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A UTHOR : BREDIF, LEON TITLE: POLITICAL ELOQUENCE PLACE: CHICAGO DA TE : 1881 Master Negative # COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES PRESERVATION DEPARTMENT BIPLIOGRAPHIC MICROFORM TARGET Original Material as Filmed - Existing Bibliographic Record Restrictions on Use: |74 "Bredif/ Leon, 183 ^Political ';eloquQpoe4n Greece;' DemoBthenes with.ext^^ac^s^frWlhis^ •:di8(mB8ion^f the FTrial onJ^HeTo^ :- . Bredif >> , -tr .,: by M. jJ.Mao -M^ Chicago , I'ri^ Griggs,; 1881. \ 510' p. - port. 22, cm. ■i ♦;' i*- .- '€■ ■ «•.» *i»t-*>»/. l i fc wi a ' .— >. I FILM SIZE: 35 rt\ fr\ TECHNICAL MICROFORM DATA REDUCTION RATIO: II X IMAGE PLACEMENT: L\ Ql^ IB HB DATE FILMED: fe-lO-qi INITIALS [£h]>.C HLMEDBY: RESEARCH PUBLICATIONS. INC WOODBRIDGE. CT c Association for Information and Imago Managomont 1100 Wayne Avenue. 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If this were the only recommendation for the appearance of "Political Eloquence in Greece" in the English language, it would not, we think, be a slight one; but from the author's comparative study of ancient and modern eloquence, from his exposition of the passions, in- centives and convictions underlying those remarkable out- bursts of eloquence which culminated in a Demosthenes and an ^Eschines, in a Cicero and a Caesar, in a Mirabeau and a Bossuet, the student of history, oratory and philoso- phy will find this volume instructive. "To animate a people renowned for justice, humanity and valor, yet in many instances degenerate and corrupted; to warn them of the dangers of luxury, treachery and bribery; of the ambition and perfidy of a powerful foreign enemy; to recall the glory of their ancestors to their thoughts, and to inspire them with resolution^ vigor and unanimity ; to correct abuses, to restore discipline, to revive and enforce the generous sentiments of patriotism and pub- lic spirit," — these were the purposes for which Demos- thenes labored, and they may possibly recommend them- selves to the orator, the statesman, and the citizen of the nineteenth century. To the classical student who has read or is to read the Oration on the Crown and the Oration Against Ctesiphon, 6 TRANSLATOR S PREFACE. Chapter XI will possess a particular interest. In it Pro- fessor Br^dif has drawn, with a masterly and impartial pen, a picture of the two great adversaries, of their times and their acts, their abilities and their failings, their rise and their fall. A love for the Greek language and literature, and a strong admiration for the scholarly manner in which the author has treated the king of the ancient tribune, might also be mentioned as incentives which induced the trans- lator to undertake this task. That the work is free from errors and worthy of the admirable original, we can by no means vouchsafe. So vast is the field of ancient litera- ture from which the author has gathered his rich mate- rial, that it has been difficult at all times to consult the original texts. Of the numerous extracts from the classical writers of antiquity, we have translated some from the original Greek and Latin, others we have taken directly from the author's faithful version, and in the orations of Demosthenes and iEschines we have availed ourselves of the excellent translations made by Dr. Leland and Mr. Kennedy. The special thanks of the translator are due: first to the author himself, then to Major Geo. M. McConnel, of Chicago, for valuable critical assistance, to Alfred Flinch, Ph.D., for advice on the last chapters, to the publishers and printers for their pains to issue the volume in its present form, and to many friends for their interest in the progress of the work and for their appreciated criti- cisms and suggestions. M. J. MacMahon. Chicago, Illinois, March 1881. AUTHOE'S PREFACE. " rriHAT which distinguishes man from the lower animals, J- and the Greek from the Barbarian, is his superiority of intelligence and utterance." Isocrates might have added that the best use to which speech can be put is the examina- tion and defense of civic interests. Political eloquence was one of the essential elements and one of the least disputed glories of Athenian democracy. We cannot attempt to study in detail its various developments. The political eloquence of Greece, during the Persian inva- sions and the Peloponnesian war, left no original monument of itself. It has been necessary to trace it through second- hand productions, — sometimes rendered faithfully enough (as in Thucydides), but all rare and insufficient. On the other hand, during the forty years which elapse between the cap- ture of Athens by Lysander and the appearance of Philip on ' the borders of Greece (404-359 b.c), Attic eloquen^'e is especially judicial, — political eloquence merely incidental. Hence, while profiting by the writers whose recollections of early ages illuminate, in a general manner, the history of political eloquence, we have particularly sketched the image of that eloquence which rendered the Macedonian epoch so illustrious. Demosthenes and his contemporaries do not constitute the entire eloquence of Greece, but they represent it with the greatest 6clat at one of the most impressive moments in the life of the Greek world. Two great personages eclipse all others in the middle of the fourth century of Hellenic history (362-336 b.c): Philip and Demosthenes. They and the Athenians are the three 7 8 AUTHOR S PREFACE. author's preface. 9 actors in the national drama unfolded in Greece. We have drawn a picture of the Macedonian king and the city against which he contended. In regard to Demosthenes, his achievements as a statesman and as an orator fill and animate this entire work. At every moment he apjDears upon the scene as an actor or witness. Happy would it be if the reader found as much delight in listening to his eloquent testimonies as the heliasts experi- enced in hearing those of Homer and Solon, Sophocles and Euripides, read by the court clerk. We have thought it possible to dwell upon the judicial eloquence of Athens with- out inconformity to the title of this work. The functions of advocate and political orator were so closely interlaced among the ancients that it is difficult, if not impossible, to separate them. Private interests and political tendencies incessantly commingled in the cities where the retired and private man was but little separated from the active citizen. Thus the bar was converted into a political arena. The passions which agitated the assembled people might also move the tribunal. The debates presented a doubly interesting spectacle of opponents defending their life or their honor, while at the same time they took sides on affairs of state, a public deliberation grafted upon a duel. Under such condi- tions, it is not surprising to hear an ex-consul, the prince of the political rostrum^ at Rome, assert the priority of judicial eloquence,— the most difficult, perhaps, of human accomplish- ments, but also the grandest.* A political trial was the origin of Cicero's masterpiece in oratory, Oratio pro Milone. One particular cause consolidated the union of deliberative and judicial functions at Athens: public administration was extended to the entire people. The accorded right, not to say the duty, imposed upon every citizen of investigating « * In causarum contentionibus magnum est quoddam opus, atque Laud scio an de humanis operibus longe maximum. iDe Oratore ii 17.) ' * political crimes and misdemeanors, favored the perpetual confusion of the tribune and the bar by inciting accusations in which private pique was too often armed under the guise of public interests. The only three orations of ^Eschines which remain to us are three political speeches. With the exception of the Philippics and the Olynthiacs, the finest harangues of Demos- thenes* are composed in about an equal measure of the deliberative and judicial element. Add to tfiis that the Athenians did not have special judges for special cases. When there was a question of civil claims or a political debate, the tribunal was always a part, more ^r less respect- able, of the Athenian multitude, — a popular audience, whose minds the orator ruled and whose passions he swayed by appropriate arts. Whence among the Attics the affinity of oratorical customs at the tribune and bar, and the necessity, in order to thoroughly comprehend the political orators of Athens, of seeing her advocates at work. A witness, to be proof against suspicion, should neither be a partisan nor a dependent of the litigant. To these conditions the tribunal of Letters might add another, that of not being his translator or his critic. There is a com- mon inclination to become over-zealous in our admiration of a writer whom long and sympathetic communion has apparently made our own ; the exact truth sometimes suffers from this excess of good will. Great names add to this interested affection a prestige which favors illusion. Un- doubtedly, one should not speak lightly of such eminent personages; but if respect is due to their glory, the whole truth is due to the reader. We believe that we have studied the king of the ancient tribune with a veneration that is free from partiality. The citizen, the statesman, and the orator are sufficiently strong in him to sustain the re- * Contra Leptinem, In Midiam, In Ari^tocTatem^ On the Affairs of the Chersonese, On the Embassy, and On the C own. 10 AUTHOR S PREFACE. author's preface. 11 proaches which the man and the polemic did not always escape. Br^bceuf has been reproached for being more Lucian than Lucian himself (Litcano Lucanior). Many an inter- preter of Demosthenes, undoubtedly dissatisfied with his original eloquence, contributes to it what pleases his own taste. Unfortunately the Attics were not eloquent in the Gallic view; to adorn Demosthenes amounts to parodying him; to make him bombastic, does not render him more recognizable. When he recounts wrongs, the translator, with the best intention imaginable, denounces crimes. '* Rest in repose, confident and armed," becomes "Await without noise, confidence in your hearts, and your sword in hand." "I will speak with frankness," is cold; a substitute is made: "Nothing will enchain my tongue." These scruples are given with good intention, but they miss the mark. For want of stones, an indiscreet tenderness throws flowers and metaphors at this colossus. The greatest service which Demosthenes' friends can render him is to refrain from obliging him with this affectation. Do you wish that his beauty should enrapture? Then display him simply as he is. You will thus spare him the "calumnies" of which Addison* complained, and you will avert from yourself the application of the adage, Traduttore, traditore. The translator should be the prime auxiliary of the critic; an ancient orator well translated has his commentaries half written. During long years devoted to secondary and higher in- struction, we have collected from the study of ancient liter- ature rich materials, which is to-day distributed into four- teen different courses. We ofi'er the most recent of these courses to the public; it is also one of the most modern. May it be hoped that this consci3ntious study in which moral philosophy, politics and literary criticism naturally lend their aid, will prepare the way for its seniors by meriting the inciulgent approbation of 4ts readers. Derietrius, th(j Phalerian, said of eloquence that in free states it is like the sword in combat. Well organized re- publics should know no other civil battle-field than that of the tribune — a peaceful and fruitful arena where the issue is joined between in^^elligence and intelligence on a common ground of national devotion. When recalling the oratorical and sanguinary conflicts of the patricians and plebeians, at periods reputed the most flourishing of the Roman Republic, the author of the Dia- logue of Orators charges eloquence with living upon sedi- tions. Free and united France nurtures eloquence with better aliments. The era of social seditions will never again interrupt her, and, thanks to the Constitution which has made her her own sovereign, she will avoid errors which might cause her to launch words of iron, as did Athens and Demosthenes, against foreign enemies. Far more fortunate in our day is the mission of the French forum. In profound peace its sole impulse is for good; it exhibits with pride the dearest- interests of th« country to all eyes. Assisted by its powerful ally the preps, it has become, by wise considerations, the political preceptor of the people ; and by the dignity of its sentiments it nobly maintains the proud soul of France. * I have been traduced in French. (The French word meaning translated is traduit.) TABLE OF CONTENTS. Translator's Preface, - Author s Preface, - 5-6 7-11 CHAPTER I. Introduction — The Three Ages of Attic Eloquence, 15-51 CHAPTER II. Philip — The Athenians, CHAPTER III. Demosthenes — The Man — The Citizen, - CHAPTER IV. Demosthenes — The Statesman, CHAPTER V. Analysis of the Principal Elements and Charac- teristics OF Demosthenes' Eloquence, 52-82 83-117 118-166 167-198 CHAPTER VI. Analysis of the Principal Elements and Charac- teristics OF Demosthenes' Eloquence (con- tinued), . - - - 199-263 18 14 TABLE OF CONTENTS. If J CHAPTER VII. Oratorical Contests in Political Debates at Athens, 264-289 CHAPTER VIII. Invective in Greek Eloquence, 290-337 I CHAPTER IX. Greek Eloquence ts the Light of Truth and ^^«^^^^^'» 338-371 CHAPTER X. I. Demosthenes as a Moralist — II. Relations of Justice and Politics — III. Religious Senti- ment IN Demosthenes, ... 372-411 CHAPTER XL The Trial on the Crown, - 412-464 CHAPTER XIL Conclusion, Analytical Table of Contents, 465-488 489 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. CHAPTER L INTRODUCTION. IN the seventeenth century, when public speaking was restricted principally to the pulpit and bar, Fenelon restored the omnipotence of Grecian eloquence. To-day our assemblies are manifestly unceremonious; they exhibit great examples of the efficiency of elo- quence, but still they are far from those triumphs familiar to Greek antiquity. And so we can share even in these days the admiration ^f the author of The Letter to the Academy, Eloquence will never exercise over us the sovereignty which it enjoyed at Athens. This is attributable to the different conditions of public life among the ancients and moderns. From her cradle Greece grew up and waxed strong in the warm light of liberty. As long as her independence lasted she breathed the public life of the Pnyx and the Agora. In the popular assemblies, where the nation met for deliberation, eloquence was naturally called upon to play an important rcle. Polit- ical discussions took place in the open air; each delib- eration was like a drama played by a thousand actors, whose passions and votes depended on the master of the tribune. In the midst of democratic cities, justly jealous of governing themselves and examining care- 15 16 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. fully their own affairs, '^all could do everything."^ The majority decided without appeal most important questions: the choice of alliances, peace or war, the life or death of the vanquished. ''7/i a democratio state,'' says ^schines, 'Hhe private individual is a king hy right of law and suffrage.'' \ Sometimes a great citizen appears to be king of a city; but this fragile royalty depends upon the favor of the people: the people have instituted it, and the people at their will overthrow it, according to the impulse of the mo- ment. What ally will aid the statesman in preserving the confidence of the city whose will he must obey? — Eloquence. In former times, says Aristotle, J the usurpers to whom the citizens submitted were generals. For then the sword was more skillfully handled, and was more powerful than speech; ''but in our days, thanks to the progress of eloquence, the faculty of speaking well will suffice to place a man at the head of the people. Orators are not usurpers on account of their ignorance of military art, or at least such an occurrence is very rare." Thus among the Greeks the multitude was master of everything, and oratory was master of the multitude. This power of eloquence produced surprising effects. The Athenian army falls into the hands of the victori- ous Sicilians. Diodes, a favorite orator, advises the Sicilians to kill the generals, to sell or throw the sol- diers into prison. • The Sicilians applaud these vigorous measures. A citizen, JS'icolaus (although the war has deprived him of his two sons) exhorts the victors to * Tacitus, Dialogue of Orators, 40. t '^v TzoXst 37)/ioxpaToufiiu7j oLVTjp idimzT^q ^oina 7La\ tl'ijfpu) fiaai' Xeosi. (Against Ctesiphon). XPoliticSjV\u,4. INTRODUCTION. 17 t clemency. The people are touched, and are about to pardon them. Gylippus, a Spartan general, alarmed at this impolitic weakness, speaks in his turn: the mul- titude is exasperated, and votes the punishment.* Once, at Athens, the Mityleneans, having revolted, were condemned to death in mass by the advice of Cleon. The next day Diodo^us made the people blush at such thoughtless barbarity, and the Mityleneans were spared, f Eloquence also reigned in the Amphict- yonic assemblies: a council of the states general of Greece, in which the interests, as well as the political and religious debates of the Hellenic family were dis- cussed. Thus public speaking was the main-spring of Greek society. From its origin eloquence flourished in Greece with- out effort or study, as if on a soil best adapted to it. This spontaneity sprang from qualities indigenous to the Hellenic race: customs and institutions nourished and bore it into full maturity. Sensibility, lively im- agination, flexible and delicate organs, electric sympa- thies,— nothing prevented the Hellenes from acquiring the gift of speech without seeking it. The Grecian was born an orator (prirwp)^ and the social center in which he lived, since the heroic age, compelled him to provide himself with convincing and persuasive power. In his Theatre des rheteurs Father Cressolius, of the Society of Jesus, quotes a verse of the Odyssey (xix, 179) to trace the art of oratory, not to the deluge of Deucalion, but antenor to it: to Deucalion's father, Minos, who was converted into a profound sage and consummate reasoner by lessons drawn from conversa- tions with Jupiter. Without tracing it so far back, the * Diodorus Siculus, xiii, 19 et seq. t Thucydides, iii, 35 et seq. 18 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. ingenious scholar might have been satisfied with the story of Peleus confiding Achilles to Phoenix that lie might learn how '' to speak and to act "; or with those verses of the Iliad which describe the oratorical con- tests with which the Achaean youth diverted the assem- blies.'^ This twofold influence of natural gifts and customs appears manifest in Homer. Heroic feudalism discloses democratic inclinations in which the future institutions of popular government are foreshadowed. The counsel-bearing (,SouXrjv /lirpuv wjOpa}-::oq '' Protagoras." INTRODUCTION. 48 {7iTrwv) argument overthrow a stronger (xpsiTTwv X6yo^) argument; — such was the foundation of the sophists' doctrine. Philosophic scepticism was born in Greece from an excess of metaphysical speculation, just as the idealistic exaggerations of the Cartesians elicited the scepticism of the eighteenth century. But, if excesses are explained by reaction, they are never justifiable, especially when they step from the domain of pure ideas into that of morality in order to destroy it. The scepticism of the eighteenth century produced Hel- vetius, d'llolbach, and Lamettrie ; * the sophists of Greece did not hesitate, on their part, to draw from their doctrine its lurking poisons. Is the law of con- science indefeasible ? or is the law of natui*e the only true law? Is divine justice aught but an oratorical supposition? Does a successful crime cease to be criminal I That is according to circumstances. Yes, if the thing suits you ; no, if you find the contrary more advantageous. Thus Greece, by subtilizing, amused * "The sentiment of self-love is the only basis upon which a use- ful morality can be founded." (Helvetius, De V Esprit.) " It would be useless, and perhaps unjust, to require man to be virtuous if he were not so without rendering himself unhappy: when vice renders man happy he is to love vice." (D'Holbach, Systeme de la Nature.) Lameltrie, Passim: "Remorse arises from the prejudices of educa. tion. * ♦ * It is permitted, according to the law of nature and Puf- fendorff, to take by force a little of that which another has in excess." Lamettrie considers innocenl "those philosophical demolitions of vices and virtues. That will not prevenl the people, a vile herd of imbeciles, from continuing their course, from respecting the lives and purses of others, and from believing in the most ridiculous preju- dices." Such is the philosophy which he calls " our amiable queen," and Voltaire "execrable." According to this philosophical physi- cian, man is a " machine." The whole machine gets out of order if its springs are forced to overwork. The author of VArt de Jouir died of indigestion. His landlord, it is true, Fredrick, "the Solomon of the North," wTOte his funeral oration. 44 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. herself as if fencing with demonstrations or refutations of the most necessary moral truths. Protagoras commenced one of his works with this peremptory declaration: ''Are there gods, or are there no gods ? Two reasons prevent me from devoting my- self to the examination of this question: the uncer- tainty of the thing, and the brevity of human life." Antiphon, although a man of grave character and weighty eloquence (he was surnamed Nestor), laughs at the prejudicial and religious beliefs of his contem- poraries. " Certain men do not live the present life, but prepare themselves with great trouble, as if they had to live another life, and not the present life; in the meantime the iiours escape them, and their time has past."* This present life, the sole object of the sophists, was precisely what Socrates disregarded for the life to come, — Socrates, a novice lika the sophists as to scientific methods, but as hostile to their religious and moral scepticism as to their filigreed language. Sophistry, "a school of impudence, "had instructed the great statesman of the Gorgias. Callicles threw away the preconceptions of small minds as litter. The strongest reason is always the best. Might conquers right, — a theory upheld in our day by important per- sonages, with the annexation of provinces to support them; a theory formerly taught in certain schools of Greece, and put into practice by her statesmen, f By losing the sense of the true, the sophists and the Athenians, their subservient disciples, lost the sen- timent of divine existence, of goodness and justice, which are identified with it. That which the experi- * Orat. Attici, Didot, p. 238, § 125; G. Perrot, V Eloquence Judi- ciatre el Politique a Athenes. t Thucydides, i, 76 ; iii, 37, 40 ; v, 89 <}t seq. INTRODUCTION. 45 ence of antiquity, with Hesiod and ^sop, had only considered as a brutal fact,* the sophists had set up as a principle, and this principle they applied with a cruel logic worthy of MachiavePs Prince, These poi- soned maxims sooner or later destroyed those who fostered them.f Athens profited by the apology for tyranny and usurpation. Under the grasp of Philip she bitterly expiated her sophisms. The moral influence of the sophists was therefore very pernicious, but their influence on eloquence was not altogether bad. The Attic orators profited by their researches without sacrificing to their errors. The justness and stability of the Attic temperament had reacted against the allurements' of Sicilian vices. In the hands of Lysias, Isaeus, and their school, prose, judiciously elaborated, learned to adorn itself without coquetry, to blend simplicity and grace, vigor and ease. No longer were there evidences of effort or laborious meditation, but an easy and fluent style, less solicitous to induce reflection than to instruct by its precision and clearness. No longer do we behold in it the glittering prisms of sophistry, with irredescent colors and flattering illusions. It is a transparent crystal, in which objects appear in their natural tints and propor- tions. Nor need the eye disentangle their real con- tours under artificial reflections and undulating move- ments. It beholds them clearly drawn in mellow re- ♦^sop, The Earthen Kettle and the Iron Kettle; Hesiod, T?i£ Nightingale and the Hawk. f "Whoever plays the tyrant inevitably falls into the evils of tyranny, and suffei-s what he caused others to suffer. Athens has testified to this. She placed ganisons in the citadels of other cities, and, as a result of this, saw the enemy (the Lacedaemonians) master of her own." Isocrates, Discourse on Peace, p. 113, § 91 ; Didot. 46 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. lieiVlike the tracery of cordage on a Pirsean ship under the fading rays of the setting sun. Third Period.— The Attics bequeathed to their suc- cessors an exquisite instrument, — a clear, expressive, and sufficiently picturesque prose. Their eloquence was at all times a little wanting in action and heat.* This placidity, which, acco-ding to our taste, verges upon coldness, was imposed upon the orators by law. The Athenians knew themsel ^es too well to trust them- selves to eloquence. Ulysses closed the ears of his companions to the song of the sirens; the Athenians captivated the mouths of the sirens f in the agora. The law of the tribunals interdicted pathetic appeals. If the advocate attempted to use the pathetic, an officer recalled him to his duty. The Areopagus observed this rule with jealous respect; however, it was eluded on the day when Hyperides pleaded for Phryne. The mute eloquence of unveiled beauty touched the grave assemblage, — an overwhelming peroration not fore- seen by the laws. The mild eloquence of the genuine Attics was unequal to the agitations of the Macedonian period. Political orators then kindled the fire which Atticism had preferred to leave smouldering. The "clear fountain" became an impetuous torrent; the "gentle zephyr" a "tempest accompanied with thun- der-bolts." i This eloquence was not only artistic, but militant in the midst of impassioned contests between the adversaries and partisans of Philip. One side, *We may mention, as an exception, the pathetic peroration of Andocide's. discourse On the Mysteries; Oratoi-es Attici. Didot, p. 72, Sec. 144. f On Isocrates' tomb a column thirty cubits high was erected, upon which was surmounted a siren seven cubits in height X Quintilian, vi, 1 ; x, 1. INTRODUCTION. 47 through venality or good faith, advised the Macedo- nian alliance. They saw in the father of Alexander, not an ambitious man, meditating, by craft and force, to strike the heaviest blow that the Greek world could suffer, — the destruction of Athenian liberty; but they c^-y^^sjg^ looked upon him as the pacifactory arbiter of danger- v^I ous dissensions, — the future leader of Europe against Asia. \The other party spurned this savior as the violator of Athenian dignity by his past life and des- \ tined course. The}^ marshaled themselves against him I with all the force of their genius, with the recollection I of their ancient valor, which they laid before the eyes of those Athenians who were indifferent about the in- vader. At their head appeared Demosthenes, the voice of his mother country and the savior of Hellenic lib- erty, if it were possible to save it. [ But if Phocion was the "chopper"^ of Demosthene?r arguments, Demos- thenes could not likewise be the "chopper" of Philip'^ actions, andvas might triumphed over right, arms tri- umphed over eloquence.'n We will study this period, the most beautiful and last of Greek eloquence. After a sublime effort, and a burst of genius worthy of the patriotism which insp ired it, eloquence fell and perished wTm everything else; it exhaled its last breath at Ca- lauria, on that day when, in the presence of the satel- lites of Antipater, the author of the Dilation on tlie Crown expired. • Let us here repeat a fact worthy of notice, and con- tradictory to the common ground of the joint respon- sibility of morals and eloquence. Messala {Dialogue of Orators) labors to find the causes of the decline of eloquence. He imagines he finds the principal one in * i) T(bv i/idtv Xoywv xot:\(z dviiTTaTai^ a saying of Demosthenes, according to Plutarch. 48 POLITICAL ELOQUEKCE IN GKEECE. INTRODUCTION. 49 I ! the decline of morals. Seneca* also affirms that morals are the regulators of eloquence. ''As is life, so is the language; moreover, wherever you see a corrupt lan- guage, you can be assured that the morals are cor- rupted." This estimate is not altogether true. Style may undoubtedly be the mirror of character. Mecoe- nas and the Spartan Sthenelaidas, Nicias and Alcibia- des, had not the same soul; they did not speak with the same air. Eloquence often savors of a baseness of the heart, or reflects its nobility. But does it follow from this possible correlation that the decline of morals necessarily draws with it that of art and speech ? Lit- erary and political history deny this assertion; for the heart may remain pure when the taste becomes de- praved, and not unfrequently taste has been purified at an instant when the soul had lost its virtuous energy. Moral sentiment ennobles eloquence as well as the works f art in general, but it is not indispensable to them. And so the palmiest days of heroism in Greece were not the days of her eloquence. The soldiers of Marathon and Salamis were citizens rather than ora- tors: Themistocles must be excepted, for he was emi- nently both the one and the other. But even his example confirms the natural independence of genius and virtue. Aristides, morally his superior, stood far below him in political genius and oratorical talent. During the period intervening between the close of the Peloponnesian war and the Macedonian interven- tion, f the sentiment of moral grandeur appeared to be banished from Hellenic society. And yet this was the epoch during which eloquence prepared itself for the * Ad Ludlium, 114. f Ot. Muller cited the fact without stopping to explain it, t. ii, p. 573, of the translation by M. K. Hillebrand. flight which was destined to carry it to perfection in the immortal productions, of Demosthenes and ^schi- nes. This phenomenon is not at all surprising. Al- ready eloquence had presented a striking contrast with morals during the struggle between Athens and the Dorian race. Who is not struck in Thucydides* with the somber picture of Greek profligacy, in the midst of the fearful commotions of the Peloponnesian war, and of rampant passions of the most detestable dye ? Eloquence had then lost much of its moral ex- cellence, but it retained its artistic worth. Alcibiades and Cleon, statesmen infested with the vices of their time, and worthy of the felicitations of Timon, the Misanthrope, were, to the misfortune of Athens, very powerful orators. This proves that moral conscience and taste (a kind of aesthetic conscience, applicable to the estimate of the beautiful), do not necessarily follow a parallel development. On the contrary, perfect elo- quence, the master of all its resources, presumes cul- ture and an advanced state of civilization, rarely the consorts of austere morals, f '^ Grand eloquence, like fire, requires aliments to nourish it, action to excite it; it is in burning that it displays its brilliancy.":]: Now the most combustible substances are not always the purest. The scourge of war raises up great captains; eloquence lives on storms, on guilty angers or holy wraths. Demosthenes hated the invader with a zeal * iii, 82, 84. t Bautru's calumnious sally is well known, " An honest man and good morals do not harmonize " ; and this saying, which is surprising in a man of good taste, "The society of women corrupts morals and forms the taste." {Esprit des Lou, xix, 8.) These sentiments, if well founded, would justify J. J. Rousseau's paradox on the per- nicious influence of civilization and society. X Dialogue of ilxe Oratoi's^ 36. 3 V 50 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE rN GKEECE. that did him as much honor as his eloquence. Never- theless it must be conceded that the patriotic dislikes which were at the bottom of his heart were (to omit other weak points which it would be puerile to deny) allied to rancorous personal feuds: a source of action far from generous, albeit his eloquence was still admi- rable. His oration on the prevarications of the embassy equals, in an artistic point of view, his finest PhUippica. The ideal definition of an orator given by Cato is rather a wish than the statement of a general fact. How many men among the ancients and modems have failed to maintain their integrity on the same elevation of their talents! Satis eloquential, sapientim parum. Sallust applies this phrase to Catiline. It could be as appropriately applied to his historian and to other per- sonages. Thus it appears that bad taste and good morals are sometimes found together. In France the theorists of the charming, of the sensational, have often been a very estimable and extremely serious class of people. For instance. Father Bouhours and Montes- quieu {E88ai 8ur le gout). "A magistrate rose by his merit to the highest dignity. He published a moral work in which the sarcasm is unique" (Labruyere). Taste, before the time of Boileau, was generally de- testable, but can it be said that the first half of the seventeenth century was inferior in its morals to the last half? TO . 1. -J 4. 4? Let us return to Greek eloquence. If, in the midst ot the decline of private and public morals, when a Philoc- rates and a Timarchus were possible, in the bosom of tri- umphant egotism and venality,\&reece, always proud of her past history, but incapable of sustaining it, produced her most famous orators, she owed it to circumstances ♦ Vir bonus dicendi peritus. INTRODUCTION. 51 especially favorable which made such orators contem- porary with the merciless duel between Athens and PhilipTlnd the inheritors of the progress made in the art orSpeaking during the age of Pericles and the Attic school. A master of these treasures of experience and art, ^schines lavishly resorted to them, and used them with a talent difiicult to excel. Demosthenes, like his adversary, sometimes took advantage of them under the goad of disordered passions. But in him the citizen fortunately governed the individual. His soul was purged of its impurity by the bitter toils of patriotism, he rose above his rival with all the superiority that the heart has over the mind. More firmly bound to the laws of honor than Pythia herself, and the faithful interpreter of Athens, enslaved, but proud in the midst of her defeat, when, after seven years of servitude, she at last, with the author of the Oration on the Grown, received her revenge of Chae- ronea, Demosthenes, the orator of duty, united in one finished work artistic and moral beauty. The galaxy of Grecian orators terminates in him as a theological system carries in triumph the statue of an immortal. Homer is the poet of all poets. De- mosthenes is eloquence personified. Men desirous of serving their country at the tribune should study him and become imbued with his eloquence, ever ancient, yet ever new. T^emosthenes will therefore forever breathe his spirit and influence upon citizens burning to repel a public enemy with the sword of speechri He will ever be the law of eloquence,* the herald oi national dignity and liberty. * Quintilian, x, 1, Lex Orandi. V ill j^^^^g « I Tt*lf^^f^W w CHAPTER II. PHILIP-THE ATHENIANS. AFTER the lapse of twenty centuries the harangues J\. of Demosthenes again delight the learned and instruct the philosophic histoiian. They remind him how the states went to ruin. The orator's counsels and reproaches to the Athenians should always be an ob- ject of meditation among people who desire to escape the failings which destroyed Greece forever. To thor- oughly appreciate the power of Demosthenes' eloquence, and the difficulty of the task which he confronted, it is necessary to liave present in our mind the obstacles which accumulated before him; to be well acquainted with the public enemy, Philip, who had also become the orator's private enemy, and with his domestic ad- versary, the Athenian people, whose vices became the Macedonian's allies. We will afterward see what resources Demosthenes could draw from his soul and genius to struggle against two antagonists equally formidable. I. Philip, detained several years at Thebes as a hostage, profited by his disgrace, and studied, in the heart of Greece, that military art which he afterward used so skillfully against her. At the school of the victor of Leuctra, Epaminondas, he conceived the idea of the Macedonian phalanx, formed on the model of Thebes' sacred army, and destined to play so important a role in history. Thus Thebes educated the soldier who was 68 0>\ PHILIP — THE ATHENIANS. 53 to crush the liberties of Greece at Chseronea. At the head of his phalanx, Philip routed the cohorts of the presumptuous Lysicles, and joined the victorious wing of his son Alexander. This powerful machine required careful management, otherwise it was but poorly adapt- ed to all kinds of action. Philip reserved it for decisive conflicts. He ordinarily avoided pitched battles. That he might more surely surprise his enemy, instead of heavy cohorts, he advanced and retreated at the head of a fly- ing camp, composed of archers and light cavalry. Alert and always ready — for he made no distinction between winter and summer— he changed his position at will and unexpectedly fell upon cities. The Athe- nians were not so active; they consulted the aspects of the moon; they followed old national customs which were disregarded by this barbarian king; they only waged war willingly during four or five months of fine weather. "Our century does not at all resemble preceding cen- turies, and this is especially true in the art of war, be- cause it appears to have had action and progress. "* The Athenian strategy of the good old times was discon- certed, scandalized by these innovations contrary to all rules which had hitherto been respected. Likewise, the thundering marches of Bonaparte were incongruous to the sentiment of the old German generals who had been habituated to exact and methodical evolutions and to the patient combinations practiced during the thirty- seven years' war. Philip, like Caesar at a later day, believed he had done nothing if anything remained for him to do. He well knew how to prosecute everything with obstinate activity, to prepare everything timely, and to foresee everything; action, movement, was his sole life. As a general, he was diligent and inevitable, * Third Philippic. hAA -*'^*^-'^'-^"ni htaa III"' 54 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. and at all times displayed dauntless bravery. Demos- thenes paid him this homage: •* I saw Philip, our adversary, braving all dangers that he might command and become master; I saw him deprived of an eye, his shoulder broken, his hand and legs maimed; I saw him freely and cheerfully resigning any part of his body which fortune pleased to take, so that he might enjoy the rest with renown and glory."* This passion for glory, which rendered Philip regard- less of his body and life, made him at a later period respect his vanquished enemy. He was urged to destroy Athens. "May it never please God," he responded, " that I should destroy the theatre of glory; my sole work is for it. " He also labored to satisfy an insatiable ambition; he himself confessed it: " I am at peace only with those who are willing to obey me." This thirst for rule led him to carry his arms into most opposite countries, from Phocis to the Danube, from the Hemus (the Bal- kans) to Euboea, from the Peloponnesus to Byzantium, and even into Scythia. Master of Illyricum, of Chalcidice, of theChersonesus, of Thermopylae, of all the avenues of central Greece north and south, no aggrandisement could satisfy him. ''Greece and the barbarian countries wern all too narrow for the ambition of this wretched mortal." In his eyes no conquest was small. Compelled to withdraw for a moment from Athens, his most coveted prey, he throws his army upon the "poor villages of Thrace, willing to brave toils, cold and hunger and extreme dangers for such conquests. * ^ ^ That he may plunder the Thracian vaults of their rye and mil- * Fro Corona, %Q1. f':- PHILIP THE ATHENIANS. 55 let, he faces the stormy deep in the midst of winter. **•}<• ^ miserable Macedonian, born in a country where it is impossible to purchase even a good slave." He is raised over Greece, and appointed to preside at the Pythian games, the most august of her national solemnities. He receives the privilege of consulting the oracle first. Admitted with reverence into the amphictyonic council, the sovereign arbiter of Hellenic differences, the instrument of the gods' vengeance on their profaners, nothing satiates him. The undisputed ruler of all Greece, invested since Chaeronea with the hegemony which was formerly an object of emulation among the great cities of Greece, he will not yet be at ease. Proclaimed generalissimo of the eastern forces against Asia, he will dream of the conquests reserved for his son, and at the moment of entering upon this new career a murderer's dagger will consign him, at the age of forty-seven, to his first, his last repose. (336 B.C.) Philip's first entrance into the government revealed in him qualities characteristic of a great politician: he became a master of intrigues, and his intrigues were successful. At first, regent of Macedonia in the name of his nephew, Amyntas, he supplanted him. At the age of twenty-four, by virtue of his address and energy, sometimes criminal, he succeeded in maintaining him- self against his enemies at home and abroad. Of this number were the Athenians from the origin. They were the partisans of Argaeus, the foremost one of his competitors for the crown. The Greeks had long wished to interfere in his affairs. He paid them well for it. Their covetousness and traditional jealousies furnished arms against them, and the artful Macedo- nian used them with success. He besieged Amphipo- i I 56 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. /~ lis, a position long disputed by Athens and Macedonia. The Athenians wished to aid it. Philip checked them by promising that he would surrender it to them when once captured. He took it and guarded it. (358 b.c.) A year afterward he deprived them of Potida^a, and gave it to the Olynthians, who were then hostile to Athens. Later, Olynthus was seized in. its tuJTi (348 B.C.). r^is device was to take advantage of divisions and cdS^uer them. He saw that the Thessalians, the Thebans, the Phocidians, had become suspicious of one another. He duped them in their turn, and subjugated them all, one with the assistance of another, j Against Sparta (for his ambitious activity embraced 'Sll Greece) he used the interested intervention of Argos and Mes- sene, or the antipathy of the Arcadians. T He gave to one city what he plundered from another, ^n this way he was assured of accomplices^] He fomented intestine hatreds; he baffled in advance all attempts at coalition. The cities, blinded by cupidity or municipal enmities, did not see that, in exchange for trivial advantages, — guarantees only as real as the rays of the sun given to the brothers of Perdiccas by the king of Sabaa, — the common enemy robbed them of their honor and their arms. Philip, in order to enjoy the right of contend- ing for the crowns at the Olympic games, proclaimed himself a descendant of Hercules. He was neither a Greek, nor allied to the Greeks, but worthy of being such. He had many qualities in common with Homer's Ulysses. He was not only patient, inured to fatigue, but also sagacious, fertile in resources, and skillful in strategy. He could metamorphose* himself and im- personate different characters. He was a man conipe- tent to do everything {'auoupyoq), to feign everything. ♦ IJoXuTXaqj ^oixdo/iTjTt^j 7roXufxrJxa'ju<;^ TzuXuTpoTZtK;. \j PHILIP THE ATHENIANS. 57 According to the state of his affairs, he alternately caressed or intimidated. His speeches were spirited or reserved,, even humble (especially after the alliance of Athens and Thebes). He advanced or retreated, resisted or yielded, at the proper moment. Philip was a prudent politician, and practiced the diplomatic maxim of always giving the appearance of right to his own side; his clemency never despaired: " Notwithstanding so many provoking iniquities, I have respected your city, your temples, and your territory. I could, however, have taken much, even captured all. I have persisted in my desire to submit our mutual complaints to a court of arbitration." The duplicity of his actions is especially apparent in his contest (always disavowed) against Athens. He has sworn to take it, and, as far as he is able, from the moment he steps on Hellenic ground he proclaims his friendship for the city of Minerva. On all occasions he treats her with respect, and flatters her. He sends the Athenian prisoners, loaded with presents, back to the camp of Aro-aeus; he treats the Athenian garrison of Potidsea with civility, later he will promise to liberate the cap- tives of Olynthus: "See how far my good will for you goes. I have given to yon this island (Halon- nesns); your orators have not permitted you to receive it." After such pledges who would dare distrust him ? His designs are innocent; his intentions equit- able and peaceable. " Let us have peace"," is his cry. His partisans publish it; he himself declares it in writ- ing: and therefore we doubt the sincerity of his desire ! The Athenians are impressed by his peaceful measures, and observe the truce; Philip profits by it, and ad- vances his schemes. Athens is at peace with Philip, but Philip is not at peace with Athens. While his 58 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. abused enemy is disarmed, the invader pursues his hos- tilities; he scales the ramparts without striking a blow. What need has he of violence when stratagem suf- fices ? There will always be time enough to draw the sword when the adversary, driven to desperation, revolts. Convicted, taken in the very act, he still denies his intentions. When necessary he affects a hypocritical devotion to the victims whom he has already baffled; to the unfortunate Oretians he answers: " I have sent my soldiers to visit you ; it is out of love for you, for I have learned that you are suflfering from factions; the duty of an ally, of a true friend, is to present himself at such a crisis." Philip excelled in secret manoeuvres; in the face of hostilities he concealed his designs and retreated; in the meantime he strengthened himself little by little, and advanced. As soon as his knavery made him master he threw off the mask. No longer did he offer promises of friendship and protestations of innocence, but menacing reproaches. Here are a few extracts from a letter of this friend of Athens. " Notwithstanding my frequent embassies for the main- tenance of our oaths and agreements, you have never turned your attention to this side of the question. I believe, then, I ought to acquaint you with those points in respect of which I consider myself slighted. Be not at all astonished at the length of this letter: my grievances are numerous, and it is indispensable that I should explain myself clearly upon all of them." The enumeration of the iniquities of Athens follows. The most grievous wrong on the part of the city is to have at last opened her eyes, and to have rendered war in return for war against this honest neighbor. PHILIP THE ATHENIANS. 59 *'Such are my grievances. You are the aggressors, and my moderation renders you bolder, and makes you more eager to do me all the injury within your power. It to-day becomes my duty to repulse you; I will call the gods to wit- ness, and I will settle the diflBculty." Philip declared war against the Athenians in this message. For twelve years he had been preparing for war. Athens was his sole object. The alarms of Athens increased in proportion as his oblique measures, his winding marches, dissimulated' by pretense and decisions of every kind, progressed; but the Macedo- nian's oaths and machinations increased also, and the city, not seeing the danger, remained inactive. When once the adversary is at his mercy, Philip openly pre- pares for decisive action; a single blow remains to be given, and he feels himself the stronger; the key of the house, the house itself, is within his reach; what need has he to play the role of hypocrite any longer ? Philip knows where the nerve of Athenian power is located: in the preponderance of her naval forces, he endeavors to cause the maritime arsenals of the Piraeus to be burned: in the tributes accruing from her allied islands, he makes an effort to exhaust this source of her revenues. The Athenian piracy does great injury to Philip; it impedes importation and exportation from Macedonia: against a pirate a pirate and a half. The Macedonian piratical boats proceed to enrich them- selves by plundering the allies of Athens; they fall upon Lemnos, Imbros, Gerestos, and Marathon, from which they take away the sacred trireme. Philip, the corsair, aspires to the guardianship of the sea. The pirates infest the Archipelago and the coasts of Asia Minor. Philip is to intervene and assist the Greeks; this will give him an opportunity to inspect the coasts. / 60 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. PHILIP THE ATHENIANS. 61 to practice intrigue among the islands, sometimes to take possession of them (thus he takes the island of Halonnesus from the pirate Sostratus); to favor the development of his marine, the most cherished of his aspirations; and, under the disguise of friendly coop- eration, he will corrupt the allies of Athens. He fol- lows his adversary over all lands; like a vigilant senti- nel he watches, and attacks him on all sides; he knows that whenever he assails he cannot fail to injure and finally to conquer. Philip is not only a friend of the Greeks, but also of their gods. Their religious quarrels during the Sa- cred War offer him many an opportunity to become obtrusive. The pillage of the temple at Delphi (about 355 B.C.), and, later, the impiety of Cirrha in culti- vating a consecrated field, place a devout army in the hands of this protector of religion. Invested by the Amphictyons with an absolute military command {(TTpaTrjo^^ aoToxprhopa)^ lie marclics at the head of his soldiers, and, like them, encircles his head with Apol- lo's laurel. He is the minister of the vengeance of the god who leads him. He writes to the Peloponnesians: "With you I wish to aid the god and punish those who transgress things held sacred among men," and piously he keeps his word. Sacrilegious Phocis is de- livered to conflagration, and its inhabitants to slaugh- ter. The CirrhjEans, contemners of religious decrees, are chastised. All labor deserves its recompense. His first intervention opens to him without a struggle the pass of Thermopylae (346 b.c); the second, by the cap- ture of Elatea (339 b.c), the road to Attica. These two thunderbolts produced consternation in Athens; but did she not know that the gods protect the de- fenders of their outraged rights ? Notwithstanding this protection, Philip sometimes founders. Checked the first time at Thermopylae, he postpones this blow. He knows how to await. He could not strike his enemy there; he hastens to meet him in his colonies of the Chersonesus, and marks all vulnerable points. Beaten in Thessaly by Onomarchus of Phocis, he displays in his defeat a new energy and destroys his adversary. Populsed from Perinthus, from Bvzantium, driven from the Hellespont, he is not discouraged. Obstinate, tenacious, his eye fixed upon his object, he changes his means of attack, but not the end. He spies the shores of Greece as a wolf prowls around a sheep-fold; he explores Megara, Am- bracia, and Euboea. He always appears at the post from which he can best hold his enemy in check. He varies his line of march that he may baffle the sus- picion of wise prophets. If a fortress is impregnable to engines of war, he causes its gates to fall before *'an ass laden with gold." Affable, eloquent, capti- vating by his very person, he can use bribery at a longer range than his catapults. The gold mines of the Pangsea, without mentioning those of Thessaly and Thrace, give him a thousand talents per annum. He employs them in purchasing Greece, with her generals, her orators, and her oracles. Among those who draw salaries are skillful flatterers who lull the Athenian, people to sleep by their deceptive promises, and who extol their indolence. Others surrender to him their troops or the strongholds which they have promised to defend. In this manner he takes possession of Pydna, Amphipolis, and Olynthus. He does not, it is true, always allow the traitors to enjoy the fruits of their treason. His object once accomplished, he dis- cards them. He fears to share the glory of success v^ k^ I I 62 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. with them; and he is assured, notwithstanding these bitter returns, that he will never be in want of them. He declares the man contemptible who sells himself, and he does not count on his fidelity. Who had sacri- ficed the Hellenic cause for the profits of a Macedonian alliance more eagerly than the Thebans ? Neverthe- less the Thebans one day betrayed him; nor did the victor of Chseronea (338 b.c.) spare these deserters. He put them to the sword or sold them. Athens, on the contrary, alone of the Greek cities, always resisted his offers and encroachments. He hated and esteemed her; he pursued her furiously, yet admired her; he returned her prisoners and spared her the dishonor of yielding to a Macedonian garrison. Was it not as great a disgrace to her to be deprived of her liberty? Philip, in his eagerness to rule, appealed to the bad instincts of human nature: jealousy, cupidity, in short all the infirmities of egotism. He excelled in corrup- tion, and,by his corruption, in conquering. Violent and perfidious, mild and merciless, pious and cruel, "^ accord- ing to the views of his policy, disdaining mankind as all ambitious men have done, he himself had his vices, but instead of allowing them to obstruct his designs, he turned them into allies as efficacious as his good quali- ties: activity, indefatigable perseverance, heroic valor, .military talent, profoundness and versatility, passion for glory, and finally that factitious grandeur accom- panying stupendous projects which were executed at the cost of an admirable unfolding of intelligence and ,«-• -.r, h^^> f^ * He cast three thousand prisoners of Phocis into the sea out of piety. In less than three years he destroyed thirty-two cities of Chal- cidice. At Olynthus, he gave liberty to some friends of a Greek comedian, and killed his two brothers; he had previously caused a third to perish. (Jusiitij viii, 3 ; ix, 8 ; Diodorus Siculus, xvi, 54, 95.) PHILIP — THE ATHENIANS. 63 eneroy, but without scruple and regardless of the means. Such was Philip, an enemy formidable in him- self and strengthened still more by the blunders of his adversaries. II. After Man tinea (361 b.c), confusion and trouble reigned in all Greece more than ever. Never did the Hellenic cities, not even in the time of the Persian invasions, form a body of general confederation, capa- ble of uniting all the forces of the country against the public enemy. " I do not see the Greeks united by a common friendship. There are those who place more confidence in the enemy than in certain of their own body." The envious rivalries which divided Lacedae- mon, Athens and Thebes, omitting the cities which re- mained strangers to the practice or even covetousness of the hegemony, broke the union which it had been so necessary to form; and, if patriotism is the sympathy of all with all in a common order of ideas and sentiments, the object of which is the good opjie common country, Greece never kn ew patriotism. ^F ear of the invader, the strongest Bond of liarmony, never made her entirely united around a common hearthTjas was the Roman republic in the face of the GaflTs or of Hannibal. That altar of Vesta — a symbol of a country one and indivisible; those public penates; that temple of Jupi- ter Capitolinus — the unique seat of the Roman empire; and finally that strong cohesion of the whole people united in their convictions and faith in common desti- nies; — where could these be found in Greece, with her diversities or antipathies of race, and her parceling out of little personalities, active and vigorous in themselves, but weak as a whole on account of a distrustful and 64 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECK PHILIP — THE ATHENIANS. 65 jealous isolation? At Marathon, Athens was alone in line; Sparta waited, before marching, until the moon was full. At Salamis, Athens with her allies was the rampart of Greece. At Platsea, the struggle was sustained by the Athenians, the Lacedaemonians, the Tegeatans and Megarians, against the Persians and their Greek auxiliaries, among others the Tliobans. At Chffironea, the last battle-field of liberty, Athens and Thebes alone met the enemy. Lacedsemon did not even appear too late then as she had done at Marathon. There was an intellectual Pan-Hellenism Uaidzia'EkXr,vixr;)\ there was no political, and even less a patriotic Pan-Hellenism. Greece was an aggregation of egotistical individualities incapable of disinterested sacrifices. In the oration On the Navy Boards, the ora- tor speaks of the design, ascribed to the great king, of attacking Greece: " He will give gold, he will offer his friendship to some, while they, wishing to repair their individual losses, will sacrifice the common safety. Many might, without the charge of inconsistency, neg- lect the rest of Greece, while engaged in the pursuit of private interests"; and further: "the Hellenes might wish to place themselves on his pay-roll, not so much to procure any conquests for him, as to escape their poverty and acquire a little personal ease." Such are the dispositions of the Greeks in respect to this mon- arch, "wealthier himself than all the Greeks together, and whose gold loads two hundred camels." They will be the same toward Philip, who is less opulent but more dexterous. He will know how to entice their cupidity and dupe them. Some will not entertain the design of giving him arms against the Hellenes, but the crafty statesman will know how to turn their pas- sions to his profit, even against their will. Never did $ » H the Athenians consent to these shameful bargains, even by deceit ; but what other advantages they allowed Philip to take against theml^pThey dread Philip ^ I the enemy, not of their libertyTHbut of their repos^ / Careless, buoyant, a mere trifle distracts them from their duty. In the midst of the most important deliber- ation, if a child's story had been narrated to them they would have received extreme pleasure from it. And in fact a short tale was sometimes necessary to compel the frivolous multitude to listen. Without being devoted to laughter perpetually, like the Tirynthians, the happy subjects of Amphitryon, who was the king beloved of Jupiter, the Athenians acquitted the greatest criminals, even when convicted, "in return for one or two witty re- marks." Instead of delighting in the reasoning of the orator, they are carried away by nicknames and jokes of which he is the object before the tribune; they turn everything to pleasantry. A rhetorician at Olympia pledges them to union. " This man exhorts us to con- cord," remarks an auditor, " and in this he cannot per- suade the three persons who compose his household, his wife, himself and his servant." Such is the fruit which they draw from his harangue. It is necessary to divert them in order to win them. Leo of Byzan- tium is deputed to Athens; he appears; a general laughrer welcomes his small stature. "Ah! what would you think," says the clever ambassador to them, "if you should see my wife; she scarcely reaches to ♦ The author intended here to portray only the traits of Athe- nian character which pertain to this part of his subject. A complete portrait would be more favorable, and would recall the canvass on which Parrhasius essayed to picture the contradictory qualities of a fantastic and unequable people. (Pliny, Natural History, xxxv, ch. 86, § 5. Cf. Thucydides, i, 70; Plato, Laws, books i and ii.) 3* 66 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. PHILIP — THE ATHENIANS. 