuals and of states is the same, the end of the best man
and of the best constitution must also be the same; it is therefore
evident that there ought to exist in both of them the virtues of leisure;
for peace, as has been often repeated, is the end of war, and leisure
of toil. But leisure and cultivation may be promoted, not only by those
virtues which are practiced in leisure, but also by some of those which
are useful to business. For many necessaries of life have to be supplied
before we can have leisure. Therefore a city must be temperate and brave,
and able to endure: for truly, as the proverb says, 'There is no leisure
for slaves,' and those who cannot face danger like men are the slaves
of any invader. Courage and endurance are required for business and
philosophy for leisure, temperance and justice for both, and more especially
in times of peace and leisure, for war compels men to be just and temperate,
whereas the enjoyment of good fortune and the leisure which comes with
peace tend to make them insolent. Those then who seem to be the best-off
and to be in the possession of every good, have special need of justice
and temperance- for example, those (if such there be, as the poets say)
who dwell in the Islands of the Blest; they above all will need philosophy
and temperance and justice, and all the more the more leisure they have,
living in the midst of abundance. There is no difficulty in seeing why
the state that would be happy and good ought to have these virtues.
If it be disgraceful in men not to be able to use the goods of life,
it is peculiarly disgraceful not to be able to use them in time of leisure-
to show excellent qualities in action and war, and when they have peace
and leisure to be no better than slaves. Wherefore we should not practice
virtue after the manner of the Lacedaemonians. For they, while agreeing
with other men in their conception of the highest goods, differ from
the rest of mankind in thinking that they are to be obtained by the
practice of a single virtue. And since they think these goods and the
enjoyment of them greater than the enjoyment derived from the virtues
... and that it should be practiced for its own sake, is evident from
what has been said; we must now consider how and by what means it is
to be attained.
We have
already determined that nature and habit and rational principle are
required, and, of these, the proper nature of the citizens has also
been defined by us. But we have still to consider whether the training
of early life is to be that of rational principle or habit, for these
two must accord, and when in accord they will then form the best of
harmonies. The rational principle may be mistaken and fail in attaining
the highest ideal of life, and there may be a like evil influence of
habit. Thus much is clear in the first place, that, as in all other
things, birth implies an antecedent beginning, and that there are beginnings
whose end is relative to a further end. Now, in men rational principle
and mind are the end towards which nature strives, so that the birth
and moral discipline of the citizens ought to be ordered with a view
to them. In the second place, as the soul and body are two, we see also
that there are two parts of the soul, the rational and the irrational,
and two corresponding states- reason and appetite. And as the body is
prior in order of generation to the soul, so the irrational is prior
to the rational. The proof is that anger and wishing and desire are
implanted in children from their very birth, but reason and understanding
are developed as they grow older. Wherefore, the care of the body ought
to precede that of the soul, and the training of the appetitive part
should follow: none the less our care of it must be for the sake of
the reason, and our care of the body for the sake of the soul.
Part XVI
Since the
legislator should begin by considering how the frames of the children
whom he is rearing may be as good as possible, his first care will be
about marriage- at what age should his citizens marry, and who are fit
to marry? In legislating on this subject he ought to consider the persons
and the length of their life, that their procreative life may terminate
at the same period, and that they may not differ in their bodily powers,
as will be the case if the man is still able to beget children while
the woman is unable to bear them, or the woman able to bear while the
man is unable to beget, for from these causes arise quarrels and differences
between married persons. Secondly, he must consider the time at which
the children will succeed to their parents; there ought not to be too
great an interval of age, for then the parents will be too old to derive
any pleasure from their affection, or to be of any use to them. Nor
ought they to be too nearly of an age; to youthful marriages there are
many objections- the children will be wanting in respect to the parents,
who will seem to be their contemporaries, and disputes will arise in
the management of the household. Thirdly, and this is the point from
which we digressed, the legislator must mold to his will the frames
of newly-born children. Almost all these objects may be secured by attention
to one point. Since the time of generation is commonly limited within
the age of seventy years in the case of a man, and of fifty in the case
of a woman, the commencement of the union should conform to these periods.
The union of male and female when too young is bad for the procreation
of children; in all other animals the offspring of the young are small
and in-developed, and with a tendency to produce female children, and
therefore also in man, as is proved by the fact that in those cities
in which men and women are accustomed to marry young, the people are
small and weak; in childbirth also younger women suffer more, and more
of them die; some persons say that this was the meaning of the response
once given to the Troezenians- the oracle really meant that many died
because they married too young; it had nothing to do with the ingathering
of the harvest. It also conduces to temperance not to marry too soon;
for women who marry early are apt to be wanton; and in men too the bodily
frame is stunted if they marry while the seed is growing (for there
is a time when the growth of the seed, also, ceases, or continues to
but a slight extent). Women should marry when they are about eighteen
years of age, and men at seven and thirty; then they are in the prime
of life, and the decline in the powers of both will coincide. Further,
the children, if their birth takes place soon, as may reasonably be
expected, will succeed in the beginning of their prime, when the fathers
are already in the decline of life, and have nearly reached their term
of three-score years and ten.
Thus much
of the age proper for marriage: the season of the year should also be
considered; according to our present custom, people generally limit
marriage to the season of winter, and they are right. The precepts of
physicians and natural philosophers about generation should also be
studied by the parents themselves; the physicians give good advice about
the favorable conditions of the body, and the natural philosophers about
the winds; of which they prefer the north to the south.
What constitution
in the parent is most advantageous to the offspring is a subject which
we will consider more carefully when we speak of the education of children,
and we will only make a few general remarks at present. The constitution
of an athlete is not suited to the life of a citizen, or to health,
or to the procreation of children, any more than the valetudinarian
or exhausted constitution, but one which is in a mean between them.