67 my knee " ? The laughter and cheers redouble. "And yet, as small as we are, when we have a dispute between us, Byzantium is not large enough to contain us." Athenian gayety respects nothing, not even the venera- ble Areopagus. A member of that convention, when it was assembled before the people, used, in regard to a decree of Timarchus, and without thinking of any evil, terms implying double meanings, in which the malignity of his audience saw an allusion to the ques- tionable houses which that personage used to frequent. Several times the hilarity of the public underlined cer- tain expressions of the honorable and candid orator; but behold, when, with a deep tone, he entered into details, the assembly no longer governed itself, it burst out in laughter. The crier interceded: "Do you not blush for laughing thus before the Areopagus? " What could he do ? The wanton laughter was like a panic, irresistible; and it was not at Athens that the people thought of subduing it."^ The Athenians were amused at the disputes of their orators as they would be at cock-fights. Demosthenes ill understands how to amuse them on every occasion. He is a water-drinker. He constantly entertains a people entirely devoted to pleasure with their trouble- some duties. Loving leisure, they passed their time pleasantly chatting in the barber's or in the perfumer's shop. Fond of news, they went to and from the agora asking one another. What news ? For want of news they forged it. "The sublimity of the newsmonger is chimerical reasoning on politics" (Labruyere). The Athenians reasoned, conjectured, interpreted Philip's designs. They described what he had never done, and refused to believe what he was seen to do every * .^Eschines, Against Timarchus^ § 8L day. Each one forged his own fable, scrutinized the future; no one thought of his present duty. After magnificent decrees they laid down their arms on a slight rumor, just at the time when the report announc- ing Philip's death or illness should have arolised them to immediate action more than ever before.* Always with humor to give in excess, they passed from ex- treme discouragement to extreme confidence; from pre- sumption to despair. Credulous to whosoever flat- tered them, they closed their ears to the admonitions of Demosthenes; they opened them with complaisance to the pacific counsels of Phocion, to the naive illu- sions of Isocrates, and to the cleverness of those coun- sellors of injustice, the detestable authors of belligerent motives. Obstinately blind, the Athenians found it more convenient to turn their eyes from danger than to meet it. Philip has seized Thermopylae. At this news there is great agitation in the agora. The subject is dis- cussed, accusations are made, the people are excited; then, with tlie aid of their egotism, they come to tran- quillizing reflections. It is still far from Thermopylae to the Piraeus. No danger in delaying. However, if Philip has overleaped the rampart of Greece, it is for the sole object, — he himself has given his word for it, — of concluding the Sacred War, which has stained Greece with blood for more than ten years (357-346 B.C.). Athens does not oppose these charitable meas- ures. With a light heart she assists in the destruction of the accursed Phocidians. Philip, master of Phocis, descends toward the south. The Athenians are dis- * In an analogous circumstance, Phocion will tell them at a later time: " Do nothing hastily. If Alexander is dead to-day, he will be dead to-morrow and the tollowing days." .^- 68 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. PHILIP THE ATHENIANS. 69 turbed only in a moderate degree. Philip has not yet attacked the Theban power. Now, Athens has con- quered the Thebans. Thebes is threatened, — Athens' consolation: since Man tinea, Theban arrogance has humiliated Athens. Did not Epaminondas dare to say to the multitude that "it was necessary to trans- fer the Propylaea of the Acropolis to the vestibule of the Cadmea ? " And then these Boeotians are as stupid and heavy as the air that nourishes them. Why should any one at Athens be interested in people who have no spirit and character? Boeotia is subjugated, the Thebans destroyed, and the invader has reached a new halting place. Athens begins to take the hint. The great justiciary of the sacrileges of Phocis and of The- ban insolence alway* advances. He is about to touch the point. Pin vain Demosthenes has given the alarm: To arm^, Athenians ! Those machines erected against Thebes are going to demolish your own walls. If Boeotia perishes, you will perish, for you are the par- ticular men whom the Macedonian fears and wishes to annihilate. Wealthy men, give your gold; wealthy and poor, mount your galleys, seize the oar and spear ! * * "^ Demosthenes, a disagreeable prophet, an inex- orable patriot, is not listened to; for ^schines tran- quillizes them. His brow is serene. He pronounces the 8uspicioi\s of this morose orator falsehoods injuri- ous to Philip/l He advises the Athenians to spare their money, their lives, and to continue in the enjoyment Q f_ the ir rest. This agreeable language is a feast for themT^anJ while treason and violence pursue their work, unfortunate Athens does not stir. At the most, she is only agitated, but she does not act. Too often her movements are as fruitless for her as is her repose. She is generous, and adopts resolutions worthy of her in favor of the oppressed, but sne does not adhere to them. An orator proposes an expe- dition. Act to-day^ cries the assembly; and neither on this day nor on the next is anything accomplished. She votes forty triremes and sixty talents. She sends ten empty boats with five talents of silver, and at another time "a general without troops, a decree with- out force, and the boastings of her tribune." ^She wages against Philip a clamorous war of decre^ a^ What fruit does she derive from it? Long ago had" the Macedonian been chastised, if the decrees had that virtue; but in spite of their zealous speeches he al- ways progresses. [The Athenians carry off the palm for orations, Philip tTie palm for actionT\ " That Philip, a general and soldier, putting himsdf in the fore- ground, animating all with his presence, losing no opportunity, not even an instant, triumphs over men given to delays, to decrees, and to conjectures, I am not astonished." Harangues, even those of Demos- thenes, are not sufficient to conquer in war. f^^ith- out action all eloquence is powerless, especially the eloquence of Athens! for we pass for the cleverest speakers of Greece." Quick to understand themselves and to comprehend the ideas of another, they adopt resolutions, but make no effort. That people who formerly aroused all Greece to defend the rights of the Hellenes, at the very moment when the people themselves are plundered, slumbers, and allows the despoiler to go unpunished ; and yetQie loves glory, she admires the glory of her ancestors, and rejoices in hearing it celebrated. IBut she contents herself with applauding her ancestors, the saviors of Greece, with- out having the courage to imitate them."7 At one mo- ment aroused (what apathy would not be aroused?) by * 70 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. the eloquence of Demosthenes, she votes war by ac- clamation, but she leaves the care of waging it to others. Instead of serving in person, the Athenians hire mercenaries; good citizens as to desire and inten- tion, patriotic warriors by proxy. The time was not long past when, before a Spartan assembly, their enemies rendered this homage to the Athenians: "They are prompt to imagine and to exe- cute what they have conceived. ^ * * For their country they risk their lives and expose their bodies as if they were of least importance to them. ^ * * They know no other pleasure than the accomplishment of their duty."^ What a contrast between the Athenian of Pericles' (432) day and the Athenian of Demosthenes' (360) time! The latter before all things looks to his own well-being. It is repugnant to him to quit a laughing sky, the chats of the Porticos and the Agora, the thousand artistic and literary amusements con- stantly renewed in a city not only the school but the rendezvous of pleasure for all Greece, and to go in the midst of winter into a barbarous climate to meet rude soldiers accustomed to dare everything and to suffer everything. The enjoyments of body and mind to which he has habituated himself have rendered him unfit for the severe toils of war. The poor man is devoted above all to the three obols of the tribunals which enable him to live; to the two obols which assure him an entrance to the theater. He repairs to the assembly "as to a feast at which the scraps are to be divided." The wealthy man ' ' measures happiness by the capacity of his stomachf and by the most shameful pleasures," * Thucydides, i, 70. f " What nonsense are you relating to us here ? You are talking for pleasure : Lyceum, Academy, Odeum, Thermopylae, the nonsense of S PHILIP THE ATHENIAT^S. 71 without any regard for the happiness of serving no master, ''an advantage once esteemed in Greece the greatest and highest degree of felicity." It is suffi- cient to say that the wealthy and poor are ill-disposed to expose their bodies to that monstrous beast, all bristling with iron, which is called the Macedonian phalanx. They reserve themselves for more agreeable contests. Instead of fighting Philip, they fight their counsellors and generals. " Is it the author of your misfortunes that you hate ? No, it is the citizen who has spoken to you of them last," when he was about to ofier a remedy for an evil of which he himself was innocent. A military enter- prise has failed. A speaker attributes its failure to Diopithes, Chares and Aristophon. The crowd ex- claim "he is right!" and the general is summoned to trial. " Brave to condemn, cowards to act," they hold him responsible for their own faults; or, if he himself has committed any, they punish him with a severity which they could use to a better purpose against the great criminal, Philip. What is the result of these injustices or excessive severities ? The generals desert Athens. Each one of them in all security goes to wage war where his interests call him.^ Thus the Athenians do the work of their enemy, not their own. K)phists. I see nothing in these worth our attention. Let us drink Scion, let us drink to excess and make life happy as long as opportul nity and means permit. Join in the uproar, Manes; nothing is dearer than the stomach. The stomach is your father, the stomach is your mother Virtues, embassies, commands, vain glory, vain turmoil of the land of dreams. Death will strike you on the day marked by des- tiny. There will remain to you only what you shall have drank and eaten. The rest is dust. Dust is Pericles, Codrus, Cimon." (Alexis ^^^5 ^S ^t^'''^'^^ ^'^S- of the Comic Poets. Cf. Plutarch, MoraL.) Thus Timotheus and Chabrias sold their services to Persia against Ji^gypt; Chares became a lieutenant to Artabazus- IphicrateT con- •-'- ^ 72 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. What shall we say concerning the election of magis- trates ? Socrates and his followers in general were not very sympathetic with Athenian democracy. Socrates dared to ridicule "the fullers, shoemakers, masons, coppersmiths, petty tradesmen and peddlers,— all im- portant personages of whom the assembly of the people was composed." Politics was, in his eyes, a compli- cated science, as virtue itself was an art. Was the ignorant multitude capable of arriving at the one or the other ? Montesquieu is more indulgent. " The people are admirable to choose those to whom they are to entrust any authority. They have only to deter- mine from the nature of things which they cannot be igno- rant of, and from facts which fall under their knowledge. They know very well that a man has often been in war; that he has had such or such success. They are then very capable of choosing a general. They know that a judge is assiduous; that many classes go away from his tribunal satisfied with him; that he has not been convicted of corruption. This is enough to choose a pretor. They have been struck with the magnificence or wealth of a citizen; this is sufficient to choose an «dile. All these things are facts of which they can better inform themselves in public places than can a monarch in his palace."* The Athenians, if Demosthenes is to be credited, ill justify the good opinion which Montesquieu has in this respect. They give offices to the wealthiest, not to the most worthy, t They name their political or military ducted twenty thousand Greek mercenaries to Artaxerxes; the old pirate Charidemus gained possession of small cities oti the coasts of Asia, and reigned there. * Esprit d€8 Lois, ii, 2. t Demosthenes, In Midiam, passim. PHILIP THE ATHENIANS. 73 leaders with as much levity as their priests. It should be required, for example, that a cavalry general could hold himself in his saddle. Now Midias, promoted to this dignity, cannot, even in the solemn processions, becomingly cross the public place on a horse. With such aptitudes for positions due to intrigue, what won- der if, on the day of action, these incapable aspirants use every evasion to escape the obligations of their duty ? They have coveted dignity. They no longer wish office it it threatens to become effective. If they decree to send out cavalry, the cavalry general sud- denly becomes enamored of the sea and runs to the triremes. If a naval expedition is decided upon, they must wait until the sailors rejoin their squadron. '' How does it happen (Isocrates, after a severe crit- icism of the political customs of the Athenians, puts this objection into the mouth of a contradictor) that with a similar conduct we are not destroyed, not even inferior in power to any city ? " It is because the enemies of Athens, the Thebans and Lacedaemonians, are no longer discreet. Athens has for a long time owed the maintenance of her prosperity to the faults of her adversaries. With Philip it must be otherwise. The king of Macedonia was not a man who would be apt to become an instrument of success for the Athe- nians. " To such circumstances are you reduced by your supine- ness, that I fear (shocking as it is to say it) that, had we all agreed to propose, and you to embrace, such measures as would most effectually ruin our affairs, they could not have been more distressed than at present. At present your con- duct must expose you to derision. Nay, I call the powers to witness that you are acting as if Philip's wishes were to direct you. Opportunities escape you; your treasures are 74 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. PHILIP THE ATHENIANS. 75 li wasted; you shift the weight of public business upon others; break into passion; criminate each other."* Instead of adopting measures most agreeable to the enemy, why do they not hasten to do what he would not fail to do were he in their place ? But their char- acters are very different. Philip deliberates upon the future; the Athenians quarrel over the past. Philip anticipates emergencies; the Athenians follow him as if towed. " Just as barbarians engage at boxing, so you make war with Philip; for, when one of these receives a blow, that blow engages him ; if struck in another part, to that part his hands are shifted; but to ward off the blow, or to watch his antagonist, for this he hath neither skill nor spirit. Even so, if you hear that Philip is in the Chersonesus, you resolve to send forces thither; if in Thermopylae, thither; if in any other place, you hurry up and down ; you follow his stand- ard. But no useful scheme for carrying on the war, no wise provisions, are ever thought of, until you hear of some enter- prise in execution, or already crowned with success. This might formerly have been pardonable, but now is the very critical moment when it can by no means be admitted."! The Athenians are absolutely wanting in the justly appreciated quality of the Greeks,— opportuneness {gi)xaipia)\ they do everything at the wrong time, too late or too early. " The people always have too much or too little to do. Sometimes, with one hundred thou- sand arms, they overthrow everything; sometimes, with a hundred thousand feet, they only go like in- sects.":]: "And now, Athenians! what is the reason (think ye) that the public festivals in honor of Minerva and of Bacchus are * Third and Fmrth Philippics, §§ 1, 20. t Fird Philippic, § 40. t Esprit des Lois, ii, 2. always celebrated at the appointed time, whether the direc- tion of them falls to the lot of men of eminence or of persons less distinguished (festivals which cost more treasure than is usually expended upon a whole navy, and more numbers and greater preparations than any one perhaps ever cost); while your expeditions have been all too late. The reason is this: everything relating to the former is ascertained by law, and every one of you knows long before who is to con- duct the several entertainments in each tribe, what he is to receive, when and from whom, and what to perform. Not one of these things is left uncertain, not one undetermined. But in affairs of war and warlike preparations there is no order, no certainty, no regulation. So that when any acci- dent alarms us, first we appoint our trierarchs; then we allow them the exchange;* then the supplies are considered. These points once settled, we resolve to man our fleet with strangers and foreigners, then find it necessary to supply their places ourselves. In the midst of these delays, what we are sailing to defend the enemy is already master of; for the time of action we spend in preparing, and the junctures of affairs will not wait our slow and irresolute measures. These forces, too, which we think may be depended on until the new levies are raised, when put to the proof, plainly discover their in- sufficiency." f Omitting the vices of the military and financial or- ganization, the Athenian always depends upon his neighbor, t He would like to apply the law to his **Aut{doirt^. Every citizen who believed himself taxed unduly or to excess had the right of demanding that a wealthier man should be charged with his liturgy. If the latter refused under pretext that his resources did not permit him to do it, the law compelled him to exchange his goods for those of the demander,— a law equitable in principle, but a source of delay and of debates very prejudicial to the harmony of the city and to the promptitude of militaiy operations. t First Philippic, § 35. X Cf. Aristophanes, Tlie. Assembly of the Women, the law of com- munism in theory and practice. 76 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. PHILIP — THE ATHENIANS. 77 neighbor and be exempt from it himself. He indif- ferently comes to the place of action at the latest possible moment, in the hope, secretly caressed, of escaping from a painful duty. We see how at Pydna, Potidaea, Methone, Pagasse, they arrive just in time to witness Philip's triumphs and their own confusion. ''Can the people conduct an undertaking, know the places, opportunities, moments, and profit by them? No, they cannot,"* and the Athenians less than all others. All at Athens is capricious, tumultuous; no decided impulsion, no regular counsels, no unique au- thority. All is done by intermittent passion, by jerks and twitches. How different it is with the despotic invader ! His finances are in a sound condition, his veteran soldiers always under arms. What he judges proper to do he does immediately, without public de- liberation or a proclamation of decrees. He is neither calumniated before the tribunals, nor accused as a transgressor of laws, nor amenable in person; but everywhere a universal arbiter and an absolute master. In the face of such an adversary what do we see ? A people aggravating by the disorder of the time, one of the vices connected with the democratic constitution, a multitude ''blinded, as it seems, by an evil spirit," an "old man in delirium tremens," as ^schines ex- presses it. In Aristophanes the favored orators of the people cajole and dupe them; in the time of Philip they flat- ter and betray them. The spirit of vengeance forced * Esprit des Lois, ii, 2; cf. v, 10, De la Promptitude de V Execution dans la Monarchie: "Cardinal Richelieu wishes the people to shun the thorns of societies in monarchies, societies which form difficul- ties for everything. Although the cardinal could not have had des- potism in his heart, he might have had it in his head." Alcibiades to desert his country. The ambitious fugi- tive wished to punish her for her intended ingrati- tude, and employed against her the talents for which he deemed himself poorly paid. Then, when the chas- tisement was consummated, he returned to her and was loved, inasmuch as he had caused her to feel the value of his favors. The return of the victor was a triumph. "The Athenians lauded what he had done for the city, and did not admire less what he had done against her." During the Macedonian epoch duties toward the country were no better known, and forfeit- ures arose from a source more impure than from the wounds of pride, — from venality. "A contagion, a terrible and cruel pest, came and spread over Greece." Magistrates and private citizens emulously called for the Macedonian's gold and servitude. The epidemic at first reached Thessaly, penetrated the Pelopon- nesus, "provoked the massacres of Elis, and became intoxicated with a furious madness of the pitiable classes who, in order to elevate themselves one over another, while extending their hands to Philip became covered with the blood of their relatives and citizens." Far from resting here, the scourge gained Arcadia and Argolis, and finally crept into Athens. "Whilst it has not yet spread, watch over yourselves, Athenians, stigmatize those who have imported it. Else fear lest you may recognize the utility of my counsels when a remedy shall have become impossible."^ The disease, pointed out in vain in 342 b.c, continued to spread; the orator of the Oration on the Crown (330 b.c.) should have recalled the sad eflfects of it. In this re- spect the Athenians might have received lessons from the Spartans. Pausanias sacrificed the interests of * Demosthenes On the Embassy, § 259. '« n 78 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. Lacedsemon to the favor of Xerxes. Convicted by the ephors he fled into the temple of Minerva. His mother was the first to place a stone at the door and shut him in. Athens did not consider things so seriously. Are Philip's friends really traitors ? Some call them pro- moters of peace, saviors and champions of the true interests of the state, as were Fouche and the auxil- iaries of the allies in 1815. The Athenians forgot to distinguish between the sincere citizen who was de- ceived and the egotist who thought more of himself than of the republic. Formerly Arthmius of Zelia, an Asiatic city, brought gold from the Persians into the Peloponnesus. The ancestors of those Athenians who were fighting Philip declared him an enemy, himself and his race infamous, and considered him an outlaw. At another time the Athenians, jealous guardians of the dignity and safety of Greece, engraved upon bronze the infamy of corrupters. How times have changed! "Envy toward him whom gold has seduced; jests and laughter if he confesses it; pardon if he is convicted; hatred against his accuser."^ Such were the senti- ments awakened by the traflic of the country. Is it astonishing after this that the Macedonians in the Pi- raeus multiplied, and, shielded from contempt, exhibited for sale a shameles simony? Votes, decrees, admin- istration, war, finances, — they sold everything in full market, and preached peace for ready cash. They vied in their emulation to become purchasers. " Philip was not satisfied with hearing the traitorsVpropo- sitions, and he did not know what prey to seize first. He took, in one day, five hundred horsemen with their arms, delivered up to him by the leaders themselves, a capture hitherto unequaled. The light of day, the soil beneath their ♦ Third Philippic, § 39. PHILIP THE ATHENIANS. 79 feet, temples, tombs, — the guilty traitors regarded nothing, not even the reputation which was to shed infamy upon such acts. Such great venality, Athenians, strikes men with de- rangement and madness!" Philip, it is true, neglected no opportunity, as he did at Dium after the capture of Olynthus, to display a liberal magnificence by which the greedy poverty of the Greeks was dazzled and enticed. Athenseus* has transmitted to us the description of a feast at a Mace- donian wedding, so sumptuous and splendid that it might render Trimalcion jealous. Caranus' guests re- turn from the banquet not only deliciously feasted, but loaded with gold and silver plate, enriched for life. Let an Athenian now come and talk to them of the meager fare of his feasts ; they will send him back ridi- culed to his rockets and onions. We do not know the bill of fare of the banquets offered by Philip to his hosts from Athens, but his liberalities are known to us. One brings back from Macedonia timber to cover his house, another sheep and horses; for the most skillful artisans the highest salary. Philocrates, the principal author of the fatal peace, which took its name from him (3-17 b.c), received lands whose revenue was a talent, besides the grain and gold with which he openly carried on commerce on the bankers' tables in the Agora. He brought back from Olynthus freed women, captives to gratify his pleasures, and besides this he was seen going the rounds of the market, and, a fine connoisseur, " purchasing women and fish." Demos- thenes has named several of these traffickers of the Hel- lenic family whose eloquence had a fixed tariff^. " The day would fail me if I should recount their names." He paints the least shameless of those who realized * Banquet of the Sophists^ iv, 2. 80 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. their fortunes of real estate and retired into Mace- donia. He also represents those traitors in Macedonia who betrayed their country, seated at Philip's table with cup in hand, drinking the public liberty. Such charac- ters justified the insulting contempt of the princely purchaser of Greece. See in what a strain he speaks of the few orators who remained faithful. ''It would be easy for me, by throwing a little gold before them, to check their censures and convert them into eulogies; but I would blush to be seen purchasing the friendship of such men."^ They likewise justify this cry of Demosthenes: "We have inured a formidable enemy against ourselves. Let whoever denies it appear be- fore me and say where Philip derived his power if it was not in the heart of Athens." In fact, did not Athens send him deputies who were emulous to deprecate their country before him? "The people, a restless mul- titude, are the least stable, the most vacillating, of all things. They are like the waves of the sea which a slight breeze agitates: one comes, another goes away; no one cares nor studies public affairs. It therefore behooves you to have friends at Athens who will do and regulate all according to your will. Take care of this support and among the Athenians you will make all yield to your pleasure, f Philip was careful not to allow these charitable encouragements to pass gratui- tously. It was far less expensive for him to hire a few men than to conciliate the entire city by honorable means. In this way he succeeded well. The same tongues calumniated Athens in Philip's presence and exalted Philip himself before the Athe- nians. No, never was man seen "so gracious, so ♦ On the Embassy, passim. t Demosthenes, On the Embassy ^ § 136. , PHILIP — THE ATHENIANS. 81 I r amiable"; he was gallant, he was eloquent, he was the ''most Grecian" of those who were not Greeks, and what a drinker! They did not add that this accom- plished prince was an excellent payer, but the Athe- nians, when advised, discovered it. Thanks to the connivance of these allies, he deferred the oaths which were at some time to bind his hands, for three whole months. In the mean time, he pilfered and appropri- ated on all sides; he esteemed as a good capture what- ever he could possess before signing the peace. It was still in the heart of Athens that he found accom- plices always ready to become the echo of his fallacious promises, sometimes even to exceed them. This was ap- parent after the treaty and peace of 347 b.c, from which Philocrates, ^schines and their associates perfidiously allowed the Phocians to be excluded, against the will of Athens. How could the people escape becoming the laughing-stock of their machinations? Sent to Philip in order to treat with him directly, and to exam- ine on the spot the true state of things, they were the sole official authority to decide; their falsehoods were dexterously colored, and enforced belief Contemporary history has presented certain examples of these decep- tions of a nation by ministers employed to enlighten it, and throwing it into fatal adventures when misguided by forged declarations. "Yes," said ^schines, " Philip has passed Thermopylae. What signifies ? Do not be alarmed, all will go according to our wishes ; in two or three days you will learn that he has become the enemy of those whose friend he appeared, and the friend of those whose enemy he proclaimed himself." Athens was often deceived by these phantasmagorias of her orators, but she was also often the victim of her own illusions, and of faults attributable to herself. 82 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE FN GREECE. ff ..f: She had a right to cry out treason; but did not the entire people betray themselves by their weakness and follies ? *'0h, gods! we have suffered all these plunders; we have, if I dare say it, cooperated with him in them, and now we will seek the authors of our misfortunes! for I know too well we will take care not to confess ourselves guilty. In the perils of war no fugitive accuses himself, but always his gen- eral, his comrade; he accuses all rather than himself; never- theless all the fugitives cause the rout. This accuser of another could have held his ground firmly, and if each had held firmly, they would not have been vanquished."* Never, indeed, did Athens accuse Demosthenes: this was justice. No man was more passionately de- voted to the difficult work of the common safety. In Philip's time, Athens numbered as many citizens (about twenty thousand) as in the days when she repulsed the barbarians, and disputed the empire with Lacedsemon; she had preserved her numerical forces, but not her valor. Let us now see what resources Demosthenes, the citizen, the statesman and the orator, used in his endeavor to restore her valor and thus save her liberty. * Third Olynthiac, § 17. / II )\ CHAPTER III. DEMOSTHENES -THE MAN -THE CITIZEN. ''Tob^ re xaO' aOrd^ M-^opa- {^^w ds X6rou rtOe/iai Oioxtwva) xat Toj ,Sta, Ttapr^XO,: "He was the most upright of the orators of his time, excepting Ph(x;ion." (Plutarch, Life of Demosthenes.) " My character has never been compromised. I was never known to prefer the favor of the great to the rights of the people. And in the affairs of Greece, the bribes and flattering assurances of friend- ship which Philip lavished never were so dear to me as the interests of the Hellenes." {Oration on the Crown.) TN Demosthenes, the citizen, the statesman, and the -^ orator, were equal to the task which he volun- tarily imposed upon himself. Before entering upon his political career, the young son of a sword-cutler was m danger of being deprived of his inheritance, and said to the judges: ''You have not yet put me to tnal, and do not know what I can do for the state- but, may I hope, I will not be of less service to it than my father was. " * This modest prevision of the young man of nineteen years was more than justified. Forty years later the patriotic exile could write to his citizens, in demanding of them a reexamination of his trial: "I yield to no one in affection for the people. Not one of my contemporaries has done more for you, none given more proofs of his devotion."! * Second Pleading against ApTwhus, § 22. t Second letter of Demosthenes, fin. Some modems have dis- puted the authenticity of these letters recognized by Cicero We accept them as a faithful proof of the sentiments of. ancient Greece toward their patriotic orator. 83 ^M 84 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. DEMOSTHENES — THE MAN. 85 £■•" I. The Man. — Demosthenes had from his youth given proof of a character fitted for strife. The ath- lete, who was destined some day to bear up against Philip with all his strength, had first tested his powers on himself. Less fortunately endowed than some of his rivals in eloquence, he resolved to repair nature's work and to remake himself. His obstinacy remained ruler. This tenacious firmness, perpetuated in legend like all that strikes man's imagination, permitted Va- lerius Maximus to say: "If his mother brought one Demosthenes to light, art begat another with toil."* ^schines several times rebuked Demosthenes with the title of Scythian. ''Demosthenes is neither of our soil nor of our race. * * * On his mother's side he is a Scythian, a barbarian, a Greek only in language, his heart is too perverse to be an Athenian." His grand- mother, in fact, was a woman from the Bosphorus. The stiffness of his character, wanting in Athenian flexibility and playfulness, was due, perhaps, to the influence of his maternal blood. At all events, his youth was not in every respect similar to that of the sons of Athenian families, but more worthy, in cer- tain respects, of the young Anacharsis. His midnight studies remain celebrated. Who is ignorant of them ? Says the author of the TusculancB Disputationes : "He was grieved if it happened that an artisan began work earlier than himself, "f According to his own testimony he became an orator by using more oil than wine. It was not the oil of the palestra, ^schines reproached him for not having cared for the well-being ♦Valerius Maximus, viii, 7; Demosthenes, bom in 384 or 385^ died in 332. t Tuiculanae Disputationes, iv, 19 : " Qui dolere se aiebat si quando opificum antelucana victus esset industria.'^ ^' of his body in the gymnasia. Neither had the chase any charms for him. He disdained the amusements enjoyed by companions of his age. Athenian orators more than once drew unfavorable inferences from the mdifference of their adversaries for the accustomed amusements of the Greeks. To pass the time pleas- antly chatting before the bankers' counters, in the per- fumer's shop, or in the barber's shop, was one of their favorite pleasures. Aristogiton did not engage in these pastimes. He lived a stranger to the pleasures of so- ciety. His accuser did not forget to charge him of this crime. Demosthenes likewise sought isolation for him- self. To what end ? To accustom himself to the chi- canery and to the artifices of a rhetorician greedy of the goods of another. Thus speaks the accuser of Ctesiphon. Plutarch gives curious, if not authentic, de- tails of the studious practices of the stubborn wrestler. His ha f-shaven head, his cave, his great mirror before which he was wont to declaim, his sword suspended over his shoulder to check its disagreeable shrugs, the peobles m his mouth, and, finally, the different painful or whimsical exercises to correct the imperfections of his voice, are at least proofs of the impression left upon the ancients by a will power which has become traditional. Plutarch means that the youths should go to the gymnasium and to the chase, exercises more ennobling than fishing.* The latter has, however, one advan- tage: It does not cause fatigue, which is, accordmg to riato, the enemy of knowledge. Of these Demosthe- *0n the Education of ChMrm. Cf. AniTrtaU of Land and Sea A^llo and Diana received their surnames from destroytg woS^ .^ ^ 1 1 I 86 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. nes enjoyed neitlier the one nor the other. He cared not to run in the forests like Hippolyte, and he devoted his leisure hours to pleasures which the chaste friend of Diana would have despised. Before his severity in prosecuting his guardians had given him the surname of Argas (a kind of serpent) his youth had received, not from his nurse, but from fame, according to ^schi- nes, the name of Batalus* The customs of his manly age were not without reproach. Demosthenes' differ- ent speeches cut the characters of the gilded youth of Athens to the quick. Perhaps the accuser of Conon and Nesera has exaggerated these traits a little. The eulogies conferred upon the family life of the Athenians by Aristogiton's adversary cannot be sus- pected of exaggeration. " Naturally kind and indulgent toward one another, you conduct yourselves in this city as do families in their homes. One house contains a father, his sons, who have grown to manhood, and perhaps their children. In these three genera- tions there are necessarily numerous and essential differences of taste: the young neither speak nor act like the old. And yet, if the young people are observed, they desire in what- ever they do to escape notice, or at least they clearly show their intention to conceal themselves. If the old men, on their part, notice that the young are given too much to ex- penditure, to wine, and to the pleasures of their age, they see it without the appearance of seeing it. Thus each follows his own tastes, and all goes well."t * Demosthenes' busts have the lower lip raised against the gum, a customary habit with stammerers. For a long time he was unable to pronounce the letter R. His nurse might have designated by this nick-name an effeminate stammering like that of the Incoyablea. Battos (whence f^dTTaXo<;), king of Cyrene, was (itmous for his stammering, ^schines naturally adopted an interpretation less in- nocent f This is an exaggeration of the Athenian quality praised by Thu- DEMOSTHENES THE MAN. 87 Timarchus is an incorrigible debauchee. How can it be helped ? Leave him to his evil propensities, with this simple restriction: ''With respect to those who give chase to the young,— a prey always easy to cap- ture,— compel them to turn themselves toward foreign- ers and alien settlers. They will thus be able to sat- isfy their passion without injuring you."^ Timarchus would be a very bad citizen if he did not profit by so con- ciliating a concession, ^schin^s endeavors to associ- ate the names of Demosthenes and Timarchus We know what to think of these calumnies, but of calumny something always remains. '' If these fine garments these soft underclothes in which you are dressed when you write orations against your friends, and which cause them to pass into the hands of the judges, were taken away from you, no one would know, I believe unless mformed, whether these garments belonged to L man or to a woman. "f Demosthenes, like Hyperides and others, had easy manners, and participated in recreations before which the old men of Athens closed their eyes. However, he excepted wine from these pleasures. Did he abstain from it out of taste or cal- culation, and ought this proscription of wine to be added to the voluntary ordeals which his desire to attain eloquence imposed on him? Unlike Horace, water was perhaps his Hippocrene. Clean: ''Do you wish «iat I should tell you what has happened to you? i^ou have like so many others, gained a small case against a foreigner. Did you mutter it sufficiently all night, declaim it in the streets, recite it to every comer ? Did you drink enough of water to inspire cydides (ii, 37): a fine condition of social relations and indulgence of good taste among a people who know how to live ^^'^^^^'^^^ ^^ » Against Tirmrchm, § 195. f Against Timarchus, § 285. i if- l! 88 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. you?" The Butcher: "And what do you drink then in order to be capable of astounding the stupefied city with your clamors ? "^ Cleon follows Philocrates' re- gime. " He waters a fresh fish with a large jar of pure wine." Demosthenes' method is different. He needs more to calm than to animate himself. Eratosthenes speaks of his bacchic [-apd^axj^w/) frenzy; Demetrius the Phalerean, of his "enthusiasm " at the bar. What would all this have been if he had loved his wine? Pythagoras proscribed the bean as contrary to the serenity of philosophic meditation. Our orator like- wise distrusts the exciting liquor of Bacchus, and his good intention is turned against him. Water drinkers are abominable. Demosthenes often heard this epithet applied in connection with that of morose and coarse. Solon, even in his old age, enjoyed the sweet gifts of the gods. Demosthenes seemed never to unbend his stem and imposing brow. A similar contrast marked his whole life. His career gave proof that he pos- sessed a sensibility accessible to human weakness, and an austere firmness in mastering himself as soon as a higher interest of his own choice imposed upon him its duty. This man, unsparing of himself, was always so to- ward the enemies of his country. The bitter humor aroused by his political foes was not at all surprising in a citizen moved b}^ the dangers of Athens, and by the animosities of the unequal contest which he sus- tained for her. The sad thoughts of his mind dark- ened the traits of his character. This orator, with careworn visage and evil predictions, will be treated with curses after Chaeronea. Before the disaster ^s- chines was contented to abuse his morose character * Aristophanes, KniglUa. DEMOSTHENES THE MAN. 89 and his gross manners. Wliat diff'erences between these two counsellors of the people! The one sport- e, amiable, has the smiles and indulgence of Phi- linte. He has had the good taste never to trouble any accountable person; he never banishes any person into exile. He is easy, accommodating; he views things on the agreeable side, and adapts himself to the times. He loves Athens, the liberty of Athens, as Philinte loves truth and virtue; a little less than his comforts, and on condition that it will cost him nothing. De- mosthenes is not, like him, a gallant man. He injures the Macedonians in order to convince them that he is their enemy; he insults Philip at the risk of implicat- ing the city; he is brutal, ill-advised; he does not know how to live. He has no heart; it is scarcely seven days since his daughter, who first gave him the sweet name of father, expired. Demosthenes, crowned with flowers, dressed in a white robe, celebrates Philip's death in a public sacrifice ! He violates tlie most sa- cred laws of nature and religion. He dares to say in public that he believes himself bound more by the duties of patriotism than by the rights of hospitality. He causes to be put to torture an Oritian who was sus- pected of high treason, and whom he had formerly welcomed under his roof. He accuses his colleagues in the embassy of prevarication, even after having par- ticipated with them in the repast of the Prytaneum. A blind enemy of Alexander, he persuades, even while m exile, the Athenians to revolt. His obstinate resist- ance is like that of a madman. * ^ * These traits de- picted by ^schines were intended to dishonor Demos- thenes, but in fact they honor him. ^schines further calumniates him when he insinu- ates that he was sold to the enemies of the republic. 90 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. *, I- % i In Demosthenes the citizen was irreproachable, if the man was not. Like Mirabeau, Demosthenes loved money, and for the same reasons. Plutarch reproaches him for having increased his wealth on board of mer- chantmen, which was then considered the greatest usury. ^ On this point modern men are justly less rigorous than the ancients were. Money is a com- modity as well as anything else. Commerce with money is therefore legitimate on land and sea. Plu- tarch accuses Demosthenes of another charge, equally trivial. The Athenian orator was never intrusted with an important commission or command like Cicero. Does the biographer wish us to understand that per- haps he would have enriched himself like Yerres' ac- cuser, or that at the head of an army he would not have been more scrupulous or sparing of others' prop- erty than Diopithes or Timotheus?t These insinua- tions should be withdrawn: opportunities are rarely wanting to him who would offend, ^schines and Philip's well-paid friends have clearly proven it. De- mosthenes was fond of luxury and its accompanying pleasures; no one lias ever convicted him of having betrayed his duties as a citizen in order to gratify his inclinations. J The stenographer's eloquence sufficed to delight him. Often has he himself in his speeches stigmatized, in the name of his litigant, the greedy venality of those who deal in orations, .^schines has a right to censure him for deserving that his own in- vectives against covetous orators should be applied to himself; but is this gain, whatever may be thought of * Comparison of Demosthenes and Cicero, chap. 3. f Oration on the Chersonesus, and Against TimotJieus, passim. • X ^scliines insists upon the Eubcean aflfairs, but without proving anything. DEMOSTHENES THE MAN. 91 it, comparable to that of Philocrates ? The author of The Lives of Illustrious Men expressed regret, and all share it, that Demosthenes was not sufficiently dar- ing in war, nor " sufficiently guarded and fortified against presents." These two qualities would cer- tainly have crowned his glory; but what his defects have left to him is still grand; and as Plutarch has said of him, if Demosthenes in some respects did not escape the common vices of Athens, he was the most honorable orator of his time with the exception of Phocion. It was no small merit during the l^acedo- nian period to be, we will not say perfect, but even moderately virtuous, — the only assumption Demosthe- nes ever entertained.* Eloquence was the great power at Athens, but too often gold actuated it. Without mentioning the cor- ruption of magistrates and judges (thus Chares through his immense wealth escaped death which his colleague Lysicles had already suffered), the orators of Athens sold their eloquence and their silence in turn. Those whose heads Alexander demanded owed their safety to five talents which Demades accepted for shielding them, by a skillful expedient, from the vengeance of his friend, the Macedonian prince. In the case of Harpalus,t this same Demades laughed at the money- cold ascribed to Demosthenes. It is well known how Philip paid his partisans for speaking or remaining silent. He became so accustomed to success over these venal souls that he was filled with hatred toward the upright counsellors of Athens. "I would blush to * ^bati jiirptov TroXtrrjv, (Pro Corona.) t Harpalus fled from Asia to Athens (327) in the hope of escaping Alexander's wrath and enjoying the fruits of his extortions4n peace. He succeeded in bribing several orators, but not the city's protection, and had to flee to Crete. 92 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. purchase the friendship of such men." We have little faith in a scruple of delicacy on the part of Philip. If he did not seduce Demosthenes it was not because of his disdain, but because he was unable. To bribe Demosthenes was to terminate the war at once; but if the zealous patriot accepted gold from the Medes to procure arms against the Macedonians, as the Euro- pean powers unscrupulously received gold from Eng- land with which to defeat Napoleon, never did he stain his hands with presents from his enemies. In an oration ^ in which he succeeded, by force of reason and elevated sentiments, in calming the Athenians who were enraged against him, in the midst of the double scourge of the plague and of the war, Pericles recalls his principal claims to their confidence, and especially his integrity, — superior to riches, — a rare quality, which the historian insists is one of the causes of his long power over the Athenians. "Pericles, as eminent by his intelligence as by the respect shown him, mani- festly invincible to the seduction of presents, governed the multitude. He did not allow himself to be led by it, but he led and guided it." Demosthenes' political integrity was in like manner one of the secrets of his strength against Philip and his influence over Athens. " If on all these occasions it is evident that I have foreseen the future more clearly than others, I do not assume vanity, nor do I flatter myself with the belief that I am possessed of a remarkable sagacity. To two causes, Athenians, I will attribute all the honor of my intelligence and presentiments: the first is fortune; ♦ ♦ ♦ the second the disinterestedness with which I judge and reason on all things. No; no man can show a single present attached to my actions, to my words and speeches in the administration of duty." f * Thucydides, ii, 60-65. f Oration on the Peace, § 11. DEMOSTHENES — THE MAN. 93 :« Money is the offensive arm of the ambitious. All usurpers establish their power on corruption. While Philip was buying Greece rather than conquering her, our orator's integrity remained impenetrable to seduc- tion. By that means he again acquired the right of comparing himself to Pericles and claiming honor like him. " If it is asked by what means Philip succeeded in all his enterprises, everybody will answer. By his army, by his presents, by the corruption of those who were at the head of affairs. ♦ * * In refusing his gold, I have conquered Philip; for if the purchaser triumphs over the traitor who sells himself, that man who remains incorruptible has tri- umphed over the seducer. Athens, therefore, has been un- conquered on the part of Demosthenes."* Demosthenes several times made allusion to the re- proach of timidity which was imputed to him. "He is weak and without courage. He counsels war and dares not propose it by decree ! " In fact, he objects to it in the fourth Philippic (341), and explains his objection by motives of prudence. The fierce reply of Ilegesippus on this occasion is well known: "But it is war that you propose ! Yes, war, and with it mourn- ings, public burials, funeral eulogies, ~ everything that ought to make us free and save our necks from the Macedonian yoke." Demosthenes does not view it in this light. He does not conceal his apprehension of being treated, in case of failure, as ti-aitors more justly would be dealt with. During the previous year (342) he extricated his cause from that of ^schines, a prevaricating deputy, and disavowed the criminal manoeuvres, in the expiation of which he feared that he would see, in days of anger, his innocence entan- . * Pro Corona, § 247. « 94 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE, ^' gled. In the third Philippic he calls to mind Eu- phrseus, the Oritian: ''Rather die a thousand times than complain like a coward to Philip and deliver up any of your faithful orators." Demosthenes did not flatter himself in saying that he foresaw the future. -<^schines was to accuse him of ruining Greece, and Alexander was to demand his head. From 352, in the first Philippic, he declares himself resigned to suffer everything if success deceives his expectation, and at the same time he would wish to be assured, he said, that it would be as advantageous to himself to give good counsels as to the Atlienians to receive them. Notwithstanding his uncertainty he gives his coun- sels, for he knows them to be useful. "Audacity is often the child of ignorance, and hesitation that of deliberate consideration. The truly great mind is that which clearly perceives wherein is pleasure and pain, and which, in the meantime, never turns away from dangers. " ^ Demosthenes saw the danger. With- out fear or boasting he felt it approaching and boldly faced it. In these conditions the cautious prudence of certain apparent timidities exalts, if it can be said, the courage of principles and general conduct. According to ^schines, Demosthenes was wanting in assurance before the multitudes (5siXdv Tzpoq rohq dx^uu^), "As regards his courage I have only a word to say: If he did not acknowledge his cowardice and you were not con- vinced of it as he is, I would stop for a moment to prove it to you. But since he himself recognized it in our assemblies, and since you do not in the least doubt it, it only remains for me to remind you of the laws directed against cowards." f Ihus an enemy could describe him. Some lines of * Thucydides, ii, 40. f Against Ctesiphon, § 175. DEMOSTHENES — THE MAN. 95 the oration In Midiam imply a discreet acknowledg- ment of the facility witli which he faltered. Midias endeavored to obtain from him a nonsuit at the cost of gold. At the sight of the banker Bl^paeus approaching Demosthenes, the fear of seeing him ac- cept a settlement provoked the people to such clamors that the terrified orator left his mantle and hastened his flight, ''almost naked, in his shirt," before the pur- suing financier. To fly before gold and shouts is in- deed characteristic of a man very easily influenced. Demosthenes was impressible to an extraordinary de- gree. He did not always possess that firmness which permits one, without stumbling, to look in the face the situations in which coolness is necessary to escape from all danger. Demosthenes had a nervous and sensitive nature, ^schines compares him to a woman on account of the vivacity of his sentiments, and re- proaches him for weeping more easily than others laugh. He was, as often happens, very firm, very decided, in his ideas, but timid in his actions. A little was sufticient to throw him off his balance. The nil ad- mirari, which constitutes the virtue and happiness of Horace's sage, was not his lot. He was a man aston- ished at the most trifling things. How much he suf- fered from this weakness ! Sent on an embassy to Alexander, then encamped under the walls of Thebes, he was seized with fear and returned with the precip- itation of a ''fugitive." Appalled at the march of Alexander on Thebes after its revolt, the Athenians mstructed deputies to announce to Philip's son that they recognized his hegemony and that they decreed him divine honors. The author of the PJiilippica had not the courage to cross the Cithaeron and to place at the feet of the prince whom he had mocked the proof i. 96 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. of his country's and his own humiliation. Dare we blame him for it? If the sentiment which inspired Demosthenes' retreat was such as we believe it was, ^schines' raillery is rather a praise than a reproach to him. But why so freely accept a mission if his courage to accomplish the task was not assured ? De- mosthenes feared, perhaps, that he would falter before the young conqueror, as he had done before Philip. In the presence of the Macedonian's court, and with- out the excuse of the military apparel which was des- tined one day to paralyze the flowing eloquence of the defender of Milo, the deputy from Athens lost his memory and stammered, a disgrace obvious to an orator who was -^schines' colleague. That nature which Demosthenes subdued at the tribune of the Pnyx was predominant at Pella. Others before him and less timid than he had experienced similar failures. Alcibiades was wanting in self-confidence at the tribune, and often broke down. One day, while haranguing the people, he let a quail escape. The Athenians ran after it, caught it, and returned it to him. Did Alcibi- ades, who was fond of diversions, premeditate this very thing in order to conceal the treachery of his memory and to give himself time to think ? An idol of the Athenians, he well knew that he was not speaking before hostile hearers. Demosthenes, in the presence of Philip, lost his self-possession as if he were before an enemy. His timidity was too manifest to think of concealing it; he could only essay to apologize for it. " Hardy, shameless, impudent, I am not, and do not desire to become so. Nevertheless, I esteem myself much more courageous than these intrepid states(nen without shame. To judge, to confiscate, to distribute the property of others, to -— -*— -•-*■ DEMOSTHENES THE MAN. 97 accuse, without regard to the interests of the country does not demand any courage. When one has for a pledge of his own safety the faculty of speaking and of governin.. to please you, boldness is without danger. But, for your good to resist your wishes, to give you advice not agreeable, but always the most useful tp you, to follow a policy in which fortune rules more often than sound calculation, and never- theless to declare myself responsible both for fortune and calculation,— this, I say, proves a man of courage."* ^sehines taunts him for his cowardice. And didst thou not, replies Demosthenes, during the prosperous days of our. country "live the life of a hare? Fear- tul, tremblmg, thou hast constantly expected to be struck and cliastised for the crimes with which thy conscience has reproached thee. At the hour of our misfortunes thy assurance has struck every eye »+ Demosthenes' timorous humor discloses the charac- ter of the citizen, resolved to brave the dangers con- nected with the political role which honor had com- manded Mm to choose. Was that orator cowardly who assailed by sarcasms, by cries, by menaces, and a the risk of being "torn into pieces," repulsed with his inflexible views and patriotic zeal the assaults of beasts (eripia) which had been let loose on him ? Some- times he seemed to hesitate to commit himself. What 18 the use of incurring enmities which do not profit the commonwealth ? But when solemn circumstances de- 'T?^ a.f ' ^' °" ^^^ ^^y ^f*^-* ^'^t^*' and on the eve ot the Theban alliance, far from sparing himself, he devoted himself entirely to the common interest. Civil courage is valuable at a time when the country is in danger and summons us, and when the sentiment of duty binds a citizen to bear alone, or more than all * Oration on the Chersonam, § 68. f Pro Corona, § 263. r 98 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. others, the hazards and responsibilities of the future. Cicero, consoled by Cato, displayed this courage against Catiline; Demosthenes displayed it against Philip with no other ally or inspirer than the genius of the Athens of the past. The comic poet Timocles pictures De- mosthenes as a warrior in battle array, a "Briareus, an eater of lances and catapults."^ The irony is keen when we consider that this warrior had fled at Chse- ronea. Here it would be pleasing to use the eraser and draw the curtain. Nevertheless, if Bourdaloue marked the six circumstances in extenuation of "the eclipse" of Louis of Bourbon at the head of the Spanish army, it is equitable, not to palliate Demosthenes' fault, but to show why his compatriots pardoned him. On this point ^Eschines, a brave soldier, had fine play against the warlike orator who deserted his post. The law of Solon condemns to civil degradation the coward who throws away his buckler; and he, — he claims a crown! In vain Demosthenes, in order to escape his adver- sary's blows, intrenches himself behind his oratorical ability: at the tribune, in the embassies, in the public councils, I have served the state better than any other man. The minister of Athens has always done his duty; let the statesman acquit the soldier. This apol- ogy is more adroit than solid, and his answer to ^s- chines' sarcasm in this proverbial verse, which Aulus Gellius puts in his mouth, is truly characteristic, — " He who fights and runs away, Will live to fight another day," — a verse which the poet Horace, without doubt, agreed to on his return from Philippi. ''Yes, my friends, I fled, but with you." Thus Xenocrates, not merely a ♦ Fragments of Comic Poets. DEMOSTHENES THE MAN. 99 soldier but a general, without further troubling him- self, replied to his companions in the rout. In like manner Demosthenes followed the general rout; he fled from the battle-field, but in fact he returned to his duty. While he was stealing away conquered from the arrows of the Macedonians, what was ^schines doing ? ^schines has neglected to tell us. Was he behind Philip's army, awaiting the issue of the combat, hoping, perhaps, for the defeat which must necessarily strengthen his party ? He himself took care to give us in detail an account of his services in the campaigns previous to the year 350. Nowhere has the glorious soldier of Thamines, crowned for his bravery against the Euboeans,^ made allusion to his participation in the battle of Chaeronea. It would have been very difiicult to repulse with his arms an enemy whose complaisant policy had prepared the road. Demos- thenes is worthy of blame, but we are not willing that ^schines should address him on this subject ^schines did nothing to avert the disaster, nothing to repair it. Even after Chaeronea, Demosthenes was a better and more useful citizen than ^schines. De- mosthenes' safety served Athens better than if he had sufl'ered a courageous death. It was he, with Hyper- ides, who organized the resistance and forced Philip, by the city's resolute attitude, to treat her with care and respect. Viewing things in a certain light, all the works of genius combined are not worth one good action. And yet, if one of these works is fitted to inspire us with virtuous acts, can we not show some mdulgence to the weakness which made it possible ? The author of the Oration on the Crown did not fight like a hero, but that oration inspires heroism. It ♦ ^schines, Embassy, § 167. 100 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. would have been a great loss to Athens if the trial on the crown had not occurred. For if she saved the honor of the Hellenes by fighting at Chseronea, she consecrated her own by justifying Ctesiphon's decree. There are fortunate mistakes against which posterity has not always the courage to protest. Let us pardon this confession. We are very well satisfied that Demos- thenes ill sustained his maxims of war to the knife on the field of battle. His death would have confirmed his orations, but how dearly would this confirmation have been bought ! The Athenians themselves, if consulted, would not have wished it at that price; they owed gratitude to the counsellor of the city for the generous words which had awakened their zeal. Like the The- bans, they were touched with this magnanimous trait. "Thebans, you refuse to give us your alliance; very well, we will fight alone. Only permit us to pass over your land to go to Philip! "* How many times did they applaud his manly counsels without having the fortitude to follow them? Demosthenes, in his turn, forgot what he had said concerning the duty of dying for his country, and his fellow citizens had the gener- osity not to remember it. The orator of the Philip- pics conceived courage without realizing it. He mag- nificently traced the idea of it, as J. J. Rousseau adored virtue, with a Platonic passion. Human weak- « * ^scbines (Against Cteaiphon) has the unskillfulness lo find fault with this eloquence, worthy oi the sublime apostrophe of Ajax to Jupiter : " Oh, King! oh. Father! hear rry humble prayer: Dispel this cloud, the light of heaven restore ; Give me to see, and Ajax asks no more ! If Greece must perish, we thy will obey, But let us perish in the light of day." (Iliad, xvii, 645 et seq.) DEMOSTHENES — THE MAN. 101 ness will always justify Montaigne's saying: "We must consider the sermon and preacher separately." Never would Demosthenes have made a public con- fession of his timidity if he had not known that he could do it with impunitv. Athens even gave him remarkable proofs of pardon. It would not have been surprising, immediately after the disaster, if the people persecuted him with their resentments as the author of the public distress. On the contrary, the whole city turned toward him. It adopted his decrees, it spurned the accusers who wished to profit by the pub- lic misfortunes and overwhelm him, — a conduct equally honorable to Athens and to the orator. Yery soon the city confirmed its esteem for him by a testimony still more striking. Let Demosthenes himself speak. To quote him here offers him an opportune chance to avenge himself: "When the peopie came to elect a person to make the funeral oration over the slain immediately after the battle, they would not elect you, although you were proposed, al- though you are so eminent in speaking; they would not elect Demades, who had just concluded the peace, nor Hege- mon, no, nor any other of your faction. They elected me. And when you and Pythocles rose up (let Heaven bear wit- ness with what abandoned impudence!), when you charged me with the same crimes as now, when you pursued me with the same virulence and scurrility; all this served but to con- firm the people in their resolution of electing me. You know too well the reason of this preference; yet hear it from me. They were perfectly convinced both of that faithful zeal and alacrity with which I had conducted their affairs, and of that iniquity which you and your party had discovered, by pub- licly avowing, at a time when your country was unfortunate, what you had denied with solemn oaths while her interests 102 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE l^ GREECE. flourished. And it was a natural conclusion that the men whom our public calamities emboldened to disclose their senti- ments, had ever been our enemies, and now were our de- clared enemies. Besides, they rightly judged that he who was to speak in praise of the deceased, to grace their noble actions, could not, in decency, he the man who had lived and conversed in strict connection with those who had fought against them; that they who, at Macedon, had shared in the feast and joined in the triumph over the misfortunes of Greece with those by whose hands the slaughter had been committed, should not receive a mark of honor on their re- turn to Athens. Nor did our fellow citizens look for men who could act the part of mourners, but for one deeply and sincerely affected. And such sincerity they found in them- selves and me; not the least degree of it in you. I was then appointed; you and your associates were rejected. Nor was this the determination of the people only; those parents also and brethren of the deceased who were appointed to attend the funeral rites expressed the same sentiments. For as they were to give the banquet, which, agreeably to ancient usage, was to be held at his house who had been most strictly con- nected witl^ the deceased, they gave it at my house, and with reason, for in point of kindred each had his connections with some among the slain much nearer than mine; but with the whole body none was more intimately connected; for he who was most concerned in their safety and success must surely feel the deepest sorrow at their unhappy and unmerited misfortune." Bdelycleon, an advocate of Labes, excuses a thievish dog in these terms: He is a poor ignorant brute. "Pardon me, he cannot play on the lyre." The re- mark is comic and profound. Yice has often other roots than ignorance, but it is also often born of ig- norance. The followers of Plato only erred by exag- geration when they confounded science and wisdom, DEMOSTHENES THE MAN. 103 in other respects a less dangerous prejudice than that of the Cartesians attributing errors to the will. Igno- rance is not alone the origin of culpability. One is born a fool, another becomes one; the latter is culpa- ble, since he has perverted his nature. The former is innocent because he is from birth what he is. The gods made him so. Antiquity was very indulgent toward moral infirmities attributable to nature. Want of courage was of this number, and this consideration sometimes tempered the severity of punishment. Isoc- rates never dared to mount the rostrum, and he spent ten years in composing one oration. He was evident- ly interested in placing eloquence above all things. He also declared that it gave a man more honor than wealth, courage^ and the other gifts of fortune and nature. The author of the panegyric on Athens has chiseled out gems. He is a goldsmith who pleads for his art. He may be right, but this disdain for courage, a pure gift of nature, is remarkable, for it implies in- dulgence to him who does not possess it. This dispo- sition of the ancients to condemn the weaknesses of nature gave to Demosthenes a distinction at which the moderns are at first astonished. Midias, said he, will become humble in order to disarm your justice; be 80 much the more inexorable to him. ** For if incapable of curbing his pride, — he had been so haughty and violent all his life by the power of nature and fate, — it would be just to moderate your rigor; but if, capa- ble to adapt himself, whenever he wishes, to moderation, he has adopted a contrary plan of life, it is very evident that after having deluded you to-day he will become to-morrow the same man you know him to be." This is saying: "Strike Midias without pity, he is not incorrigible"; and if he were manifestly in- 104 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. DEMOSTHENES — THE MAN. 105 H corrigible, would it be necessary to save liim from punishment? Well authenticated incorrigibility is an argument which, among modern nations, the advo- cates of capital punishment endeavor to establish. On the contrary, it forced the ancients in certain cases to use clemency. "There are passions which emanate from nature. Thus a son, appearing before the tribunal for having struck his father, defended himself by saying: 'But he also struck his father!' and he was acquitted; for it appeared to the judges that it was a natural failing which was in the blood, " Intemperance seems to be more voluntary than coward- ice', it also makes us the object of more legitimate re- proaches. ♦ ♦ ♦ Cowardice does not seem to be voluntary in all cases, when they are examined in detail. It is not it- self grievous, but the circumstances under which it is pro- duced (the fear of servitude and death) cause pain which places man beyond his control; it compels him to lay down his arms or to commit other acts as unbecoming (dfr^^rj/io^slv). This is why it appears to be real violence,"* like the act of striking his parents by virtue of a heredi- tary disposition. It would be easy for us to multiply these citations. They all prove that, in the opinion of the Stagirite, man is not responsible for the physical emotions that actuate him, nor for acts provoked by those emotions. There are many forces which habit- ually triumph over human nature, and consequently the motives or intemperances to which we yield, shrink from the judgment of morality and human justice. A madman tears out his hair and gnaws it, — is he to be blamed for yielding to the pleasure of this phantasy ? No, no more than he should be praised . * Nicomachean Ethics, iii, 13. for controlling it, or at least victory or defeat are of very little importance here; for they depend almost entirely upon the intensity, more or less great, of the physical impression. Now, natural passions are as excusable as unhealthy intemperances. Here, then, is a formal consecration of the body's triumph over the soul, of destiny over will. All is reduced to the knowledge of knowing with what com- plexion each is born. Gall had predecessors among the ancients.^ Metoscopy and physiognomy were the legitimate children of a belief in fatality; this prejudice was so strong that it inspired JEschines with scruples against reproaching Demosthenes for his cowardice, — a trait for which nature alone was re- sponsible. ''It will perhaps be surprising," said he, " that we should prosecute a man for a vice attributable to nature {(pofftm^ ypatpai).''^ And in fact if natural dis- positions are sovereign in this respect, is it logical to bring men controlled by them before the courts? Was Isocrates, then, justified in stigmatizing the in- nate baseness of the Barbarians, or Demosthenes in doing honor to the Athenians for having obeyed the generous impulses of their natural character? The ancients, in general, under the weight of dogmas and fatality, ill-knew and ill-defined human liberty. Aris- totle attributed it to original inclinations; his theory opens the door to the convenient excuse of necessity. f * See Aristotle, History of Animals i, 9, and the Elder Pliny (Book xi, 114), here a compiler of the Stagirite and of Trogus Pompeius. t " I think that there does not exist, t-hat there never has existed, any art capable of making men who are bom depraved conform to justice and virtue." (Isocrates.) Seneca's maxim, Arsest bonum fieri, is nearer the truth. " With necessity all is well " ; this is the conclusion of grave Pindar celebrating the ex-voto of a happy lover, and an hun- dred young courtesans brought by Xenephon to the sacred grove of lit I lift 106 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. DEMOSTHENES — -THE MAN. 107 We cannot absolutely say with Socrates that cour- age, no more than virtue, is a science. For courage, in a great measure, depends on temperament; but are flesh and blood the ruling power in man 'i The sovereignty of instinct prevents perfectness in ani- mals. Never will the hare of the fabulist be a thunder- bolt of war, whatever he may think of it, even by comparison. But liberty gives to man the power of ruling his physical complexion. Socrates, by his confessions, justified Zopyrus, the Lavater of his times; but the vigor of his mind surmounted nature. Whoever is born without courage ought to acquire it. Turenne felt his carcass agitated on the battle-fleld ; he ruled it by throwing it into the greatest danger.* The man of courage conducts his body where he pleases, and moulds it to his liking. Did not De- mosthenes conquer rebellious organs ? Did he not resist, at his will, the allureiiA-^'^.t of pleasure and ac- quire his eloquence by the power of his will ? So strongly organized a mind was in all respects worthy of repairing nature's work. In a city where the poets (^schylus and Sophocles) skillfully handled the lyre Cypris. Pindar here speaks like an oracle: "There is in Phocis a temple to Hercules Misogynes, and its priest is bound to be chaste during the year of his ministry. Thus old men are ordinarily chosen as priests. In later times, a young man of noble birth and mild temper secured the priesthood. He was at the time in love with a young lady whom he took great care to shun. One day she came to surprise him at the hour of repose, after the dance and festival- He was unfortunate enough to forget himself. Seized with trouble and fear he ran toward the oracle, and inquired if there was any means by which he could expiate his c»ime. He received the fol- low mg answer: Tfie god pardons all that is necessary.'' (Plutarch, WJiy Pythia no longer gives her oracles in verse.) * " Thou tremblest, carcass ! Thou wouldst tremble much more if thou knewest where I am about to conduct thee." and sword in their turn, he could have united the two qualities necessary to a Grecian statesman.* He ought to have done it; he was competent to do it. His entire life, save Chaeronea, and his death prove it. Isocrates, according to tradition, punished himself for his great illusions by permitting himself to perish of starvation. Euphrseus, a clear-sighted patriot, a ridiculed prophet, "cut his throat," and thereby proved his sincerity. Demosthenes preferred a bitter struggle to a fortunate submission. This timid man braved Philip and Alexander; he pro- voked Antipater's deadly wrath. Was this the con- duct of a man without courage ? f In the silence of moral deliberation, face to face with honesty, his soul, inaccessible to fear, yielded to the calls of duty.f In the midst of the unaccustomed clash of arms, his body regained its empire, and the great emotion of combat, which sometimes makes cowards forget their fear, deprived him of his firmness. The Athenians pardoned this surprise of the senses; let us regret it without branding him with injurious re- proaches which his enemies lavished upon him. Let us rather reflect on the grief by which the patriot's soul was certainly penetrated at that moment when, deceived in his dearest hopes, he quitted the battle- field on which the liberty of the Hellenes was en- tombed forever. * MuOw>Ts prjTTJp' k'fisvat izp-qxTrjpd re epyiov. Iliad, ix, 443; Ora- torem verborum actoremque rerum. (Cicero.) t When the Macedonian's assassins, at the threshold of Neptune^s temple, were about to kill him and he asked of them a few moments' respite, they insulted him ; they were ignorant of what he was about to do. (Plutarch, Life of Demosthenes, chap. 29.) X Too rd diovra tzouIv op/irjv. I 108 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. DEMOSTHENES THE MAN. 109 Thirteen years later (325) Demosthenes withdrew from his native soil, vanquished this time by his ene- mies' hatred. Condemned at the trial of Ilarpalus to pay a fine of fifty talents, then thrown into prison as insolvent, he succeeded in escaping from it and depart- ing from Attica. He could undoubtedly have found relief from the chagrin of exile in the consciousness of his devotion to the Athenians and in the thought of their ingratitude. Nevertheless his eyes could not turn toward Attica without shedding tears. Plutarch blames him for having shown such manifestations of weakness during his exile, ill according with the fiery energy of his administration. This tenderness was not at all surprising in so sensitive a soul. Dishonored and separated from Athens, Demosthenes did not pon- ceal his affliction, but his grief remained dignified. He submitted to the unjust arrest by his country with a filial respect which recalls the Crito, " Do not think that these orations have inspired me with anger. I do not wish to be irritated against you, but com- plaint offers a kind of solace to the victims of injustice, as weeping does to the sick. I have affection for you, which I might wish you had for me. Such has been, such ever will be, my maxim. From the beginning T thought that every man connected with public affairs, if he was a good citizen, ought to hold in respect to all members of the city, the feel- ings of a son toward his parents. He will hope to find them as equitable as possible, but he will bear with them, such as they are, with a benevolent resignation. Defeat in such a case is a grand and honorable victory in the eyes of the wise. Be happy." ♦ Demosthenes' piety toward his country was natural- ly associated with piety toward the gods. At first a * Third Letter, § 10. fugitive at Troezen, he leaves this place for a safer asylum, Neptune's temple at Calauria. " Respect toward the god will, I hope, furnish me a safeguard. And yet how do I know ? When we are at the mercy of another, we live from day to day without ever being assured of the morrow." These presentiments were justified. At the moment when Antipater's soldiers, conducted by an old comedian, Archias, sumamed the exile-hunter {.~. -^r.- .:,, ±^ 150 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. VThe political penetration of Demosthenes sometimes appeared at fault; iiis ideas of Philip and of the weak- ness of the empire did not always seem worthy of an / intelligent statesman. In fact, Demosthenes does not spare his invective upon this ''barbarian, worthy of all names one could wish to give him." He most willingly branded his envious jealousy and debauchery; he pictured him as surrounded, in his court at Pella, by a lot of fools, thieves, and debauched people, "abandoning themselves in their orgies to dances which I would blush to describe to you"; and still, in this respect, Demosthenes knew that the Athe- . nians were little scrupulous with their eyes and ears. / This satire upon Pliilip's morals was shabby, 'tis said^ iEschines did right to reproach him for it. Why ope* the eyes to gross intemperance and close them to genius? Some say, Demosthenes was guilty of a graver mistake: he ignored the secret of Pliilip's power, a culpable error in an orator about to deter- mine the destiny of Athens in a merciless combat; but it appeared at the beginning of the struggle and continued until the eve of Chgeronea. The last Philip' pic, like the first, expressed unwarrantable disdain and unfounded hope. " It is worthy your attention to consider bow the affairs of Philip are at this time circumstanced. For they are by no means £0 well disposed, so very flourishing, as an inattentive observer would pronounce. Nor would he have engaged in this war at all, had he thought he should have bejn obliged to maintain it. He hoped that the moment he ap- peared, all things would fall before him. But these hopes are vain. And this disappointment, in the first place, troubles and dispirits him." * Perhaps his prosperity is only a snare * Third Olynihiac, § 21. DEMOSTHENES THE STATESMAN. 151 I laid by divinity: "For great and unexpected succeas is apt to hurry weak minds into extravagances. Hence it often proves much more difficult to maintain acquisitions than to acquire them." LThe temple of Philip's power apparently so threat- ening, is more iniposing than realj and rests upon rotten foundations.\\ " For when forces join in harmony and affection, and one common interest unites the confederating powers, then they share the toils with alacrity, — they endure the distresses, they persevere. But when extravagant ambition and lawless power (as in his case) have aggrandized a single person, the first pretense, the slightest accident, overthrows him, and all his greatness is dashed at once to the ground, ^t presenn his successes cast a shade over him; for prosperity hath great\ power to veil such baseness from observation. JBut let his I arms meet with the least disgrace, and all his actions will be exposed; for, as in our bodies, while a man is in health he feels no effect of any inward weakness, but when disease attacks him, everything becomes sensitive in the vessels, in the joints, or in whatever part his frame may be disordered. So in states and monarchies: while they carry on a war abroad, their defects escape the general eye; but when once it approaches their own territor}^ then they are all detected. Now such appears to be the fortune of this m.an, who is too feeble for the load he wishes to carry. * * Ij^And I also, Athenians, would have believed Philip born to coinmand fear and admiration if I had seen him rise by legitimate means. * * * But it is not possible, Athenians, — it is not possible that iniquity, perjury and fraud can support durable powersS By such adventurous means they maygustain themselves on^ for a moment; they may even promise the most flourishing future; but time exposes them, and they fall of themselves. In a house, a vessel, or any other structure, the base should be the most solid part, and likewise it is good to give prin- J , I 152 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. now ciples to action, a foundation of justice and truth,- this is what to-day the enterprises of Philip lack/' YTlie statesman may here be said to be the dupe of the moralist; the patriot mistakes his wishes for reali- ties; lie deceives himself, and deluding one's self is more than a crime for a statesman, j -c^Eschines alleged that the promises of Philip misled mm. Demosthenes rejected this excuse: "It is not admissible, neither in politics nor equity, for in fact you induce, you force no one to mix in public affairs; only when a man who is persuaded ot his ability presents himself do you wel- come him with the gratitude of a good and confiding people, and without jealous objection. He becomes your choice, and you put your affairs into his hands. If he is successful, he will be honored and will exalt him- self above the multitude; but if he fails, shall he be cleared of it with excuses and evasions ? This would not be just. Would the allies who have perished, and their wives and children, and so many other unfortu- nate victims, be indemnified for their disasters by the thought that it is the work of my folly, not to say that of JEschines ? Yery far from it. " ^ Now, can we rightfully use these words against their author, and throw upon him the responsibility of this blunder ? TTo us it seems easy to justify Demosthenes. Philip's weakness, as described by him, was not a fancy. Those domestic and national dissensions to which he points really existed; the very death of the conqueror through I court intrigues proves it Hand if Demosthenes, more confiding it seems than PITocion in the equity of provi- dence and the fortune of Athens, preserved some hope till the end, the catastrophe of the battle of Chae- ronea, whose loss was due solely to the rashness of ♦ Embassy, § 99. DEMOSTHENES THE STATESMAN. 153 Lysicles, then the sudden fall of Alexander's empire, proved that the orator's hopes were not wholly delu- sive. "If each city had had but one citizen like me at the i)ost that I occupied, — what say I? — if but a single man in Thessaly, a single man in Arcadia, had thought as I did, no Greek on this or the other side of Thermopylae could have been reached even with pres- ents ; but free and self-governed, without peril and without fear, they would all live happy in their own country, obliged for so much good to you, to all Ath- ens, thankful to me."Q)emostlienes was not so blinded by his hatred of Macedonia as to believe and desire the impossible. That which he saw was not fanciful; and when often he feigned not to see it, he had rea- sons, easy to conceive, for hiding it from the people."]] It is in fact injudicious to admit that the true state of ' affiirs had escaped the penetration of such a mind. Demosthenes was reason and reflection itself He passed his life in studying Philip, in watching all the turns in domestic and foreign affairs; and Philip, through his most wonderful qualities, escaped him. We would not know how to admit such a strange contradiction. Who, then, has given us the truest portrait of Philip, the general and the politician, unless the orator of the Phi- lippics fVDid Demosthenes ignore the advantages that \ gave to Fliilip the defeat of the Athenians and their democratic constitution ? No, he perceived them clearly; but he did not believe that the whole reality ought to be placed before the eyes of his hearers. He satirized / Philip's habits and his Macedonian nights (not Attic) j passed with actors, outcasts of the Piraeus; with a cer- I tain Callias, a public slave, rejected by Athens with dis- ( gust, and afterward the favorite of the king. He called 1 to witness a person who had been in that country an I 154 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. \ indignant witness of Philip's basenes^) lie treated the conqueror as a common drunkard, — wr what purpose ? To conceal by abuse the secret devotion of a man who received wages ? Let us leave this frivolous interpreta- tion to ^schines. He used thereby an orator's ac- knowledged right to exaggerate or curtail, according to the necessities of his case. A Peter of Russia could love wine as Henry lY and Louis XIV loved other pleasures, without being for that reason less worthy of the name of "the Great." Demosthenes did not exaggerate the extent of Philip's vices unreasonably, and he certainly would not have sought reasons for it if his auditors were merely such as Lycurgus, Hy- pendes, and Eubulus. ButHntellectual as were the citizens of Athens, a city witlTout blockheads, the as- semblies there were none the less popular assembliesj Oratory before the Areopagus or at the Pnyx, in the forum or before the senate, was under different condi- tions. Publius Scipio would not have dared, before the conscript fathers, to caricature the descent of Han- nibal's army from the Alps, as he did before his army (Livy, xxi, 40). He would have thought only of in- structing the wise company. But it was necessary for him to fortify the courage of his alarmed soldiers; and what surer way than to inspire them with contempt of the enemy ? fl)emosthenes likewise devoted himself to remove the fears of the Athenians. To lessen Philip's strength in their eyes weakened him, for it strengthened the confident courage of those whom he fought. In \ general, Demosthenes paid homage to Philip when he 1 wished to spur the Athenians to emulation; he de- ' nounced him, and justified the words of P. L. Courier, calling him "the great pamphleteer of Greece,'' when he wished to give them courage; now, this was above |ii!l I DEMOSTHENES THE STATESMAN. 155 i ! all what they lacked. The orator did not even think of concealing his tactics. "To enumerate the elements of Philip's power, and by this examination arouse you to your duty, does not seem convenient to me. And why ? Because all that could be said in this respect would not be without glory to him, and not an eulogy to our conduct. * * * But that which before an impar- tial judge would cover you with ignominy, is what I shall try to tell you here." While he disparaged their adversary he endeavored to strengthen their own feel- ings and raise them to the level of their ancestors; sometimes he played upon their fear. ' ' Philip not only wishes to subjugate Athens, but to annihilate it," I an exaggeration suiting the purpose of the orator. I Sometimes instead of exaggerating he attenuated the 1 danger. J Demosthenes called the Amphictyonic title \ decree(H:o Philip a "vain shadow." Can we dare con- clude that he did not foresee for what purpose the adroit Macedonian would use this remark ? He foresaw it but too well; but powerless as he sav/ Athens to rescue this sacred weapon from a prince who, by the consent of all, had become the protector of Delphi and its Pythia, Demosthenes should be praised for speaking disdain- fully of a title whose denial would have provoked a formidable levy of bucklers against his country. Let us continue to do homage to his wisdom and his de- signs; let us not impute to political blindness that for which the moralist and the orator may be more prop- erly praised. Enlightened judges have esteemed Demosthenes one of the greatest statesmen of antiquity; others have ac- cused him of driving his country to the precipice. Was Demosthenes right or wrong in advocating war against the Macedonians? Polybius reproached him for it. 156 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. "The struggle of the Athenians against Philip tended to plunge them into still greater evils; and without the magnanimity of the king and his love of glory, the policy of Demosthenes would have caused them still heavier misfortunes. " Polybius reproves Demosthenes for having denounced as "traitors" the most important people of those cities that concluded an alliance with Macedonia. These citizens were not traitors, but rather "benefactors" and "saviors," since their friendship for Philip preserved their country from the greatest dis- asters, and secured them very marked advantages over inimical cities. The friend of Scipio ^milianus could not speak otherwise without running the risk of a trial. Polybius, friendly to the Romans in their struggle against Perseus, procured them the help of the Achaean league, whose cavalry he commanded; therefore ho praises himself when he congratulates Aristhenes for having made the Achaean league pass over "properly" from the alliance of Philip to the friendship of the Ro- mans; a policy which for the Achseans was a source of "security" and "aggrandizement." Polybius' views were narrow and selfish. He justified the desertion of nations on the ground that their secession was person- ally profitable to themselves.* Demosthenes consid- ered interest higher than independence and national dignity. lie accused the cities aiding Philip of failing in their duties to the Hellenic cause; Polybius insists upon the advantages which the alleged traitors procured for their country. Nevertheless Demosthenes affirmed that all the cities guilty of treason had more to suffer * Polybius, xvii, 14, 13. B.)rn at Megalopolis, in Arcadia, the his- torian would have greatly desired to protect his compatriots from the branding reproaches of Demosthenes. ^ DEMOSTHENES THE STATESMAN. 157 from the triumph of the Macedonian than Athens her- self, and history proves him right. "^ Mablyt quotes Polybius, and approves him: "This orator grossly deceived himself if he believed all the Greeks would consult the interests of the Athenians. If each republic, after the fall of the federal government, could count only on itself, and had none but foes for neighbors, why did Demosthenes believe himself jus- tified in demanding that Thessaly, on the frontiers of Macedonia, and which Philip himself had delivered from tyrants, should become ungrateful^X and expose itself to the evils of war, to give Greece a useless ex- ample of courage, and appear attached to the principles of a union that no longer existed ? If the Argives implored the protection of Philip, it was because Lace- daemon still desired to be the tyrant of the Pelopon- nesus, and because Macedonia alone could give them useful help. If the Thebans allied themselves with Philip, it was because they saw that the Greeks no longer wished to be free, and that they thought it jpru- dent not to offend the most powerful enemy of jpuhliG liberty. Why did not Demosthenes perceive that the injuries with which he afflicted the principal magis- trates of Messenia, Megalopolis, Thebes, and Argos, far from preparing their minds for the alliance which he contemplated, were but able to multiply the civil hatred and domestic quarrels of Greece ? By his in- considerate conduct * * * he himself served the am- bition of Philip. After having tried the feebleness, irresolution and timidity of the Athenians, why did he * Grote, History of Greece. t Observations sur Chistoire de la Grece (edit, of 1791), iv, p. 157. X Thus Polybius {Examples of ViHv.es and Vices, § 38) opposes the generous virtue of Philip to the ungrateful obstinacy of Athens. 158 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. wish that the other cities should do for them what they would not do for themselves? After having learned by experience the uselessness of the embassies with which he fatigued Greece, why did he not change his views ? and can we not condemn him as a statesman and as a citizen^ while we admire him as an orator ? " Mably w^ould very willingly accept the saying of the sceptics of Athens: '' Demosthenes does not know his country; he is a fool."* In return he exalts the ad- mirable sense of "Phocion, who, as great a general as Demosthenes was a bad soldier, knew how, by advis- ing submission, to put himself within reach of his fel- low citizens." t We shall leave to Mably the care of refuting himself. Is it not in fact refuting one's self to render homage to Demosthenes in terms that assure him of oiy: sym- pathy at the cost of the prince, his opponent? rPhilip feared the impetuous eloquence that denounced him as a tyrant. He did not wish that the pride of the Greeks should be revived by awakening the memory of the great deeds of their fathers. To speak to them of the price of liberty was to force them to act with circumspection distasteful to an ambitious man. The more Philip endeavored to deprive Greece of her lib- * Demosthenes, Embassy. ifipsPpovry^ffOaij rijv tzoXiv dyjottv. f ^schines [Against Ctesiphon) rails at a " long " decree of Demos- thenes, "full of hopes that could not be realized, and of armies des- tined never to unite." Was this the fault of Demosthenes or that of the Athenians? This criticism is as good as the argument of Mably: "Demosthenes expected nothing from his enterprises, since in the great number of exordia that he composed in advance, one hardly finds two or three which he had prepared for a happy result." De- mosthenes had not to fear that in case of success he would lack words ; joy would assure him of the improvisation of an exordium to his liking. i i t DE3I0STIIENES THE STATESMAN. 159 erty, and to inspire her with a certain indolence that would prepare her to obey when she would be con- quered, the more he saw with chagrin that the Athe- nian orator revealed his projects, taught the Greeks beforehand that they would some day blush for the servitude that was inevitable, and, in a certain way, rendered the fruits of his victories uncertain by pre- paring them to become unquiet and seditious. "^ ^ * Till then there had been no one in Greece but this ora- tor, who, unraveling the ambitious plans of the Mace- doniiin, had discovered the dangers with which the liberty of his country was menaced. If any man was able to draw the Athenians out of the disgrace into which their taste for pleasure had cast them, and to restore to the Greeks their ancient valor, that man was Demosthenes, whose burning orations inflame the reader even to-day. But he spoke to deaf people; and, thanks to the more eloquent gifts of Philip, from the time the orator in thundering terms proposed decrees, to conclude alliances, form leagues, levy armies and equip galleys, a thousand voices cried out that peace was the greatest blessing, and that it was not worth while to sacrifice the present to the imaginary fears of the future."*^ Demosthenes appealed to love of glory, love of country, love of liberty, but these virtues no longer existed in Greece; the pensioners of Philip stirred up and created in his favor laziness, avarice, and eflfemi- nacy."^ *' A victory due to such means has little honor, especially when we consider for what bad purposes it was used by a prince who could only be praised for having the art to de- * K If the Arcadians neglected a remote evil to seek a remedy for the one that oppressed them, ought Demosthenes to make it one of their crimes ? " (Mably.) 160 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE EST GREECE. base the Greek and to destroy the remnant of courage they owed to their liberty. * * » Working but to satisfy his am- bition, he employed the greatest talents and rarest gifts of genius but to construct an edifice which, after his death, must crumble into dust." Thus Philip did not serve the cause of ''humanity" as he ought to have done. He was not a provident man. Why then summon Demosthenes to trial, the enemy of a conqueror who did not even claim the excuse of having bettered what he conquered? In short, Mably has written in another work: " With what noble and passionate firmness do free states defend their liberty! Macedonia had more trouble in sub- jugating several cities of Greece than entire Asia. Asia, once vanquished, submitted forever. Vanquished Greece did not at all allow herself to be overwhelmed with disgrace; ♦ * * she still found enough courage in herself, under Alex- ander and after him, to resist her own vices and the power- ful princes who had the art of dividing her. The desire to be free remained after liberty seemed to be irretrievably lost, and produced the Achaean league that could not be destroyed but by another republic destined to conquer all." It is not very easy to comprehend how the author of these lines on the virtue of liberty could disown the orator whose passion was to awaken its desire. Mably's thoughts lack cohesion and precision, or, rather, his thoughts and his sentiments contradict one another. This was the eternal struggle of cold intel- lect, moved everywhere by interest, with the generous inspiration and impulse of honor. It is Demosthenes' glory to have ignored these internal struggles and to have done all that the dignity of Athens might come out triumphant. "Distrust the iirst move," said a politician. It is always the best. The iirst move- DEMOSTHENES THE STATESMAN. 161 ment of Demosthenes was that of his whole life. Mably has condemned him, but at the expense of con- tradictions that refute his iniquitous judgment. An eminent genius, who has with distinction applied his high faculties to the exposition of philosophical doctrines, M. Cousii^, has judged Demosthenes in one of his most magnificent lectures.* The passage merits citation: "Demosthenes, after all, was nothing but a great orator. Demosthenes, in his time, represented the past of Greece, the spirit of small cities and small republics, a worn-out and corrupt democracy, — a past that could be no more and that was no more. To revive a past irretrievably gone it was necessary to wager truly against the possible. It was necessary .to attempt an unfolding of force and energy of which others were incapable, and himself like the rest; for, in short, one is always a little like others; one belongs to his time. So Demosthenes failed; I add, with his- tory, that he failed shamefully. * * ^ The eloquence of Demosthenes is almost like his life. It is convul- sive, demagogical, very unlike a statesman. He had enough of invective and dialectics, as well as of a skillful and wise use of language. But take the ora- tions of Pericles, poorly arranged as they are by Thu- cydides, compare them with those of Demosthenes, and you will see what a difference there is between the eloquence of the leader of a great nation and that of the leader of a party. [It would be difficult to compress more errors into fewer words.] If the strug- gles of nations are sad, if the vanquished claim our pity, we must reserve our greater sympathy for the conqueror [for Caesar, apparently, and not for Ver- cingetorix], since all victory infallibly indicates prog- * Introduction d Vhiatoire de la philosophie : 10th lecture 7* t f 162 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. DEMOSTHENES THE STATESMAN. 163 ress of the human race. * "^^ * Unfortunate heroes excite in us deeper sympathy than nations. Individ- uality adds to sympathy, but even there 'tis better to be on the side of the conqueror, for it is always that of the better cause, that of civilization and of human- ity, that of the present and of the future, since that of the vanquished is always that of the past. A great man vanquished is a great man out of place in his time. His triumph would stop the progress of the world. We must therefore applaud his defeat, since it was useful, since with his great qualities, his virtues and his genius, he marched against humanity and time. " Thus Demosthenes is culpable for having yielded to the allurements of patriotism, because he marched against humanity and time. The triumph of Greece would have arrested the progress of the world. These are grand expressions, but when time alone has re- vealed to us what was hidden from Demosthenes by the shadows of the future, it is easier than it is just to draw, at the expense of the generous citizen, the pom- pous conclusions of a transcendental philosophy. His maxim was that of Pericles, not to seek, for the sake of our misgivings, to sound the future. "'^ "Prophets should never sit in the council of states- men, "f What we attribute to the force of circum- stances is often due to the mere weakness of men. Therefore the least questionable duty is here the near- est. With righteous souls the moral of the present will always prevail against the philosophy of the fu- * " They have abandoned the uncertainty of success to hope, but think that they ought to count only upon tliemselvcs in the face of the present duty." {Funeral Eulogy, Thucydides, i4, 42.) t Of. De R^musat (1834), cited by M. Stievenart. .. li ture. Demosthenes may have spoken in the name of extinct virtue. Be it so, but he spoke in the name of virtue. Intelligent as Themistocles, he was not wholly ignorant of his inability to repair the edifice from the foundation, decayed by time. In Aris- tophanes, Agoracritus makes People pass over to the frying-pan and give him back his ancient virtues, to- gether with youth. The counsellor of Athens could not effect this magical change; but he was worthy of praise for trying to draw from a dull old man the last spark of youthful ardor. So many others around De- mosthenes counselled the useful, the present utility. It was well for the highest interests of Athens that the voice of their ancestors resounded for a last time on the tribune, that the emulation of the past was pro- posed as the pledge of certain esteem, at least of the respect of prosperity. Demosthenes, a worthy pupil of Pericles, said to the Athenians; "In deliberations of public interest the glory of our ancestors is the only law to consult. Each citizen, if he wishes to do nothing but what this law approves, ought, in mounting the tribune to judge a public cause, to think that with the insignia of his ofiice he is invested with the dignity of Athens." He himself set the example. He struggled, in the name of national honor, aga^inst the selfishness of citizens, the paltry interests of that always abundant class of people attached exclusively to the prosperity of their own trifling aflfairs, to the inviolability of their own well-being, — the Chrysales of patriotism, whose horizon is a good soup and a well-cooked roast. Citizens like these were not scarce at Athens.* Aristophanes engaged them in the gross * "One dies on politics, one lives on business," is their device. We suppose they will shortly translate beneficium as benefit. '■ 3t' If X. i I - f ■ 164 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. pleasantries of his Acharnians, and employed his comic whims in increasing their number. Three cheers for ringdoves and thrushes, tripe with honey, eels from lake Copais, biscuits, nicknacks, beautiful dancers, and cool wine ! Fie on war and its disgraces ! In truth, Lamachus is well advanced, having gone to break his lance against the enemies. Pay attention ! There he is coming back amidst the laughter of the theater, with a cut from a lance somewhere else than in the breast, groaning, limping, legs out of joint, head half split, and without his plumes ! This is the depth of Diceopolis' political morality. This just man and his equals saw in a buckler the picture of a cheese, in a spear a spit. They judged everything from the standpoint of good living and of enjoyment. Yery often such were the Athenians of Demosthenes' time, when the love of peace at any price was much less excusable than at the time of the Peloponnesian war. The contemporaries of Aristoph- anes doubted whether it was their duty to dispute preeminence with Sparta, or to seek the aggrandize- ment of Athens in Sicily. Demosthenes' hearers could not doubt their obligation to drive the Macedonian from Greece. Thus the orator, in attacking Philip, obedient to the dictates of his conscience, could not fail, and if he failed, his mistake was happy, and more enviable than the cold prudence of the foreigner's partisans. There are situations where honor com- mands us to fight, though the cause be hopeless. If heaven has designs, it will always have power to accomplish them, and men at least will have obeyed that secret voice which inspired a hero of Corneille with this honest maxim: ''Do your duty^ and to the gods leave the rest.'*'' \ DEMOSTHENES THE STATESMAN. 165 Now, it was undoubtedly Athens' duty to delay servitude by the manly efforts of an hour, and not to hasten it by a weak submission. Fancying one's self to discover the men of Providence, and aiding the evolutions of humanity by rallying to their standards, is to enter a dangerous way. Patriotism here can easily err. Demosthenes, condemned by speculative philosophy and poetry, is acquitted by common sense and morality. It is a narrowness of honorable minds not to set them- selves up as especially interested interpreters of divine commands, but to oblige themselves modestly to do their duty without words. Fenelon * declares that Atti- cus was wiser than even Cicero and Cato. Demosthenes, in his eyes, was wrong in struggling against Philip- it was impossible for him to restore his republic, and to guard her from danger. The preceptor of the Duke of Bourgoyne makes a distinction between the duty of a private citizen and that of a prince: "A mere private man ought to think of nothing but of regulating his own affairs, and of governing his family; he ought never to desire public oflftces, still less seek them." God has provided for this abstinence by entrusting the mission of governing a state to a prince, who would not be at liberty to abandon it, '4n however bad a state it was." Without thinking of it, Fenelon eulogizes the republican constitution: where there is no monarch, the citizens inherit his duties, and ought, in his place and position, never to abandon, desperate as it may seem, the cause of the state. The republic is not intrusted to the care of a single man, but to the devotion of each of her children; Demos- thenes' care did not fail her. " Seeing that all Greece * Thirty-third Dialogue, ,Demo8thene et Ciceron. 166 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. was humiliated, branded and corrupted, by those who received the gifts of Philip and Alexander for the ruin of their country, that his city needed a man and all Greece a city to take the lead, he gave himself to his country, and the city to Greece for liberty." This homage, rendered by Hyperides to Leosthenes, seems to be addressed to the orator of the Philippics. Demosthenes was conscious of having served his country well, "an august and holy recompense in the eyes of him who esteemed virtue and honor." He enjoyed still another: roused by ^schines to avenge her defeat upon her counsellor, Athens, acknowledging his services, decreed him a golden crown, less brilliant, however, than that with which he enriched his coun- try's brow. With all due deference to the critics vexed by his policy, Athens may be pardoned for a part of her long-extended weakness; her vigor, tardy, but worthy of her past, has merited and will still receive the eulogies of the future. CHAPTER Y. ANALYSIS OF THE PRINCIPAL ELEMENTS AND CHAR- « ACTERISTICS OF DEMOSTHENES' ELOQUENCE. ^^Aoyoq tuffTzep £ixa)v rrjq ^/J-7J<; diavoia^ . . . /i\/7jfj.£'i6v jioo TzoXb xdXXiov ra)v ^aXxaiv dva07jfidTwv: This oration is like a faithful portrait of my thoughts, a monument far more beautiful than statues of bronze." (Socrates.) IN Demosthenes the statesman is reflected in the ora- tor ; Demosthenes is therefore the most useful model to be studied by men who are called upon to govern their equals by speech. His eloquence is prac- tical and positive, born of affairs and used for them. In this sense we can well accept Rousseau's words: "Ani- mated by Demosthenes' masculine eloquence, my stu- dent will exclaim. This is an orator! But in reading Cicero, he will exclaim. This is an advocate!" On the rostrum, Demosthenes disdains the artifices of art and the desire to please the mind by employing re- sources of the imagination. An oration in Demosthe- nes' style, delivered in our days before the English Par- liament, or before the Congress of the United States, would produce a greater effect than the most magnifi- cent harangues of the Roman consul. Cicero spoke before auditors who were moved by everything that dis- played theatrical pomp. Rome's majesty was imprinted in his eloquence, and his eloquence was embellished like the patrician's toga. The Attic genius, as simple and precise as the pallium, was not adorned with this magisterial fullness. Demosthenes aimed at enlighten- 167 i!ul I /»- ■ 168 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GKEECE. Ik DEMOSTHENES THE ORATOR. 169 i ment and conviction before all other things; and in treat- ing public affairs without an apparent trace of literary care,he realized effective eloquence, — the only eloquence relished by our modern political assemblies. He car- ried the votes most difficult to win, and like Yoltaire, he accomplished it without making a phrase. In him there was no show, no ostentation; no great words nor periods for efiect. " His good sense spoke without any other ornament than its own force. He made truth in- telligible to the whole people; he awakened them, he stimulated them, he showed to them the yawning abyss. All was said for the common safety, not one word for the orator himself.^ All was instructive and touching, nothing brilliant." Demosthenes pursued his object constantly and bravely, without ever deviating to amplify; he ab- stained from all development, even that which would be most favorable to eloquence and most agreeable to the ears of the people, if it was not essentially necessary. Clearness, luminous precision, these were the secrets of his power. "And if you will be persuaded, Athenians, first to raise these supplies which I have recommended, then to proceed to your other preparations, — your infantry, navy, and cavalry; and lastly to confine your forces by a law to that service which is appointed to them; reserving the cave and distribution of their money to yourselves, and strictly examining into the conduct of the general; then your time will be no longer wasted in continual debates upon the same subject, and scarcely to any purpose; then you will deprive him of the most considerable of his revenues; for his arms are now * F^nelon, Lettre a VAcademie. Cicero's orations are full of Cicero. Demosthenes' biographers cannot, to their deep regret, derive any in- formation from Demosthenes' harangues. i supported by seizing and making prizes of those who pass the seas. But is this all? No; you shall- also be secure from his attempts; not as when some time since he fell on Lemnos and Imbrus, and carried away your citizens in chains ; not as when he surprised your vessels at Gerastus, and spoiled them of an unspeakable quantity of riches; not as when lately he made a descent upon the coast of Marathon, and carried off our sacred galley; while you could neither oppose these insults, nor detach your forces at such junctures as were thought convenient."* *' I have heard it objected, * that indeed I ever speak with reason ; yet still this is no more than words,t that the state requires something more effectual, some vigorous actions.' Upon which I shall give my sentiments without the least reserve. The sole business of a speaker is, in my opinion, to propose the course you are to pursue. This were easy to be proved. You know that when the great Timotheus moved you to defend the Euboeans against the tyranny of Thebes, he addressed you thus: * What, my countrymen 1 when the Thebans are actually in the island, are you de- liberating what is to be done? what part to be taken? Will you not cover the seas with your navies? Why are you not at the Piraeus? why are you not embarked?' Thus Timo- theus advised ; thus you acted ; and success ensued. But had he spoken with the same spirit, and had your indolence pre- vailed, and his advice been rejected, would the state have had the same success? By no means. And so in the present case, vigor and execution is your part ; from your speakers you are only to expect wisdom and integrity. * First Philippic, § 33. ^ Aiysiv TO. apiffza: to say only what is best to be said in the people's interest is the utmost requirement of the law. The orator who fails in this duty is subject to the denunciation called tlffayyeXia. Demosthenes willingly uses this formula in order to remind the Athenians of his devotion to the superior law of patriot- ism. (Hyperides, Against Polyeuctus.) 8 V; i^-±- - ( ll i!' 170 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. I shall just give the summary of my opinion, and then descend. You should raise supplies, you should keep up your present forces, and reform whatever abuses may be found in them (not break them entirely upon the first com- plaint). You should send ambassadors into all parts, to reform, to remonstrate, to exert all their efforts in the ser- vice of their state. But, above all things, let those corrupt ministers feel the severest punishment; let them, at all times, and in all places, be the objects of your abhorrence; that wise and faithful counsellors may appear to have consulted their own interest as well as that of others. If you will act thus, if you will shake off this indolence, perhaps,— even yet, perhaps,— we may promise ourselves some good fortune. But if you only just exert yourselves in acclamations and applauses, and when anything is to be done, sink again into your supineness, I do not see how all the wisdom in the world can save the state from ruin, when you deny your assistance." ♦ This is invincible evidence, and one that forces assent like an arithmetical demonstration, according to ^s- chines' comparison. Demosthenes ignored long preparations, he never <*beat about the bush,"— he went directly to the facts. *'Brief and without pretense will be my debut, Athe- nians. In my eyes the sincere orator ought, from his first words, to clearly expose his proposition. When his opinion is known, if you wish to hear him further, he explains himself, he develops his plans and means. If you reject his proposal, he descends from the rostrum without fatiguing your patience and his voice to no purpose. I therefore enter at once upon my subject. Democracy is outraged at Mytilene, and you ought to avenge this injury. By what means \ * Oration on the Chersonesua, § 73. DEMOSTHENES THE ORATOR. 