A man's constitution should be inured to labor, but not to labor which
is excessive or of one sort only, such as is practiced by athletes;
he should be capable of all the actions of a freeman. These remarks
apply equally to both parents.
Women who
are with child should be careful of themselves; they should take exercise
and have a nourishing diet. The first of these prescriptions the legislator
will easily carry into effect by requiring that they shall take a walk
daily to some temple, where they can worship the gods who preside over
birth. Their minds, however, unlike their bodies, they ought to keep
quiet, for the offspring derive their natures from their mothers as
plants do from the earth.
As to the
exposure and rearing of children, let there be a law that no deformed
child shall live, but that on the ground of an excess in the number
of children, if the established customs of the state forbid this (for
in our state population has a limit), no child is to be exposed, but
when couples have children in excess, let abortion be procured before
sense and life have begun; what may or may not be lawfully done in these
cases depends on the question of life and sensation.
And now,
having determined at what ages men and women are to begin their union,
let us also determine how long they shall continue to beget and bear
offspring for the state; men who are too old, like men who are too young,
produce children who are defective in body and mind; the children of
very old men are weakly. The limit then, should be the age which is
the prime of their intelligence, and this in most persons, according
to the notion of some poets who measure life by periods of seven years,
is about fifty; at four or five years or later, they should cease from
having families; and from that time forward only cohabit with one another
for the sake of health; or for some similar reason.
As to adultery,
let it be held disgraceful, in general, for any man or woman to be found
in any way unfaithful when they are married, and called husband and
wife. If during the time of bearing children anything of the sort occur,
let the guilty person be punished with a loss of privileges in proportion
to the offense.
Part XVII
After the
children have been born, the manner of rearing them may be supposed
to have a great effect on their bodily strength. It would appear from
the example of animals, and of those nations who desire to create the
military habit, that the food which has most milk in it is best suited
to human beings; but the less wine the better, if they would escape
diseases. Also all the motions to which children can be subjected at
their early age are very useful. But in order to preserve their tender
limbs from distortion, some nations have had recourse to mechanical
appliances which straighten their bodies. To accustom children to the
cold from their earliest years is also an excellent practice, which
greatly conduces to health, and hardens them for military service. Hence
many barbarians have a custom of plunging their children at birth into
a cold stream; others, like the Celts, clothe them in a light wrapper
only. For human nature should be early habituated to endure all which
by habit it can be made to endure; but the process must be gradual.
And children, from their natural warmth, may be easily trained to bear
cold. Such care should attend them in the first stage of life.
The next
period lasts to the age of five; during this no demand should be made
upon the child for study or labor, lest its growth be impeded; and there
should be sufficient motion to prevent the limbs from being inactive.
This can be secured, among other ways, by amusement, but the amusement
should not be vulgar or tiring or effeminate. The Directors of Education,
as they are termed, should be careful what tales or stories the children
hear, for all such things are designed to prepare the way for the business
of later life, and should be for the most part imitations of the occupations
which they will hereafter pursue in earnest. Those are wrong who in
their laws attempt to check the loud crying and screaming of children,
for these contribute towards their growth, and, in a manner, exercise
their bodies. Straining the voice has a strengthening effect similar
to that produced by the retention of the breath in violent exertions.
The Directors of Education should have an eye to their bringing up,
and in particular should take care that they are left as little as possible
with slaves. For until they are seven years old they must five at home;
and therefore, even at this early age, it is to be expected that they
should acquire a taint of meanness from what they hear and see. Indeed,
there is nothing which the legislator should be more careful to drive
away than indecency of speech; for the light utterance of shameful words
leads soon to shameful actions. The young especially should never be
allowed to repeat or hear anything of the sort. A freeman who is found
saying or doing what is forbidden, if he be too young as yet to have
the privilege of reclining at the public tables, should be disgraced
and beaten, and an elder person degraded as his slavish conduct deserves.
And since we do not allow improper language, clearly we should also
banish pictures or speeches from the stage which are indecent. Let the
rulers take care that there be no image or picture representing unseemly
actions, except in the temples of those Gods at whose festivals the
law permits even ribaldry, and whom the law also permits to be worshipped
by persons of mature age on behalf of themselves, their children, and
their wives. But the legislator should not allow youth to be spectators
of iambi or of comedy until they are of an age to sit at the public
tables and to drink strong wine; by that time education will have armed
them against the evil influences of such representations.
We have
made these remarks in a cursory manner- they are enough for the present
occasion; but hereafter we will return to the subject and after a fuller
discussion determine whether such liberty should or should not be granted,
and in what way granted, if at all. Theodorus, the tragic actor, was
quite right in saying that he would not allow any other actor, not even
if he were quite second-rate, to enter before himself, because the spectators
grew fond of the voices which they first heard. And the same principle
applies universally to association with things as well as with persons,
for we always like best whatever comes first. And therefore youth should
be kept strangers to all that is bad, and especially to things which
suggest vice or hate. When the five years have passed away, during the
two following years they must look on at the pursuits which they are
hereafter to learn. There are two periods of life with reference to
which education has to be divided, from seven to the age of puberty,
and onwards to the age of one and twenty. The poets who divide ages
by sevens are in the main right: but we should observe the divisions
actually made by nature; for the deficiencies of nature are what art
and education seek to fill up.
Let us
then first inquire if any regulations are to be laid down about children,
and secondly, whether the care of them should be the concern of the
state or of private individuals, which latter is in our own day the
common custom, and in the third place, what these regulations should
be.
I
| II | III
| IV | V
| VI | VII
| VIII