171 t I J T can tell you, when I shall have established the reality of this oppression, and your duty to put an end to it." Brief and full of sense, such is his aim; proofs and examples are at once presented in his thoughts; he confines himself to facts which are best ' known and best adapted to his purpose {/idXtffra T:poytipoj)\ he can choose. He never likes to hear himself speak, he has no leisure for it; he does not mount the rostrum to speak, but to act, if we can use such an expression. This brevity, always laud- able, was particularly necessary in an orator whose reprimands contained no flattery for Athenian weak- ness. Sometimes they refused to hear him. Some cried, Speak !. others. Do not speak ! If the orator was able to triumph over the tumult, he did not con- quer their rebellious dispositions. In such a case he hastened his speech, he knew that they were impatient to get rid of him. Demosthenes' rapidity notably appeared in his ex- ordiums. Aristotle compares the exordium to the poet's prologue, to the preludes of flute-players. We could further compare it to the preparatory move- ments of the wrestler when he wishes to make his hands and arms supple; ^ but with this diff'erence, that the athlete strikes at nothing, while the exordium is destined at once to reach the adversary. The exor- dium is especially necessary to the advocate who sup- ports, or appears to support, a bad cause. ''It is more advantageous to him to stop at every digression than to come to his own aflkir. Thus slaves never answer directly when questioned; they use circumlocutions and preambles, "t The deliberative exordium is generally * Such is the prelude of Dares, the pugilist, (^netd, v, 375.) t Aristotle, Mhetoric, iii, 14. '6- i r % \ 172 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. short, sometimes useless. Everybody knows the subject under consideration; the exordium, then, has no other object than to awaken the attention of the hearers to the importance of the debate, and to inspire them with dispositions favorable to the person or to the orator's thesis. Demosthenes and his principles were suffi- ciently well known to t' ; Athenians; he had only to use before them the cc nmon resources of the bar. Two statements were sufficient for him: "Judges, before all things, the thought that the abrogation of the law (of Leptines) is useful to the commonwealth, and, secondly, the interest of Chabrias' son, have made me consent to support these citizeds with all my power." His peroration was likewise remarkably simple. It was the formula familiar to the Athenians: "I see nothing more to say, and all my words have, I be- lieve, been comprehended {Contra Leptinem) "^"^ \ or a rapid review of the arguments developed. At the con- clusion of the oration all is clear; the sentiment de- sired by the orator is inspired then or never. Many an orator prepares his peroration immediately after his exordium: he fears that breath will fail him at the end. Demosthenes did not fear these swoons; he felt strong and sure of himself; he had no weak troops adorned and surrounded by chosen soldiers; in him all was solid and ardent. An intense heat animated his harangues from beginning to end: his life, his soul, circulated in them from the first word to the last: spiritus intus alit. "^ "^ ^ What good is it to adjust a peroration carefully prepared to a discourse which is all peroration ? The orator concludes with some grave and simple words, without using pathetic ges- tures or oratorical efforts; he descends from the ros- t 1 J DEMOSTHENES THE ORATOR. 173 trum with the same step and with the same air as he mounted it.^ Demosthenes had little success in improvisation; but when he was compelled to speak impromptu, he did it with an energy superior to that of his written orations. This compulsion to do himself injustice by departing from his natural course, imprinted upon his mind an agitation the result of which was remarkably vigorous language. Then, without doubt, escaped from him those bold terms or images with which ^schines reproaches him.f JS'ot endowed with the gift of easy productions, he also failed in the indiscreet vivacity of his imagination and his thoughts. In his orations he sometimes appeared to be transported by a divine inspiration. His nature was irascible and violent; sometimes he inclined to wrangling and to the abuse of subtile reasoning. At all times he had to govern himself and to undergo a severe preparation. Improvisation would have given him loose reins; the pen restrained him. Thus calmed and chastised,' he was not only protected from the railleries of comic poets, but incomparable in point of beauty. He was unexpectedly called upon to mount the rostrum: ''I am not prepared," was his excuse. He knew the exigencies of an artistic people, whose delicacy had more than once chagrined his debut. He judged it prudent to meditate and to write his harangues * Modem speakers, in general, think that they must make a great effort at the close. Taste among the ancients was different. A Pin- daric Ode of Horace (Lebrun deemed it worthy to be translated by his own hand) concludes thus: "The young calf which is to liquidate my debt has a white spot on his forehead, the rest of him is of a dun color " (IV, 2). Pindar finishes the Fourth Olympic thus : " Even young men's hair often turns white before their age warrants it." t Against Ctesiphon, § 166. -t ,*•,■■ •-- ^■rv^Ji. x-^'-iimriM n' -i' nr " •"• ^liT^. :iikitm^. iT!^ •Tjt-svjrsT m POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GEEECE. % thoughtfully, in order to satisfy the people and to justify himself if malignity should compel him to defend himself, as in the Oratio in Midiam^ against the assaults of Athenians, who were the first to profit by his admonition. Demosthenes' imagination was more vigorous than prompt. With all that, he was timid. A vigorous exercise had rendered his voice sufticiently powerful to triumph over the roar of the waves. It was, per- haps, always difiicult for hitn to overcome the emotion which the storms of the popular assembly aroused in him. It was, no doubt, to the preoccupation of an orator who was easily disconcerted and obliged to en- trust his strong reflections to an attentive memory that Demosthenes owed the meditative and anxious attitude ridiculed by ^schines.^ An easy and spontaneous eloquence would have given him more freedom and abandonment. It would have doubled his powers. Sudden inspiration is one of the most powerful instru- ments of speech, and the source of irresistible effects. If living words affect us more than reading, what ad- vantages instantaneous eloquence has over the pre- meditated oration ? In place of being reduced to silence by an unworthy adversary, it is always ready for his orders, never at his mercy. It follows him over his own ground. Against his prepared sentences it offers arguments which spring from a sudden con- ception, and which are in the highest degree marked by the expressive beauty of living nature. The spec- * On the rostrum, before speaking " he rubbed his forehead " ; he assumed "the attitude of a charlatan who meant to impose on his hearers " ; that is to say, his attitude was grave and collected, (^s- chines, Embassy^ § 49.) " When he composed he held his pen in his mouth and bit it." (Plutarch, Life of Demosthenes, 29.) i' DEMOSTHENES THE ORATOR. 175 tator who sees them born assists the creative act of the genius; he admires it, and this admiration disposes him to be easily persuaded. A penetrating glance from a calm orator confounds and chastises an inter- rupter. A fortunate rally can reestablish a battle that has been almost lost. What does it profit to be right if we cannot prove it at once, when the refutation must, without delay, destroy the effect of an adversary's ora- tion ? Without improvisation, the orator in the heat of the contest is disarmed as soon as he has spent the arrows brought from his shop. Improvisation assures him of a supply that is ever new. See how Cicero, by an extemporaneous outburst, dismayed Clodius in that passionate altercation before the senate, a graphic de- scription of which is found in one of his letters {Ad Atticum, i, 16). An extemporaneous debate is a duel in which the attack and reply cross each other with the rapidity of two swords. Victory is sometimes the reward of the most agile dexterity. To be wanting in improvisation is therefore a grave defect in a statesman, especially at Athens, where the citizens of the Pnyx, daily occupied in the current of public affairs, represented a permanent parliament. The eloquent ministers of the state were also called upon to act as her ambassadors. IS'ow, what are we to think of an Athenian deputy who is deficient in oratory ? Demosthenes must have suff'ered cruelly be- fore Philip for having failed in prompt eloquence, on which his contemporary orators prided themselves. Python of Byzantium flattered himself on his ability to write, but he also knew how to improvise. De- mades had a prompt conception and ready language. In his extemporaneous speeches he often completely reversed all the arguments which Demosthenes had icfa ■HB glfitukiJi 176 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. carefully studied and premeditated. Sometimes also, when he saw Demosthenes troubled, he came to his assistance and aided him in regaining control of his audience. What are we to say of ^schines, whose eloquence, according to his rival's testimony, flowed abundantly, like the rolling waves of a torrent ? De- mosthenes must have been touched by his own in- feriority in this respect. Modern orators are more felicitous. Words have wings and fly away; writings remain. Without mentioning Cimon, Themistocles, Phocion, and Pericles, who have left us nothing of their eloquence, how little of Demades' brilliant im- provisations remains to us, and what a great damage has ^schines, our orator's rival, inflicted on Greek letters by transmitting so little of his fertility ! The Tliree Graces,^ due to ^schines' chisel, increase our regret for having been deprived of such masterpieces which were born from day to day of inspired but fra- gile designs. Plutarch, in his comparison of Demosthenes and Cicero, does not admire the habit of continually exer- cising the talent of ''haranguing and pettifogging." Athens was not wanting in fertile speakers, always disposed to improvise an opinion.rOemosthenes pre- ferred to polish the expression otTiis thought as he matured his deliberations. Thus he did not fear repe- titions. When a period, a comparison or an entire development, thoughtfully elaborated, appeared to him as near as possible to the desired ideal, and worthy of being peremptorily preserved, he had no scruples to use it again and againTlHe wished to submit the Athenians to the control of his speech, and to direct ♦The ancient critics thus designated .zEschines' works: Against Timarchus; Oration on the Embassy; Against Ctesiphon. J DEMOSTHENES THE ORATOR. 177 their attention to the public good; whence his perse- verance in repeating until he accomplished his object. Socrates* excused himself for always saying the same thing upon the same subject to the sophists, thinkers who were very changeable. Demosthenes concen- trated his attacks upon the same weak points of the Athenians. Perhaps they are wounded by these repe- titions. To whom do they attribute them ? Are they not the first authors? "Change your conduct, and I will change my language." True and noble thoughts, when once in a mould worthy jf them, are always pleasant to hear. If they are applicable to the subject, it is unnecessary to search for their origin and the date of their birth. Within an interval of two years (355-353), at the close of his oration Against Timocrates^ Demosthenes re- produced an invective which had already been directed against Androtion. He did not pretend to dissimulate the repetition, but he announced it in such a manner that it was pardoned: "I have already had occasion to pronounce the words which I am about to say to you; but only those of you heard them who assisted in the debates provoked by Euctemon." The tribunals changed judges every year. The audience was almost entirely renewed. The orator thought it unnecessary to renew himself Elsewhere, Demosthenes alleged that he returned to facts already mentioned, and in the same terms, for the instruction of young classes who had been neither witnesses nor hearers. Theophrastus' great talker {AdXoq;) "recounted what applause one of * The Pierrot of the Festin de Pierre is Socratic on this point. To Charlotte: " I always tell you the same thing because it is always^e same thing; and if it were not always the same thing, I would not always* tell you the same thing." irs POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. ! 1 i =- his orations received which he delivered in public, and he repeated a great part of it." The author of the oration O71 the Crown sometimes resisted this tempta- tion, which had such influence on the Greek mind. He said he feared that "such retrospective eloquence would fatigue the judges in vain." When he was assured of escaping this danger he was less scrupulous. He drew before the eyes of the Messenians "dazzling examples " of Philip's perfidy. He considered it useful to repeat them before the Athenians, and he repeated his little address whose "judicious truth" had (he himself takes care to inform us) excited the "roaring acclamations" of the Messenians.* The Athenians saw, if they did not all feel like Demosthenes, the alarms at the news of the capture of Elatea. Ctesi- phon's defender did not omit to picture it before their eyes. This picture was not merely, under the orator's pen, an illustrious testimony of his courageous devo- tion. He found another opportunity to charm the people with the refreshing remembrance of his incom- parable eloquence. "On that day, then, I was the man who stood forth. And the counsels I then pro- posed may now merit your attention on a double account: first, to convince you that of all your leaders and ministers I was the only one who maintained the part of a zealous patriot in your extremity, whose words and actions were devoted to your service in the midst of public consternation; and secondly, to enable you to judge more clearly of my other actions, by granting a little time to this. ":(: Demosthenes omitted ♦ In the Embassy ^Eschines reproduced, in substance, an oration already pronounced by him before Pliilip, and repeated previously in the assembly of the people. It was therefore delivered three times. t Pro Ccn-ona, % 173. DEMOSTHENES THE ORATOR. 179 h a third reason; it is that he derived as much pleasure from repeating his orations as did his fellow-citizens from hearing them. Homer never fails to repeat ver- batim the messages or the speeches of his characters. It is his advantage,— his naive simplicity. The Attic orators followed this example in order to please their hearers and themselves, and did it with artistic scru- ples. It was well; let us imitate it. The better is sometimes an enemy of the good. It is thus with our virtuosi. If they excel in certain pursuits, in which their talent has full scope, they continue the same pur- suits, and will compel the world to admire their execu- tion. 11 nous faut du nouveau^ n'en fat-il plus au monde. On this point the French are more Athenian than the Athenians themselves. The Greeks love novelty (Aristophanes did not forget to entertain them with new inventions), but the beautiful allured them still more; though it might be repeated many times. It was never unacceptable to them. Thus they allowed no one to practice originality with impunity. It would have been even dangerous, especially for an accused man, to do it with eclat. "Now if I ask you to listen to an oration quite different from those habitually delivered before you, you will not be angry with me, but pardon me, reflecting that the particular nature of the attacks against me renders these explanations of a new kind necessary. * * * I hesitate to speak, for I have such new and strange opinions to expose to the consideration of you all that I fear you will, at my first words, fill the tribunal with your murmurs and cries. * * ^ I beseech you, however, not to become prepos- sessed with the idea that I would have been so foolish, when I am under an accusation, as to choose a method 180 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. of defense which contradicts your opinions, if I did not think that this part of my oration accorded with that which precedes. "* Sometimes the Atlienian orators took care to remark that their sentiments were those of their hearers. Like Aristogiton's accuser, they defended themselves from being originah ''I will say nothing new, nothing original, nothing particularly remarkable (TzspcTZihy Superiority was the danger to avoid. Pericles dissimu- lated his. ''I will endeavor, in accordance with the law, to meet the desires and sentiments of each one of you to the best of my ability, "f He was satisfied with the honor of being in harmony with the city, and of being alone the interpreter of all. Thus the speakers considered the susceptibility^of hearers who would be insulted by an elevation and richness of thought by which they might, perhaps, feel humiliated. The people desire that the man be one of their number, and like them. Nero became the idol of the plebeians by publicly sharing their tastes. The literati of Rome denied the appellation of learned, and shared the popular preju- dices against the Greeks. Aristides the Just was ex- iled. Athens would have tolerated him if he had merely merited the qualification of moderate citizen (fiirpto^). Under Caligula and Domitian, probity was an offense to the emperor. The Athenian people were tyrannical ; their jealous temper imposed equality imperiously and in all respects; all eminent merit, even in eloquence, made them distrustful. It is therefore not astonishing that the Athenian ora- tors aspired to originality only indifferently. They cared little for it; they did not fear to resemble their * Isocrates, Antidosis. f I^uneral Oration, ii, 35, fin., 45. DEMOSTHENES THE ORATOR. 181 rivals, to copy them as they copied themselves.* In- no: ition in thought stimulated them less to emulation than elegance of expression. Isocrates' testimony is significant in this respect. *' Past events are a common domain, open to every man. To make use of them htly, to draw from them suitable reflec- tions, to enliven them with charms of expression, is the office of the skillful. The surest means, in my opinion, to promote all the arts, and the superior art of speech, would be to honor and to admire, not those who first grappled with a subject, but those who brought it to perfection; not the author anxious to speak of things which have not been touched upon before him, but the talent capable of treating a known subject in a man- ner that cannot be equaled."t • II. Perfection of form in language, as in all other things, was the desired aim of the Greek artist. ISTow perfection is rarely improvised. :j: Pascal tells us that .we should not fear to repeat the proper word when we have found it. Our pulpit orators have extended this principle to entire pages, when careful reviewing brought them to the highest degree of beauty possible to reach. Fenelon, in his third Dialogue on Eloquence^ de- * Demosthenes and Isaeiis established the utility of the torture in the same terms " Having to express the same thoughts, I do not think that I ought to trouble myself to express in another manner what has been presented felicitously. * » * I would be unreasona- ble ii; seeing others protit by what belongs to me, I was the only one who did not dare to use what I myself composed. Isocrates {LetUr to Philip). t Panegyric on AtJiens, § 9. t Sometimes a sudden inspiration creates at once a perfect master- piece (cf. Plato's Ton). Thus from patriotic feeling was born, with a perfect harmony of words and song, the finished hymn of Houget de Vlale; but these ctfusions are the excei^tion. ~'^7^^piii^ 182 li ' POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. mands that the preacher shall speak with effusion, and pour his soul out in a touching and familiar ser- mon. These pastoral exhortations are capable of .powerful effects, but they also have their dangers: it is dangerous to improvise at the foot of the altar. Bossuet's method is safer: Bossuet revised his ser- mons without recoiling before patient erasures. What Bossuet, Bourdaloue and Massillon did in the christian pulpit, which is devoted to the saving of souls, the political orators of Athens could not refuse to their love of art and of the state. It was not, however, without sometimes exposing themselves to criticism. Demosthenes thought that he ought to exculpate him- self for having written the Oratio in Midlam before appearing at the tribunal. He said that he had pre- pared a bill against the. opposing party, a rich collec- tion of the crimes and insolences of the criminal. He offered to give the judges a lecture on it. Nothing was more natural, in the eyes of the heliasts, than to see an accuser carefully draw up and magnify his brief against his adversary: this was the right of an enemy. Condemnation was passed on the memoirs, but not on the perfect beauties of the speech itself; for the speech was a snare to captivate the artistic sensibility of the hearers: ''Perhaps Midias will add that I have studied and prepared all that I am now saying. Yes, Athenians, I have studied it; why should I deny it? I have weighed it with all the care im- aginable. In fact, I would be foolish if, after the out- rages which I have received and am still receiving, I had neglected the accusation which I am about to present to you. As to my oration, Midias himself wrote it; for the author of a bill of accusations is really that man whose actions have furnished the sub- \ f f • DEMOSTHENES THE ORATOR. 183 ject, not that one who has taken care to elaborate the arguments which, by my right as a citizen, I lay before you to-day. Such is my custom, Athenians: I agree with Midias. But he, undoubtedly, has never made a wise reflection in all his life. For if he had only reflected a little, he would not have acted with such extravagance." Isocrates, a professional writer, also apologized to the people, but in a different tone. He declared to the admirers of familiar orations that he knew as well as any one the merit of simplicity. Master of all the resources of his art, he could be brilliant and simple at his will. The severity of these austere writers betrayed them: they reserved their eulogies for works whose weakness could not discourage them. Thus the author of the Panegyric was neither sur- prised nor intimidated by their disdain for his fine diction. Orontes asked indulgence in favor of his sonnet: he had so little time to write it. Isocrates, more sincere, made this candid confession to the de- tractors of finished orations: "Most orators, in their exordiums, assuage their audience in advance; they prelude by pretexts to the oration which they are about to deliver. Some allege the little leisure given tlicm to prepare themselves; others the difficulty ot finding expressions equal to the grandeur of the sub- ject. As for me, if I do not speak in a manner worthy of the subject, of my reputation, of the time devoted to the composition of this oration, (nearly ten years, the duration of the siege of Troy!) and finally of the long experience of my whole life, I do not ask any forgiveness; I consent to ridicule and contempt."* Renown and length of time compelled him to submit * Panegyric^ §§11 ^^^ 14. / 184 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. DEMOSTHENES THE ORATOR. 185 All written orations, however, owe to the reader qualities which the harangues that are born of daily disputes in the forum do not possess. "A written oration derives its merit from expressions rather than the thought it contains."* If the author wished to polish it with his pen, it was apparently in the hope that it would be admired by posterity. Now, how can he be assured that it will reach its destination, if not by the imperishable and inalienable beauty of diction? "Well written works," says Buffon, ^^will be the only works that will pass to posterity." Modem law protects literary property; the genius of the writer will protect it as surely. Bossuet and Demosthenes are less " liable to be robbed " than Harpagon. To the reasons which Demosthenes alleges to justify the artistic work done in the introduction of the Ora- tio in Midiam, we can add one relative to the fitness of revising it after delivery: ''Written orations ap- pear meagre when delivered in public. The finest harangues at the bar seem ordinary when they are read in print. It is because they are made for action, and if they are not used for action they no longer produce their effect, but appear insipid." f Action was their dominant virtue {y-uxpirixmrdrr^^ and that was precisely the power of which they were deprived. As soon as they were written they needed the essential merit of written orations, which was a •scrupulous perfection of style. Thus Demosthenes' harangues, so powerful by action, were weakened when transferred from the tumultuous tribune to paper. They were like a statue with dim eyes, substituted for the living athlete. They would never seem lan- guid and cold, even without the revisions; and yet, * Aristotle, Rhetoric, iii, 1. f Aristotle, Wietoric, iii, 12. lA \ notwithstanding their innate vigor, they must neces- sarily gain by being reviewed before reading. In the cabinet the writer reanimates his work with a new life; with purity of language, with perfection of de- sign, with the coloring of pencil, he unites at his leisure pathetic energy and the beauty of expression; finally, he uses all the secrets of his art capable of making the marble breathe, and of giving, by force of illusion, the warmth of life and action to the motion- less canvas. As to the proofs of revision, they are numerous in the orations of Demosthenes and his contemporaries. Thus we do not find to-day, in the oration On the Em- bassy^ several expressions or traits criticised by ^schi- nes. Demosthenes profited by his enemy's criticisms; he suppressed them as soon as he made his final revis- ion. The harangues of the two rivals contain many passages as follows: "I learn that my adversary will excuse himself in this manner. * * * He will, I know, oflfer this objection. * * * He will give me this reply. When he will say to you, * * * do not listen to him; if he insists, answer him," or other analagous formulas. Evidently the speeches in which these anticipations are met have not reached us in their primitive form. Per- haps in civil cases the logographers were so unfaithful as to mutually communicate their arguments, — the client was the only one to suffer; but in political and passion- ate debates this supposition is inadmissible. Kever did ^schines and Demosthenes extend their disinterested love of art to such a degree that they refrained from dealing the blows which their hatred demanded. These literary preoccupations do not agree with the eulogy of Fenelon, which we have referred to. In Demosthenes *'not one word is for the orator." * ^ ^ Pytheas re- 8* nt^m^^iss-r- ■>!.>^. ^ _.^^ 186 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. preached this same Demosthenes for bestowing so much labor on his orations that they smelt of the lamp; u£s- chines, for using expressions that were polished to ex- cess {'ipiipyotq). Like Thucydides, according to the re- mark of Dionysius of Halicarnassus, Demosthenes pre- ferred a studied diction to ordinary and natural lan- guage, aiming at originality of attitude and relief. How can we harmonize this apparent contradiction ? It is true Demosthenes did not pursue the beauty of diction to aggrandize himself; he disregarded himself and looked only to his country's interests; but even his coimtry's safety made him an excellent artist. "Demos- thenes did not strive after the beautiful ; he created it without thinking of it. He used language as a modest man uses his coat, to cover him." With all due defer- ence to the author of The Letter to Hie Academy^ Fenelon, Demosthenes aimed not only to dress his thoughts decently, but to present them under a costume which attracted the eyes of those who admired the ex- quisite perfections of form everywhere. Demosthenes did strive for the beautiful, and thought of it constantly, but he knew how to realize it with an imperceptible art; ^ he assiduously studied his eloquence, but this study never in the least deprived him of his nature and his disinterested sincerity. The orator, even after his studious labors by the lamp, could always apply to his political harangues the words which close the Fourth Philippic: "Such is the truth, Athenians, told in all frankness, with simplicity and devotion. I know nothing better to say." He might have added, if he had Isocrates' disposition, I could not say it in better terms, nor with a more per- suasive talent. Demosthenes was precise and rapid *ilav^dya>y r^oUi, (Aristotle, BftetoriCy iii, 16.) DEMOSTHENES — THE ORATOR. 187 in his thoughts, measured in his vigor, warm and sober in his style; in a word, he was a perfect Attic. The audience made the orator. The Areopagus acquitted a courtesan who was accused of impiety because she was beautiful. The Athenian people likewise were in- dulgent toward ^schines, the friend of Philip, because he was eloquent and handsome. In order to be master of such a city, and to exercise Pericles' undisputed as- cendency over it, Demosthenes had to derive his power from the union of the practical eloquence of former ages with the polished eloquence which his contempo- raries exacted. His attainments had to be such that it would be said of him, ' ' The Graces reposed on his lips ; when he opposed the will of the Athenians, when his voice, animated by his country's interests, assumed the severe tone of reprimand, it had to render agreeable and popular the censures which it hurled at men who en- joyed the favor of the people."* If Demosthenes as an orator of the state had to be artistic on the rostrum, he certainly should have the privilege of being artistic when writing his orations in his cabinet. There he no longer addressed the men of Athens; he pleaded in a manner his cause before posterity. He meant to sub- jugate us also by his sound reasoning, his elevated senti- ments, and his perfect language. If he has treated us as Athenians, let us not complain of it. We have praised Demosthenes' brevity and his dis- dain for all that was merely ornamental. This eulogy applies without restriction to the Philippics and to the harangues, which are exclusively political and full of action. His other orations sometimes contain speci- mens of pure charms, which alone afford us pleasure in reading them, and dissuade us from pronouncing * De Oratore, iii, 34. Ci A- •» ^_ 8^- 188 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE ITT GREECE. f them tedious works. Papyrus is patient; the Athe- nian judge who did not share with Philocleon the Aristophanic privilege of eating his soup before the audience was, perhaps, not always so patient, and yet the Greek mind was generally indulgent toward ora- tions delivered for the sole object of pleasing. Trag- edy sometimes permitted them. Such were the long geographical sketches in ^schylus' Prometheus and the detailed description of the Pythian games in Sopho- cles' Eleotra^ a picture sufficiently interesting, ac- cording to the taste of the Athenians, to make them pardon an anachronism. The recital of Hippolytus' death, for which Fenelon reproached Racine, would certainly have found mercy before the Athenians. Even in civil speeches, where the clepsydra measured the time, Attic sobriety was not always averse to agreeable amplifications. Demosthenes, in his oration Against Neasro.^ went back even to Theseus in order to prove citizenship at Athens by history, — a digression undoubtedly well received by the audience, but not indispensable to the debate. The speech Against Lac- ritus contains an enumeration of the Athenian tribu- nals and their respective attributes, which is instruct- ive to us but useless to the case. Did the dicasts find particular pleasure in an enumeration of the com- plicated cases for which they used to go and receive their three oboles ? We are tempted to believe it when we see Demosthenes renovating and displaying his judicial knowledge in the speech Agai?ist Andro- tion^ and Hyperides adorning the exordium of his ora- tion For Euxennipus.'^ Demosthenes' speech On the * Demosthenes {Against Anstocrates) opportunely recalls the six criminal procedures disregarded by Aristocrates' decree. This enu- meration, remarkable in several respects, is here a powerful argu- ment. ^ DEMOSTHENES THE ORATOR. 189 Embassy contains two splendid digressions, worthy of the orator's gravity, but they are none the less digres- sions (purpureus pannus). The first is the descrip- tion of the contagious plague which destroyed all Greece, a description so justly admired by Pliny the Younger;^ the second is a thrilling recapitulation of Philip's invasions, — an eloquent page of political his- tory, but foreign to the demonstration of ^schines' culpability. Aristotle has clearly described the different condi- tions of the tribune and bar in this respect: " Delibera- tive oratory does not admit the digressions which are received at the bar, where the orator can inveigh against his adversary, speak of himself, and arouse the people's passions. Deliberative oratory opens up a field to malice less vast than judicial oratory. In fact, deliberative discussions appeal to the interests of the people. Here the hearer is judge in his own cause, and the orator ought to be satisfied with showing that what he supports is truly such as he describes it to be. At the bar this is not sufficient. It is very useful to engross the hearer's mind. In fact, when the interests of another are at stake, the judges only seek their own satisfaction, listen for their pleasure, accord all to the orator, and forget their duty as judges. Thus in sev eral places the law forbade the orator to enter upon digressions which were foreign to the subject. But in the public assemblies those who deliberated on state affairs greatly observed this rule."t Those speeches of Demosthenes which are both political and judicial possess qualities natural to the eloquence of the trib- une and that of the bar. The orator, who was both an advocate and counsellor of the people, here gives free * Letters, ix, 26. t Rhetoric, iii, 17, i, 1. L. 'S^-- r^^^^^ftl 190 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECK I scope to his powers, and realizes, by virtue of the variety of his means, the ideal eloquence, a triumph which, according to Cicero, was reserved for judicial causes, and especially for works in which the two kinds of eloquence united their resources and peculiar beau- ties.* When Demosthenes revised his orations he sup- pressed all proofs, the letters, treatises, law-texts, decrees or projects of decrees, and testimonies. Some of these documents, which were very often necessary for the cause, and sometimes almost useless, served to give the orator and the judges relief "These facts are well known to you," said Lycias in the speech Against Eratosthenes^ "and I do not see the necessity of producing witnesses. However, I will do it; for I need rest myself, and several among you will be pleased to hear as much testimony as possible on the same subject." The tribunal was not only refreshed, but charmed, when the testimonies were from the poets, such as Solon, Homer, Hesiod and Euripides. The author has carefully reproduced these testimonies, to the great satisfaction of the reader. He suppressed the others. The latter might have given some respite to the audience, inasmuch as thev would cause a short suspension of close attention, since they were insipid. * Demosthenes' orations, with the exception of his speeches, wliich are purely civil, may be divided into three classes: First, orations which are al the same time civil and political, and composed for others {Against Androtion, Timocrates, Arhtocrates). Here the orator does not speak in his own behalf, and does not appear in the contest. Second, orations in which he defends his own interests, and which belong both to the deliberative and judicial classes {In Midiam, Em- bassy, Pro Corona). Third, harangues before the people, in which Demosthenes exclusively performed political work, and spoke as a responsible counsellor. DEMOSTHENES— THE ORATOR. 191 Demosthenes did not give them to the reader; he left them in the echinos (lawyer's satchel), as literary rub- bish."^ Many of the official pieces transcribed in the- oration O71 the Crown are spurious. One orator has preserved some of them, which are manifestly authen- tic: the decree of the Byzantians, that of the Cherso- nesians, and Demosthenes' decree. The first two, proofs of the acknowledgment of the people whom Athens had saved were too honorable to the minister of Athens to frustrate his apology. The third is a pa^ thetic speech delivered before the Thebans against Philip. In it we can easily trace the orator's hand and soul. Certain civil speeches have the advantage over political harangues of not being deprived of their supplementary proofs. Thus the orations Against NecBra and Against Lacritus have come down to us in their complete form. Such has been the will and caprice of the copyist or of the times, which destroyed or preserved them blindly. Destiny, with its inequali- ties and injustices, extends its empire even over writ- ings: hahent sua fata lihelli. We do not speak of certain convincing pieces which were of a special and fragile nature, and unworthy of being preserved, for example the nose which a poor devil of Tanagra left under the tooth of his enemy, Aristogiton. Titus Livius recapitulates the decrees of the senate, even the most important, in place of transcribing them; for example, that of the Bacchanals. In the last edi- tion Demosthenes generally omitted technical docu- ments in which there was no oratorical display. Cras- sus wrote but little {Brutus, 44), and even his written ♦ Thus we have only the titles of Chabrias' services; of the bills drawn up against Midias; of the administrative documents (military and financial) of the Third Philippic; of the financial plan of the First. I 192 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. orations do not contain all that he said at the tribune. He sometimes deemed it sufficient to indicate certain points without treating them thoroughly. Such ap- peared like headings of chapters, or at the most brief summaries. The Roman orator disdained the glory of a writer. ISiot caring to transmit the beauties of form, he was particular to represent clearly the essential groundwork. A different sentiment guided Demos- thenes in his selections. He sacrificed the unworthy portions which could not be treated in an elegant manner. Quae desperat tractata nitescere posse, relinquit. Documents whose loss is obvious to modem readers had little value in his eyes. He seemed to fear that posterity would not be interested in certain particular topics; he wished to transmit to posterity orations em- bellished with such developments as would earn ad- miration in all countries and at all times. III. Hence the suppression of a thousand local or temporary circumstances, which were undoubtedly present to the mind of his hearers, but which are passed over in silence with the reader. To these details Demosthenes expressly preferred political, ad- ministrative, moral theses, in which eloquence was dis- played with all its advantages, and this to the great displeasure of modern criticism. Why is it so difficult to assign exact dates to the Oli/nthiacs f * It is be- cause they do not contain sufficient precise indications of the circumstances which preceded or called forth the orator's speech. It would be easy to assign De- * Dionysius of Halicarnassus gave the Olynihmca in an order con- traiy to that of the manuscripts and of the most ancient commen- tators. DEMOSTHENES THE ORATOR. 193 ^ £ mostlienes' works to their proper time and events if history were found repeated in them from day to day. These details would throw light on his harangues for us, as the frame of the historical narrative throws light on those of Thucydides. But Demosthenes did not write for critics or historians of the future, but for the learned. Attic eloquence did not dislike commonplace things, taking this word in its highest acceptation. It will- ingly effaced the realities of the moment that it might elevate the oration to considerations which were su- perior to actual events. Thus the sculptor effaced the personal traits of the victor in the games in order to substitute for it an anonymous and impersonal beauty, but its effect was sure and universal. There is in Demosthenes' eloquence a trace of philosophical spirit which is attached less to those particular accidents which are modified to infinity and pass away than to the general and immutable element. The author of the Antidosis eulogized general developments and suc- cessfully applied his talent to them. By this means, but by this means only, he justified the complacent praise which Socrates gives him in t\\e Phoedrus : "In this young man there is philosophy." To this spirit of generalization are attached political or moral theo- ries, recitals of principles, oratorical definitions, and portraits (the true democrat, the faithful ambassador, the sycophant, etc.), which are diffused in the works of masters of oratory. Their style was indebted to that manner of majestic gravity which, even at the time when the tribune was most exciting and militant, re- called the union of the milder eloquence of former ages with moral philosophy. Themistocles' harangue 9 V 194 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. on the Greek fleet of Salamis ruled over all opposi- tion. * The Athenian people, frivolous and ideal as a poet, were also very capable of abstract meditation. Their philosophers, Plato, even Aristotle, whose eloquence Cicero compares to a golden stream {flumen aureum ' orationis), were consummate orators; their orators like- wise were fond of philosophical considerations. The first speech against Aristogiton presents a remarkable proof of it. Lycurgus, says Ariston's defender, has al- ready treated the cause profoundly. "As to me, I wish to entertain you with thoughts which will direct all de- liberation on state interests and laws. Permit me, Athe- nians, in the name of Jupiter, permit me to use here that method which is natural to me and has my prefer- ence. I could practice no other." And immediately he enters upon general reflections, morals, laws and pub- lic order. " I will say nothing new nor striking, noth- ing special nor original (Jdur.)^ but that which you all know as well as myself" No man can announce the commonplace things which follow this declaration in a more determined manner. The orator interrupts them a moment in order to make valid certain proofs which escaped from Lycurgus. But he quickly returns to his accustomed manner. He bows before Adrastia and Nemesis; he recalls the universality of religious senti- ment. "All nations have erected shrines to Justice, to Law, to Modesty. Although an honest man's heart may be the most beautiful and most saintly sanctuary, those which his hand has raised are not less worthy of veneration. But what sacrifices were ever offered to Impudence, to Perjury, to Ingratitude,— vices which dwelt in Aristogiton's heart? " Later he traces a priori * Herodotus, viii, 83. f ik , fr *> DEMOSTHENES — THE ORATOR. 195 the picture of this public snarl er's partisan; and at the close, in a pathetic appeal, he asks the judges with what conscience they will ever dare prostrate themselves before Cybele, if, false to their oaths, they violate the laws intrusted to their defense. It is unnecessary to mark clearly in what sense and in what measure Demosthenes favored general develop- ments; even in these specimens he remains himself, that is to say, sober and rigorous. "Persons of no instruction persuade the multitude more easily than the learned. In fact, they have recourse to common- place things, to general considerations; the learned to things which they know, and which pertain to the sub- ject."^ In this respect Demosthenes' eloquence is both learned and popular. Always and everywhere he con- fines himself closely to his subject and remains a pre- cise logician. iN'evertheless, if he is not one of the school of Bufl'on, who seeks general terms as the most noble, he admires general themes as the best adapted to eloquence. Thus, having selected a theme, Demos- thenes develops its thoughts with sound reasoning and not phrases, by producing arguments and facts. These developments are entirely different from commonplace things or abstract conceptions, without direct applica- tion or supplementary proofs; but with all that, they are of such a character that he could repeat them al- most indifferently every time he mounted the rostrum, f * Aristotle, "Rhetoric, ii, 22. t Here are some of them : It is the orator's duty to give the best counsels, yours to follow them Equity is the only solid foundation of the undertakings of men. If you wish to fight the public enemy successfully, at tirst chastise your domestic enemies, the traitors. Venality is the never-dying worm of Greece. If Athens does not save the people who are attacked by Philip, there will come a day when she cannot save herself. Defiance is the surest rampart of free i '-V- . "^4 frf^ W l^ 1 IH'^f^ ^; 196 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. The situation, on the whole, always remains the same; the orator's objective also remains the same; and con- sequently his eloquence, rich and various in its means, is uniform in the common basis of ideas and senti- ments. Demosthenes' political orations, especially the Olf/n^h'acs and Philippics^ do not reflect, like the orations of our modern assemblies, the various inci- dents of the political life of each day. They all have a familiar air; they are all born of necessities and of the same spirit. Tliese reflections on general developments are es- pecially applicable to the orations of Demosthenes, which belong to the purely deliberative class; in those which belong in some degree to the judicial class, the orator, without hesitation, enters upon arduous discussions of facts and dates. From minute details he draws indications or proofs with the marvelous sagacity of his civil speeches, in which he finds it necessary at every moment to ofl*er comments on the laws. Thus the oration On the Embassy^ notably in the first part, is a concise controversy in which De- mosthenes seizes his adversary hand and foot, and binds him in all manners. If he retreats, he follows him step by step; if he advances, he incloses him in iron bands, without permitting him to escape from them. He constantly holds him at the sword's point, and baflles all his disguises and efforts to disengage himself, ^schines is a Proteus; but Demosthenes states. Philip is the aggressor, — to fight him is to defend ourselves. Philip hates and distrusts our republic; his sole aim is to destroy it. Do not depend on another, nor on the gods, if you do not aid yourselves. Athens has always been more careful of her honor than of her money. At all times she has preferred the rights of the Hel- lenes to her own advantages. She ought to be inspired by the mag- nanimity of her ancestors. If) • 3 I + DEMOSTHENES THE ORATOR. 197 knows how to entangle him so cunningly in his strong and inflexible meshes of argument, that he cannot escape him. If he does not succumb under his ad- versary's blows, he at least receives them all; he withdraws from the contest defeated, if not pros- trated.* In the second part of the harangue, general themes find place, — it is because the oration On the Embassy belongs to both the tribune and the bar. Likewise, the oration On the Chersonesus contains a debate which relates to Diopithes, and considerations on general politics. Only one of Demosthenes' exclusively po- litical harangues is really technical, — the Oration on the Navy Boards. The author has taken care to show this peculiarity of his work: "As for me, Athenians, imbued with these reflections and other similar ones, I have not employed boasting expressions, nor use- less and long orations; but your preparations, their best form, their greatest haste, — such is the diflicult subject which I have taken the pains to investigate." Demosthenes pursued this course so much more will- ingly because he could not permit this rigid oration to face the tribune. Our political orator of thirty-one years would undoubtedly have needed an authority in which he was wanting, even after his success against Leptines, to make this dry work agreeable to an audience of amateurs. We doubt, with the wise critics, that the Oration on the Navy Boards was ever delivered * He reminds us of Entellus, who makes blow^s fall like hail-stones on Dares. Nee mora, nee requies , quam multa grandine nimbi Culminibus crepitant, sic densis ictibus heros Crebcr utraque manu pulsat versatque Dareta. {uEneid^ v, 458.) >iittii r ' .1 -i«Mt[riii>i'tiiiMgji bt. ',31- 198 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. Judicial oratory dwells on the past, deliberative on the future. The deliberative is, therefore, the more difficult; but it is, in turn, the more beautiful,* for it is nourished with the noblest material. Elo- quence is free from the miseries and petty passions of every-day life. Besides the interests and safety of private individuals, it watches the interests and safety of the commonwealth. It does not stop to torture a law text which may be left a prey to eternal chicanery. Like the Eoman pretor, it does not oversee trifling things. It is occupied with public duty, political and social justice, national honor, and the human and divine laws which are the unchangeable interpreters of the conscience of all times. Demosthenes' soul was adequate to these sublime objects, and his elo- quence equaled them without an effort. This preemi- nent dignity was due to the orator's taste for general developments, and to the superior talent with which he gave finished expression to the conception and sentiment of what was true and beautiful. ♦ Aristotle, Rhetoric, i, 1 ; iii, 17. i b HI 4 epyo'y.) CHAPTEE VI. ANALYSIS OF THE PRINCIPAL ELEMENTS AND CKAR- ACTERISTICS OF DEMOSTHENES' ELOQUENCE, ^p (continued.) yT^HE spirit and life of Demosthenes' eloquence ^^ was born, in a great degree, from the nature of his reasoning. He employed no long, logical deduc- tions, but a series of striking observations, recollec- tions, examples, and convincing pictures. Demos- thenes often proved without reasoning. He spoke and painted the truth. He repeated! v impressed tha^ h earer withi t. He urged him, hurried him, compelled hiin to march with him. His power was invincible. Compelled to yield to the evidenceHthe Athenian i could cry out, as did Marshal GramoiTt^at the foot of / Bourdal one's chair, " By heavens, he is right! " His motto was, ]S"ot words, but dee ds (Od X6yo<;, axx' r«=^l i^ou lost your"T)pportunity at Hersea, Athe- nians; do not lose it again at Olynthus. See the mistakes which caused you to lose Amphipolis; avoid billing into them again. Philip protests with his pacific desig ns. Consider the plan of his usurpations perliciiously fouowed, a nd which I Ipmng, . which he has p ^ thenes n'^w unron« hpf'ro ^[|^ ^y^ s o^' th^'p^^PmKly Apology and parabole are suitable to orations delivered before the multitude, and it is easier to invent them to please the people than to draw examples from history. ''But examples have more weight in deliberations; for the future generally bears a great resemblance to the 199 f. v.g.T^^^ 200 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE, DEMOSTHENES THE ORATOR. 201 I ; past."* Demosthenes had too rich a provision of examples at command to have recourse to fable, and the vivacity of his arguments further aided the natural force of the lessons which he drew from the past. " It is folly and cowardice, in the presence of such exam- ples, to constantly recoil before duty, * * * to imagine, on the faith of the enemy's orators, that Athens, by her grandeur, is out of all danger. How shameful to say in the future, after the event: But, just gods! who could have expected it? We should have done this, not that.'' All nations that have perished could to- day make many such tardy reflections. ''But what doth it avail them now? While the vessel is safe, whether it be great or small, the mariner, the pilot' every person, should exert himself in his particular station, and preserve it from being wrecked, either by villainy or unskillfulness. But when the sea hath once broken in, all care is vain.^f For Demosthenes' history is literally ''the torch of truth," the "mistress of life." (J)e Oraiore, ii, 9).^JIis maxim was that ''past events ought to always be present to the minds of the wise.^ His conduct conformed to this precept: "Observing affairs from their beginning, foreseeing their results, announcing them to the people, is what I have done." An eloquence thus furnished with coher- ent reflections, and recollections must be rich in dem- onstrations from facts. It was not Demosthenes who convinced and put the Athenians to the blush; it was the reality he drew before their eyes. Zeno compared eloquence to the open hand, dialectics to the clinched fist. Demosthenes' eloquent dialectics united the ad- vantages of both processes. He developed truth with ♦ Aristotle, Wi^toric, ii, 20. Third Philippic, g 67 ct scq. irresistible eclat; and he dealt blows on the contradictor from which he could not recover. Demosthenes, as a political orator, owed much to the logographer. From Isaeus, his master, he learned to cut down his long sentences, to chasten his style, and to soften its harshness. He especially accustomed himself to dialectics in the midst of the arduous dis- cussions of cases which bristled with as many thorns as a hedgehog, and which contained tedious arguments. Demosthenes would not have been so powerful against Philip if the gymnastics at the bar had not developed his language and mind. Traces of these strengthening studies are found in the orator's art to seek the reason of things and the motives of actions. "Reflect for a moment, Athenians. You have often made war on democracies and oligarchies; you know it as well as I do. But the motives which armed you in both cases none among you, perhaps, inquired into. What are these motives ? " And the orator indicates them with sagacity. He likewise excels in analyzing the human mind: if he wishes to exculpate himself from the diverse sentiments to which his enemies might attribute his action against ^schines, he reviews all the suppo- sitions of malevolence, and shows their vanity like a skillful logician. He explores the soul of the Mace- donian king, and discovers his most secret calculations with a perspicuity which was sharpened for these divi- nations by his exercise in detecting the true motives of Philip's orators, who practiced deceit and falsehood. Thus his practice at the bar developed the penetration of a genius, which was naturally observing. One of Demosthenes' most powerful forms of argu- ment was the dilemma. We do not see how ^schines could have answered this: m 202 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GEEECK i I: " Now, consider in your minds how convincing the proof of his guilt will be. I presume that iEschines, the defend- ant, must have addressed those speeches to you,— those about the Phocions and Thespiae and Eubcea (supposing he was not, from a corrupt motive, intentionally playing false),— from one of two causes: either because he had heard Philip expressly promise to effect and do the things in question, or else because he was charmed and beguiled by Philip's general liberality, and therefore expected those things from him also. There is no other alternative. Now, in either of these cases he ought, beyond all other men, to detest Philip. Why? Because, so far as it depended on Philip, he has suffered the utmost indignity and disgrace. He has deceived you; he has become infamous; he is judged to be a lost man, if he had his deserts. Had due proceedings been taken he would have been impeached long ago; but now, through your sim- plicity and good nature, he attends his audit and chooses his time for it. Is there one of you who has heard the voice of ^schines accusing Philip? — who has seen him pressing any charge or speaking to the point? No one. Every Athenian is more ready to accuse Philip,— any, indeed, that you like,— though none of them has assuredly sustained personal injury. I should have expected language like this from him if he had not sold himself: ' Men of Athens, deal with me as you please. I believed. I was deluded. I was in error. I con- fess it. But beware of the man, Athenians! He is not to be trusted. He is a juggler, a villain. See you not how he has treated me? — how he has cajoled me?' I hear no language of this kind, nor do you. Why? Because he was not cajoled nor deceived, but had hired himself and taken money when he made those statements and betrayed you to Philip, and has been a good, true and faithful hireling to him, but a traitorous ambassador and citizen to you, deserv- ing to perish not once, but three times over."* * Embassy, 102 et seq. .. .TK^i^ DEMOSTHENES THE OEATOE. 203 , . Where can we find a closer alliance of logic and passion ? Without having a prompt imagination on the ros- trum, Demosthenes sometimes found happy replies. Pytheas once told him that all his arguments smelled of the lamp. Demosthenes retorted sharply upon him, "Yes, indeed; but your lamp and mine, my friend, are not conscious of the same labors." This same Pytheas was dissuading his fellow citizens from uniting themselves with the Athenians: "As some sickness is always supposed to be in the house into which asses' milk is brought, so the city which an Athenian embassy ever enters must necessarily be in a sick and decaying condition." Demosthenes turned the comparison against him by saying: "As asses' milk never enters but for curing the sick, so the Athenians never appear but for remedying some dis- order." ^schines reproached him for his excessive movements on the rostrum. " It is not for the orator, ^schines, but for the Ambassador, to hold his hand under his cloak." Demosthenes' formal refutations had a vigor at least equal to the sallies of his replies. Here is a speci- men in which both logic and sense are united: "I know, indeed, that ^schines will avoid all discus- sion of the charges against him; that, seeking to withdraw you as far as possible from the facts, he will rehearse what mighty blessings accrue to man- kind from peace, and, on the other hand, what evils from war; in short, he will pronounce a panegyric on peace, and take up that line of defense. Yet even these are so many arguments to convict him. For if the cause of blessings to others has been the cause of so many troubles and such confusion to us, what 204 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. else can one suppose, but that by taking bribes these men have spoiled a thing in its own nature excellent ? Oh, but — he may say, perhaps, — have you not pre- served, and won't you preserve through the peace, three hundred galleys, with stores for them and money ? In regard to this you must understand that Philip's resources likewise liave been largely aug- mented through the peace, in supplies of arms, in territory, in revenues, of which he has gained an abundance. ^ * * But that establishment of power and alliances, throligh which people hold their good things either for themselves or their superiors, — ours has been sold by tliese men, and gone to ruin and decay; his hath become formidable and mightier by far. It is not just that Philip, through these men, should have augmented both his alliances and his rev- enues, while what Athens must naturally have gained by the peace they set off against what was sold by themselves. The one has not come to us in exchange for the other, — very far from it: one we should equally have had, and the other in addition but for these men. Moreover, has ^schines the right to declare himself the author of the peace ? ''What I am about to say is strange, yet perfectly true: if any one is really glad of the peace, let him thank the generals for it, whom all accuse. Had they carried on the war as you desired, the very name of peace would have been intolerable to you. Peace, therefore, is owing to them: perilous and unstable and insecure has it become through these men having taken bribes. Bar him, bar him, then, from any argu- ment in favor of peace, and put him to his defense for what he has done." * * Embassy, §§ 88, 96. A^'^ -•-■— **^ ' DEMOSTHENES THE ORATOR. 205 The comparative study of the orations of Demosthe- nes and ^schines at first suggests one remark, — the identity of their means. Their arms seem to have been chosen exactly equal, as if for a duel. The two orators draw powerful effects from the decrees which they place in contrast. They eulogize Solon and their ancestors. They speak with the same respect of the majesty of the laws and the guardians of the city. Both declare their sincerity, their disinterested devo- tion to the commonwealth, and they censure the Athe- nians for their indulgence toward flattering demagogues. If they recommend themselves by the same oratorical manners, they blacken the character of their enemy with the same stains. ^schines and Demosthenes had souls that were covetous and ridiculously vain. They attached a higher price to the specious beauty of their orations than to truth; to an ephemeral success on the rostrum than to the safety of the state. JEs- chines was at first the enemy, then the hireling, of Philip. Demosthenes, at first the accomplice of Phi- locrates, subsequently became his accuser. They in- cessantly changed their politics, faithful only to the unchangeable inspiration of their own interests. They invoked the same examples, — that of Arthmius of Zelea. They reproached each other for complicity with the enemy, by the intermedium of the spy, Anax- inus, or of Aristion, Demosthenes' young friend. De- mosthenes alone has ruined all. He was damned. . ^schines alone has lost all. He was the chief of the traitors. Demosthenes falsified concerning the woman of Olynthus. His entire harangue is therefore a false- hood, ^schines attacked Ctesiphon in place of pro- voking Demosthenes face to face. The whole ground- work of his accusation is therefore as contrary to justice ;fW. n ,"4 it §- 1 1 206 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. as it is to truth. The two adversaries pursue the same tone in a docile manner. "As to his tears, his wail- ing voice, when he will cry out: Where am I to fiee^ Athenians f exiled from Athens^ I no longer have an asylum / answer him : Ah, Demosthenes, where will the Athenians fly ? where will they And money and allies ? what resources has your ministry assured the republic?" "This culpable deputy will weep over himself. He will perhaps present his little children. He will show them before the rostrum. With the children of this man, judges, compare in your minds the children of so many allies and friends, dispersed, wandering and miserable, afflicted with cruel evils on account of him, and much more worthy of compassion than the sons of so criminal a father and of so treach- erous a traitor. Think of your own children, and of their descendants, from whom Philocrates and .^schi- nes (allusion to the perpetual peace) have taken away all hopes." The orations On the Ormvn and On the Embassy might have been written in juxtaposition, since ^schines would wish to see the ancient and the new decrees compared. Their constant affinities, their exact parallelism, is striking. The two antagonists attacked each other like two powerful athletes of equal size. Every member of their bodies was developed and peculiarly fitted to cope with the antagonist : hceret pede pes^ densusque viro vir. These similarities depend upon two principal causes: the orations of the two rivals were revised with care, after the debates, so that no weak points were left uncovered, no advantages unseen; they were adjusted to each other during leisure hours. Furthermore, at the bar and on the rostrum of Athens, certain argu- ments or oratorical proceedings were employed out DEMOSTHENES THE ORATOR. 207 of respect for tradition. The orator did not, perhaps, draw great and powerful effects from them, but if he disregarded them, he ran the risk of appearing too confident in his own ability and disdainful toward sacred custom, — a neglect doubly dangerous before a sensitive and formal audience. For more than a century (1635-1755), until Duclos, the prizes decreed by the French Academy for the finest eloquence drew their subjects from ethics and moral philosophy. Long after him, the orations on reception followed a cer- tain outline which had been traced beforehand (as was that of the funeral orations at Athens), and the only thing to relieve the monotony was the talent of the new member. The tyranny of usage was like- wise imposed on Attic eloquence. Without speaking of the uniform developments which the uniformity of situations produced, the orators of the Pnyx or the logographers sometimes willingly bound themselves to socomes which were not necessary, but decorous. They prayed the judges to defend themselves from the instances of solicitors, to rigidly confine the orator to the subject; they contrasted the wise parsi- mony of recompenses in former times with the in- discreet prodigality of the present time; the severity of their ancestors with the indifference of their de- scendants. Themistocles was banished; Cimon con- demned to pay a fine of fifty talents. To-day, when our public enemies are convicted, they are acquitted for twenty -five drachmas. The occasion can justify these and other similar com- monplace remarks; but there are some to which this excuse is injurious. Thus bold pleaders, in order to impose upon the tribunal of judges and readers, oflfer to yield the floor to their adversary. "Let him speak .=.?v. ■ >.-->>■.■■, u. 208 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. DEMOSTHENES THE OEATOR. 209 of my water-drinking, I consent to it." They launch bold challenges ['poxkr^trti;) on paper, assured that they will not be taken at their word. '' lie asserts that the delegates of Greece were then among you. * -^^ * Well, then, Demosthenes, mount this platform. I yield it to you. -^ * ^ If jou can prove that their presentation to the council, and the decrees are of the date which you assign to them, I will descend and condemn myself to death. " These challenges are simple modes of speaking, so much so that sometimes the autlior of the interpola- tion immediately passes on and continues to address the audience without awaiting, even for the sake of form, his adversary's response. They administer the torture with as much ease as the simple oath. ''We therefore produce our slaves and deliver them to the question; 1 will interrupt myself if the accuser consents to it; the executioner will come immediately and put them to the torture before you if you order it." The opposing party does not answer, as it is supposed, and the orator triumphs. '' Then Demosthenes refuses my challenge, does not accept the testimony of slaves when put to the torture, and takes Philip's letter." In reading the Attic orators we would suspect the Athenians of enjoy- ing the spectacle of torture as naturally as Perrin Dan- din; and yet, the humane city of Minerva never saw this incident produced before an audience. Among the conventional proceedings of Greek elo- quence there are some very striking peculiarities. Re- spect for the letter of the law has been able to dictate to a council of war this sentence: The accused is con- demned, first to death; second to a fine of one dollar (the assessment for the offense of public drunkenness). The Attics generally at first demanded the punishment of their adversary, but they did not long maintain this rigor; they retreated very gracefully, and were satisfied with a fine. " Those Athenians who wish to rid them- selves of Aristogiton, whose crime against the law is evident and manifest, have only one thing to do,— to condemn him to death, or at least to such a fine that he cannot pay it during his life." (Aristogiton did not atone for the crimes of which he was convicted, either with his head or purse; later he had still to escape from the teeth of another ''dog of the people," Dinarchus.) The accuser rarely forgot to ask the court to refuse the criminal permission to speak, ^schines did not disregard this established custom. Permitting Demos- thenes to exculpate himself before the judges is au- thorizing him to involve them in perjury. Let Ctesi- phon himself establish harmony between his decree and the laws if he can, and the cause will be judged. If the decree is found to be illegal, Demosthenes can speak in the special pleading, which relates to the fix- ing of punishment. Laharpe was indignant at this ''revolting " pretension of ^schines. He would have been more inspired not to take it so seriously. The Greeks, no doubt, had not the high respect and idea of justice and law which exist among modern men; and even reduced to its true work, this custom of barring the defender from the right of speech bears a strong contrast to the institution of our official advo- cates. Nevertheless, the Athenians were not unpro- vided with moral or common sense to such a degree that they saw in it anything but an instigation, which was sanctified and almost imposed by hatred. Hy- perides said to Polyeuctes, the accuser of Euxenippus: You do not wish that any one should assist and give him the support of his words. On the contrary, you advise the judges not to listen to those who will mount 9* _^A.;3.»uittvi ■ J'^'ig g gg' I' p ■ h I- r t 210 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. this rostrum in liis behalf; and nevertheless in our city, among so many excellent institutions, is there anything more beautiful, more conformative to democ- racy, than to behold, in the presence of judicial dan- gers which threaten an accused man who is unable to defend himself, a well wishing citizen using his right and departing from the crowd, — advancing and coming to his aid, — to acquaint the judges with the truth of the case? Polyeuctes' pretension, contrary to jus- tice, would likewise have been so to the reality of practice. Polyeuctes himself, besides other Athenians who were called to his assistance before the court, had recourse to ten orators in his suit. Demosthenes like- wise shows us "all orators" under arms for their rich client Midias. The venerable traditions and proceed- ings of Greek eloquence made each of the two orations On the Crown the counterpart of the other. IN'ever did harangues resemble each other more in exterior forms, never were harangues more dissimilar. The two bodies are almost equal, but as to soul and heart, what a profound difference ! The form of Demosthenes' oration is often dramatic. Now it is a dialogue between the hearer and himself, or between the Athenians, or between the Athenians and Philip; now it is a monologue of the king reflect- ing on the surest means of accomplishing his projects in all security. Demosthenes moderately uses the apostrophe, the ^rape-shot of eloquence^ according to P. L. Courier, but always with fitness and energy. " Some of our orators, I observe, take not the same thought for you as for themselves. They say that you should keep quiet, though you are injured; but they cannot themselves keep quiet among you, though no one injures them. Come, raillery apart, suppose you were thus questioned, Aristode- DEMOSTHENES THE ORATOR. 211 mus: 'Tell me, as you know perfectly well, what every one else knows, that the life of private men is secure and free from trouble and danger, while that of statesmen is exposed to scandal and misfortune, full of daily trials and hardships, how comes it that you prefer, not the quiet and easy life, but the one surrounded Avith peril?' What should you say? If we admitted the truth of what would be your best possible answer, namely, that all you do is for honor and renown, I wonder what puts it into your head that you ought, from such motives, to exert yourself and undergo toil and danger, while you advise the state to give up exertion and remain idle. You cannot, surely, allege that Aristodemus ought to be of importance at Athens, and Athens to be of no account among the Greeks. Nor again do I see, that for the common- wealth it is safe to mind her own affairs only, and hazardous for you not to be a superlative busybody. On the contrary, to you I see the utmost peril from your meddling and over- meddling; to the commonwealth, peril from her inactivity. But I suppose you inherit a reputation from your father and grandfather which it were disgraceful in your own person to extinguish, whereas the ancestry of the state was ignoble and mean. This, again, is not so. Your father was a thief if he resembled you, whereas by the ancestors of the common- wealth, as all men know, the Greeks have twice been rescued from the brink of destruction. Truly the behavior of some persons, in private and in public, is neither equitable nor constitutional. How is it equitable that certain of these men returned from prison should not know themselves, while the state that once protected all Greece, and held the fore- most place, is sunk in ignominy and humiliation?" * The scenes in the Agora and Pnyx present in De- mosthenes lively pictures. Scarcely has the lot de- signated the judges when intrigue besieges them. The question is, which of the two parties can best show * Fourth Philippic^ 70. If 212 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. contempt for the law. They are like two armies drawn up in battle array {Tzapdraziv)^ and emulating each other in factious zeal (-apayyeXia) to charm the con- science of the heliasts. The tribune is no calmer. Demosthenes has just mounted it. Posted near him, one on the right, the other on the left, ^schines and Philocrates cry out, interrupt and torment the orator with sarcasm. "Great wonder, Athenians, that De- mosthenes and myself are not of the same opinion: he drinks water and I wine! " and the Athenians laugh. After Philocrates' impertinence, ^schines ex- hibits his by addressing the assembly. Compelled by outcries to descend from the tribune: "Among so many criers, how few would be willing to fight, if it were necessary." Aristogiton had no equal in shout- ing the cry of war at the Agora. One day the citizens were being enrolled; our warrior crawls to the assem- bly leaning on a crutch, and his leg bandaged. Pho- cion, who was presiding, seeing him from afar, cried out: "Clerk, write down Aristogiton, lame and cowardly." Aristogitons were numerous at Athens. They revenged themselves for their cowardice in the innocent struggles of the public place during the session. "If they appear in the assembly, their anns are vociferations, audacity, calumnious imputa- tions, invectives of sycophants, impudent gestures, and other similar practices. Nothing, in my opinion, is more contrary to deliberations, more dishonorable to Athens. By these scandalous excesses they triumph over our wisest regulations; they make a jest of the laws, of presidents, and of all conveniences." Such are the madmen, the wild beasts (r« Tmaora Si^pta) who encumber the tribune to-day." This dissoluteness of the cGclesia^ exaggerated, no doubt, by the orators 1 £k DEMOSTHENES -.- THE ORATOR. 213 when it was their turn to suffer from it, had perhaps become a custom; and custom modifies everything. Such small disorder, when passed into the custom, loses much of its malignity. This is credible, since the storms of the Attic swarm were inoflfensive and easy to calm, like the great conflicts of the bees in Virgil: . Pulveris exigui jactu compressa quiescent. In the Council of the Five Hundred (this testimony is borrowed from the same painter of the parliament- ary violences at Athens) a weak grate kept oflf the public and made them respect the secret of delibera- tions. The Areopagus was seated in the royal portico and surrounded by a mere rope, which kept oflf the troublesome and insured tranquillity. As soon as the clerk cried out lietire, all the magistrates, appointed by lot, consulted in peace, under the protection of the laws, without fearing the insults of the most violent. These and a thousand other equally noble rules af- forded respect and surety to the state. Perhaps the day will come when a mere rope will with us be a sufiicient barrier in a similar case; but even up to this time French petulance could learn lessons of respectful discretion from Athenian democracy, which is termed so undisciplined. Demosthenes was nurtured in the school of Thucydi- des, and in imitating this orator as his master he sur- passed him. Bossuet confessed that he read little of Demosthenes. "The study is too difficult for those who are occupied with other thoughts." In fact, sub- stantial and concise, he gives us much to meditate on. He charms the reader and demands all his attention, . but his profundity remains luminous. His orations are concentrated and limjpid. Sometimes reasoning ^ i^jk^ .-feiSi^Ki: ' :;[ 214 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. suffocates passion in the austere historian. His strong logical conceptions are addressed to the intelligence rather than to real hearers. Demosthenes often aHows the general idea to mingle with the impression of act- ual reality. The words reabon^ consider^ reflect^ are found in him every moment. He wrote his harangues for the Athenians and for the thinkers of the future; but their augmentation is always allied to an intense passion with direct effect. Besides facts which speak and "cry out" (ama Bha) themselves, we find in them warm exhortations, which constitute their charming conclusions. Emotion and demonstration, reason and passion, — such is his eloquence. II. The law of the tribunals forbade the pathetic at Athens, a striking indication of the extreme sensibility of the Hellenes, ^neas was reproached for weeping more profusely than was becoming to the founder of an empire. The heroes of Homer, tender and fero- cious in their turn, were not less prompt to be satiated with tears (jo^no ripr^tnOat). According to Herodotus (vi, 21), the Athenians fined the poet Phrynichus for making them weep in the theater over The Capture of Miletus^ and they prohibited by a decree the repre- sentation of the drama because it awakened the mem- ory of domestic misfortunes. On the tribunal the orator was forbidden to move the people by relating the misfortunes of another ; but here also customs were more powerful than laws. The accuser employed the least justifiable resources of art and hatred to prejudice the judges against his adversary. It would have been rigorous to deprive the accused of the nat- ural right of petition. " If I had to prosecute Midias for an illegal motion, — for being an unfaithful ambas- I . " DEMOSTHENES — THE ORATOR. 215 sador or some other similar crime, — I would not think myself obliged to address you with prayers, persuaded then that the part of the accuser was to furnish proofs, that of the accused to use supplications. But * * ^ since I have been struck, outraged as no choregus was ever outraged before, * * ^ I will not hesitate to im- plore you, for, if I may be allowed to say it, I am the accused, since a want of judicial satisfaction makes an intense prejudice press upon an insulted citizen." Custom tolerated the use of the pathetic in orations, and especially permitted the accused to assist his defender's eloquence by affecting the judges with his tears. Demosthenes feared the effect which Midias' lamentations might produce upon them. " What then remains ? Ah ! by Jupiter ! compassion. For Midias will present his young children. He will shed tears. He will supplicate you to pardon him for their sake. This is his last resource. But (you are not ignorant of it) piety is due to the innocent victim of intolerable severity, not to the culprit who is justly punished. Who could have pity on the children of Midias, when he has not had pity on the children of Straton ? " Farther on the orator redoubled his eflforts, so much did he wish to prevent the emotion of the court. " He will come, I know, to lament with his children. He will express the most humble declarations. He will weep. He will make himself as miserable as possible. * * * I have no children myself, and I could not, by producing them here, bewail and weep over the out- rages which I have received. It is therefore rational to treat the victim less favorably than the prosecu- tor ? "* The poet of the Wasps has not forgotten this trait of customs in the lawsuit of the dog Labes. (Cf. B.?ic\ne.,.Plaideurs, iii, 3.) 3- ^ I I I! 216 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. The impression of pity was much more powerful when the orator was accused himself, and united his pathetic pleading to the spectacle of his family in tears. So ^schines presented his whole family on the ros- trum in his oration 6^72, the Emhassy. Sometimes the advocate, respectful toward the law, entrusted the care of exciting pity to his client. " Euxenippus, I came to your aid as far as I was able. It remains only to beseech your judges, to implore the assistance of your friends, and to make your children mount this place." This conclusion of Hyperides is according to Attic tradition, and conciliates all. The same design to har- monize the law and the interests of the pleaders some- times caused the orator, in the midst of his oration, to dissimulate pieces for the purpose of exciting pity. Demosthenes, in his second oration Against Aphobus^ paints before the judges' eyes his mother's grief, her anxiety for the issue of a lawsuit which can deprive her of her last resources, and prevent her from marry- ing her only daughter. He conjures tliem in the name of their wives, their children, and all they possess. Then he closes with a phlegmatic conclusion, as if he wished to be pardoned for liaving shed tears. !N'o man at Kome ever thought of reproaching Cicero for his pathos, ^schines reproached Demosthenes for his; he marks the lamentable tone of his voice, the expression of an illegal and hypocritical grief in his eyes, ^schines would have been pleased to see the law master here, and to see Ctesiphon's defender deprived of one of the greatest resources of his elo- quence. Demosthenes, far from abdicating, used against ^schines all his right to pathos, but with a violence of emotion peculiar to him. Pathos was usually born in him from an elevation of sentiment; -il 9\ ( I ^^^^BP DEMOSTHENES THE ORATOR. 217 he charmed the soul by his exaltation; he transported his hearers by his generosity and moral reasoning. This intense passion, constantly springing from the bottom of his heart, seems to be unconscious of itself, so sincere and naive is it. ''In spite of the passion that carries me away, I perceive that water is going to fail me, and that I am losing my way in orations and recriminations which would take up whole days {Antidosis)^ The author of the ode On the Conquest of Namur likewise tells us of the " learned and sacred intoxication " which transports him. Demosthenes did not feel conscious of his transports because he did not seek them. ^schines attributes to Demosthenes this pathetic interrogation: "When he will demand of you, Athe- nians, where can I take refuge, etc. "^^ * ^" Farther on: "When at the close of his oration he will call near him the accomplices of his venality to defend him. * * *" There is nothing like this in the ora- tion On the Crown, ^schines feigned to foresee these oratorical buoyancies, in order to have the advan- tage of using them and of bringing around the tribune the shades of Solon, Aristides and Themistocles: "Do you not believe that the warriors who died at Mara- thon and Plataea, that the very graves of our ances- tors would wail, if the man who confesses that he has worked against Greece, in concert with the bar- barians, were crowned ? " Ctesiphon's accuser develops this prosopopoeia with fervor and makes it effective in the close. Demosthenes is sometimes content to in- dicate one or two of them occasionally, and leaves the care of reviving their ardor to his hearers. "When Midias, surrounded by his children, will entreat you to grant them his acquittal, then imagine that you 10 "*- r — .- t i i 218 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. see me appear, escorted by the laws and your oaths, begging you, soliciting you to pronounce in their favor." "Now, consider, reflect how just the indig- nation of these illustrious dead would be, if they had any idea of what we are doing to-day." {Against Leptines,) Reflection is here closely united to emo- tion, and this alliance well measures Demosthenes' pathos. His prosopopoeise are of such an Attic so- briety that they could find place in a pleading. That which closes the speech against Macartatus, and in which Sositheus evokes, in the name of a child, all the deaths of Buselus' family, is by far the longest and most touching of our orator. Demosthenes knew better than any other man the common sources of pathos, but he disdained to draw from them. "True eloquence mocks at eloquence." (Pascal.) Demosthenes' pathos is very seldom aflecting. Give this material to ^schines, — a picture of the desolation of Phocis in ruins. If he wished, he could put into this picture emotions of the most touching sensibility. The accent of Demosthenes' soul is difl'erent; he discloses to the Athenians the source of the catastrophe of Phocis, and he interrupts his exposition with this cry: Shocking and pitiable spectacle! On our late jour- ney to Delphi we were compelled to see it all, — houses razed to the ground, walls demolished, a country stripped of its adult population; a few poor women, little children, and miserable old men. No language can do justice to the misery now existing there; and yet I hear you all say that this people once gave a neg- ative vote to the Thebans on the question of enslaving us. If then, your ancestors, Athenians, could return to life, what vote or judgment would they pass upon the authors of this destruction of Phocis ? In my opinion, DEMOSTHENES THE ORATOR. 219 though they stoned them with their own hands, they would consider themselves pure. For is it not dis- graceful, — is it not, if possible, worse than disgrace- ful, — that people who had then saved us, who gave their vote for our preservation, should have met with an opposite return through these men, and be suffered to incur greater misfortunes than any Greeks ever knew ? Who, then, is the author of them ? Who was the deceiver ? ^schines, — who but he ? * Sentiments of national dignity, branding of ingrati- tude, hatred toward the traitor ^schines, — these are the true sources of Demosthenes' pathos, rather than the picture of the misfortunes of Phocis, or another similar subject capable of exciting pity. The nature of the conflict which he supports for his public life is "full of daily struggles and sufi*erings," and his own nature willed it to be so. Demosthenes' eloquence is the image of his character; there is some- thing rough in both. Dionysius of Halicamassus attnb- utes this kind of roughness to a scrupulous imitation of Thucydides' style. We must rather find its source in a soul whose steadfastness borders upon severity. Demosthenes could not apply to himself the words of Antigone: "I am created to love, not to hate." His incisive words can better accuse than defend, f Her- mogenes marks its biting sharpness (dptfiurr^q)*^ -^schi- nes its sharp bitterness {-txpun^). According to the taste of Ctesiphon's accuser, Leodamas the Acharnian had not less force than Demosthenes, and he had more pleasantness {yjStw^y * Embassy, § 64. t Only two of his civil speeches are defensive. One For Phormio (he had even pleaded against this person a short time previous), the other For ApoUodoruSy on the subject of the naval crown. "■'I'liTfflSBEBL. k-JA. ■_■•«.•. 220 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. Tliis want of pleasantness did not exclude ingenuity in our orator. Could lie have been an Athenian if he had no ingenuity ? ''One day when he was desiring to address a large meeting in the city, the people would not have heard him had he not informed them that he only wished to tell them a story. Hearing this, they listened to him, and he commenced in this manner: "Once upon a time," he said, ''there was a man who hired an ass to go from this city to Megara. About noon, when the sun was burning hot, both the driver and the hirer sought the shade of the ass, and mutually hindered each other. The owner said that the traveler had hired his ass, and not its shadow. The traveler, in op])osition to him, maintained that the whole ass was under his jurisdiction." Having thus commenced his story, he withdrew. The people recalled him, and begged him to finish the story. " Ah," said he, " how eager you are to hear a story about an ass's shadow, and you will not listen when I speak of your most im- portant affairs." We find proofs of Demosthenes' ingenuity in several passages of his writings, in certain untranslatable deli- cacies of style, in which the art of the Attics is sur- prised by a play on words of different shades of mean- ing, by passing from the proper to the figurative sense; by delighting the mind with refined thoughts and language, accompanied by a mixture of delicate irony and subtility."^ Sometimes even Athenian taste did ♦Aristotle {Rhetoric, iii, ii, 3) cites this passage from Isocrates: riiv T^c OakXdrTft; apyr^v (empire) apyr^v (principium) eTvar raJv xaxmj. Of. Oration on The Cliersonesus. opM^j uytav^ir^rwv sound body), si $yj Toh^ rd rotaura Tzocobura^ bytaUv^ (sound mindj tp-qtrauv. Farther on: eyovr dufx{a) should always respect the law of urbanity (dfrrew^). Usually they disdained these doubtful pleasantries, and avoided them, even where they most naturally presented them- selves, ^schines, said Demosthenes, would give from his hlood^ rather than from his oration/ and Ctesi- phon's accuser, in his turn, said; "This man has on his shoulders not a head^ but a source of revenues^ — a farm." Few modern men would have resisted the temp- tation to replace the sayings of the two orators by these: he would give his blood rather than his water ; he has not a Kead^ but a capitol, A commentator, chagrined at seeing ^schines on such an occasion, utterly wanting in wit a la Fran^aise, effaces the word revenue {Kpoffudov)^ and substitutes for it capital {x£^d/.aiou). This is too kind. To these doubtful niceties the Attics preferred traits after Gorgias' taste : "A little sparrow had dropped some excrements from its stomach upon him." The sophist raised his eyes and said: "That is not fair play, O Philomela"; as if he should say : "That does not look well, princess." Notwithstanding the delicacy of his wit, frequently ingenious, Demosthenes had little success in pleas- antry. In Cicero's judgment, he is an accomplished model of urbanity; but he seems to have ignored the well known piquant {faceius) playfulness of Lysias and Hyperides. According to the author of the fifth dvOpcuTtouq ei<; kXeoOepiav dipeXiaOat (to charm, to excite to liberty) irot/iot. Severe Aristotle himself said that it was necessary to use epithets as seasoning, r^du(T/iaTi, not as food, l8i?iiii*t ig "i > g.^ k^k^.^Bjr h-it f -a i rtii y 'T^Sf-^w^jpSf' 224 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. of all Greece a^ explosion of ancommon laughter." He interrupts the people with great cries ; he is a Boeo- tian {^occoTtdUc) worthy of sympathizing with that coarse people. Are we to be astonished at it? He is a Scyth- ian (a peasant from the Danube) by his mother, not an Athenian. It is seldom that Demosthenes' irony is sufficiently free from passion to be lively. His smiles are not malicious, but contracted and half grimacing. Another orator would have chastised with a lighter hand the cowardly self-conceit of Midias and his zeal, which was always unseasonable. If the danger is on the sea, Midias procures supplies from the Egyptian Pam- philus. If the contest is to be tried on land, Midias runs to the assembly and loudly promises to fit out a trireme. He is always just where there is no danger. He is elected hipparchus, and he cannot assist in a procession on horseback without losing his stirrup, and, furthermore, his nag is borrowed. Instead of agreeably enjoying himself at the expense of this boast- ful blunderhead, Demosthenes employs in the recital of his subterfuges the epithets of coward, execrable man, etc. For jocularity he substitutes invective. The author of Mcomachean Ethics allows the magnani- mous to use scornful irony. Such is most frequently that of Demosthenes. Horace played with the human heart by pleasingly ridiculing its weaknesses. Juvenal vigorously branded its vices. The same difference distinguishes our orator from other Attics in the use of irony. Demosthenes' irony is especially indignant and virulent. " Evidently, .Eschines, these evils move you, and the The- bans inspire you with pity,— you, who have lands in Boeotia and who cultivate the fields of which they were robbed; and DEMOSTHENES THE ORATOR. 225 I I rejoice,— I, whose head was immediatelj^ after demanded by the author of these disasters." ♦ ♦ * " By such a language, you miscreant, while of the deeds of our ancestors you°made sport and havoc with your tongue, you ruined all our affairs. And out of all this you are a land-owner and become a con- siderable personage. For here again : before he had wronged the state so grievously he acknowledged that he had been a clerk and was under obligation to you for electing him, and he behaved himself with decency; but since he has wrought such infinite mischief he has drawn up his eyebrows, and if any one says ' the ex-clerk ^schines,' he is at once his enemy and says he has been slandered; and he traverses the market with his robe down to his ankles, walking as sharply as Pytho- cles, puffing out his cheeks: — one of the friends and acquaint- ances of Philip for you. That's what he is now,— one of those that would be rid of the people and regard the present establishment as a raging sea,— he that formerly worshiped the dining-halh"* Irony is a resort skillfully managed by the tragic poets. In them it is sometimes derisive, as in the mouth of the ISTicomedes of Corneille ; sometimes as bitter as in Racine's Orestes, Demosthenes gives to his a sort of dolorous acridity. The ancient comedian Archias allured Demosthenes with pleasing words. ''Quit your asylum; I will conduct you to Antipater ; he will do you no harm. " From the place where he was seated, Demosthenes beheld him. ' ' Archias, you never moved me on the stage ; your good promises will not move me more to-day." Archias is enraged and threatens: *Emhmsy, § 313; Pro Corona, § 41. The oration On HaUmnem, IS animated from one end to the other with a fine irony and capricious spirit, which turns those acquainted with Demosthenes from attrib- uting this piece to him. Demosthenes would have commented on Philip's letter with biting penetration and an acidity very remote from the liveliness of Hegesippus. He has developed almost the same ideas, but in an entirely different manner. 4r 226 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. . *rt). Without the reveille of the Thebans the burden of the war would have fallen upon Athens like a torrent in winter (x^t/j.dppau^). If a reverse befalls the city, ^schines immediately starts from his repose, like a sudden gust of wind (wfT'zp Tt'^sb/ia dv£Tj), Philip's attack is ''a hail-storm that ruins the harvest." "This decree (of alliance with Tliebes) expelled the danger which en- veloped the city like a cloud."* Cicero extolled this merit in Demosthenes' elocution: "The frequent use of metaphors is, in the eyes of certain critics, the prin- cipal merit of his eloquence; and, in fact, we rarely find a passage in his works in which his ideas are not introduced in a salient form; yet he is the only orator who knows how to give to all, or at least to nearly all his thoughts a lively turn and a luminous splendor."! Demosthenes owes the picturesque relief of his style to the vivacity of his imagination and also to the ge- nius of his colored and expressive mother-tongue. The Greeks made it in their own image, and handled it as a painter handles his brush.:]: ♦ TuuTo TO (^'7J£^aiTt(T£. This is said of a horse that capers and throws off his rider by shaking his mane (j^atVij). It would be easy to mul- tiply these examples. * Tivk^ rd ffrevd (Tzptoxrov) SittTZtp rd^ ^tkovaq duipooci. t De Oratore, iii, 41 ; Orator, 8. 230 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. the author's taste. He alleges the examples of Homer, -^scliines, and Demosthenes, and he extols the ''daz- zling grandeur"* of those traits which Ctesiphon's ac- cuser has censured. The fragments of Demosthenes which Pliny cites certainly deserve this eulogy; but who will dare to confer it on the comparison of the larding-pins, which indeed is not Attic ? Antithesis is often employed in Demosthenes' plead- ings. It tends to brevity by rapidly placing face to face two ideas which the clepsydra did not always permit him to develop. Thus the pleading For ApoU lodorus contains two antitheses, which recapitulate it with great effect. Demosthenes' antitheses never liave false windows^ designed for symmetry. '^What I fear is, not that Philip may be living, but that the hatred toward the prevaricators, and the eagerness to punish them, may be dead in the heart of the state." The antithesis, or contrast of things, is one of his favor- ite methods. An almost continual parallel is estab- lished, in the orations On the Embassy and On the Crown, between the birth, education, family, private and public life, of the two adversaries. The bright and clear liglit of Attica gave the Athenians a taste for luminous relief. Demosthenes, in this respect, knew the force of parallels {-apaAXriXa\ and did not conceal his intention to profit by them. "With my conduct compare theirs. Light will .shine from this parallel." f We will conclude these remarks on Demosthenes' elocution with the citation of a page which reproduces some of the traits of the expressive physiognomy of his eloquence. ♦ Granditas elucet. {Letters, ix, 26.) t Tliis taste for contrasts was practiced by the comic poets. Ti- mocles calls him "a man who dislikes orations and never made an antithesis.'* DEMOSTHENES THE ORATOR. 231 ', "What matters, they will say, the loss of Serrhium, of Doriscus ? Let these insignificant spoils accumulate. They will finally raise themselves to a disastrous * sum-total.' Do you believe you are wise in purchasing peace at the cost of such concessions? *I fear that some day, like imprudent borrowers, who procure passing ease at large interest, and consequently see themselves deprived even of their patri- mony, we, also, will pay dearly for our indolence; and that, for having devoted all to pleasure, we will sooner or later undergo the necessity of suffering many hardships to which we formerly objected, and of trembling for the very soil of our country.* * * ♦ You must, Athenians, from to-day, shake off this weakness. See how far this man has pushed his arro- gance. He does not even now leave you a choice between action and repose. He threatens. He utters, they say, inso- lent speeches. Incapable of contenting himself with what he has captured, he surrounds himself each day with a rampart of new conquests, and while we are remaining inactive, he is encircling us and infesting us on all sides. When then, Athenians, when, pray, will you do your duty? What are you waiting for, — an event? necessity? But what other understanding can you have of what is passing before our eyes? As for me, I know of no more pressing necessity for free men than dishonor. Tell me, will you always go to and fro on the public square, asking each other ' What is the news? ' Ah! what news could be greater than that a Mace- donian is the conqueror of Athens, and the ruler of Greece? *Is Philip dead? No, he is sick.' What difference is it to you whether he is dead or sick? If any misfortune has be- fallen him, you will very soon make another Philip, with the vigilance which you now use in your affairs." TV. The disposition of Demosthenes' plans sometimes needs more light. Exactitude of method is one of the superiorities which modern men manifest over the * First Olynthiac, " Si noles sanus, curres hydropicus." (Horace.) 232 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. f I "ft. ancients. The admirers of antiquity had a giant task to sustain, in the time of Charles Perrault, when they undertook to prove that the Iliad and Odyssey left nothing to be desired as a composition. The in- telligent admirers of Homer could allege the differ- ence of taste in former ages and in our own; and in fact, a modern tragedy similar to Sophocles' Ajax would not escape criticism. With us the drama ends with the death of the hero: the Greeks heard with delight the four hundred verses (more than one-fourth of the tragedy) which survived the true conclusion. No doubt they were less moved than we by the in- distinctness in the canvas of one of Demosthenes' works. What is, in detail, the plan of the oration On the Crown^ or more particularly the plan of the oration On the Embassy f The critics contend over this ques- tion: instead of examining the diverse opinions ex- pressed in this debate, we will substitute a certain number of incontestable observations, suggested by an assiduous reading of the orator. Would Demosthenes, an accomplished artist, have cheerfully deprived his master-piece, worked with jealous care, of one of the essential forms of literary beauty, — that of order ? We cannot admit it, especially w! 3n we see him so eager to give the merit of dis- position to simple sentences. Each of the stones whose combination will constitute the oratorical edi- fice is hewed by Demosthenes with admirable art. This same art presides over the formation of groups which are born from their assemblage. In consequence of this wise structure, the group, or partial develop- ment, forms a little harangue which has its own com- mencement, its middle and its end; it constitutes an organized and complete body. Why is the organism 1. > DEMOSTHENES THE ORATOR. 233 > of the whole work less striking, and so incommo- dious as to disjoint it? It is because the ordinary method yields to a superior art, which disregards those rules of convenience in order to attain effects which rules could never teach.* Modern critics ex- pect to find in the Pro Corona a plan designed ac- cording to the prescriptions of the rhetoricians, and they do not find it there. Who is at fault? Some- times, by a wrong method they imagine they have dis- covered between certain parts of the work mysteri- ous lines which do not exist; is the orator responsi- ble for their fancies ? He did not always disclose his secrets to them; it was their duty to discover them. Demosthenes has not always a regular plan; he has a wise disposition, which is justified by a de- termined and premediated design, not on the obser- vation of common practices, but on the effect to be produced. Thus the artists to whom we owe the wonderful beauty of the Parthenon allowed the columns to deviate from the perpendicular; they con- tracted certain parts of the monument's ornamenta- tion; they diminished the intervals progressively, altered the rectilinear surfaces, to attain certain de- lusions of perspective; the right line is not always the shoi test line to lead to the accomplishment of art. Demosthenes, like the Athenian architects, used inclined planes and curves: he was justifiable. The great compositions of the deliberative class are not bound to the same exactitude as the works of the bar. An Athenian lawyer's speech had to present a sim- * It is instructive to study, in this respect, one page of the Oration en the Ckersonesus. In noting the words: TtpwTov * * * y/wmt^ * * * deuTspov eiSivat^ then tidozaq * * * iyvtoxorai; we can see \yith what care he arranges his words. 10* 234 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE^ DEMOSTHENES — THE ORATOR. 235 pie and clear order. On tins condition alone the client could trust it to his memory. On the other hand, a little design, easy to be seen at a glance, must be elab- orated more exactly in its lines than a large picture rich with episodes, and whose learned complexity is destined to produce a powerful effect of harmony. These large canvases object to a close examination; smaller draw- ings ought to be able to endure the indiscreet curiosity of the glass. The political oration is better adapted to be heard than to be read. The reader, master of his own time and of himself, wishes to taste all at his lei- sure, and to take everything into consideration. While reading he analyzes his impressions and the different qualities of the work; he sometimes even rests to pene trate it more thoroughly. The hearer, less exacting, only asks to be convinced and entertained; he especially desires emotion, action, sensible and repeated state- ments. Now, these redoubled expressions will be given him by the rich succession of arguments and passions, of which the mass {yyj.oq) of the political ora- tion is composed. If the orator succeeds in proving and affecting, without following a plan of irreproacha- ble regularity, his success acquits the writer. A baker asked whether he should make the pie hard or soft. '' Can you not make it good ? " * '' Demosthenes, says Ulpian, does not follow method, but he is guided by what is advantageous." If without method he wins our suffrages, what more can we ask ? All's well that ends well. According to their own criticisms, ^schines and Demosthenes delivered ''confused and embroiled ora- tions." The two orators gave this criticism precisely to the passages of their harangues in which they were ♦Aristotle, Rlietoric, iii, 16. (Of. Horace, Ad Pisones.) V "I the clearest, — too clear, in fact, to suit the adversary's will. These are tactics addressed to the judges. They wish to persuade the judges that they have not clearly heard the orator, when they have comprehended him perfectly. Let us not, therefore, believe their criticism, ^schi- nes (and on this point he does himself justice) contrasts the order and clearness of his oration wiih Demosthe- nes' premeditated and artificial confusion. He an- nounces a luminous {naipiffrepw^^ exposition of his ene- my's iniquities; he intends that there should be "no difficulty in following him." In fact, the plan of the oration Against Ctesiphon is neatly traced and faith- fully followed."^ That of the speech Against Arlstoc- rates^ one of Demosthenes' most remarkable speeches, is equally irreproachable in this respect. Usually, however, his manner is less methodic than that of ^s- chines, Hyperides, or Isocrates. He indicates an idea and sets it aside; later he returns and develops it; he *^scliincs pretends to have formed the plan of the third part of his oration on that which he knew ought to be adopted by Demosthe- nes. Demosthenes will divide his administration into four periods, ^schines then examines these four periods successively. The truth is that there is no relation between the si)eeches of the two adverea- ries, either in the disposition of the whole, or in the development of parts. In his oration -^schines has followed an order which dittbi-s from that of the act of accusation ; now, it is to the order of the act of accusation that Demosthenes devotes himself in his defense. The portion of Demosthenes' oration which is devoted to the apology of his ministry offers no trace of the four epochs mentioned by his accuser. Why, then, has ^schines attributed to him a plan which exists only in his own imagination ? Is the object of this disguise to show that he does not fear to follow him over the ground of his own choice? Elsewliere he attributes in advance to Demosthenes pathetic apostrophes which Demosthenes did not use. This gratuitous fic- tion gives him an opportunity for sharp replies. This is the whole secret of his artifice. 236 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. announces a proof, and he delays to give it; he com- mences a contrast, and he stops in the midst of it. lie marks out tiie plan whicli he says he intends to follow, and he does not follow it {Against Timocrates^ second part). Demosthenes draws strong general lines which divide the subject into its essential parts, but that which fills up the intervals is disposed of without rigorous order. Occasionally he recapitulates forementioned grievances and demonstrated facts. These landmarks, these beacons indicating the route already passed and that which remains to be traveled, are not superfluous. The orator frequently leaves his road to toil on the right and left in foot-paths where he neither loses his time nor his pains, for they forward him to the desired end; but instead of a straight line, they are windings and turns to and fro, like those of a free improvisation. "But let us speak of the decree of invitation (to the feast of the Prytaneum); I had almost forgotten this point, one of the most important of my cause.^ If it is sometimes difficult to follow Demosthenes in the windings of his plan, it is always easy to compre- hend the ruling idea of his orations. Every one of them is inspired by a dominant thought— the soul of the entire composition. Thus the oration On the Crown is summed up in the lines which form the epigraph to the work. This unity of principal thought and com- municated expression makes the true unity of the ora- tion. Demosthenes, an obstinate and tenacious orator, * Tliese artifices of the orator are frequent. ** Clerk, take again the decree in favor of Chabrias; look it up, search for it; it ought to be here somewhere " {Against Leptines), and especially Ayainat AriS" tocrates. Cicero imitates the Greeks even in these little tricks. " These two statues are called Canephores. " But the artist * * * who is he,— i who, pray? * * * You are right; it is Polyclctus." (Verrines, De 8igni», iv, 3.) ( II I. DEMOSTHENES THE ORATOR. 237 does not wish to appear such. He insists on determin- ing proofs, but not at once ; he leaves them and returns to them again. When the hearer has once been drawn over to that point which pleases him, he knows how to hold him there without fatiguing him with monotonous repetitions. On the contrary, he studies to dissimulate the persistence of his means under a variety of forms and skillful weaving. His plans do not form a chain, but a net which Yulcan would not have disowned. Demosthenes' composition resembles the open order of military tactics. It is not the regular disposition of a regiment in files, marching with uniformity and sym- metry, with all its detachments in their regulated posi- tions. His exordiums, we have seen, never have those showy plumes with which studied orations are wont to be adorned. Narration, confirmation and refutation take part in the conflict like irregular troops, without any precise method ; the peroration is everywhere at the same time, like a good general animating all with his presence. The entire harangue is a legion dispersed into sharp-shooters, advancing, retreating, obliquing to the right and left, according to the accidents of the ground and the necessities of the contest. All argu- ments, like scattered soldiers, concur in the same action; strike the same enemy, obey the same directing thought; but how far is it from the order of parade! The scru- pulous observation of the rules of art is here subordi- nated to the requirements of the action. The art, the only necessary art, is the art to conquer. The liberty of Demosthenes' plans belongs to a per- sonal cause, the orator's genius ; and to general causes, the traditional customs of Attic eloquence. Diversions were familiaijtto them (in spite of the law which forbade i T,v:;^l7l35?=™°" 238 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. them to wander from tlieir subject), but especially an- ticipated refutations, written after the charge. The composition of ^schines' oration Against Ctesi- phon seems to us irreproachable, save some long tirades in the second part, due to this process of prolepsis. In general, the harangues exchanged between ^schines and Demosthenes, are, as a whole, attacks and replies ; or replies and rejoinders at the same time. They fin- ished them after the debate, according to the means employed by the adversary. These additions, after important inlaid work, are as so many incumbering overcharges ; they destroy the economy of the primi- tive oration, and are prejudicial to the simplicity and purity of the composition. Two works kneaded together cannot have the harmonious homogeneity of one work moulded by a single cast. Demosthenes was asked, What is the first quality of the orator? — action. And the second ? — action. And the tliird ? — still, action. This remark clearly proves that Demosthenes had suflfered from the imper- fections of his own action. Action, " the eloquence of the body"* had for a long time been somewhat de- fective in Demosthenes. Whence the obstacles that at first discouraged him: "Of all orators, I take the most j^ains; I have almost exhausted my i)owers in training myself for eloquence, and with all that, I cannot make myself agreeable to the people. Igno- rant sailors and drunkards occupy the rostrum, and they are heard while I am disdained." The comedian Satyris knew the cause of the evil, and prescribed a remed^ for him. lie made Demosthenes recite, then recited himself, some verses from Euripides. Demos- thenes was struck with the different effects which they * " Quasi scrmo corporis." (De Oratore, iii, 59.) / DEMOSTHENES THE ORATOR. 239 produced when spoken by himself and by his friend. He saw the power of the art of declamation, and, at the cost of an obstinate struggle, he succeeded in acquiring it; without, however, correcting his action in a certain impetuosity, the object of ^schines' crit- icism. At Rome, an orator might make use of the most vehement gestures; he could touch the earth* with- out wounding the taste of connoisseurs. Attic ^s- chines, a constant attendant at the palaestra, reproaches his rival for not frequenting it. Demosthenes might there have acquired a measured suppleness, a har- monious proportion of movements,— that grace and dignity of attitude so admired by the Greeks. In- stead of that he preserved the habit of shaq) and violent movements. • He does not mount the rostrum, he jumps («v£;:^' aywva)^ and not to examine a minister's conduct; to pass judg- ment on the beauties of language, and not to weigh the interests of the state. Demosthenes himself sometimes sacrificed to ora- torical cares. "When outraged by Midias in the exer- cise of his functions as choregus, he prepared numer- ous memoirs against that insulter. He confessed that he had written carefully the speech in which he de- manded justice. He invoked the people against the impious Midias with all the vehemence, hatred and * Against Ctmphon, §§ 218, 225, 227. ability possible, then, when his work was finished, he left it in his portfolio. It seems that his desire was less to pronounce it than to write it. The author of an oration full of bitterness and gall, — a virulent pamphlet in which he swears to be inexorable, — De- mosthenes suddenly disarms himself and sheathes his sword. He subsides and Midias is spared his life. This unexpected event warrants this conclusion: vio- lated law, outraged religion and danger of the public safety, were not the orator's oiily cares and considera- tions in his oration against Midias. By the side of a satisfaction for damage, he placed a satisfaction of self-love. He produced this masterpiece of invective through his hatred for Midias and his love for honor. He wished to inflict on his enemy the punishment of a posthumous disgrace, and to leave to posterity an imperishable monument of his eloquence. In order to carry off the palm in the contests at the bar, there were no artifices which adversaries did not employ. They vied with each other in the artifices of court {jzakataiia dtxaffzrjpwu). They exchanged the epithets of sophists, monkeys, foxes; that is to say, of knavish and sly rogues. Demosthenes said ^schines is like the finest flour (ra^ra/iy/aa), capable of passing through the finest sieve. He turns here and there; he changes every moment. JEschines was even sharper. An old pettifogging knave {rrepirpi/i/ia dyopd-)^ he slipped from between the hands of his antagonist and escaped the greatest embarrassments. He was "clever at all things (TTctv^stvo?), treacherous (-axtupyo^).'^^* Panurge, * Strepsiades, in the Clouds: "Let them (the sophists) do what they please with me. I deliver my body to them. Blows, hunger, thirst, heat, cold, are of little importaDce. Let them flay me, pro- viding that I escape my debts,— providing that I have the reputation :* \^ 276 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. in Rabelais, practiced sixty-three methods of procuring money when in need. The most honest was to steal. The champions of the Greek tribune likewise left no stone unturned. Dissimulations, inventions of every kind, alteration of dates, facts and texts, — all arms were lawful if they aided in vanquishing the enemy. Truth, right, respect for one's self and for others, were of little importance. Success acquitted the orator of everything. Did not grave and serious Pindar write that "we must do everything in order to triumph over our enemies " ? ^ In his definition of power, in which he makes a complete enumeration of the methods by which a man can be moved, Aristotle says nothing of a method proscribed at the public games, but which was held in high esteem by the tribunals, namely, tripping the adversary (^urzoffxiXtUi^). Philip practiced this against the Greek cities. The wrestlers of the ju- dicial and political arena had no scruples in employing itif hence the agility and flexibility of their argumen- tation and the stratagems with which they reproached one another, and yet had recourse to them. An Athenian orator's aim was at first to have right, of Toeing a bold knave, a ready talker, impudent, brazen-faced, noisy, skillful to weave lies, an old stager of chicanery, a real table of laws, a word-mill, a fox that passes through every hole, as supple as leather, as slippery as an eel, an insincere and crimeful braggart, a cheat with a hundred faces, crafty and unbearable, fond of good dishes. Such are the names with which I wish to be saluted. On this condition let them treat me as they please; and, if they wish^ by Ceres ! let them make a pudding of me and serve me up to the philosophers!'* *jr^Tj dk Ttd'j epdovT afiaopuxTat tov iy^Opwj, (Third Isthmiac, SI.) f Plato compares the rhetoricians playing with the quibbles of sophistry to " those who place their foot before you in order to make you fall, or who remove your chair when you are about to sit down^ and then laugh heartily when they see you on the ground." L.v'L.^LM. t m.^<^i: ,^_ ORATORICAL CONTESTS. 277 or the appearance of right, clothed in good language, then to delight his hearers with eloquent words as often and as long as possible. With Demosthenes, said ^schines, it is difficult to find place to say a word; ^schines, replied Demosthenes, is not a man who yields to anyone: "He would give his blood sooner than any of his oration." This was an allusion to the clepsydra that measured the orator's time.* The rivalry of the two adversaries often bordered on jeal- ousy; that of Demosthenes appeared " hyperbolical " to ^schines. Perhaps he was not exempt from it. At one time he paints his adversary as an incomparable ora- tor, a prodigious statesman, carrying his head high and cheered by the assembly, then descending from the rostrum with ''great majesty" {/idXa (T^jivmq), At another time he makes malicious allusions to the physical advantages, and to certain superiorities of his rival. Demosthenes refused to improvise: -^s- chines was always ready. Demosthenes never let his lamp go out, — slowly, laboriously he prepared his way. -^schines seemed to ignore the work of the file * On August 3, 1789, a member of the National Assembly pro- posed that the president have a fice minute hour-glass on his desk, in order that when the five minutes were passed the orator might be invited to sit down. An ecclesiastic immediately asked that the president's watch supply the place of the proposed hour-glass for the time being. An orator observed that, as the motion had not yet been adopted, they could not conform to it. The discussion began : the hour-glass succumbed to it. The fear of going beyond the pre- scribed limit might trouble the orator and thereby render him " unintelligible." " History presents to us but one epoch in which the hour-glass has been the measure of eloquence. * * * To enslave to a pendulum, and to measure the right of the representatives of an active and intellectual nation," and that "after two hundred years of despotism " and obligatory silence, was an unacceptable proposition; etc. The Assembly rejected " the tyranny of the dial." 1*^ 278 POLTTICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. ORATORICAL CONTESTS. 279 ' " and was eloquent by nature. Demosthenes intention- ally exaggerated this enviable facility, and compared it to a river which rolls in torrents.^ Demosthenes congratulated ^schines on his excellent memory; he himself often saw his weakness in this respect, ^s- chines could pronounce long tirades in "a single breath"; his pronunciation was clear, his voice har- monious and sonorous. Both were faulty in Demos- thenes. Several times Demosthenes extolled these qualities of ^schines. That admirable declamation recalled to his mind his own long and painful efforts to correct an interrupted respiration and his faulty pronunciation; therefore his eulogies were ironical and impregnated with envy, ^schines is well adapted to tragedy; he knows how to assume dignity and to acquit himself like Solon. He is a ''fine statue," and what lungs! Never had a public crier stronger lungs. His two brothers were also loud-talkers (fuyaXo^wvtn); it is a family characteristic. A powerful voice was an advantage particularly admired h^ the ancients. Cicero appreciated its value, if we can judge from this remark: '' What voice, what lungs, what vigor could describe this outrage!" Iron lungs {J^errea vox) were indispensable auxiliaries be- fore the tumultuous multitudes of the forum and the Pnyx. When ^schines harangued the Ten-Thousand in Arcadia, he discovered the advantage of his. Even in the halls of our modern assemblies, a weak voice must compromise the orator's victory, if the meet- ing is a stormy one. The orator needs a voice capa- ble of mastering the tumult and the audience. Mira- beau had a voice that was pleasing in the diapason of seduction, and " terriblv resonant in the accents * ^ A'jvi} -oraiiih'j v[ Xoyot ippur^ffav. {On the Embassy/.) of fury." Could he have been master of the assembly as well without this formidable thunder ? " In public exercises whoever possesses these three ad- vantages, — a powerful voice, harmony and rhythm, — carries off the prize. At the theaters to-day, the comedians carry off the palm from poets; likewise in oratorical contests (tzoXitcxou^ dywvaq), the orator gifted with graceful gestures is the favorite." * A melodious voice, the essential element of action, must have exercised a strong influence over the musical and artistic organization of the Athenians, that Demos- thenes should ridicule ^schines' voice with such sar- casm. He sneered at it on every occasion, — we might say that he refuted it, so much did it seem to be an argument in favor of his rival and a natural instrument of victory, ^schines said that Demosthenes' voice was shrill and sharp (o'^erav); that he was obliged to modify it with great labor, ^schines had a voice like a ''siren," and the orator of \hQ Embassy pleaded against it as against a formidable adversary. " If you keep watch upon him thus, he will have nothing to say, but will raise his voice here and have exercised him- self in spouting all to no purpose. About his voice, too, it may be necessary to say something ; for I hear that upon this, also, he very confidently relies, as if he can overpower you by his acting. I think, however, you would be committing a gross absurdity if, when he played the miseries of Thyestes and the men of Troy, you drove and hissed him off the boards, and nearly stoned him to death, so that at last he desisted from his playing of third-rate parts; yet now that, not upon the stage, but in public and most important affairs of state, he has wrought infinity of evil, you should pay regard to him as a fine speaker. Heaven forbid ! Do not you be guilty * Aristotle, Rhetoric^ iii, 1. -'r%^* 280 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. OEATORICAL CONTESTS. 281 N of any folly, but consider: if you are making trial of a herald, you should see that he has a good voice, but if of an am- bassador and undertaker of public duties, that he is honest, that he demeans himself with spirit as your representative like a fellow citizen toward you. ♦ * » Further, when you see eloquence or a fine voice or any other such accomplish- ment in a man of probity and honorable ambition, you should all rejoice at it and encourage its display, for it is a common advantage to you all ; but when you see the like in a corrupt and base man, who yields to every temptation of gain, you should discourage and hear him with enmity and aversion; as knavery, getting from you the reputation of power, is an engine against the state. You see what mighty troubles have fallen upon the state from what the defendant has got renown by." » The ill-concealed spite which these qualities of jEs- chines inspired in Demosthenes was probably aug- mented by a circumstance which must have been hu- miliating to our orator. Demosthenes' spirit of emu- lation often involved him in indirect contests with orators whom he honored by seeming jealous of their success. In the oration written in the name of Andro- cles against Lacritus, Isocrates' pupil, we find a feeling of sorrow expressed which the young Demosthenes felt because he was unable to pay that famous master for lessons which were held at too high a price. "As for me, by Jupiter and all the gods, I never was jealous of sophists, nor did I blame any one for giving money to Isocrates. It would be folly on my part to be disturbed by such cares." He did, however, trouble himself to vilify an art which, according to him, did not recognize its debts, and paid its creditors with falsehoods. If such seems to be the vivacity of Demosthenes' feelings * Embassy, § 337. as regards obscure rivals, what must have been his ), often insulting. In it Teucer addresses Menelaus with " in- sane " and ''robber of votes" (x/e-rij? (I'r^fpoTtaw^'), Aga- memnon coming on, the scene is prolonged and embit- tered. Teucer, stung by the appellation of "big ox," *' slave," and "barbarian," humbles Agamemnon by reminding him of his family history. Thy father Atreus served his brother Thyestes the abominable feast in which he ate his own children; thy mother, a Cretan, was caught in the act of adultery, and thrown into the sea like food to dumb fish, etc. "^ * * Before Ulysses, who finally has come to settle the quarrel, Agamemnon excuses himself for having at first refused burial to Ajax. "It is not easy for a king to be just." He does not think of excusing his violent language. The spectators, far from being surprised, were pleased with the whole. To these general causes we will add some others that were peculiar to the modes of eloquence and judicial organization at Athens. In transforming their harangues into pamphlets, the Athenian orators made diversions which were useful to their cause. They turned the attention of the judge from the principal point, sometimes difficult to establish,* and at the ♦ The Romans also used this same method of digression -Rapix^acK^'. Quintilian, iv, 3). Indignation, pity, hateful envy, INVECTIVE IN GREEK ELOQUENCE. 297 same time they procured his complaisance by flat- tering one of his most decided inclinations. Aris- tophanes, in the hope of branding a detested enemy, cast handfuls of coarse salt on a mixed audience in which all conditions, all ranks were found in one theater."^ His muse, sublime and ridiculous, some- times shakes, with lacchos, the sacred torch of the initiated; sometimes, with Xanthias {Frogs), she vol- untarily soils her wings in the mud of cross-roads. Likewise, the Athenian orator, speaking before an assembly, not selected but popular, sometimes forgot the dignity of an art that was formerly imprinted with the gravity of moral philosophy; he remembered the instincts of a people inclined to raillery, jealous, fond of outrage, and disposed to avenge themselves by such means on superior talents and prominent men. In connection with bursts of the grandest elo- quence, he did not fear to descend to invectives that were pleasing to his hearers or even impudent. At Athens th^ public minister's right of initiative was extended to the entire public: any citizen could enter a criminal charge against another. This dis- position of the law, extolled as an excellent preroga- tive of democratic government, favored accusation and encouraged enmity. Sycophants, covetous and hateful grumblers, hoped to obtain a part of the criminal's fortune if he was condemned. In all cases they satisfied their hatred. Besides, the decision of the suit was not intrusted to a few serious judges who were imbued with the sanctity of their functions, invective (convicium), are so many means " of resting the judge " and of unbending him. Sometimes invective is the very foundation of the oration ; for example, the Oratw in Pisonem. « * Rusticus urbano confusus, turpis honesto. {Ad Piaones, 213.) 298 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. INVECTIVE IN GREEK ELOQUENCE. 299 nor to a limited and cliosen jury; but to a multitude (sometimes fifteen hundred persons) ignorant of the laws and subject to all popular passions; a partial and blind mob who sat day after dav for their three oboles, and consoled themselves for the miseries of their liumble condition by striking those of whom they were jealous, or imagined they had a right to hate. This class of judges, irritable and malicious,* was armed with smarting darts, always ready to pierce. And how the accused caressed this dreaded master! The greatest prostrated themselves before him, ''brushed the flies from him, took the sponge from the pot and blacked his boots " {Wa^ps). The most powerful purchased his clemency, and woe be to him who had formerly wounded him! Imagine a tax-collector falling into this wasp's nest ! "What revenge such a mob would take on him ! This was the lot dreaded by poor Euxitheus. And yet he was a very modest person. His mother, a little haberdasher, had to serve as nurse, and he himself sold ribbons at the market. But he had been demarchus, and an honest demarchus; he exacted payments from the tenants of sacred groves; he forced the plunderers of the public treasure to restitution. When accused he had everything to fear. Androtion's case was still worse, — he had been a careful tax-collector, and his accuser was Demosthenes. Androtion, taking cowardly advantage of their precarious position, molested two * To endeavor to moderate them was like trying to " cook a stone." (Aristophanes, WaspSj passim.) The Athenian people were dissatis- fied if a promised accusation was abandoned; it was taking away their prey. They felt ungrateful to Timotheus and Demosthenes for failing to keep their promise to accuse Iphicrates and Midias. (Of. Ant\phon,*Oratores Attici, §§ 69, 70.) A judicial error delivered the HellenotamcB to punishment. f courtesans, Sinope and Phanostrate. He seized their furniture. Was his aim to take vengeance upon them for the outrages of the libertines, who, instead of pay- ing him for his kindness, beat him? Androtion, a pitiless persecutor, forced the poor to hide themselves under their beds, or seek shelter in their neighbor's house. A more oppressive tyrant than ever were the Thirty. He broke open the houses of citizens or changed them into prisons ! Even under the eyes of the sover- eign people we see this unworthy magistrate eager to persecute the innocent, when his infamous acts declare him unfit for public oflice; for he is known ''to be guilty of the most revolting excesses. He is impudent, audacious, haughty, dishonest, fitted for anything ex- cept to exercise an official function in the democracy. " * We will pass these crimes, and even worse than these. Judge if, with an indigent f and revengeful monarch of the suburbs, such an invective was well received and the defamation efiicacious. ^ The Athenian law required every citizen to defend himself in person before the court. Often the com- plainant, unskilled in eloquence, asked his barrister for a written speech ; but both were very careful to dissim- ulate this strange recourse. The author of the speech stamped it with his client's spirit and passion; the cli- ent pronounced it with the sincere emphasis of his own resentment, and demanded vengeance with the earnest- ness of an outraged man. In modern times, neither the plaintiff nor the defendant address the audience. * Against Androiton, §47. + He relied upon the triobole to purchase his dinner. (WaspSy verse 300.) The confiscations from which he hoped to receive his part increased his covetousness. (Lysias, Against Epicrates, Oratoi^es ' Attici, § 1). f 300 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GKEECE. Even if he should desire it, he has not the leisure to inveigh against the magistrate, the author of the ad- dress. The Greek pleader and defendant endeavored to justify themselves by attacking the adverse party or the accuser. If the logographer substituted himself in place of the client, appeared at the bar and attacked the adversary directly, he waa^ bound to prove by the animosity of his attack that he prosecuted him as a private enemy. The more violent his oration, the less would be the belief that he had undertaken the defense of another for money. Modern advocates declare their disinterested impartiality; the logographer, his personal enmity or sometimes contrary feelings. Hyperides thought it advantageous to declare before the Areopa- gus that he was the lover of Phryne, his client. For a stronger reason the plain tiif did not hesitate to ex- press his own affections. The logographer reviewed his adversary's entire life and abused him without mercy. Such outrages are the exception with our advocates. The Greeks in- sulted merely to insult. They wished to dishonor their enemy, to brand him with public contempt in order to more certainly produce the legal dishonor {aniiia) pronounced by the judge, and that in a spirit of revenge and enmity which was either real or feigned, but in any case earnestly professed. The logographer had little shame, as his oration was generally deliv- ered by another. Perhaps he would have recoiled be- fore certain articulated calumnies if their author was known. Anonymous insults ignore all modesty. The Athenian tribunals took no pride in establish- ing their sentences on right. Yery often they were ignorant of the law, and if ^schines is to be believed, who in his experience as clerk often witnessed the in- 1 INVECTIVE EN GREEK ELOQUENCE. 301 different inattention of the judges, they took but little care to learn it. The orators on their side appealed as much to passion as to law.^ In order to be success- ful they inspired the judges with favorable or hostile prejudices. To this end the advocate did not give way sometimes before real infamies; for example, that of a son publicly outraging his mother's honor in the hope of destroying the testimony of a brother whom he thought necessary to prove a bastard, f Such suitors did not scruple to use invective, therefore they employed it unsparingly. For want of argument they used insult, and often succeeded by this means. Hy- perides, Dinarchus and Stratocles, Demosthenes' ac- cusers in the case of Harpalus, prosecuted "the pa- tient" on charges and outrages of every character; but precise facts and conclusive proofs were ignored. They dispensed with all that should carry conviction. It seemed that the accused was convicted before trial. What was most necessary to carry the decision of a popular tribunal ? Passionate reasoning, whose pathos concealed the weakness or the absence of proofs. Rig- orous demonstrations were not more necessary to the Athenian orators than to Swift, when he wished to arouse the Irish against Mr. Wood and his money scheme in a pamphlet which was based, not upon rea- son, but upon passion and skill, and which triumphed over virtue and right.:): The Athenian logographers made a careful distinc- tion between conviction {^'^^rx"^) ^^^ invective (Xoidopta), This was only in theory. In practice they confounded * ^OpyiZtffdt ! {Against Leptines, § 119.) (Against EratostJieneSy passim.) f Against Stepfianus, i, § 83. X Taine, English Literature. lipodpa xpij opyiZeffOai, 302 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. them. Sometimes invective seemed to be forced upon the orator when he had to establisli the unworthiness of a proposer of a bill or law. A law of Solon forbade citizens of infamous character and spendthrifts the use of the tribune. Androtion proposed an illegal decree. Diodorus attacked him. In his eyes Androtion was twice culpable: first, for having made a motion con- trary to the laws; second, for having made it at a time when the unworthiness of his life legally forbade him to submit to the people even a regular proposi- tion. Androtion reproached his accuser for deceiving the tribunal (who was engaged in another suit than that of Diodorus) with imputations destitute of all proof Demosthenes, the author of Diodorus' speech, replied that he did not depart from the question, and that his so-called insults were proofs. A modern tri- bunal would see a manoeuvre foreign to the case in the defamation of the accused. In certain cases at Athens abuse was argument. The pamphlet was a demonstration which disarmed the adversary by de- grading him when his character prevented him from being right. The law on unworthiness was therefore very favorable to invective. It was always easy in a city of lax morals to attack the private life of a po- litical adversary. It is a common self-love to declare worthless any man whose acts wound our feelings or interests. Modern men consider the validity of a motion, not the character of the proposer. They consider rather what it is than whence it comes. The Greeks some- times refused to distinguish between the political per- sonage and the private man, as if a citizen of question- able character could not offer useful advice. Socrates declared that a man unable to govern his house well INVECTIVE IN GREEK ELOQUENCE. 303 was unable to govern the state well {Memorabilia^ iii, 4). " The affairs of a private individual are not as numerous as public affairs; herein lies all the differ- ence." This Socratic prejudice seems to be an echo of Solon's law, which ^schines comments upon in these terms against Timarchus : " In the legislator's opinion, he who has badly adminis- tered his domestic affairs will not manage public charges better. It is impossible for the same man to be a vicious citizen and a good magistrate, and it is not proper to permit an orator who is more careful to arrange the order of his orations than the course of his life, to speak from the trib- une. " » Therefore, to attack one's private life is not only a right, but a duty. It is a disagreeable proof, salutary to the city. From this it happens that "personal enmities are turned to the welfare of the government," according to the Athenian proverb. Unfortunately the orators, by abusing the law of unworthiness, weak- ened its beneficial qualities. Too often pamphlet elo- quence and private resentments profited more by it than the commonwealth, f * Against Timarchus, § 30. t Invective sometimes formed a part of the oration. Sometimes it pervaded the entire speech. Demosthenes' speech Against Timocraies, and ^schines' harangue Against Ctesiplwn, are composed of a judi- cial discussion and a pamphlet. In Demosthenes' harangue On the Embassy hatred occupies as much space as demonstration ; but the oration Against Timarchus is from beginning to end an invective. Sometimes invective, in the same cause between two orators, seems to have been reserved to one of them. Thus Demosthenes' oration Against Androtion is a deuterology in which invective predominates. This is equally true of the oration Against Aristogiton. Lycurgus, before the author of this second pleading, has especially treated the question of right 304 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. II. In purely civil cases invective always preserved something of the moderation of the Attic style. De- mosthenes, in his oration Against Phormio^ paints Apollodorus in all but flattering colors. But his re- proaches are mild compared with the outrages that are lavished in public and criminal cases. Private and public life were equally a prey to the accuser. No wall, no respect for decency, protected them. Abuse from the rostrum seemed to be one of the forms of political life, as it was one of the forms of eloquence. The violent and wise employed it equally."* Plutarch declares that these excesses are unworthy of a states- man, and more injurious to the insulter than to the insulted. It seemed to be difficult for ancieut democ- racies to prevent this abuse of liberty, and the great men of Athens even preferred transitory humiliation and insult to ostracism. Such insults in our day would provoke bloody conflicts. At Athens they were en- dured with philosophical resignation. Moreover, the blows received were never mortal, and the injured person was somewhat comforted by the hope of return- ing them on some occasion. Insulting, insulted, out- J'agiiig^ outraged; such was the common condition, relieved, of course, by the prospect of revenge and the thought of equality. Glaucetes, Menalopus, Androtion, and Timocrates, were perhaps less moved than modern readers by the insults which Demosthenes puts in the mouth of his client Diodorus {Against Timocrates), Aristogiton, who * Antiphon, invective against Alcibiades ; Lysias, against Eratos- thenes and the Thirty; Dinarchus, against Demosthenes (trial of Har- palus); Lycurgus, against Leocrates, a fugitive merchant after Chse- ronea, and against Lysicles; Hyperides, against Demades, and even against Demosthenes, his friend. DHTECTIVE m GREEK ELOQUENCE. 305 never blushed, could receive his accuser's assault with^ out much commotion. We must conclude that either Aristogiton committed the crimes imputed to him, and in that case the author of such acts was able to endure a just representation of them, or that he was innocent, and therefore his enemy's odious exaggeration de- stroyed its own force, and fell upon his incredulous audience without effect. Aristogiton left his father in prison; the old man died. His excellent son refused to bury him, and even brought suit against those who discharged his duty at their own expense. He struck his mother; he sold his sister for exportation."^ Zobia, a woman, received him kindly at her house. He dragged her before the magistrates, and endeavored to sell his benefactress. Thrown into prison, he stole from a fellow-prisoner a bill of exchange, and besides, he cut off his nose. From the private man judge the citizen. *' No man in Athens is stained with greater and more numerous vices. Why, then, should we save him ? He is the people's dog, they say; yes, but one of those curs which, in- stead of biting what we call wolves, devour the sheep whose guardians they pretend to be. What orator has he summoned * Eie i^ayioyri ar.idozo. Timocrates was also reproached for disposmg of his parents in this manner. "A deputy who was a guest of Timocrates and an inhabitant of Corcyra, a city hostile to Athens, wished to have his sister (we omit his motive). How much for her? So much. Take her. * * * And now she is in Corcyra" (Didot.) Satyrus declared to Philip that he would not derive any profit {xspdavm obdiv) from the daughters of his friend Apollopha- nes, when he besought that prince to give them to him {Embassy) Aristophanes represents a Magadan as less particular. He sold his two young daughters for a little garlic and a measure of salt. " Oh Mercuiy, god of commerce, would that I could sell my mother and wife at the same price! " With such men Philip could easily come to an agreement. 13* 306 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. INVECTIVE IN GREEK ELOQUENCE. 307 ^H to justice since his reappearance on the rostrum? None but private individuals.* It has been said that when a dog has once tasted mutton he should be killed. Therefore kill Aristogiton as soon as possible. He renders you, Athenians, none of the services of which he boasts; his designs are alto- gether criminal and impudent. ♦ ♦ * He advances on the public place like a viper or scorpion, with poisonous sting; he darts from side to side spying his unfortunate victim in order to pierce him with his calumnies, or afflict him with some evil, or intimidate him and then impose upon him. ♦ ♦ ♦ A savage, a vagabond, an enemy to all good society, he is igno- rant of the blessing of civility, friendship and all the inclina- tions of honest people. He prowls about, escorted by mon- sters with whom painters surround the impious in Hades, — Imprecation, Calumny, Envy, Sedition, and Discord. Such is the wretch whom the infernal gods, far from pitying, would consign to the ranks of the impious; and you, not satisfied with pardoning this criminal who has been delivered to your justice, would accord to him not only impunity, but favors which have been refused to benefactors of the commonwealth. *Mf a cancer, a gnawing ulcer, or any other malady, has triumphed over remedies, the physicians burn them out or cut them out with the knife. In like manner banish, expel from Athens, this incorrigible beast; exterminate him from the city before he wounds you. None of you, perhaps, have ever been bitten by a viper or a tarantula, and I hope you never will be. Nevertheless as soon as you see one of these animals, you readily kill it. In like manner, Athenians, as soon as you see the reptile called sycophant, full of gall and poison, do not await until he bites some one of you, but let the one who is first threatened always strike him." f * " Quid immerentes hospites vexas, canis Ignavus adversum lupos?" (Horace, Epodes, 6.) t Didot. The comparison of orators with vipers seemed established at Athens. (Cf Oratores Atticiy § 84) ^schines treated Timarchus no better; and yet he declared that he used the greatest moderation toward him. He could have exposed his childhood to oppro- brium. He generously declined to do so. He was willing to forget it, like the acts of the Thirty, previous to the archonship of Euclides. But with what rapture he compensated himself on the youth and manhood of the accused! We will not cite any of the prosecutor's address. Its impudence equaled that of his own life. The speech Against Midias is more approachable. It presents the special character of a tribunitial pamphlet, and recalls the harangues of the plebeians, arousing popular indignation against the insolence of the Appii. Cicero taught his pupil to excite the passion of envy, *'the most penetrating of all." Livy's orators never employed this device with more art than did the author of In Midiam. " Must I tell you, Athenians, that between the rich and us, the mass of the people, there exists neither equality nor common right? No, neither of these exists. The wealthy are granted all the delay they desire before 'ajppearing, and their crimes are superannuated and cold when they are dis- cussed before the tribunal. But among us the perpetrator of a trivial offense is condemned immediately. They have wit- nesses ready to come forward and prostitute themselves (ipOtiptaOai) at their call, and all the slanderers fly to them to accuse us; and in my case you see how citizens have even refused me a testimony of veracity. Consider why you are assembled here together. Isolated, you are too weak to com- pete with citizens who are proud of their friends, their riches, and a thousand resources, but from your union you derive a force superior to each of them, and you check their insolence. " Where, then, is his magnificence? Where are his bur- densome magistracies? I do not see, unless we consider his 308 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. INVECTIVE IN GREEK ELOQUENCE. 309 \> palace at Eleusis, which obscures all homes in the neighbor- hood. Where are his great liberalities? The two white horses from Sicyon, with which he conducts his wife to the mysteries of Ceres, or wherever her whims may direct; the three or four slaves who always attend him when strutting about in public places; when speaking of his precious cups, his vases and his rich flagons, in a tone loud enough to be heard by the passers by.* What advantages, citizens, do you derive from Midias' opulence and from his pompous luxury? I do not know, but I see the outrages which he, proud of his gold, has perpetrated on the multitude and on the first whom he encounters. ♦ * ♦ " Wealthy and eloquent, this enemy of the Gods sees in others only impure beings, beggars and worthless people (tou<; oudiv). What will this proud contemner not do if he is acquitted! As soon as the first sentence condemns him, Midias declaims, inveighs and protests. If the question is an election, Midias of Anagyrontes advances to the front. He is Plutarch's man of affairs. He is involved in secrets. Athens cannot hold him. Now, in all these motives he evidently has no other object than to show that the sentence of the people has not reached him. He does not fear it. He does not dread the consequence. To think that he would degrade himself if he should seem to fear you, to boast of braving you, — does not this, Athenians, deserve death ten times? Yes, * Midias displays his riches. He therefore insults the poor peo- ple. If he was simple in his mode of life, and reserved in his man- ners, would he escape slander? Not at all. Stephanus has an austere figure. He walks along the walls. He means to pass for an humble man, and is only an avaricious egotist, whose sole thought is the pro- tection of his purse. A frowning look, a cold exterior, will serve him as a barrier against solicitors and beggars (Didot). It is difficult to satisfy all and the Athenian sycophant. Nicias was brave in war. He lived at Athens, and his heart was always sad at the thought of informers. He seldom went out. He walked very discreetly on the public ways, and always had money in his hand for the needy. (Plu- tarch, Life of Nicias.) he imagines that you will be unable to pronounce on his fate Wealthy, audacious, haughty in his notions, haughty in his ^ language, violent, bold, when will you seize him if he escapes you to-day? *' If he were innocent in other respects, the orations with which he addresses you, the circumstances under which he pronounces them, would, in my opinion, deserve the severest punishment. You know that when news favorable to our country, and delightful to us all, has been announced, Midias has never been seen among the number of those who con- gratulated the people and shared their joy. But if one of those reverses, which we would all have wished to avert, happens, he is the first to rise; he immediately mounts the tribune, he adds insults to the misfortune of the times, and, triumphing in consequence of the silence to wliich sadness and misfortune have reduced you, he exclaims: 'Indeed, Athenians, you are strange people; you do not go to the war, you refuse to contribute to it, and then you are sur- prised at your want of success! Do you imagine that I will contribute for you, and that you will enjoy my liberality? Do you believe that I am disposed to equip vessels in which you will not embark?' Behold how he insults you, and on every occasion he unveils that bitterness and malevolence which his heart secretly nourishes against the people. Well, then, Athenians, when he will employ his lamentations, his tears and his prayers to abuse and mislead you, answer him in your turn: " Indeed, Midias, you are a strange man. You are lavish in your insults; you refuse to suppress violence with your hands, and 'then you are surprised to find your- self the victim of wickedness! Do you imagine that we will bow under your blows, and that you will strike us with im- punity? that our sufi'rages will pardon you, and that you will persist in your violence? " Demosthenes attributed to Midias words which had more than once honored our orator, but he clothed i 310 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. ' I: f them in accents of haughty contempt when applied to Midias. He reproached Midias for using them, as ^schines, in a later day, reproached Demosthenes for the same words and to the same end — exciting popular feeling against a courageous censor. Demos- thenes in fact eulogized Midias without intending to. "Suppose, Oh Judges, that our wishes reject this pre- vision, and that it will not be realized; but suppose that these men, with Midias and his equals, are masters of the commonwealth. A private citizen arrested in the ranks of the people, guilty of some offense toward one of those men, but a mild offense compared with Midias' insult toward me — suppose this citizen appears before a tribunal com- posed of such judges, do you think that he will receive pardon, or the right to defend himself? Will they immedi- ately pardon him? will they hear the prayers of a man of the people? will they not rather cry out: 'The envious, the miserable wretch! he is insolent; he ought to deem him- self fortunate that he is permitted to live!' Treat them, Athenians, as they would treat you; be not dazzled by their riches or their credit; but consider what you are. They have much property, in the possession of which no one troubles them; in their turn let them not trouble you in the security of yours; the law assures every citizen the en- joyment of his rights." In other words, be toward the wealthy what the wealthy would be toward you, — pitiless and lawless. This is a strange way to defend the rights of the people, and to plead equality. "I ask that the ac- quittal or condemnation shall not depend on the will of such or such a one; but that the accused shall receive the judgment due him according to facts which protect or defeat him. Such is the spirit of democracy " {JSmbassy). Thus spoke ^schines' ac- INVECTIVE m GREEK ELOQUENCE. 311 cuser. Midias' accuser seemed to understand the laws of democracy otherwise. He created hatred among citizens by the iniquity of retaliation; he added fuel to the flame of spite and popular jealousy, and when he saw the audience exasperated, and worked up to the pitch to which his personal passion carried them, he did not forget to say when sentence was about to be pronounced: ''Eemain firm in the opin- ions which you hold at this moment." So much did he fear that the kindled hatred would grow cold, and vengeance would escape him! Demosthenes, the statesman, strengthened himself by holding the balance of power between the different parties of the city. He addressed them with an au- thority which was justified by an impartial devotion. Personal feeling inspired the private citizen with re- criminations worthy of a seditious demagogue. What wonder that the sycophants often had the best of the case before a tribunal prepared in this manner? if Demosthenes stooped like them to employ the basest passions ? if he stirred up the poor against the rich, the low against tlie great? The Oratio in Midiam was not pronounced. It ought never to have been written. We see in it a remarkable specimen of the license of Athenian eloquence and an illustrious ex- ample of the power which custom had over minds that were badly governed. It was necessary to brand an adversary, and under all circumstances to render him odious in order to condemn him before the people. Demosthenes submitted to this usage and did not deem It derogatory. The evil which he did his enemies his enemies inflicted on him every day. Why should De- mosthenes not insult Midias when ^schines convoked all Greece before the heliasts to insult Demosthenes ? 312 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. INVECTIVE IN GREEK ELOQUENCE. 313 According to Demosthenes, JEschines raised the de- bate On the Crown merely to liave an illustrious oppor- tunity to drag him in the mud. The pamphleteer's violence and desperation seem to justify this suspicion, -^schines' regret is that his virtuous indignation is not shared by the people. "Such is your disposition toward Demosthenes. Habit has hardened you on the recital of his crimes. You must change, Athe- nians; you must be indignant and punish if you would save the wreck of the commonwealth."^ The orator aided them to the best of his ability in inspiring proper sentiments. "If there is in any part of the world any kind of perversity in which I cannot prove that De- mosthenes has excelled, I demand death." These are declarations rich with promises, and if the insulter did not hold to them it was no fault of his. If he attacked a man he noted his dissolute manners and his contempt for all family affections. We know how he wept over his daughter. Go and ask Cnosion what price he laid upon his faithful wife. We are told that it costs more to support one vice than two children. Demosthenes, who has no (legitimate) children, labors hard to sup- port his vices. Very soon ruined, he sells himself to clients, an unfaithful logographer, a hireling and deceiver of both parties. This enemy of tyrants (o fiKTOTupavvoq) sold himself to Philip and Alexander, and then insulted them in order to better conceal his game, which all know. There is not a single member of his body, not excepting his tongue, which he has not sold, and yet he claims to be an Aristides ! Midias boxed his ears in public, — a fortunate encounter! Demos- * Didot. We here make an allusion indistinctively to the invec- tives directed against Demosthenes in the speeches On the Emhcuisy^ On the Crown, and in the pleading Against Timarchus. thenes will cash these handy-cuffs. No money is un- acceptable to him, not even that which he hoped to extort from his cousin, Demomeles of Peania, by in- flicting blows upon his own head with his own hand. As a public man, Demosthenes must have elbow room, he must do things on a great scale. Formerly he contented himself with the cheating of rich orj^hans, with the defrauding of his pupils, and with the despoil- ing of an unfortunate exile, Aristarchus. Henceforth this "purse-cutter" {(^akw,ru)T6iio<;) will pilfer the finances of the state. He will turn to his own profit the trib- utes of our allies. He will attribute to himself the liberties of foreign people. Was he not convicted of the theft of sixty-six talents offered by Darius, at a time when nine of those talents would have secured the safety of the Thebans, whose misfortune drew so many tears from him? Did he not pilfer a whole squadron of sixty-five vessels ? Such a man, returning to his trade of sophistry, ill deserves to succeed in his oratorical schemes. And what an insidious address he has ! What perfidy in his speeches ! Does the im- pudent, perjured debater forget that "he must change his hearers or the gods?" He is a "modern Ther- sites " as regards his insolence and cowardice. Brave in words, cowardly in combat, ever ready to talk and impotent to act. Stained with all vices, he affects virtue. {xdOapfia ZriXoTUTzuuv aptryjv.) He has been im- plicated in two assassinations.* A violator of the most sacred laws, he prosecutes his friends criminally * Greek calumnies sometimes border on the ridiculous. A dis- ciple of Epicurus, Idomeneus of Lampsacus, accused Pericles of having treacherously killed Ephialtes, his intimate friend, the con- fidant and coadjutor of his plans. " I do not know," says Plutarch {Life of Pericles, 10), "where Idomeneus met with this calumny, which he vents with gi-eat bitterness against this great man." 14 I 11 314 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. INVECTIVE IN GREEK ELOQUENCE. 315 i'lf and has them condemned to death. He accuses others of versatility,— ''this deserter whom the scorching iron has neglected to brand," this " brute, unworthy of the name of man." The most notorious criminals of Greece, Eurybates and Phrynondas, were ordinary scoundrels compared to him. What wonder if the malediction connected with his impure nature and with his impiety has ruined the state and provoked dis- asters which have disturbed the world ? This modified sketch from ^schines' tablets gives, some idea of the violence expressed in. the original, and inspires us with little confidence in ^schines' in- nocence. You are angry, therefore you are wrong. Demosthenes touches the secret wound with the sharp point of his stylet. The wounded man cries out. Un- able to justify himself, he offers insult. "You know, of course, on the late occasion in the Pirseus, when you would not allow him to be your envoy, how he shouted out that he would impeach and indict me, with cries of ' Shame, shame ! ' " Yet all that is the prelude to numerous contests and arguments, whereas these are simple, and perhaps but two or three words, which a slave bought yesterday might have spoken. " Athe- nians, it is atrocious. Here is a man accusing me of what he himself has been concerned in, and saying that I have taken money, when he has taken it himself. '^ Nothing of this kind did he say or utter. None of you heard him, but he threatened something different. Why ? Because he was conscious of guilt, and not in- dependent enough to speak those words. His resolu- tion never reached that point, but shrank back, for his conscience checked it. No one, however, prevented him from indulging in general abuse and calumny."* ♦ Embasny, § 209. Even here ^schines betrays himself His violence is turned against himself. ''I have seen men," says he, "who drew hatred on themselves by speaking too dis- tinctly of others' turpitudes." It is not ^schines' clearness or frankness that defames him in our eyes, but the very excess of his rage. Demosthenes frequently complained of ^schines' "cruelty." Thi« cruelty was very apparent in the bitterness and envenomed address of his invectives. Never was an orator more dexterous in painting feel- ings and actions in odious colors, and in flattering the base instincts of the multitude to the detriment of an enemy. The terms in which Demosthenes char- acterizes ^schines' outrageous hatred are not too strong, ^schines smears him with mud {'por-qXaxttriidqy^ he vomits upon him "old dregs" {iwXoxpaffta)^')^ and the frightful mixture of his corruption and iniquities." We can understand how Demosthenes, lacerated bv so ven- omous a tooth, twice believed that he ought to appeal to all the immortal gods in his exordiums. It seems that their united protections would not be suflficient to save him. III. Demosthenes declared that he was not "fond of invective by nature" {ou (pdoXoidopoq atxs{ aid-qptui) ! " Aristophanes' moralists proved more clear- ly to what degree their epidermis was thick and en- during. As regards malicious remarks, the ancients were gen- erally more patient than we. A citizen insulted Pho- cion while speaking in public. The orator stopped, and when the man had finished his abuse, imperturbable, * ^E^ evporp6xT(ov, (Clouds, verse 1080 et seq.) 1 tmi INVECTIVE IN GREEK ELOQUENCE. 327 he continued: ''I have already spoken to you of the cavalry and heavy-armed troops; it remains for me to discuss with you the light troops." During an en- tire day an insolent hanger-on insulted Pericles in the public square without the latter responding a single word or ceasing to expound the laws. In the evening Pericles quietly retired to his home, still followed by the msulter, with invective on his lips. Arriving at the door of his house, as it was now night, he called one of his slaves and said : ' ' Take a light and conduct this man home." ^ When Julian the Apostate was at Antioch, a city given to frivolity and raillery, he heard the people ridiculing his austere manners and his long philosoph- ical beard. Instead of an edict to revenge the imperial majesty which had been publicly insulted, Julian re- sponded with the Misopogon : It is good for the people to *Thc modem orator is not so lenient; he immediately disposes of Ins mtemipter, and then continues his argument. "The brilliant but erratic orator, the lale Thomas Marshall, of Kentucky, toward the close of his life, when unfortunately, his oratorical inspiration was too often artificial, was making a speech to a crowded audience at Buffalo, when he was interrupted by a political opponent, who pretending not to hear distinctly, tried to embarrass him by putting his hand to his ear, and ciying out, ' Louder ! ' Mr. Marshall there- upon pitched his voice several times on a higher and yet higher key but the only effect on his tormentor was to draw forth a sdll more energetic cry of 'Louder, please, sir, louder!' At last, being inter- rupted lor the fourth time and in the midst of one of his most thrill, ing appeals, Mr. Marsliall, indignant at the trick, as he now dis. covered it to be. paused for a moment, and fixing his eye first on his enemy and then on the presiding officer, said : ' Mr. President, on the last day, when the angel Gabriel shall have descended from the heavens, and, placing one foot upon the sea and the other upon the and, shall lift to his lips the golden trumpet, and proclaim to the living and to the resurrected dead that time shall be no more I have no doubt, sir, that some infernal fool from Buffalo will start up and cry out, ' Louder, please, sir. Louder!'" (Dr. Mathews, Omtory and Orators.) 328 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. 11 If: I have intellectual men as emperors. The Duke de Mon- tausier would have sent the traducers into the river. With this system the rivers of Attica would have been filled very soon. The Athenians were more tolerant. They saw a tribunal exercise in invective; they were pleased with it as with an entertainment, and were only reasonably affected by it. Demosthenes dwelt upon the poverty of ^schines' family. This disparagement of the mean condition of individuals did not well agree with the fondness which the Athenians had for democratic equality. Their law ordained that any man might be prosecuted who re- proached a citizen, man or woman, for pursuing the lower branches of trade. " Never did the obscurity of his rank at Athens debar a poor man from public em- ployment. No man was reproached for the confession of his poverty, but for his indolence " (Thucydides, ii, 37). Aristophanes verifies the same fact in his own manner when he pictures the state in the hands of dealers in tow, in sheep, in leather, and in pudding. When he ridicules young ^schines as a school Janitor, his brothers as subordinate scribes or painters of tam- bourines, Demosthenes feels that he is coasting near rocks. "In the name of Jupiter and the other gods, let no man accuse me of senselessness ! I believe a man is bereft of reason when he ridicules poverty and glories that he has been raised in opulence." Called time and again as logographer to defend the lower class.es, he always took care to speak of the poor with sympathy, and to establish their claim to compassion. " Poverty reduces free men to low and servile professions, which ought to elicit commiseration for them, and not ruin them. Let not poverty be civil death, judges; it is in itself a great evil." All his oration Against Eubulides INVECTIVE IN GREEK ELOQUENCE. 329 is a touching plea in favor of humble professions and of the necessitous. Why, then, is he not inspired with these sentiments in his diatribes against ^schines' parents ? First, it is because the accusers declamations on Demosthenes' pretended bad fortune compelled him to debase that of his adversary; and then, he knew that with all theii love for equality, the Athenian multitude did not hesitate to receive kindly, though it might be at their own expense, all prejudices against wealth. The people of Capua did the same thing at a later day. The plebeians revolted, cursed their senators, and threatened to subject them to punishment. If it is pro- posed to supply the places of the detested nobles, the crowd answers with scornful cries to the names of ple- beians who are proposed to succeed them: This man is unknown; that man's a beggar."^ Far from wishing to hear them speak, they dishonor them; and finally they are resigned to support the senators whom they at first contemned. Philocleon, in the Wasps, perceiving that he has inad- vertently acquitted the accused, faints. This trait does not give us a favorable idea of the clemency of Athe- nian judges. Demosthenes, the statesman, said to his hearers: ''Be formidable in combat; in the tribunals be humane." The same orator, before the court, con- trasts the severity of his ancestors with the negligence of his contemporaries in regard to the greatest crimi- nals; he considers their humanity naive (sdrjOsta) sim- plicity. He turns against ^schines the words of the accuser of Timarchus. " Will you not remember what he said on his accusation of Timarchus, that there was no good in a commonwealth * Cum humilitatem sordidamque inopiam objicerent. (Livy, xxiii.) 14 i 1 330 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. INVECTIVE IN GKEEK ELOQUENCE. 331 'I : which had no sinews to stretch against malefactors, or in a government where mercy and canvassing had greater power than the laws; and that you ought to have no pity either for the mother of Timarchus, an old woman, or for his children or any one else; but consider this, that should you abandon the laws and constitution, you would find none to have pity on yourselves." * The judges were always too compassionate in the eye of an Athenian accuser. He would protect their hearts with triple bands of brass against pity. "To death" was the formula consecrated at Athens in crimi- nal cases, with variations more or less eloquent. '' Seize and punish this pirate whose oratorical cruises are deso- lating the commonwealth." (^schines.) The Athenians did not think the pamphleteer alto- gether serious; and with good reason, for the pam- phleteer himself was not deluded as to the import of their cries of death and the issue of the debate. De- mosthenes demanded ^schines' head, a criminal head {xaxij xzKpaXj)), Kill him! {a-oxTtv^are) "not once, but three times." He deserves "capital punishment. '* After having appealed so eagerly for blood, he becomes calm at the close of his oration; he sees and says things more coolly. He no longer speaks of actual punish- ment, but of civil death, metaphorical death, which merely deprived the condemned of his rights as a citi- zen {deminiitio capitis). Even his last word does not prescribe any definite punishment. He simply de- mands the chastisement of his adversary {Ttfxwprjtra/iivauqy These evasions can be attributed to a particular motive. The trial of the Embassy was not, properly speaking, ♦ Demosthenes, Embassy. This passage is not found in^schines' oration. Did the author suppress it, or did Demosthenes attribute it to him gratuitously ? a formal accusation of high treason {d(TayYekia\ but a prosecution in rendering accounts ( eo^^-q). Now, in cases of this character the penalty was not determined by law, but was left to the discretion of the tribunal {fiyib^j aTi!X7iTn<;\ This, in a measure, accounts for the in- decision of the orator in requiring punishment, and his vague conclusions. But the dominant reason of the contradiction into which he cunningly falls is his feel- ing of certainty that he will not obtain the required capital punishment. He knows the moral indifference of his hearers, and he knows that they are more dis- posed to relish the malicious pleasure of hearing out- rages lavished upon ^schines, than to share the patri- otic sentiments of the orator against him. In ^schines Demosthenes prosecuted a private and public enemy. What personal grievance had the Athenians against him ? They did not love their country enough to hate him. Theocrines' accuser observes the sipiulated enmities of orators who, after lacerating each other at the trib- une, go and banquet in company before the audience and divide the benefits of their concert. (Aristophanes compares these to two men sawing a log, one of whom pushes, the other pulls.) Such defenders do not hesi- tate to whiten or blacken one's character, according to circumstances. Their client's interest, and especially their own, causes them to change their language on any occasion. Among the ancients this was one of the weak phases of judicial eloquence. * As a logographer * Antony, the type of a Roman advocate, never wished to write anything, for fear of consequences. He wished to be able to contra- dict himself at his pleasure, and be thus spared himself the recanta- tions for which Cicero, the severe censurer and pcancgyrist of Vatin- ius, of P. Sulla, and of Piso, sought to excuse himself {Pro Cluen- tio, 50; Ad Familiares, i, 9; ii, 16; Pro P. Sulla, 3 ) 332 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. ? 1 i! ► Demosthenes could not escape it. He exalted or pros- trated before his feet the same persons, according as they were his adversaries or his clients. Although we ought, in this respect, to consider the customs of the Athenian bar and the indulgence which held them to- gether, political eloquence never pretended to enjoy the same tolerance. The orator's contradictions are with- out excuse when respect for public interests imposes opinions really personal, and sincere convictions. If Demosthenes' eagerness to stigmatize ^schines can, under any condition, appear pardonable in our eyes, it is because he is firm and sincere in his hatred. The source of his wrath is always evident; Demosthenes confesses it most frankly: " I abhor these men, because I saw them in the embassy to be villainous and execra- ble, and I have been deprived, too, of my personal distinctions since, through the corruption of these men, your displeasure has fallen on the whole embassy." * ^schines never confessed his hatred toward Demos- thenes, because he could not mention the motives without condemning himself. He hated him with a spirit of vengeance (for Demosthenes had unmasked him), and in consequence of jealousy which dishonor- able men have for those who have pursued an honor- able course. His defamations disclosed the weakness of his bad faith. He did not dare to compare that man, whom he represented as a reservoir of infamies, with his contemporaries; and for a good reason, — he knew that he was superior to them. He was, therefore, compelled to seek his rivals in the past, whose eulogy never chagrined panegyrists or hearers. He discussed with power and dignity the lavishness of public re- ♦ Embassy, § 223. INVECTIVE IN GREEK ELOQUENCE. 333 wards, an indiscreet profusion which discouraged the good without correcting the bad. " Do you think, Athenians, that an athlete, in order to win a crown at the Panathenaea or in the other games, would be willing to enter a pugilistic mel^e, or any other trying contest, if it were to be given not to the most worthy, but to the most intriguing? Not one would be willing to do it. But because the prize is rare and difficult to acquire, the victory glorious and immortal, he willingly exposes his body to peril and endures the severest toils. Consider yourselves, then, the judges of the lists in which the contest is for civic virtue. If you give rewards to a small number, to the worthiest and according to the laws, many athletes will contend for the prize of virtue. If you gratify the first ambitious comer with it, you will pervert the best appli- cants.* " That you may conceive the force of what I here advance, I must explain myself still more clearly. Which, think ye, was the more worthy citizen, — Themistocles, who commanded your fleet when you defeated the Persian in the sea-fight at Salamis, or this Demosthenes, who deserted his post? Miltiades, who conquered the barbarians at Marathon, or this man? The chiefs who led back the people from Phyl6?t Aristides, surnamed the Just, a title quite different from that of Demosthenes? No; by the powers of heaven, I deem the names of these heroes too noble to be mentioned in the same day with that of this savage. And let Demosthenes show, when he comes to his reply, if ever a decree was made for granting a golden crown to them. Was then the state un- grateful? No; but she thought highly of her own dignity. And these citizens, who were not thus honored, appear to * There was erected on the Agora a bronze statue of a political ally of ^schines, Demades, the orator of the Macedonians. fFrom Phylfe, i.e., when Thrasybulus had expelled the thirty tyrants, established by the Lacedemonians in Athens, at the con- clusion of the Peloponnesian war. 334 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. K i I! ,ti have been truly worthy of such a state; for they imagined that they were not to be honored by public records, but by the memories of those they had obliged; and their honors have there remained, from that time down to this day, in characters indelible and immortal. There were citizens in those days, who being stationed at the river Strymon, there patiently endured a long series of toils and dangers, and, at length, gained a victory over the Medes. At their return, they petitioned the people for a reward; and a reward was conferred upon them (then deemed of great importance) by erectincr three Mercuries of stone in the usual portico, on which, however, their names were not inscribed, lest this micrht seem a monument erected to the honor of the com- manders, not to that of the peoi^le. For the truth of this I appeal to the inscriptions. That on the first statue was ex- pressed thus: " Great souls ! who fought near Strj^mon's rapid tide ; And brav'd the invader's arm, and queird his pride. Eion's high tow'rs confessed the glorious deed; And saw dire famine waste the vanquish'd Mede. Such was our vengeance on the barb'rous host; And such the gen'rous toils our heroes boast. ** This was the inscription on the second: "This the reward which grateful Athens gives! Here still the patriot and the hero lives! Here, let the rising age with rapture gaze. And emulate the glorious deeds they praise. *' On the third was the inscription thus: " Menestheus, hence, led forth his chosen train, And pour'd the war o'er hapless II ion's plain. 'Twas his (so speaks the bard's immortal lay,) To form th' embody'd host in firm array. Such were our sons — Nor yet shall xVthens yield The first bright honors of the sanguine field. Still, nurse of heroes! still the praise is thine, Of ev'ry glorious toil, of ev'ry act divine." * * Against Cteaiphon, § 177 et seq. INVECTIVE IN GREEK ELOQUENCE. 335 This eloquent page develops a great moral and political truth,* but ^schines makes an unjust and malevolent application of it. Demosthenes was in the right when he refuted it thus: *' We have heard his encomiums on the great characters of former times; and they are worthy of them. Yet it is by no means just, Athenians, to take advantage of your predilection to the deceased, and to draw the parallel between them and me who live among you. Who knows not that all men, while they yet live, must endure some share of envy, more or less? But the dead are not hated even by their enemies. And, if this be the usual and natural course of things, shall I be tried, shall I be judged by a comparison with my prede- cessors? No, .Eschines, this would be neither just nor equita- ble. Compare me with yourself, with any, the very best, of your party, and our contemporaries. Consider, whether it be nobler and better for the state to make the benefits re- ceived from our ancestors, great and exalted as they are, .beyond all expression great, a pretense for treating present benefactors with ingratitude and contempt; or to grant a due share of honor and regard to every man who, at any time, approves his attachment to the public. And yet, if I may hazard the assertion, the whole tenor of my conduct must appear, upon a fair inquiry, similar to that which the famed characters of old times pursued ; and founded on the same principles; while you have as exactly imitated the ma- licious accusers of these great men. For it is well known that, in those times, men were found to malign all living excellence, and to lavish their insidious praises on the dead, with the same base artifice which you have practiced. You * " It is a general rule that great rewards in a monarchy and in a republic are a sign of their decadence, because they prove that their principles are corrupt; that, on the one side, the sense of honor has no longer any force ; that, on the other, the quality of citizenship is weakened." {Espnt des Lois.) 336 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE, INVECTIVE IN GREEK ELOQUENCE. 337 say, then, that I do not in the least resemble those great characters. And do you resemble them? Or your brother? Do any of the present speakers? I name none among them. I urge but this: let the living, thou man of candor, be com- pared with the living, and with those of the same depart- ment. Thus we judge, in every case, of poets, of dancers, of wrestlers. Philamnon doth not depart from the Olympian games uncrowned, because he hath not equal powers with Glaucus, or Karistius, or any other wrestler of former times. No; as he approves himself superior to those who enter the lists with him, he receives his crown, and is proclaimed vic- tor. So do you oppose me to the speakers of these times, to yourself, to any, take your most favorite character; still I assert my superiority. At that period, when the state was free to choose the measures best approved, when we were all invited to engage in the great contest of patriotism, then did I display the superior excellence of my counsels, then were affairs all conducted by my decrees, my laws, my embassies; while not a man of your party ever appeared, unless to vent his insolence. But when we had once experienced this un- merited reverse of fortune; when this became the place not for patriot ministers, but for the slaves of power, for those who stood prepared to sell their country for a bribe, for those who could descend to certain* prostituted compliments; then, indeed, were you and your associates exalted; then did you display your magnificence, your state, your splendor, your equipage, while I was depressed, I confess it; yet still superior to you all, in an affectionate attachment to my country.! Indulgence is due to the pamphleteer who answers the provocation of a pamphlet, especially if he is justi- fied in appealing to the righteousness of his cause. * He alludes to the complimentary addresses sent to Alexander, which he insinuates were procured by ^schines and his party, t Pro Corona^ § 314 et seq. Tlie oration On the Crown unites the dignity of a national harangue with the ardor of a philippic against ^schmes. ^schines' invectives are inexcusable. He calumniated Demosthenes, and, by insulting him he forwarded a victory desired by the Macedonians.* ' * It would be interesting, but foreign to our subject, to follow the thread of mvective at Rome under its diverse forms ; then the fescenine poems up to Seneca's pamphlet, the Apocolokyntosis, or metamorpho- SIS of Claudius Caesar into a pumpkin. The iambic and satirical poets would find their proper place then, and in the first line the Ju^n^ca. syllabi of Catullus {Odes, 29, 42, 54, 57, 93). C^sar replied to Cato's Anti-Cmar by the Anti-Cato. At first, irritated by the verses of Catul- lus (irascere iterum meis iambis), the dictator, instead of essaying to reply to them in the same tone, responded to them like an intelligent man, by an invitation to dinner. The Epodes of Horace are a feeble ^f^./"^ ^l!^ ^'"^'^^yl^i' For the aqua-fortis of Catullus, the poet of Tibur frequently substituted engravings on copper-plate. Fulvia the wife of Marc Antony, had one cheek much larger than the other' An acquaintance of the triumvir, the rhetorician Sextus Clodius' dared to comment on her deformity, which was, at least, very impo! lite. This insulting equivocation, "far from diminishing his favor with Antony, only tended to augment it. Fulvia, more jealous of her husband's honor, pierced the tongue of the orator of the PhUippic with a needle, by way of retaliation. The "delicate and gentle" Virgil (molle atque facetum) has al- lowed invective to mingle in the pleasing pictures of his Bucolics. Damaetas and Menalcas {Third Bucolic), before engaging in a poetical joust, gallantly use the epithet " robbers," in memory of the Canaen armheumof ancient Latium. This persistence of invective {convicium) m Latin literature justifies the words of Horace : " Manserunt, hodieque manent vestigia ruris {EpistUs, ii, 1, verse 160; ii, 2). Roman urban- ity always bordered on rusticity. Cicero lavished insults scarcely tolerable at the forum and before the senate, where Cineas believed he had seen an assembly of kings worthy to rule the earth, and which even the author of the Third Philippic calls " the chiefs of the most august council of the universe." In the midst of these pamphlets Charged with symmetrical insults, but without shame, what became ot the Roman dignity and the minute decorum of the De Offkiis ? The code of Roman manners regulated the voice, the walk, the gesture ifte carriage of the toga, and the least details of external life. On the chapter of defamatory insults it was mute. 15 t -•.fi TKUTH AND MOBALITT. 339 CHAPTEE IX. GREEK ELOQUENCE IN THE LIGHT OF TRUTH AND MORALITY. "To xipdo<; Tjdhj xav aizo ipsudwv e^7): Success is sweet, even at the cost of falsehoods." (Sophocles, cited by Plutarch.) ^'JaivTi ffo), he represents things as lie pleases by the aid of speech. His eloquence is the scandalous triumph of fascination " (rsparsta).* ^schi- nes, in his turn, in the midst of the ignominious out- rages with which he is covered, is especially indignant at hearing his voice compared to the song of the Sirens (a remark more effective than any other to injure him in the minds of his hearers). Is it possible that a logographer, "molded of words," and of "artificial" words, should reproach another for knowing how to use words ? It is evident that Demosthenes initiates the youth in the fraudulent tricks of rhetoric, and executes them himself with the effrontery of a charla- tan, who laughs behind the scenes at the credulity of his public. Eeturning to logic, let us see how the skillful man, in the presence of his pupils, boasts of his dexterity in juggling. {Against Tfinarchus,) The Athenians voluntarily made use of hired defend- ers, but disavowed it and pronounced it illegal. Isoc- rates at first followed the practices of logographers. Eventually, when frequently summoned to justice for violating the law which forbade the use of artifices before the courts, he ceased to write orations for others, and confined himself to the composition of rhetorical treatises, f Thus the profession of rheto- rician was viewed with suspicion, like all smuggling, * He is the most amusing maDipulator of all our politicians, the sharpest of our sophists, the most subtile and most insatiable of our jugglers. He is the Bosco of the tribunal " {Timon). Oh, eternal equity of political wisdom! f Cicero, Brutus, 12, fin. TRUTH AND MORALITY. 349 and its products, too often adulterated and sophisti- cated, were greedily sought in secret, and publicly dishonored. Poor as their soil, the Greeks became soldiers, logog- raphers or pirates, mercenaries of the sword or pen. Public opinion was more indulgent toward the pirates of the sea than toward those of the tribunals. In the same speech {Against Aristocrates) Demosthenes par- dons Charidemus, who was needy in his youth, for having pillaged the allies of Athens on a plundering expedition, and he stigmatizes rhetoricians as the scourge of their country. He recalls the herald's imprecations against the orator who spread a snare for the counsels of the people or for the heliasts. I^either human codes nor divine threats had the power to suppress an evil, whose extent was measured by the Draconian laws of Plato. If an advocate were convicted of chicanery he suffered temporary suspen- sion. In case of a second offense, death. If he were guilty of cupidity, death. The logographer always had to defend the good cause gratuitously.* Theo- * Lois, livre 11«; tome de la traduction de M. Cousin. The Capi- tularies of 803 give testimony of an unequivocal distrust toward advocates. One would say that Charlemagne knew Athens and her logographers : " Et nemo in placito (tribunal) pro alio rationare usum habeat defensionem alterius injuste, sive pro cupiditale aliqua, minus rationare valente * * * sed unusquisque pro sua causa vel censu vel debito rationem reddat, nisi aliquis sit infirmus aut rationis nescius: pro quibus Missi vel Priores, qui in ipso placito sunt, vel judex qui causam hujus rationis sciat, rationatur complacito" (Pretz, Lois, tome i, p. 92). Cf. Memoires de VAcademie des Sciences et Belles-lettres de Toulouse, 1878. Be la legende politique de CMrlemagne au dix- huitieme siede et de son influence d Vepoque de la Revolution fram^ise, par M. A. Dum^ril. Napoleon I still remembered, as it seems, his illus- trious patron. Memorial de Sainte-Helene, Nov. 14, 1816, § 14: "I would wish to establish a law that neither solicitors nor advocates should be remunerated, except those who win their cases* * * * I am .4.. . .-JmSi-i^ 350 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. f m. »: if pompiis said of Athens that she swarmed witli Bacchic poetasters, sailors, pick-pockets, sycophants, false witnesses and lying ushers. ''Favor me with your testimony," became proverbial in Greece. It was necessary to undergo three condemnations as a false witness before incurring infamy. Athenian justice in this respect was surrounded with precautions of bad augury. The accuser in a case of murder, before the Areopagus, took his oath standing, adorned with the sacred ribbons of a ram, a hog, and a bull, which had been sacrificed according to certain rites; he pro- nounced upon himself, his family and his race, extra- ordinary and terrible imprecations, in *case he bore false testimony. "This formidable and solemn pre- paration," says Demosthenes, "nevertheless was not sufficient to render him credible." From this candid observation we can estimate how much confidence the judges had in the ordinary oath. *' Even when perjury could have assured me the condem- nation of my persecutors, I would not have purchased it at such a price: I have too much respect for the tribunals, and the protection of the Gods is more precious to me than all the joys of revenge." This protestation was necessary; thus the oratorical customs willed it, but these were very different from the real customs. A client of Demosthenes, Chrysippus, mentions two testimonies of Lampis, one before the tribunal and the other before an arbiter. As this last testimony injures his cause, he reverses it with this distinction: convinced that my meaning is clear." The Emperor wished to dis- suadu advocates from supporting bad causes. It would perhaps have been more effective to discover means by which he might compel judges never to condemn good causes. -a(^m..'f%. TRUTH AND MORALITY. 351 " Judges, to render false testimony before you and before an arbiter is not the same thing. In the first case, in fact great wratb and vengeance threaten the false witness; in the second It is scarcely a misdemeanor, and without danger." (Against Phormio), ° Callistratus employs a strange argument in his favor: Olympiodorus denies that I am his associ- ate. To prove that I am his associate, I declare that on a memorable occasion I favored him in a trial with false testimony. And thereupon the irre- proachable plaintiff recounted the falsehoods of Olym- piodorus and of his witnesses. Callistratus not only did not contradict it, but confirmed it all: ''All that was concerted between us. Then our interests were evidently common; we were then associates. ^ * *" And they were certainly worthy of each other. What a singular method of pleading one's cause, and recom- mending oneself to the mercy of the judges! The deliberative orations, says Aristotle, are nobler (KaXMio.) than those at the bar. Under these conditions they were naturally superior, and yet, when they were so. It was due to the elevation of subjects familiar to political eloquence rather than to the purity of the means which the orators employed. The tribune con- stantly confounded itself with the bar and borrowed from it its passions and its most suspicious methods of discussion. If Demosthenes' Philippics were the only monument of his political eloquence, the orator's glory would not have raised him to the height to which his debates with ^schines carried him. But his glory was not thereby diminished. His harangues, inspired solely by patriotism, are decidedly true and generous, and worthy of receiving for an epigram the words by which 352 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. Thucydides characterized the statesman. ^ The rest of his work (without speaking of the logographer) does not offer in the same degree the alliance of artistic and moral beauty. In the face of the Macedonian, Demos- thenes stands a lasting model of an orator and a citi- zen. In the face of his rival, ^schines, he appears the first of orators; but he betrays himself as an Athe- nian advocate, and bears the imprint of detestable cus- toms which had been consecrated by his city: at all times it has been difficult not to howl with the wolves a fact which Voltaire felt and expressed. ^ III. The Athenians were too assiduous in the schools of the sophists not to have contracted habits difficult of eradication. It was said of them, and they almost proved it, that by oratory they could make things ap- pear what they were not; all was conjecture, all was possible: instead of convincing proofs and peremptory reasonings they used plausible conjectures and' specious probabilities. Thus, the orator would base his argu- ment on a public rumor really spread or forged by him- self, and on presumptions unfavorable to his adversary. Why would Aristion not be Demosthenes' secret emis- sary to Alexander ? Calumny is certainly a strong forte, but oratory is also very powerful. It is essential to render probable by skillful reasoning that which is least true, ^schines wishes to prove that Demosthenes has been an accomplice of Philocrates, an assertion quite incredible {d'tffroTepo^)^ which fact he does not conceal; but this is not in his eyes a reason to renounce it. The sophists urged the acceptance of the eulogy on Busiris, * II, 60: To know (jrvwvat), to explain (ipfxTjvsuffai) state interests (rd diovra); to love his country {^doTroXtq) to be superior to wealth {^prifxdTwv xptifftrmv). TRUTH AND MORALITY. 353 on the dust, and on the fever If 10 r,^^ ble to believe the v^rZZ^U-^^"' 7'' '^^T' the orator of tl>« pi •;• . ('•«/'«<'"^-'"') opinion that tne orator of the I h^l^pp^cs was the pensioned friend of the Macedonians. Of what use is speecli, if not to Illuminate obscure things, to obscure luminous thlf and to give to objects whatsoever appearance is desired According to the testimony of Quintilian (ii, nV Cicero boasted that in the criminal trial of Cluent us lit threw so much dust in the eyes of the judge 2te compelled him to see things only through\iif(ct:o! eyes The Athenian orators often might have been equally confident. Whoever has not recfiled before he task of supporting Demosthenes' philippism, an inven- The Athenians, moreover, were sceptical. They had their reasons for not believing in the incorruptibTe vir witnesses; others, without witnesses and in spite of m cult^ated language, triumphed. This venerab as „ bly did not express themselves on fine orations ( Z^^ reigned supreme. Now, when have scruples ever checked the ambition to reign ? * eIo^ul!,'i'<°"? ""' T '° "'P'"'^^''^ '•^"^'^^ "•«» «'« -nan without mss win e the highest reward is offered to the polished falsifier IrizeT' t't? '^- '^' """* ^"^"^^ °f »•>« «-«ks would giv ^e pnze to Ulysses, and Ajax, deprived of his shining armor wis ^n gaged m a struggle with death." (Pindar, EigktU Nern^7^ 15* ^ 354 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. TRUTH AND MORALITY. 355 t The penalty of death was enacted against every citi- zen who gained authority by a false law. In practice, the judge was constrained to relax a rigor which, if faith- fully executed, would have quickly decimated the bar and the tribune. "Laws make the morals of a state." Demosthenes might have added that laws without morals avail nothing. With the Athenians they were much less the expression and the fruit of character than among the moderns, and even on many points they harmonized badly enough with the morals. Not- withstanding the threats of punishment, the texts of laws and decrees were often falsified and even forged, ^schines and Demosthenes accused each other of being forgers, and both appealed to the public regis- ters, irrefutable proofs of manifest misdemeanors. JEs- chines particularly apostrophized them with veneration. *' Excellent, Athenians, — excellent is the institution of the public archives. Unchangeable, they do not submit to po- litical metamorphoses, but they permit the people to scruti- nize at their will those men who, after a criminal adminis- tration, suddenly disguise themselves as honorable citizens." Is this impudent irony, or must we admit that the collection of Athenian laws, charged with contradic- tory dispositions, was an arsenal from which every man could take such arms as he needed ? Even this explanation would not suffice to illuminate the flagrant contrarieties of several assertions of the two adver- saries. Thus Demosthenes boasts of his integrity in the same circumstance in which, according to ^s- chines, he has been accused {i^rjUyxOriq) of having pil- fered a squadron more powerful than that which van- quished the Lacedaemonians at Naxos. The substance of the offense was not, however, easily concealed. Demosthenes reproached -^schines for having entered against him the suit of Ctesiphon a long time after the events, although previous to that time "he had never accused him, never prosecuted him." ^schines re- turned a direct contradiction, and recalled different cir- cumstances in which he had not only accused Demos- thenes, but had clearly convicted him (v?av£/?d>- i^rjXiy/oo) of sacrilege, corruption and theft.* Whom are we to believe ? One of the two is certainly an unpardonable falsifier. Perhaps they have both in turn been guilty of falsehoods and deserve the appellation of orators of ♦^schines accused Demosthenes of maladministration in the affairs of Eubcea and of the extortion of money from the Oritians. Demosthenes made no reply to these grievances. Dissen gives a weak explanation for his silence, ^schines, says he, added these calumnies to his public oration. Demosthenes, therefore, was unable to refute before the people objections of which he was ignorant. De- mosthenes himself revised his orations. Why did he not profit by these revisions and destroy the grievances which had been stated against him? Criticism on this subject is reduced to conjectural appreciations; however, we know how considerations of state in Greece were affected by bribes. At Artemisium the Euboeans offered Themistocles thirty talents if he would persuade the allies to remain in the waters of Euboea. Themistocles in his turn bribed the com- mander-in-chief, the Spartan Eurybiades, with five talents. Three talents seduced Corinthian Adimantes. The fleet did not leave its anchorage at Artemisium. " Thus a special favor was accorded the Euboeans, and Themistocles himself enjoyed great profit " ; that is to say, twenty-two talents on thirty. (Herodotus, viii, 4, 5, 112.) By holding the allies to their post, the Athenian general served Eubcea, entire Greece and himself. This method of conciliating public and private interests places politicians on slippery ground. Mirabeau made this mistake. The political organization of Athens rendered disinterestedness diflScult to orators. They governed the republic from without, the administration from within, and their functions were not remunerated. In the negotiation of foreign affairs, when individuals or cities solicited favors not prejudicial to the state, the orators perhaps reserved for themselves a portion of the sums given. This was the reward they took through a medium profitable to all parties. <„. 356 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. TRUTH AND MORALITY. 357 bad standing {p^rwp Tzapdfnjtio^)^ which the accuser of Timocrates applied to the falsifiers of tlie laws. The art of falsifying seems to have been earnestly prosecuted by Greek orators. They invented facts, and then proofs of the facts. The chain was logical. It is not sufficient to edify an imposture ; it is neces- sary to prop it up firmly. Truth is self-sustaining; insincerity never has sufficient support : " This man, an inimitable juggler, incapable of speaking the truth, even inadvertently, has a method peculiarly origi- nal. When an ordinary boaster offers a falsehood he is care- ful not to express himself with clearness and precision, for fear of being confused. If Demosthenes derides truth like a boasting impostor, he at first falsifies under oath and under terrible imprecations upon himself. Then he fearlessly an- nounces that which he knows is never to happen, and even calculates its epoch. Persons whom he has nevei; seen he cites by name. * * * If he wishes to state inventions as real, he mentions the day of their occurrence. He forges the name of a witness to his invention. A wonderful mimic, he dupes his hearers by imitating the language of truth. He is a knave doubly worthy of your intense hatred, since he slan- ders characters of known probity.''* * Embassy, §g 153, 99. "If thou hast begun, finish; nunquam tentabis, ut non perficias, — this maxim of Cardan was practiced by the Athenian orators, and sometimes against them. One of the most pathetic passages of the Pro Corona is that in which the orator ap- peals to the Athenians on the true character of ^schines. Is he the guest or the hireling of Philip? (See above.) According to a legend of an Athenian savor, the orator, in pronouncing the word lunOutToqy might have intentionally changed the accent and said /utrOoToq. Meander concerted with Demosthenes to play this comedy. He first raised the question of accent by believing /ufrOwro^^ and all the peo- pie followed him. The grave Ulpian became the echo of this anec- dote, which is sufficiently refuted by the gravity of Demosthenes* character, but which is valuable as a proof of the levity of the Greek mind in general. What are we to think of this accusation of shameless falsehoods and perjuries ? Phidias, says ^schines, seems to have made the statue of Minerva to provide this man with a source of perjuries and profits. On the comic stage the Athenians mocked their gods ; on the tribune they treated them in like manner; and perhaps public levity assured the orator and the poet equal impunity. ^schines' imputations baffle the critic. Ulpian reproaches Demosthenes for having arranged the stories which he recounts to suit his fancy ; for example, that of Glaucetes (Against Timoc- 7'ates), In this case the orator never fails to summon public notoriety to the aid of his inventions. This is a method of persuading each hearer that he should be ashamed to consider or to doubt what he imagines he alone does not know. Demosthenes discloses this artifice in the speech Against Bo&otus : " That of which each of you is ignorant believe not to be known by your neiglibor, but demand a convincing proof of the alleged fact." The observation of this advice would have sometimes embarrassed the political orators, but they were acquainted with the levity of their hearers, and knew that with them they could be at ease. As there are pious falsehoods, there are oratorical falsehoods. The Greeks wrote treatises upon the art of creating laughter {nep\ Yekowo)\ examples were not wanting at Rome or Athens to compose treatises on the art of perverting the truth. Cicero recommended that the pleadings be sprinkled with little lies: Est men- dac'unculis adspergendum. Sometimes these were not little fictions for seasoning, but anecdotes de- veloped to please. Quintilian, the instructor of the Roman advocate, surpassed his master in this respect; he drew up the Code of ''false narrations." He ex- Z-r^t^-r--r^-^-jw:v*~^ ^^ • f- PJ* 9WT" 358 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. TRUTH AND MORALITY. 359 posed the theory of "colors." And with what solici- tude! Do not forget, said he to his pupil, that every liar should have a good memory. Above all, when it is necessary to lie, do not hesitate to lie persistently. By frequently repeating the same thing you will finally render it credible, and perhaps in the end you will be convinced yourself."* Nevertheless Eoman ur- banity never compared with the audacity of Attic asteism, and nothing in Latin eloquence, even the most deliberate, equaled the romantic episode of the female captive of Olynthus. . "When Philip took Olynthus, he celebrated Olympic games, and invited all kinds of artists to the sacrifice and the festival. While he was feasting them and crowning the con- querors he asked Satyrus, our comic actor, why he alone preferred no request, whether it wsls that he had observed in him any meanness or discourtesy toward himself. Satyrus, they say, replied that he wanted none of the things which the others asked, that what he should like to propose would be very easy for Philip to oblige him with, but he was fearful * Quintilian, iv, 2; vi, 3, imposes upon the master cf eloquence a venerable probity (sanctitas docentis), which is difficult to recon- cile with his precepts on the art of training witnesses, of defending all professions, even that of worthy Mercury (leno) ii, 4; the author of the formula vir bonus makes a poor defense for this contradiction (xii, 1). (Cf. De Oratore, 25, 52, 72, 79, 81 ; 59, 54.) To aid his theories Quintilian cites different passages of Cicero: Pro Roscio, 21 (Chryso- gonus to the audience) ; Pro Cluentio, 21 (story of Cepasius and of Fabricius) : " In all this there is only one thing true, that is thai Fabricius quitted the tribunal" (Cf. De Officns ii, 14). "It is some- limes the duty of the defender to support the plausible even against truth. I would not dare speak thus, especially in a philosophical work, if such were not the sentiment of Pansetius, a stoic of consider- able reputation." See {De Republica, iii, 4) the apology for injustice, by Philus. Carneades played this game without considering it dangerous; Cato thought differently. The Greeks were, above all, men of intellect; the Romans were, before all, men of government. , of being refused. Philip bade him speak out, assuring him in handsome terms that there was nothing he would not do. Upon which, they say, he declared that Apollophanes, of Pydna, was his friend; that after he had been assassinated his relations in alarm secretly removed his daughters, then little children, to Olynthus. " They," said he, " now that the city is taken, have become prisoners, and are in your hands: they are of marriageable age. Give me them, I pray and beseech you. Yet I wish you to hear and understand what sort of a present you will give me, if you do give it. I myself shall derive no profit from the grant; for I shall give them in marriage with portions, and not suffer them to be treated in any manner unworthy of myself or their father." When the company heard this, there was a clapping of hands and shouts of applause from all sides, so thai Philip was touched, and gave him the girls. Yet this Apollophanes was one of the persons who killed Philip's brother, Alexander. *' Now let us contrast with this banquet of Satyrus an- other banquet, which these men held in Macedonia; and see if it has any likeness or resemblance. '* These men were invited to the house of Xenophron, the son of Phaedimus, one of the Thirty, and off they went. I did not go. When they came to the drinking he introduced a certain Olynthian woman, good-looking, and well-born also, and modest, as the case proved. At first, I believe, they only made her drink quietly and eat dessert; so latrocles told me the next day; but as it went on, and they became heated, they ordered her to sit down and sing a song. The woman was in a sad way; she neither would do it, nor could; where- upon the defendant and Phrynon said it was an insult, and not to be tolerated, that a captive woman, one of the accursed and pestilent Olynthians, should give herself airs; and — " Call the boy "; and — "A lash here." A servant came with a whip; and as they were in liquor I imagine it took but little to exasperate them. Upon her saying something or other, and bursting into tears, the servant rips off her tunic tu'di^iiA -V .ix3^- 362 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. TRUTH AND MORALITY. 363 crate it by the false testimony of a supposed relative of the imaginary Olynthian. "See how he prepared this accusation long beforehand. One of the foreigners residing at Athens is the Olynthian Aristophanes. He was recommended to Demosthenes, whose eloquence he had heard extolled. By kind attentions and seductions Demosthenes intended to engage him to render false testimony against me. If he consented to appear before the judges, and to arouse their indignation by declaring that I had been drunk, and outraged a captive who was his rela- tive, Demosthenes promised him five hundred drachmas im- mediately. He would receive five hundred others after the evidence. Aristophanes replies (we have his own word for it) that his exile and his actual destitution had suggested to Demosthenes the idea of a well-planned speculation ; but he is grossly mistaken as to his character. He would do nothing of the kind. To establish the truth of what I advance, I am going to produce Aristophanes himself as a witness. Call Aristophanes of Olynthus to me and read his evidence. Also summon Dercylus, the son of Autocles of Agnontes, and Aristides, the son of Euphiletus of Cephisia. They heard the facts from his own lips, and reported them to me." Here we see Demosthenes confounded in. his turn. But are these evidences reliable? Is it certain that the attempt at seduction ascribed to our orator, and his inclination to perjury, are not real inventions of -^schines ? With such oratorical morals, every sup- position is admissible, every affirmation is disputable. The embarrassment to .which these solemn contradic- tions, these judicial protestations, subject the reader is precisely the object of these skillful orators. Where is the deceiver ? The judge does not know. He hesi- tates. His conscience is troubled. He pardons, or he refuses to punish. When he has reached this point all is consummated. Athenian eloquence is applauded for having accomplished its work. In this case, however, Demosthenes seems to have missed his object by overreaching it. He strained the springs of his art. The instrument was broken in his hands. "On myself, said ^Eschines, the effect of the accusation which I have just heard created the liveliest fear, the strong- est indignation, then the greatest joy that I ever experienced. In fact, I trembled, and this thought troubles me still, that some among you may be fascinated by insidious and per- fidious contrasts and may not requite me. I was excited and beside myself while Demosthenes was accusing me of out- rages committed, under the influence of wine, upon a freed woman, an Olynthian; but I rejoiced when you rebuked him for this wrong. I believe that at this moment I have re- ceived the recompense of a modest and pure life." The adage Se non e vero^ e hen trovato always acquits the poet. The Athenian orator often benefited by this favor before a people who were more anxious to be pleased or flattered than instructed. But it be- hooves all to keep within the bounds of moderation. According to Ulpian, Eubulus, at this passage of De- mosthenes' oration, cried out to the Athenians; " What! will you permit him to use such language!" The judges then arose and left the orator. This last act seems very doubtful. The Athenians would have given a remarkable proof of their moral delicacy if they had actually left the scene. But the thing is not probable. Day after day they heard falsehoods equally strong, and not as well told. The accuser's recital could betray "the detestable sycophant," according to -^schines' expression, but did not the same ^schines tremble when the vividness and agreeableness of this 364 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. picture enchanted {<;>u'/ayaj^7jOiuTs<;) and delighted the hearers almost to conviction ? Undoubtedly they were contented to receive it with an incredulous smile, and without being so strongly indignant. We know they were very delicate and sensitive, but not to things of pure morality."^ They hissed a mistake in pronuncia- tion. They rose up against a solecism, but in their conduct they tolerated stranger solecisms. Their moral sense emanated from their aesthetic sense. They ad- mired, in the good, one of the manifestations of the beautiful {y-aXoxayaOia). When they were virtuous, it was because they were preeminently artists. Demos- thenes knew well his city, and what it could support. But what was tolerable to the common public ought not to have been so to Demosthenes. An Athenian ventured an oratorical falsehood to delude the multitude, as Aristophanes risked a popular joke to amuse the multitude. But a studied calumny, circumstantiated and coldly reproduced in a written oration, after careful revisions and deliberate embel- lishments, — and that, too, when it had been disavowed by the incredulous attitude of the tribunal, — this con- tempt for truth passes all license. Demosthenes had some scruples. He suppressed one detail that was too revolting, — dragged by her hair. He no longer put the whip in ^schines' hands, but in the hands of the slave ; but he preserved and envenomed the rest. He should have known that his fable would have no more effect upon his reader than it made on his hearers, and yet he made a fair copy of it. He persisted in his iiction, without any denial, through exclusive love for the art. This boldness approaches candor. Demosthenes * GraTs ingenium, GraTs dedit ore rotundo Musa loqui {Ad Pisones) ; A eulogy very true in itself and in tbe restrictive sense. TRUTH AND MORALITY. 365 effaced from his harangues certain metaphors of fine taste upon which we, less Attic than ^schines, would perhaps have passed condemnation, and he polished and repolished calumnies which dishonor their author. TV. In Fenelon's thirty-third Dialogue des morts Demosthenes makes an apology, in company with Cicero : *' Eloquence is very good in itself. It is only its use that can be turned to evil, such as flattering the passions of the people and gratifying our own. And what else do we do in our bitter declamations against our enemies, — I against Midias or ^Eschines. you against Piso, Vatinius or Antonius? How often have our passions and our interests made us offend truth and justice! The true use of eloquence is to place truth in its proper light, and to persuade others in what is truly useful to them; that is to say, justice and the other virtues. This is the use which Plato made of it, but we have imitated neither the one nor the other." Plato crowned Homer with flowers, and excluded him from his republic. He was more rigorous toward orators. He expelled them without crowns. Their art was so debased at Athens that he refused to grant it even the name of art. In his eyes it was a skillful- ness, the fruit of practice and experience (e/xTtetfua). Eloquence ought to be allied to dialectics, and teach truths. It pursues the probable. Its task ought to be to correct minds, to fortify them by legislation and justice. Instead of off^ering to them "gymnastics'^ and salutary "medicines," it corrupts them by the "toilet" of sophism, skillfully disguised; by the "kitchen"* of flattery {Gorgias). This deceiving and poisonous eloquence deserves the * Ag(yracritu8 : " I can speak and cook, xapoxonoter^ " (KnigMs). 366 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. contemptuous censure of the philosopher, and the in- sulting ridicule of the comic poets. Does not the art of the sophists, thus understood, actually seem to pro- vide criminals for the tribunals rather than to honor tliem ? Fortunate would it be for sophism if it con- tented itself to measure how many times a flea leaps the width of its foot, and to investigate the little insect.^ It has higher aims ; it purposes to confound the good and the bad, mine and thine. It teaches us not to pay our debts and to pilfer the goods of another. There- fore the poet of the Clouds^ and the orators themselves, good judges in their own cause, treated it with no more respect. They were the first to defame one another by inserting in their speeches mutual maledictions; they whispered to the client, whose anonymous advocates they were, the blemishes of their art and the revelation of their dishonest practices. The spectacle of the abuses * Sophism bears the same relation to learning that a pedagogue does to a scholar. The former is narrow in every sense of the word, and is absorbed in trifles; his incapacious mind must grapple with small subjects, and from his inability to comprehend or appreciate great themes he becomes an egotistical literary manikin. The sophism which measures the leap of the flea recalls an illiterate country pedagogue, whose learning was confined to the rules of arithmetic, reading and writing, and to the absurd " methods " of his imagination, which was otherwise remarkably barren. Uncouth as he ■was unscrupulous, ungentlemanly as he was uncultured, ungrateful as he was ungodly, he habitually delivered himself of " lectures," to the mortification of his suffering constituents, on the great questions of long and short division, and on the '' methods " which he applied in educating ( ! ) the unfortunate urchins who frequented his bar- barian castle of ignorance. Owing to his minute knowledge of the rules for forming the letters of the alphabet, which he made one of the profound studies of his life, and his ignorance of everything that was ennobling, he measured all things, human and divine, by the slopes and slants of the letter A. But as civilization advances, this kind of sophism recedes. Fortunately the world to4ay is not afflicted with many such relics of the Dark Ages. TRUTH AND MORALITY. 367 of the art which Isocrates himself taught is perhaps not foreign to his logic: "We owe our safety to the The- bans as they owe theirs to us. ''^ * * If we understand our interests, we will pay each other reciprocally for holding assemblies, because that people which holds an assembly the oftenest works the most for the advan- tages of the other." Isocrates is wrong in rendering the institution of popular assemblies responsible for the misdeeds of speech. It is not the reunion of the nation in council that compromises her safety, but the disloyalty of the orators who, appointed to instruct her, deceive her. Eloquence ennobles or degrades the orator; it strengthens or weakens the state according to its application. Every defensive arm can be turned into a deadly instrument in unfaithful hands. ^schines stigmatized Timarchus with an authonta- tive emphasis which is not a skillful counterfeiting. In this cause he certainly had an advantage over his rival: he accused an infamous man whom circumstances forced Demosthenes to defend. The selection of Timarchus as a future accuser of ^schines was imprudent. :^s- chines wisely profited by this mistake when he stated the prejudicial question of the unworthiness of the man. The friendships of orators during the Macedo- nian epoch were often more politic than sincere."^ The author of the Great Moral (ii, 13) thought of this union of interests when he permitted the honorable man to be the friend of the base man. "The base man, if agreeable, is a friend so far as he is agreeable: if he is useful, he is equally a friend so far as he is useful." In * "Hate as if you were some time to love; love as if you could hate." {Against Aristocrates.) Hyperides loved in this manner. De- mosthenes detected him, long before their rupture, preparing memoirs against the friend whom he was afterward destined to accuse in the case of Harpalus. 368 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. TRUTH AND MORALITY. 369 ll 4. spite of these distinctions, there are classes whom it is best to love under no condition. Demosthenes ought to have been more circumspect and should not have committed himself with Timarchus. In still another respect he erred. Athenian orators too often deserved the suspicion of statements similar to that of Celsus: ''The advocate's reward is not a good conscience, but victory.""'^ These failings, common to orators contem- porary with Deniosthenes, are especially lamentable and conspicuous in him. Genius rules. In Demosthenes the man and the polemic are therefore much inferior to the orator of the Philippics and to the citizen. If he dared to compromise himself in this respect, without considering that the future would not have the com- plaisant indulgence of Athens, what liberties ought the generality of harangues to take ? Demosthenes was the most honorable orator of his time except Phocion. According to this, what are we to think of the others ? Quintilian (xii, 1), defending Cato's maxim, "the orator is an honest man, skillful in speech," wishes to answer this '' unanimous objection of the public": ^^What then? Was not Demosthenes an orator? And yet he is reputed to have been a dishonest man. I feel that my answer will create an outcry, and demands oratorical pre- cautions. I will therefore say at first that Demosthenes does not appear to me so reprehensible in his behavior that it is necessary to believe all that his enemies have accumulated against him, especially if I consider his noble political con- duct and his memorable end." Justice here commands us to separate the private from the public man and to imitate the state, which considers services not virtues. * "Non bona conscientia, sed victoria litigantis est praemium.'* (Quintilian.) *' As to an examination of his dignity, I will add without hesitation: a state and a private individual ought not to judge alike, for the points of view are different. As .a pri- vate individual, each of us considers what man is worthy of his alliance and of his relations. Certain laws and opinions determine this. But a city and a people reward whoever serves and protects them. They decide upon this not by birth and reputation, but by facts. What ! In distress we will allow ourselves to be benefited by whoever offers him- self, and when the service is received we will question our benefactor as to his standing. Such an inquiry would not be just.*' * Honest Plutarch remarks that if the people had killed Miltiades when he was tyrannizing over Cherso- nesus, summoned Cimon to justice for incest, ban- ished Themistocles from Athens on account of his licentious life, they would have thereby lost the vic- tors of Marathon, of Eurymedon, and of Artemisium, where the Athenians laid the foundation of Hellenic independence. Plutarch here wishes to establish that God and men are praiseworthy for deferring the pun- ishment of the guilty. The political philosophers of the lyceum would have drawn another conclusion from these lines. Bad acts are absolutely blamable, but the good which a citizen does his state ought to eclipse the moral evil which the unvirtuous man does against himself. " In the perfect republic," says Aris- totle, "civic virtue ought to appertain to all, since it is the indispensable condition of the perfection of the * Against Leptines. (Cf. Thucydides, ii, 42.) " If any among you at any time deserves reproach, it is just above all things to place his braveiy on the battle-field and his service to the state in clear light. The good in him has effaced the evil, and his public virtue has served Athens more than his individual weaknesses have injured her." {Funeral Oration.) .^ifi'-fii-ii'fai 370 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. TRUTH AND MORALITY. 371 state. But it is not possible that all in the state possess the virtue of a private man." The unity of virtue is as impossible as the unity of employment in choruses, where it is very necessary that there should be fig- urants, and not exclusively coryphei. When civic and private virtue can be found united in the same person, we have a magistrate both able and virtuous. But if they are not united, it is fitting to esteem that one which is more advantageous to state interests; for the qualities and experience of a commander are preferable to probity, because probity is more easily found than military talent. It would be fitting to choose other- wise if the object were to select a guardian of the pub- lic treasury. " The most important object is (we have frequently repeated it) to support those citizens who wish to preserve the government against those wiio wish its downfall." "The state can and ought to em- ploy, and even esteem, a bad man if he is useful." A good knife is one that cuts well. Demosthenes was less honorable than Phocion: who will dare to say Phocion was a better citizen than Demosthenes? Demosthenes served Athens and the sacred cause of national dignity better than he.* Af- fected by the contagion of his time, he bears its lamentable traces. But before the foreigner he is always mindful of himself. He is ever high and pure in the accomplishment of civic duty, and in the sacred struggle against the invader. Upon the whole, this Demosthenes is the true Demosthenes whom posterity * A success of the Athenian army was announced to Phocion : " When then will we cease to conquer ? " His maxim was, " Be the strongest or the friend of the strongest." Phocion could not fight at Chseronea. He was at that time commanding the fleet at the Helles- pont, — a lamentable mishap. especially knows and justly admires. Preeminent virtue and justice consist in accomplishing good for our fellow-men: "Many classes can be virtuous in that which regards themselves individually, who are incapable of virtue in that which concerns others. * ♦ ♦ The man nearest perfection is not that man who uses his virtue for himself, but that one who uses it for another, which is always a difficult task." * Much will be pardoned in Demosthenes because he passionately loved his country, f Before the triumph of Antony and Octavius caused Brutus, another martyr of liberty, to doubt virtue, he had placed the bust of Demosthenes among the statues of his ancestors. $ * Nicomachean Ethics, v, 1, § 15. t Virtue, in a republic, is a very simple thing: it is love for the republic. * * * This virtue can be defined : love for the laws and for the country. This love, demanding a continual preference of public to private interest, gives all the individual virtues; they constitute this preference. This love is singularly aff*ected in democracies. * * * I have not said this to diminish in the least degree the infinite dis- tance which there is between vices and virtues; God forbid it. I have only wished to have it understood that all political vices are not moral vices, and all moral vices are not political vices (Esprit des Lois, V, 2; iv, 5; xix, 11). X Cicero, De Claris Oratoribus, 31. DEMOSTHENES AS A MORALIST. 373 CHAPTER X. I. DEMOSTHENES AS A MORALIST. IL RELATIONS OF JUSTICE AND POLITICS. III. RELIGIOUS SENTI- MENT IN DEMOSTHENES. I. DEMOSTHENES AS A MORALIST. ** ^avTJfferat raura outw(; oo fiovov iv tvI^ vo/itfiot<;y dXXd xai ^ Opu)mvot^ ijOsffc dtwpcxs: These maxims are not only in laws; they are in the number of unwritten laws which nature has engraved upon the heart of man." {Oration on the Crown.) SEVERAL ancient testimonies, of very questionable validity make Demosthenes a disciple of Plato. This tradition of the Platonic education of our orator appears to have been born in the schools of phi- losophy which were desirous of claiming such a dis- ciple. Nine cities contended for Homer's birth: it is not astonishing to find philosophy and rhetoric contending for the glory of having inspired the author of the apostrophe to the heroes of Marathon. Accord- ing to Cicero, Demosthenes was an "assiduous hearer" of the chief of the Academy.* Cicero believed that he had found the proof of this in his letters. It is true, the letters attributed to Demosthenes, and sup- posed to have been written (except the fifth) during his exile, express noble and generous thoughts; as a whole, they do not appear unworthy of a pupil of Plato. But any one of these pages contains passages * Brutus, 31 ; Orator, 4 ; Dialogue of the Orators, 82 ; Plutarch, Lift of Demosthenes, 5. 378 which, in the mouth of Demosthenes, would furnish his own condemnation. The author exhorts, in one of his letters, Heracleodorus to lend his aid to the accused Epitimus, instead of prosecuting him with animosity: " I know that you have been trained in a school which is decidedly foreign to cupidity, and to the dishonest practices of evil passions, and producing all for the common good and for supreme justice. * * * A student of Plato, I call the gods to witness, who would dare to lie and prove himself dishonorable toward a single man, would be very culpable." The philosopher of the Gorgias would not have dis- owned the orator of the Philippics or even the orator of the oration On the Crown\ but he would un- doubtedly have sent back to the laboratories of the sophists the polemic and logographer. If Demos- thenes was the disciple of Plato, it was only under certain circumstances, as Yoltaire was the student of the Jesuit fathers. If Demosthenes did not follow the lessons of the Academy, he profited by the reading of Plato's dia- logues. This is evident (we quote from Cicero) in the majesty of his style {grandidate verhoruw^. Quintil- ian (xii, 10), refuting indiscreet orators, in whose eyes coldness and dryness are claims to the reputation of Attic, asserts, with good reason, that neither Lysias nor Andocides instructed Demosthenes in the pathetic sub- limity of his liarangues. Demosthenes, the disciple of Isseus, surpasses his master, and draws his inspirations from a warmer and deeper source. Pericles received his best-tempered arms from the hands of philosophy. In like manner Demosthenes is indebted to the study of Plato's works for a general culture which has left its manifest imprint on the dutiful orator. In this 374 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. DEMOSTHENES AS A MORALIST. 375 measure we can imagine him a disciple of Plato. To go beyond this would be an exaggeration, which would very soon be refuted by several of his orations.^ The political philosophers of the new Academy and of the Lyceum,— these, in general, were his masters, and he heard them most often, f Cicero ascribes the credit of much of his eloquence to philosophy, but to what phi- losophy ? To the sceptical Academy, the volatile mis- tressj of contradictory controversies. Is this what makes a true philosopher? Demosthenes gave no more attention to philosophy than did Cicero, but, like Cicero, he gained much from his perusal of philosoph- ical writings. The assiduous study of Thucydides, the traditional customs of Greek eloquence, the gravity of the circum- stances, and that of Demosthenes' character, contrib- uted, as much as the lessons of philosophy, to imprint a moral gravity of powerful eifect on his eloquence. " Why, Leptines, do you not think of the future? It is, * " There was need of a Plato to mould Demosthenes, in order that the greatest of orators might do homage with dLl his reputation to the greatest of philosophers." (Daguesseau.) This judgment is a shock- mg exaggeratipn. {Histoire de Demosth^ne, par M. A. Boull^e.) t " If you desire to follow the traces of ancient Pericles or of De- mosthenes, * * * if your heart is stirred at the sight of this splendid model, of this sublime image of the orator, you must embrace, in all Its extensiveness, the doctrine of Cameades and of Aristotle. * * * If a man is found who can, according to the method of Aristotle sustam the pros and cons on all kinds of subjects; if he is able, after the manner of Arcesilaus and of Cameades, to combat all kinds of propositions; and if to this method he joins the knowledge of ora- torical art, the customs and exercise of language, there then is a true, a perfect, a finished orator." [De Oratore, iii, 18, 19, 21.) X Orator, 3; Ad Atticum, iii, 25: " O Academian volaticam * * ♦ modo hue, modo illuc." All philosophical schools are not equally adapted to form an orator: Orator, xix,4; De Oratare, iii, 17; Ad At- ticum, ii, 16 ; De Finibus, iv, 3. by Jupiter, because we are far from the prevision of such sad conjunctures! Would that we could always be far from them, Athenians! Still, we are men; let us beware of words and laws which might awaken Nemesis. Let us hope for happi- ness. Let us demand it of the immortal Gods; but let us also reflect on the common law of humanity. Lacedaemon never expected to see herself in her present condition (her defeat at Leuctra laid her at the feet of Thebes); and Syracuse, that ancient democracy which submitted Carthage to tribute, which ruled over all the neighboring people, which van- quished the fleets of Athens, — she did not foresee that a single scribe, — a valet, it is said, — would impose a yoke of tyr- anny (Dionysius the elder) upon her. Did the Dionysius of our day imagine that with one bark and a handful of soldiers Dion would rout the master of so many triremes, so many foreigners and cities ? Yes, truly the future is screened from all men; little causes effect great revolutions. We must, therefore, govern ourselves- in prosperity, and provide against the future." The result was to confirm the moral affections of the young orator, and even far surpass them. Could he, in 355, foresee that a man from Pella would deatroy Hel- lenic independence, that a Macedonian youth, in less than eight years, would subjugate the entire»Orient ? Later, when Demosthenes witnessed the reverses which gradually prepared the ruin of the city of Mi- nerva, he armed himself against the public decay by means of the very disasters which caused it. He ex- horted Athens to derive her safety from her adversary. " You have received a faithful report, Athenians, but you ought not to be thrown into consternation by the misfortune. Consider that discouragement is neither advantageous to the present crisis nor worthy of you ; but it is worthy of your glory to consider that your duty is to repair the evil. If the noble conception which you have of Athens is not a delusion, ?*»,_-: j^^;-,i*-'^3(S:: 'ff-iiV**^''^*-*tHg'?fftlf- • 376 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. r I f you ought to show yourselves superior to other men in the midst of reverses. My sincerest wish would have been that this fate would not have befallen our city, and that fortune would have spared it all disgrace. But if this crisis was to be, — if destiny had resolved upon it, — I esteem it advantageous that things have been accomplished as they are. Indeed, For- tune has sudden changes. It easily passes from one field to another. Defeats, the result of cowardice, are only constant in their stability. Believe me, even your conquerors are not ignorant that, if it is your wish, — if this check arouses you, — it is not yet possible to decide whether the present event is fortunate or unfortunate for them. If they are elated over their success, their victory can very soon be turned to your advantage; for the more confident their con- tempt, the more rapid their fall. * * * Perhaps none of you, Athenians, have inquired why adversity is a better counsellor than prosperity. The sole reason is that the for- tunate man fears nothing. He does not believe that he is threatened by those evils which are reported to him. On the contrary, misfortune places before our eyes the faults of which it is the fruit, and makes us wise and circumspect for the future."* In the trial of the Crown ^schines shortens the debate; Demosthenes constantly enlarges it. He does not speak under the inspiration of disavowed personal passions, but in the name of moral dignity. The stoic Pansetius congratulated him because he established the greater part of his harangues on this principle, that "the beautiful alone is eligible" and preferable in itself. In fact, Demosthenes always dared to present the image of an austere and laborious virtue to the Athenians. He exacted of them that they should pre- fer the honorable, although difficult and even unsuc- * Exordia, 39 and 43; Didot, pp. 762, 764. This thought is .devel- oped by Bossuet : Oraison funehre de la Heine d'Angleterre. DEMOSTHENES AS A MORALIST. 377 cessful, to the useful, although agreeable, but dishon- orable. A good cause should be supported, though it be condemned to perish. The most imperious ne- cessity is that of honor. " Suppose some god would be your surety, — for certainly no mortal could guarantee such an event, — that, notwith- standing you kept quiet and abandoned everything, Philip would not attack you at last; yet, by Jupiter and all the gods, it were disagreeable and unworthy of yourselves, of the character of Athens and the deeds of your ancestors, for the sake of selfish ease, to abandon the rest of Greece to servitude. For my own part, I would rather die than have given such counsel; though, if another man advises it and you are satisfied, well and good. Make no resistance; aban- don all. If, however, no man hold this opinion; if, on the contrary, we all foresee that the more we let Philip conquer, the more ruthless and powerful an enemy we shall find him, what subterfuge remains? what excuse for delay? Or when, Athenians, shall we be willing to perform our duty? Per- adventure when there is some necessity. But what may be called the necessity of freemen is not only come, but past long ago, and surely you must deprecate that of slaves. What is the difference? To a freeman, the greatest neces- sity is shame for his proceedings. I know not what greater you can suggest. To a slave, stripes and bodily chastise- ment. Abominable things! Too shocking to mention !" * ' ' Raise your hearts ! " was the cry of the patriot and the motto of the orator. Like Aristotle, Demosthenes knew the weaknesses of the Athenian multitude ; but, while the philosopher condemned them without appeal, the orator labored and contended with them. " As the mob lives solely on passions, it pursues only pleasures which are agreeable to it, and the means to procure * On the CJiersonesris, § 49 ; of § 10. I 378 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. them. It is anxious to shun all pains and displeasures. But of the beautiful, of true pleasure, it forms not even an idea, because it has never tasted them. What orations, I ask, what reasoning, could correct these gross natures? It is not possible, or at least it is not easy, to change by the sole power of speech those habits which have so long been sanctioned by the passions."* Toward the end of his career Demosthenes is said to have experienced the discouragement which the rigor- ous sentence of the moralist was calculated to inspire. But this discouragement his entire political life had previously disavowed. The difficult work of which Aristotle speaks Demosthenes accomplished. By con- stantly speaking to the degenerate Athenians of their honor, he made them regain it. By pushing his fellow- citizens into the rough paths of duty, he sowed briers along his own pathway, and approached an almost certain precipice. The man affronting public affairs, in the hope of correcting his fellow-men, throws him- self as food to ''wild beasts." " He will perish before doing any service for the commonwealth, useless to others and to himself. "f Demosthenes braved Plato's •prophecy, and almost belied it. If he perished at the task, Athens owed to him the safety of her honor. This devotion was the constant inspiration of his whole life. In this respect he never flinched nor varied. On other points his sentiments did not always have the same firmness. In him the politician was some- times substituted for the moralist and effaced it. * Nicomachean Ethias, x, 10, § 4. f Plato, Republic, vi. RELATIONS OF JUSTICE AND POLITICS. II. RELATIONS OF JUSTICE AND POLITICS. 379 "*// 3ixato7j * * ♦ ooO^ iffTzepo^ ouCT iaioq outw OaufiaffToq: Justice * * * neither the evening star nor the morning star is so admirable." (Aristotle, Nicomachean Ethics, v, i.) " ^EffTt dk TtoXtTixov dyaOou rd dtxawvj touto S^iffT), to xocu^ ffufxipipuv: The good in politics is justice, and justice is general util. ity." One of the arguments which Demosthenes developed with the greatest force against Philip was the insta- bility of all power founded on injustice. An interpre- ter of human conscience, the orator of the Second Olynthiac^ by declaring the edifice of iniquitous power ruinous, affirms what ought to be as a consolation for what is. After the consecration of the honorable, the only basis of lasting success, he demanded the union of the honorable and the useful. The Socratic doc- trine, so pure of intention, in this case inclines to a dangerous exaggeration. In Socrates' eyes, a thing is not good when it is good for nothing. Aristijypus : "Is a basket for rubbish, then, a beautiful object?" Socrates: "Yes, by Jupiter! and a golden shield is ugly, if the one is conveniently adapted to its use and the other is not."^ This sentiment has at least the merit of purity and frankness, a quality which is want- ing in the following Stoic paradox. The honoimhle h always useful^ and alone useful^ a theory founded on an equivocation in which moral utility and practical utility are confounded. Both parties are somewhat mistaken. Socrates, in the Portico, exaggerated the truth. Demosthenes adopts a just medium when he * See above, p. 33, the text and the note. The utilitarian aesthetics of Socrates leads to the utilitarian morality of the Epicureans and of the Sceptics. 380 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. RELATIONS OF JUSTICE AND POLITICS. 381 says: "We must always aim at justice, and practice it, but in the meantime we must seek measures to identify it with our interests."* The politician guards against ideal speculations, and considers only the reali- ty of things. He pursues the honorable and the useful at the same time. What more can we ask of him ? The political motto of Hobbes was the saying of Plautus: ''Man to man is a wolf'';t the state of nature is brigandage. Since men are inclined by in- stinct to destroy one another, they need a powerful despot capable of establishing order in society. Aris- totle did not view human nature in the same light. Man, said he, is a social being {-oXtrtxi,^, Ctt>«>); justice is ''that which is useful to the greatest number," and when thus understood it constitutes the best politics. The thought of Demosthenes is not less generous than that of the Stagirite. Justice, in his eyes, is the de- fense of the oppressed. Such has always been, and such ought to ever be, the policy of Athens. The Me- galapolitans (Arcadia) besought Athens for aid against Lacedsemon, then her ally. Sparta claimed this alli- ance in order to dissuade her rival from assisting the attacked city. " I wonder, also, to hear it argued that, if we espouse the Arcadian alliance and adopt these measures, our state will be chargeable with inconsistency and bad faith. It seems to me, Athenians, the reverse. Why? Because no man, I appre- hend, will deny that in defending the Lacedaemonians, and the Thebans before them, and lastly the Eubceans, and making them afterward her allies, our republic has always had one • * For the Megalopolitam, § 10. f " Homo homini lupus, qucm nou gnoveris." In suppressing tliis restriction, the Christian philosopher aggravates the offensiveness of the Latin poet's sentence. and the same object. What is that? To protect the injured. If this be so, the inconsistency will not be ours, but theirs who refuse to adhere to justice; and it will appear that while circumstances change, through people continually encroach- ing, Athens changes not." * The protection of the weak was so strict an obliga- tion in Demosthenes' mind, that he made it the. sover- eign criterion of justice between Athens and other states. To him it was the source of honor and the foundation of equity " Men dispose of their actions easily, but no one is power- ful enough to govern the opinion which judges those acts. The people publish over the author of an act whatever appre- ciation the act deserves. Let us therefore act so that our politics will conform to justice ; let us establish them on this principle: let us do unto the oppressed what we would wish that others would do unto us in adversity (but may this never await us !)" {Twenty -second Exordium.) In the oration For the Liberty of the Rhodians^ De- mosthenes makes a distinction between social and inter- national justice; but this time he does not impose upon the latter the obligation of moral beauty. " I believe it a just measure to establish the Rhodian democracy ; yet, granting it were not just, when I look at the conduct of these people, I conceive it right to advise the measure. And why ? Because, Athenians, if all men were inclined to observe justice, it would be disgraceful for us alone to refuse; but when all the rest are seeking the power to do wrong, for us to profess high principles and un- dertake no enterprise, would, in my opinion, be not justice but cowardice. I see that men have their rights allowed them in proportion to their power. ♦ ♦ ♦ For, although private po- litical rights are granted by the laws impartially to all, the * Of. Aristotle, Politics, v, 7. 382 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. same for the weak as for the strong, the rule of Hellenic ricrht is prescribed by the greater powers to the less." A short time previous the orator, sympathizing with the Megalapolitans, placed Hellenic right, which Ath- ens identified with protection of the weak,* below strict right. He subordinated absolute justice to inter- national justice, as a modern politician would sacrifice exact equity to European equilibrium. The protector of Rhodian liberty went farther and farther. He rec- ognized a social morality arising from equity, and a Hellenic morality subject to the law of force. What was his aim ? He wished that all people should see in the Athenians the defenders of common independence. Let us sound the depths of his thought: the supremacy of Athens, the champion of Hellenic liberty, would realize for him the reign of justice in Greece. Thucydides likewise (vi, 89) reminded Athens that it was her political and moral obligation to raise her- self to the protectorship of the free states: this was the most ingenious and certain method for her to en- counter the preponderance of Lacedaemonian oligar- chy. This policy conciliated the useful and the hon- orable. Demosthenes, in his turn, celebrated its advantages and magnanimity; but, inconstant to him- self, after having established the law of honor, he stranded upon the apology of force: this fall was not expected, and what excuse did he give for it? The spectacle of universal injustice. ^ * * Too often, in- deed, the example of successful iniquity is alluring; the dog of Fontaine (viii, 7) did not resist it. He was carrying his master's dinner home for him; a mastiff attacks him: a great struggle. Other aggressors come RELATIONS OF JUSTICE AND POLITICS. 383 upon him. The faithful guardian foresees his defeat; he decides to make the best of it. Notre chien, se voyant trop faible contre eux tous, Et que la chair courait un danger manifeste, Volut avoir sa part; et, lui sage, il leur dit: Point de courroux, messieurs; moh lopin me suffit; Faites votre profit du reste. A ces mots, le premier il vous happe un morceau; Et chacun de tirer, le matin, la canaille, A qui mieux mieux: ils firent tous ripaille; Chacun d'eux eut part au gateau.* Thus certain congresses, in the name of justice (dis- tributive), cut up a victim in the interests of general peace. The Athenian maxim is then justified: each has his rights allowed him in proportion to his strength; for none of those interested would believe it his advantage to be just while the others were unjust. Demosthenes made a distinction between social and international justice. In what measure is this dis- tinction legitimate, and, if it is admitted, what con- sequences can be drawn from it ? In principle, justice does not change its nature when it changes its theater: let it he applied to individuals or to groups of indi- viduals, to citizens of a single state or to several states, it remains the same in its essence. Good, according to Kant, is that which can be universalized with impunity. Justice being one and absolute in * Our dog, seeing that he was too weak against them all, and that the meat was running a manifest danger, desired to have his share ; and he wisely said to them : Do not be angry, gentlemen, my portion will satisfy me; you are at liberty to profit by the rest. At these words he first snapped a mouthful, and each dog tore off all he could of the meat. They all feasted, — each of them had a share of the cake. .-r 384 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. itself, the principles of social justice should be capable of being extended to international justice, and the right of individuals generalized, ought to become the right of nations. In the actual state of Europe these two kinds of justice are very unequally observed. Social justice is differently respected in each state. In no ease is the citizen authorized to violate it, even after another has violated it to his detriment. Indeed, if the principle of reprisals were admitted, it would de- stroy social order, whose maintenance is a better safe- guard of all particular interests than the prosecution of crime or individual repression. The state is effi- ciently armed, for the defense of its members, with laws which protect them against every aggressor. Thus a social contract, which is fortified by sufficient sanctions, renders each people respectful to itself. On the contrary, we have not yet been able to estab- lish a similar international code for Europe. She has treaties and temporary conventions, very similar to a simple truce. She has no penalty sufficient to pre- vent misdemeanors or to suppress and chastise vio- lence. If an European state violates justice in order to injure us, have we also a right to violate it in order to secure our defense? This violation is lamentable; for evil always remains evil and nothing modifies or transforms it absolutely. But is not Europe excus- able? The temporary and precarious compact which bound the states together by the supposition that it existed, has been broken; anarchy succeeds consented order; the law of Nature, the law of diplomacy. To demand of injustice a recourse against injustice is abnormal and immoral, viewed in the light of principle; but practically allowable, since necessity exacts it. Civil law forbids us to injure another, but permits RELATIONS OF JUSTICE AND POLITICS. 385 the killing of a murderer. When a nation's life or honor, which is one of its vital forces, is threatened, it no longer recognizes any other Ir - than that of preservation, and it no longer discusses the means of securing it.-^ If it does not defend itself, what foreign force will have the authority and power to defend it? Perhaps Europe will some day recognize a sovereign arbitration, a justice of universal peace, sufficiently strong and respected to decide quarrels and to give decisions. With such an arbitration the Hellenic world was unacquainted in Philip's time; it has been wanting among modern nations even to our day. The boldest princes have sometimes been con- strained to respect the law, the common protectress of their subjects: the destruction of social peace and the loss of their crown, would perhaps have punished them for their iniquities. Against a neighboring state if it is weak, violence offers less risks. Frederick the Great respected the heritage of the miller of Sans- Souci (this was social right), and violated Silesia (this was the way he understood international law). There were judges at Berlin for a mill; where could judges be found for provinces ? * Balzac (Le Prince, ch. viii) deplores the discredit of the old theology, less accommodating, but more virtuous than the new : " It plainly says that a little evil is forbidden, when great good is to result from it; that if the world can be saved only by a trespass, it is of the opinion that it should be let go to ruin * * * ; that God has placed in our hands his commandments and not the government of the universe." In ch. xxx the thesis is very different: "A drown- ing person indifferently catches at everything he meets * * *; necessity excuses and justifies all he does. The law of God has not repealed the law of Nature. * * * To defend oneself with the left hand is not trespassing." The latter is far from the principle of the old theology. These two chapters are to be read; in them will be found the change of front of the political moralist. 17 386 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. The struggle for life is a natural and a generally legitimate law, but the infringement of justice for self- defense is not the employment of force to destroy jus- tice, nor is it the adoption of the maxim. Might makes right. Demosthenes witnessed the triumph of this detestable principle, and wished to draw from it en- couragement for its application. In this he failed. He was better inspired when he recommended to the judges of Leptines' law that they should not permit as citi- zens what they would reprove as men. T^ow, if in social relations it is necessary that right should prevail over passion, why should it not be so among cities ? States represent so many individuals, and ought to tend, out of respect to the right, to the establishment of an asso- ciation similar to that which binds the members of each state. Admitting the legitimacy of might is encourag- ing individuals, who compose the human family, to the regime of savage life. The idea of right was generally weak among the Greeks. The resources of Athens are exhausted; she throws herself upon an allied town in Boeotia, Oropus, and pillages it from top to bottom. ' ' This was not through malignity, but through necessity." Such is the moral conclusion which Pausanias (vii, 11) draws from this robbery. A teacher of morality who made pretensions to gravity, Isocrates, gave an eloquent exposition on the inseparable union of the useful and the honorable. Then when he had to express himself on the violences of Athens, he acquitted her with this excuse: " The Athenians thought that between two grievous evils they must choose the maltreatment of others rather than the maltreatment of themselves, and the unjust rule over other people rather than the unjust enslavement of themselves by Lacedaemon; and all well-informed people would think the RELATIONS OF JUSTICE AND POLITICS. 387 same. Some moralists, however, affecting wisdom, would speak and think otherwise." Melos and Scion made no better impression on his coldness: " We have been accused of enslaving the inhabitants of Melos and destroying those of Scion. According to my opin- ion, it is not in the least a proof of our tyranny, that people who have made war on us should be severely punished {(T 388 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GKEE(5e, means, and to enjoy the benefit of state rights. Should we accord the same privilege to man ? God forbid it! *' The rule Non esse facienda mala tit eveniant botia is con- firmed. The act of a queen will not be approved if she aims to save the state by committing, or permitting, a crime. The crime is certain, and the evil to the state is doubtful. ♦ » ♦ But in regard to God, nothing is doubtful, and nothing could be opposed to the rule of the best, which does not suffer some exception or dispensation." Therefore God will always have the right to pursue the best, even with the aid of evil, because he knows with certainty the result. Man will not. The evil which he hopes to correct, and the good which he imagines he can eflfect, are equally uncertain. If, how- ever, certainty on these two points were established, would not the evil destined to produce an indisputable good be permitted, and even be praiseworthy ? Logic- ally, Leibnitz could not deny the aflRrmative. But logic is not always the ruling quality of metaphysiN cians. Leibnitz, therefore, contradicts himself by refusing to subject man and God to the same moral principle, and the defense which the theorist of op- timism makes of his endeavor to imitate God proves that the system attributed to God, and that of the author, are both very questionable. Philosophers who are well informed on politics, or politicians who aspire to philosophy, are seldom con- sistent with themselves."*^ In this there is nothing astonishing. Even professional philosophers are not * Frederick II was a philosopher in his correspondence with Vol- aiire, and in the ArUi'Machiavel. However, he displayed little phi- losophy on the throne and in his foreign relations. "Who talks politics talks all but knavery." The king of Prussia spoke of politics as Rochefoucault spoke of disinterested virtue : " Qui a la jaunisse volt tout en jaune." \ RELATIONS OF JUSTICE AND POLITICS. 889 always consistent. Plato placed justice in the number of noblest ideas which constitute the retinue and radi- ance of the perfections of divinity. Nevertheless, in his liepuUic he disregarded justice and liberty to such an extent as to proscribe the elementary rights of the individual, the instinct of propriety, and the natural affections of the family. They are drowned by him in the state " as a few drops of honey in a great quantity of water. "* The most powerful genius of antiquity did not always escape, if not formal contradictions, at least the divergence of various views acceptable, each in itself, by virtue of their happy media, but not easy to reconcile. Aristotle's method differs from Plato's. Plato gen- erally devotes himself to pure speculation. He lays down, or rather seeks, principles whose formula is the object of his Dialogues; therefore he pursues the defi- nition of the good, of the beautiful, and of the holy. In the Gorgias he examines like a philosopher the relations between justice and eloquence, and as dia- lectics appear to him alone capable of realizing truth and good, he sacrifices to it rhetoric, which merely aims at probabilities and the appearance of the use- ful. Aristotle proceeds differently. At first he es- tablishes principles; then, after making these reserva- tions, he gives rules adapted to the ordinary course of things. He affirms what ought to be, then he ex- plains what is. Thus in his Rhetoric he first regrets, in the name of truth and justice, that human infirmity has created an art condemnable in itself. If men were wise, elo- quence would be no more necessary to the orator than to the mathematician and the geometrician. But * Politics, Aristotle, ii, 1. ,i . t i a fe ifc J^rj/jg ^ rj i,;^^^ ^ 390 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE vf hearers have a perverted taste (jioxOr^piav), They are not satisfied with convincing demonstration. We will therefore speak of elocution and the means of render- ing it seductive. Action deserves the disdain of sen- sible minds, but the mob exact it of their orators as of their comedians. Things are not what they should be, but necessity knows no law."'^ We must respect the law. Nevertheless, here are some artifices of rea- soning to weaken them if they condemn you, and to strengthen them if they justify you. According as the case may be, make a breach in the written law in the name of natural law, or in the natural law in the name of the written law. Apply the same practice to contracts and treaties. The city reposes on the equality and application of a law common to all. Ought great men also to be subject to it ? No ! " It would be injurious to them to reduce them to a com- mon equality, when their merit and their political import- ance place them entirely beyond comparison. Such persons, it may be said, are gods among men, — a new proof that legis- lation can concern only individuals who are equal by birth and faculties. But the law is not made for these superior beings. They themselves are the law. It would be ridicu- lous to attempt to submit them to the constitution, for they would follow Antisthenes, and would answer as did the lions to the decree rendered by the assembly of hares on the gen- eral equality of animals."! Morality, considered in itself, has unchangeable principles. In detailed applications it is as individual and opportune as medicine. :j: It is not an iron rule, * Rhetoric^ ill, 1. Oux opOib^ e^ovro^ dXX^ a>? a'/ayxaiou, (Of. i, 13, 15.) t Politics, ill, 8. These lions recall those of the Gorgias. X Nicomache(in Ethics, ii, 2. RELATIONS OF JUSTICE AND POLITICS. 391 rigid and inflexible. It is the lead rule of Lesbos which bends to the accidents of the stone and follows its con- tours. Does the philosopher contradict himself in these various assertions ? We prefer to say that he divides the subject into two branches. He sees things from a theoretical, and then from a practical, point of view under their double aspect. The political orator did not thus present the two faces of Janus. He confined himself to that face which suited his purpose. He omitted theoretical restrictions, and went straight to the reality of things. Now, reality and political ne- cessity frequently do violence to speculative truth. Plato and Aristotle, by accepting slavery, submitted to this yoke. Since ancient society rested on this iniquity, it was impossible for them to think of shak- ing it from its foundations. The political and social organization of the state prevented the ancients from seeing truth in this light, or, if they did see it, from mentioning it and from pleading for a cause whose triumph, then impossible, was to be realized many centuries after the advent of Christianity; and so, in the best philosophers, principles and the application of principles, absolute morality and political interest, have little harmony. The people, we are told, will be happy when kings are philosophers, or philoso- phers kings. According to this they are destined never to be happy. A king may be a philosopher in his spiritual tribunal. He is chief of state in his coun- cil. When perchance philosophy reigns, it does not govern. A theoretical moralist celebrates with de- light ideal justice, contemplated in its essence and in the perfection of its absolute beauty. ":N'either the rising nor the setting of the sun is as worthy of ad- J — -" ^-c - . •-. 392 ( ' •(i fl 11 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. i miration ! " * * ^ Ecstasy is forbidden to the poli- tician. He does not contemplate the intellectual world. He endeavors to see distinctly the real world and to diminish the infinite distance which separates them. Since it is generally refused him to realize absolute good,"^ he confines his ambition to the task of doing the most possible good and the least possible harm; for he must not become a slave to ideas, but must be classed with men. Let us note the, difference between the ancients and the moderns in regard to diverse forms of moral obli- gation. The ancients were, first of all, citizens; they subordinated morality to politics, f and all duties to civic duty. Hence the appropriate character of Cicero's De Officiis, a work so perfect according to the judg- ment of Saint-Cyran, that he was astonished tliat it could have been inspired by a purely human genius before the time of Christianity. Now, this work is essentially a treatise on social morality. In it Cicero places duty to the gods in the first rank, and scarcely mentions this duty in the rest of the work. This is because the pagans had no need of a special religious morality or precepts exclusively relative to obligations to the Divinity. They served their divinity by serving their country. The God of the christians is the God of humanity. The pagan divinities were wanting in this character of universality. Zeus, it is true, extended his empire over the entire civilized world, without devoting himself to any particular nation or country. But, under him, the immortals willingly adopted certain countries. They * The nature of things is such that the good and the bad are everywhere found in company. (Plato, Lawn.) t Politics, iii, 7; To Nicomaclim, i, 1. E%pnt des Lois, xxiii, 17. RELATIONS OF JUSTICE AND POLITICS. 393 bad on earth a legal domicile and sometimes even tem- poral lodgings. They formed an integral part of the city where they were strongly established. * To defend the state was to defend them; the defeat of the state involved their defeat and condemned them to the loss of their consecrated residence and to exile, ^neas carried with him his vanquished gods and sought a new country for them. And so, while among modern na- tions religious faith cannot always be in perfect har- mony with patriotic feeling, among the ancients relig- ious duty and civic duty, far from counteracting each other, fortified each other to the benefit of the state. Montesquieu recalls the trait of Persian Cambyses who placed certain animals sacred to the Egyptians be- fore his soldiers. The Egyptians were so stupid that they did not dare to kill them, and the besieged city was captured. "Who does not see that a natural de- fense is superior to all precepts ? " f So the ancients judged. They esteemed devotion to the state much higher than the realization of such a particular moral good. Public good was preeminently the good ; who virtuously served his country had no need of other virtues. Sometimes the political moralist, in recalling the principles of philosophy, modified by a restriction the imperious order of sacrificing all to state interests. "There are hideous and infamous things which the wise man will not do, even to save the state." if But * When the Spartan kings departed for war, they carried the two Tyndarides with them; these were their companion gods. Cicero conjured the Romans to avenge the national gods (decs patrios) of Sicily as if they were their own. (Against Verres, ii, livre 4, ch. 43, 51.) See M. Tustel de Coulanges, La Cite Antique, iii, G. t Esprit des Lois, xxvi, 7. t De officiis, i, 45. This exception to the sovereign rule does not trouble Cicero much ; fortunately a thought puts him at his ease (1u>c w: 394 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. n it \ this is merely a concession made, for form's sake, to the idea of absolute good and to the Stoic maxim that the honorable alone is truly useful. Cicero well knew that the wisdom of the politician was not that of Zeno; he even reproached Cato for constantly stating his opinions as in the ideal city of Plato and injuring the republic by his narrow inflexibility.* Let the safety of the people be the supreme law. Such was, upon the whole, the fundamental maxim of ancient politics and morality. Christian spiritualism inspired modern nations with a more delicate morality, and, in a measure, more per- sonal than civic. A christian prince can place the in- terest of his soul and the interest of state on the same level, sometimes even sacrifice the interest of state to conscientious scruples. In 1259, by the treaty of Ab- beville, Louis IX restored Limousin, Perigord, Quercy and Agenois to Henry III of England against their will. " His conscience troubled him"t on account of the conquests made in France by his ancestors over the future adversaries of the Hundred Years' War. When once engaged in this pursuit, why did not the saintly king continue to the end ? Was a partial restitution a ''good returning" ? To reduce the kingdom to the do- main of Hugh Capet would have been logical. :j: In the eyes of the christian moralist piety is the whole of man, eomrrwdius se res habet),—thsit the republic will never exact such a sac- rifice of the sage. * Ad Attieum, ii, 1. A passage commented upon by Camille Des- moulins. (Les Vieux Cordelier, No* 7, 1 fin., 3 fin.) t Guizot, Hutoire de la Civilisation en France, 14« le<;on. X Carneades said to the Romans : " Every people who have pos- sessed empire, and the Romans themselves, masters of the world, if they wished to be just,— that is, to restore the goods of others,— would return to their huts and become resigned to the miseries of poverty." RELATIONS OF JUSTICE AND POLITICS. 395 even on the throne ; and it is not confounded, like ancient piety, with love of country. The christian turns all to the safety of his soul; the Greek or Roman, of perfect virtue, turned all to the safety of the state. Antiquity was less interested in man, considered in himself, than in the citizen, and especially studied his role in the state. Political science was to the ancients the fundamental and architectonic science. Consequently political jus^ tice (distinguished from domestic and civil justice) gives to good its most excellent form. This reminds us of the peripatetic definition of justice,— that which is use- ful to the greatest number. Plato's definition in his RepxMiG is equally stamped with an eminently social character, and has nothing common with the definition: To each his own. It consists in a decorous subordina- tion of three elements which constitute the state, — the philosophers who govern it, the warriors who defend it, and the artisans whose labor nourishes it. This justice has, therefore, nothing to do wi^h equality of rights, nor with individual liberty, both of which Plato sacri- fices to the desire of unity; it results from a certain harmony, from a certain order, according to the philos- opher, necessary to a good constitution of the state.* The social prejudices familiar to the ancients further explain the disproportion which they sometimes per- mitted between misdemeanors or crimes and punish- ments; they did not specially consider the degree of * Likewise justice, for the individual, springs from a fitting rela- tion established between intelligence (voD?), courage {pufidq^ centre of generous passions), and concupiscence (iTziOu/xta, brutal desires). This justice is written in large capital letters in a well-organized state, and in small capitals in a well-regulated mind ; but the basis of the two inscriptions is identical. 1 i 396 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. 11 immorality in the fault, but the amount of damage done to the state. Plato condemned to death the advocate who received money for his services or supported a bad cause. Whence sprung such excessive severity— from a desire to correct, at all hazards, one of the worst plagues of the Athenian city. The principle upon which our military justice, in time of war, rests, is the conse- quence of the misdemeanor or crime committed before the enemy. It condemns the freebooter to death, and the sentinel found asleep to several years' imprison- ment. Outside of these particular circumstances mod- ern law fixes a penalty, not on possible consequences, but on the intention. Thus it does not punish as a murderer the author of a murder committed in a state of drunkenness. The ancients were disposed to punish not so much the guilt as the injury caused. Hence suits were entered even against inanimate objects. A stone fell and killed a man; it was formally judged, con- demned, and thrown out of Attica. Pittacus* was the author of a law which prescribed double penalty for crimes committed during drunkenness. As crimes were more frequent in this state than in the state of sober- ness, the legislator consulted the general utility of suppressing a preference for indulgence, which was due to an unconscious appetite. Thus public interest appears to have been the inspiration and the guide of political and private morality among the ancients. Morality in itself is one and identical. Its unchange- able essence is the order and necessity to which the citizen and the private man ought to make his acts conform. But this unique morality contains many duties of unequal dignity. The determination of this hierarchy may vary according to the media. The mind, * Politics, Aristotle, ii, 9, fin. RELATIONS OF JUSTICE AND POLITICS. 397 which changes and is unequal in the manifestations of its faculties in the child, the mature man and the old man, is, however, always the same in substance. Thus the honorable is the sovereign rule, the mind of all human actions. Nevertheless the honorable is not imposed on all with similar obligations. The politi- cian, whose mission is to protect social order within and the security of the state without, ought not to be submitted to the same duties as the individual, who has only his own welfare and moral dignity to defend. Politics and morality, therefore, are not contradictory; but when both are submitted to the common principle of good they realize it by different methods, a legiti- mate diversity which is enforced by different circum- stances and objects. In governments, the less the political power is con- centrated in the hands of a few, the more politics and justice are susceptible of harmony. A shepherd watch- ing his flock is, according to La Bruyere, the ''naive" picture of the prince, "if he is a good prince." If he is not, he practices the maxim of Fra Paolo : ' ' The first duty of a prince is to maintain himself prince." Herein lies the danger of monarchical power. In de- mocracies, where sovereign authority has passed from a single person to all, the pole of politics is also dis- placed. Interest and duty then unite and engage the attorneys of the sovereign to attend to the welfare of the people, on whom they depend, and whose inter- ests are united with their own. In these conditions modern political justice approaches that of the ancient free cities, where it was identified with the advantage of the greatest number. Now, when the governing and governed are thus united by common interests, and the direction of the people is intrusted to the ^* K^^i^»g il 398 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. people, who does not see that political crimes and public disasters, which emanate from them, must neces- sarily be more rare ? Then no dynastic manoeuvres compromise national prosperity ; no underhand diplo- macy ; none of those intrigues so mysterious that the ministers' secret is not always the Secret of the King. The policy of parliaments is still discreet ; but it cannot and will not be concealed. The light of liberty puri- fies. In the heat of the contest Demosthenes for a moment lost sight of moral law. What the philosophers fre- quently did to humor their systems, or to yield to the emergencies of the times, the politician did in a burst of indignation at the sight of universal iniquity.* He dreamed that his country would enjoy the perpetuity of honored power and independence. In consequence of this, he seems to have held strict equity at a low price. To pursue this course is dangerous. The authors of coups d'etat never fail to allege the august authority of their desired object. They abandon legal- ity to pursue right. They cannot confess that they violate the law to escape its threats. God forbids us to ever excuse the transgression of the law ; but a cri- terion is here infallible to determine the amount of esteem due the author of the attempt. It is the judi- cial formula : Who profited by it ? {Qui bono fuerit f) If the transgressor of the law alleged public welfare in the hope of securing his own welfare, let us declare him a criminal. If the state alone is to gather the * Thucydides, iii, 82. " In times of peace, and in the heart of prosperity, states and individuals have a better spirit, because they are not thrown against their will into trying necessities; but war * * * teaches violence, and assimilates the passions of the multitude to the severity of the times." r RELIGIOUS SENTIMENT IN DEMOSTHENES. 399 fruit of the crimeful act, philosophers, be indulgent to the politician. The good God who, in creating the world, wished to make it as good as possible, has, however, left it far from his own perfection. III. RELIGIOUS SENTIMENT IN DEMOSTHENES. The most beautiful and sacred altar is the heart of an honorable man." (Against Aristogiton.) ^^ 0ipsiv on uv 6 Oedq didui ysv^aiioc;: Endure with courage whatever the god ordains." {Oration on tJie Crown.) In times of violent crises, when evil triumphs among men, it is not rare to see great minds, troubled by the moral disorders which they witness, anxiously questioning one another about Providence. The Epicurean Lucretius witnessed the unpunished crimes of the triumvirate, and then disavowed the gods, substituting blind hazard for them. The Stoic Tacitus, a contemporary of Domitian, sometimes doubted the goodness of the best and greatest Jupiter, and sup- ported the belief in fatality. In the midst of the evils of the Macedonian invasion, what were the feelings of Demosthenes in this respect ? The orator of the Philippics always speaks with admiration of the power of fortune: ''Fortune is master of all things; it is the whole {rd oXov) of human things." But a good fortune can be the reward of good actions. In the age of Aristides and Miltiades, the Athenians, faithful observers of justice in their relations between them, selves and with the Greek cities, deserved to reach the zenith of prosperity. The Gods protected them in their struggle against Philip. "What could be a more striking proof of their benevolence than the propitious opportunity offered by the siege of Olyn- j^T^m^i'^m: 400 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. thus ? A friendly god inspired the Macedonian with an insatiable desire destined to ruin him by finally arousing the city. Without Athens having done any- thing to call them forth, various favorable circum- stances presented themselves voluntarily {adrofjLara), To Divine Providence Demosthenes owed the sagacity which urged him to denounce the enemy's designs. Heaven's protection, with the orator's devotion, was the source of the benefit of the Theban alliance. " 1 will read to you an oracle of the gods, who always protect the commonwealth far better than her states- men." Elsewhere he tells the Athenians to confide in the future: ''We have always been more just and pious than Philip." Why, then, has he thus far succeeded better than we ? This objection, which the Athenians made to the orator and moralist, recalls that of Louis XIV to M. de Meaux. The young king, conqueror of Flanders, invader of Holland, saw his least equit- able designs crowned with success; and victory aban- doned him in the war of Spanish succession, when he fought for justice and his right. Providence, re- plied Bossuet, wished to punish him for his excessive love of worldly glory, and to exercise his piety. If unjust Philip has succeeded better than you, replied Demosthenes to his contradictors, it is because he manages his affairs with more energy than you do. "I see that you have many more claims than he to the support of the immortal gods. But we must con. fess that we are inmovable and inactive, ^ow, who. ever does not act himself, has no right to entreat his friends, still less the gods, to aid him." The Athenians were slow to reflect on the principle of harmony between merit and good fortune. Ad- RELIGIOUS SENTIMENT IN DEMOSTHENES. 401 versity soon compelled them to implore the justice of Providence; before suffering, they had little care for it. "Justice is that which is pleasing and useful to the strong" {Gorgias), Athens had fonnerly pro- fessed this doctrine publicly. At the opening of the Peloponnesian war, when the Corinthians reproached them for their selfish ambition, their orators re- sponded; " We have done nothing at which you ought to be aston- ished, nothing contrary to human nature by accepting an empire which was offered to us. * * * We are not the first to act thus; but there is an established law at all times that the strongest shall rule the weakest.* * * Considerations of your own interests have made you allege maxims of justice which never prevented any person from enlarging his domain when opportunity was presented to acquire anything by force.'* This principle was even more openly pleaded in the conference which the Athenian deputies held with the magistrates of Melos (417), in order to draw that isle from the Lacedaemonian alliance. The Athenians said to them: " We must rely upon the pursuit of what is possible, and abandon a principle on which we agree, and have nothing to teach each other mutually; this is because, in human affairs, we submit to the rules of justice, when we are constrained to it by mutual necessity. But for the strong, power is the only rule; for the weak, submission." The Melians: "We sincerely hope that, with the protection of the gods, we will not be inferior to you in defending our sacred rights against injustice." The reply of the Athenians is curious. Force is of divine right. 17* 402 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. "We also believe that divine favor will not be wanting to us, for we demand nothing, we do nothing, contrary to that which men attribute to the Divinity and claim for themselves. In fact, we think that, by virtue of a natural necessity, the gods, according to tradition* and men, manifestly employ all the means in their power to rule when they are the strong- est. We did not enact this law; we are not the first to apply it; we found it established, and we will transmit it after us, because it is eternal. We profit by it, being thor- oughly convinced that no one, not even yourselves, if placed in the same condition of power, would act difi*erently." f Power becoming equity is one of the forms of fa- tality. We must submit to it as to all necessary things. *' Mortals and immortals, all are subject to the empire of law, which establishes and legitimatizes the most extreme violence with its sovereign hand.":^ To sup- port this article of religious and moral faith Pindar cites the example of Hercules stealing the oxen of Geryon. Thus a legal crime is no longer a crime, or it is an acknowledged law of heaven and earth that power justifies iniquity. By virtue of this eternal law, hereditary in Greece, Melos, guilty of fidelity to Lace- daemon, was captured after heroic resistance. Forced to surrender at discretion, she saw her women and children reduced to slavery, and all the Melians com- petent to bear arms put to death; an atrocious ven- geance, which even at Athens found compassionate censors. § "Everybody knows that all men, even those who have little regard for justice, experience a certain shame for not practicing it; but they boldly * Jupiter, stronger than Saturn, dethroned him and sent him to Italy to create the golden age. (See Prometheus of ^schylus.) f Thucydides, v, 89, 104, 105 ; i, 76. % Pindar, Fragments. § Isocrates, § 100; Thucydides, v, 96. RELIGIOUS SENTIMENT IN DEMOSTHENES. 403 rise up against injustice, especially if they are per- sonally struck."* This shame was wanting to the Athenians in the Peloponnesian war. They auda- ciously displayed iniquities which Eoman hypocrisy always carefully concealed. In their struggles with Philip they remembered justice and the gods when it was rather late.f Demosthenes' mind generally seemed wavering in regard to questions of religious morality. It is very difficult for a pagan to make his morality and his opinions on the gods harmonize, and to conciliate the logic of his sentiments with the respect of whimsical and illogical dogmas. During the contest, Demos- thenes was inclined to diminish the power of destiny. He found it necessary to react against the dispositions of the Athenians, who imputed all to it and even cravenly abandoned themselves to it. When the dis- aster was consummated, he threw the responsibility of it upon destiny alone, and no longer upon the neg- ligence of the city. Demosthenes could reasonably hesitate between blind fortune and the gods, for the will of the gods is obscure, capricious and contradic- tory. Before Salamis the priestess Aristonice an- nounced terrible misfortunes to the Athenians; a short time after she gave them a favorable response. Did the god, moved by their despair, change his advice in a few days ? Hegesippus went to consult the oracle of Jupiter at Olympia, then the oracle of Apollo at * Demosthenes. f " When men desire to avenge themselves on others, they delight in abolishing at first the rules of common right which are appli- cable to the circumstances, and which always leave some hope of safety to the unfortunate. They thus deprive themselves of a guar- antee which they will some day need themselves in the Iiour of dan- ger." (Thucydides, iii, 84.) 404 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. I f Delphi. He desired to know whether Phoebus would give the same advice as his father.* ''One god" (rk Osibv) could procure an advantage for the Athe- nians, another injure them according to his particular affections. In fact, the orator declared that he had ''often" experienced the fear which a malevolent genius worked for their ruin. To the war waged under the walls of Troy corresponded in Homer a war among the immortal gods.. Perhaps the gods were thus divided in the two camps, and some favored Greece, others Philip. The inhabitants of Olympus did not practice the gratuity of grace. They seldom gave before receiving; nevertheless, they willingly fol- lowed the maxim of their own pleasure: " ]N'o thing forces them to interest themselves in those for whom they care not. " f (Cyropaedia. ) The uncertainty which men felt as to the nature and affections of the gods toward them, and the inconstant fortunes which they believed resulted from these dispo- sitions, insensibly led them to accept the predominance of fortune. Who could decide on the victory or defeat of the god supposed to protect Athens? The cause was unknown to Athens and the city was excusable in attributing it to hazard; at least it was all the same to her. Demosthenes, a sad witness of Philip's victories, could sometimes hesitate between blind fatality and Providence; but, except a few moments of painful un- certainty, it seems to us impossible that he whose death was characterized by so profound a religious feeling, did not believe in divine justice and the reward of virtue, as he believed in its efficacy to secure success. ♦ Aristotle, Ehet(ync, i, 15 ; ii, 23. f Impious Alcibiades lived happily; Nicias, a model of civic vir- tue and piety, perished miserably. (Thucydides, vii, 77, 86.) # I %■ I RELIGIOUS SENTIMENT IN DEMOSTHENES. 405 If Demosthenes and Cicero were great orators, it is, according to Chateaubriand's opinion, because they were extremely religious. "They constantly had the name of the gods in their mouths." We would not dare assert that Cicero always had them in his heart, even when he invoked them in his most pathetic appeals. Demosthenes, a graver orator and politician than the jocund contradictor of Cato {Pro Murena)^ was subject, by his character and circumstances, to strong religious impressions. He was religious without pretense or grimaces; his piety was exempt from prejudices and hypocrisy. A priestess, Theoris, was instructing slaves how to deceive their masters, and used enchantments to dupe them. Demosthenes had her condemned to death. His hardy hand, when necessary, could ransack the sanctuary and seize the criminals who took refuge there. He was not less courageous in refuting the sophisms borrowed from sacred things through bad faith. Leptines contends against immunities by saying that the people cannot, with justice to the gods, excuse any person from duties possessing sacred obligations, a very perfidious {xaxoupyoramv) argument. Demos- thenes refuted him. To deprive citizens of the immu- nities which they enjoy would be an injustice which no religious pretext could palliate. It is the height of im- piety {aff£l3i(TTaro>) to legitimatize an iniquity in the name of heaven. What the human conscience declares bad cannot be good in the eyes of God.*^ Did Demosthenes believe in oracles and auguries? The Athenian masters of rhetoric gave instruction how to use favorable auguries, by virtue of the adage: Seek * A sentence true, generous and worthy of a Christian. What evils would be spared the world if men always protected themselves from these false pretexts of religion ! (A. Wolf.) '44-- * i ;«^ 406 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GKEECE. RELIGIOUS SENTIMENT IN DEMOSTHENES. 407 the advantageotcs^^ and how to reverse contrary augu- ries. Demosthenes respected oracles from which he could draw arguments in his favor; he omitted, or even ridiculed them, when they could be turned against him.f Occasionally he essayed to turn the religious opinions of his fellow-citizens to the welfare of the state. Whoever would act powerfully on men must be their superior, and at the same time must speak their language; he must fascinate the minds of his hearers in order to penetrate them. A special messenger ►an- nounced the death of Philip to Demosthenes before the news spread through the city. He mounted the ros- trum and declared that he had just had a dream, a certain presage of approaching prosperity. Presently the official message of the predicted event arrived. The Athenians for a moment took courage and placed con- fidence in the gods. This innocent artifice, which ^s- chines keenly ridiculed, recalls that of Pericles. A very skillful artist who was working on the Propylaea of the Acropolis, fell from the top of the edifice; the physicians despaired of his life. Minerva appeared to Pericles in a dream, and prescribed a remedy which would promptly cure the wounded man, a striking proof of the sympathetic interest which the goddess mani- * To ffufiipipov opdv: Each pursues his own interest; unity of measures does not exist ; they are smaUer in countries where the prod- uce is sold, and larger in those where it is purchased. (Nicomachean Ethics, V, 7.) f Four oracles are invoked in the In Afidiam, one in the Embassy. In the oration On the Navy Boards he disdainfully places the makers of oracles on the same level as foolish orators. Oracles were the po- litical and spiritual directors of antiquity. Strong minds were not their dupes. In Samothrace, the minister of the god, having initiated Lysander, ordered him to declare the most crimeful act of his life. ** Who exacts this confession ? — you or the gods ? The gods. Well, then, you retire : I will answer them." f fested in Pericles' constructions. These fictions have nothing in common with those impositions whose am- bition and selfish passion became a weapon, for exam- ple with the religious stratagem which Megacles and Pisistratus contrived in order to restore the tyrant to his former power.* Socrates firmly believed in divination. Aristotle seems to have admitted its principle, but was unwilling to accept all its applications. The famous Epimenides of Crete (a suspicious origin for a diviner) did not predict, properly speaking, the future; f he had pre- sentiments of it by the aid of inductions founded on events which really happened, but which were un- known to others. This particular observation was * Herodotus, i, 60: "Megacles, weary of seditions, negotiated with Pisistratus, offering him his daughter in marriage and the despotism. These conditions were accepted. They came to an agreement, and, to execute their plans, they had recourse to the grossest of stratagems, in my opinion ; because in all antiquity the Greek nation has been distinguished from the barbarians by its genius, which forms a striking contrast to their gross stupidity; and now this ruse has been employed among the Athenians, who are considered the most sensible among the Greeks. In the town of Paeania lived a woman named Phya. She Was nearly six feet in height and of remarkable beauty. They placed her in full armor upon a chariot, and made proclamation to the citi- zens that they should welcome Pisistratus, whom Athena herself was bringing to her own Acropolis. They announced this proclamation in all quarters, and the news was spread among the people that Mi- nerva was bringing back Pisistratus. The whole city believed that this woman was the goddess; the inhabitants adored a mortal being, and received Pisistratus. After having recovered his power in the man- ner just described, Pisistratus espoused the daughter of Megacles according to their agreement." This family compact did not else- where produce good fruit. (Ibidem, 61.) if Hhefortc iii, 17. Cf. To Eudemus, ii, 8, where the philosopher admits the sincerity of prophetic enthusiasm. The polished society of the 17th century believed in soothsayers. (La Bruyfere, De quelques usages.) * 408 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. strengthened in the philosopher by the maxim that diviners establish what they say upon the past. Un- doubtedly Demosthenes received auguries in the same manner. He respected divination, but not all who professed it. A pupil of Thucydides,* his mind was as free and manly as his teacher's, and he did not be- lieve all that a vain people believed. He did not belong to the family of Euthyphron, but to that of Pericles, t Religious feeling, the strongest and most elevated of all sentiments, often inspired the soul with its heroism, and the genius with his masterpieces. An- cient and modem art are indebted to it for some of their finest productions, — the Jupiter and Minerva of Phidias, the Moses of Michael Angelo, the Virgins of Raphael. It was paramount in all the important acts of the public life of the ancients. Thus it is found faithfully reproduced where we least expect it in the midst of Aristophanes' comedies. In the trial scene of the dog Labes, scarcely is the religious rite an- nounced, in the opening of the judicial ceremony, when the poet becomes serious, Bdelycleon invokes Agyieus Apollo and willing Psean with a respectful and touching gravity. His words are characterized by a tenderness of filial piety and sympathy for the un- fortunate. Religious faith also mingled in the acts of private life. The old Romans literally could not take a step without the company of a god. The gods assisted man even before his birth, and through friend- * Thucydides, ii, 54, 17; v, 103. t Plutarch, Life of Pericles, ch. vi, 35. The eclipse of Uie sun and the cloak of Pericles; the ram with only one horn, a marvel differently interpreted by Lampo the diviner and by Anaxagoras the philosopher. Cf. the prodigy of the praetor with horns, in Valerius Maximus, v, 6. RELIGIOUS SENTIMENT IN DEMOSTHENES. 409 ship for man they aided inanimate beings in the different phases of their existence. Religious feeling necessarily followed the ancients to the tribune. The Roman historians and orators testify that it was one of the greatest souj:ces of their eloquence.^ It was the same in Greece. Stobseus has preserved from Euripides a fragment of remark- able impiety: " Do you believe that iniquities have wings with which they fly to the Gods, that they are inscribed upon Jupiter's regis- ters, and that he consults them in order to judge men? But he would not be able himself to inscribe all or judge all. Justice is even here on our side for whoever may see it." Never would the Attic orators have dared to offer such insults to public conscience. They reminded their hearers of the fear of divine justice: ''It is useless for your suffrages to be secret, they will never escape the gods " (Demosthenes, On the Emhassy). The orator generally invoked them at the opening of his harangue, a tradition which the Peasant of the Danube t never failed to respect. The oration some- times closed as it began, with an appeal both religious and patriotic. The religion of patriotism and religion itself (we have noticed it above) were confounded in the hearts of the ancients. This joint responsibility was conspicuous in Demosthenes; in his eyes Philip was the enemy of Athens, — -of its soil and of its gods: would that the gods would annihilate him! Divinity is and always will be present in the human heart ; in prosperity because of happiness and thank- fulness, but still more in reverses, because of a feeling * Titus Livius, v, 51; Cicero, In Catilinamy i, 13; ii, 13; De Sup- pliciiSy ch. Ixxii. t Demostlienes, Exordia, 25, 50, 54. ^Aip* ^Effriaq ap^ou (Wcispa). 18 410 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. qf human weakness and the salutary effect of suffering. It is difficult to govern a people, especially an unfortu- nate people, without preaching a belief in divinity. Is it, then, surprising that religious feeling should have animated the harangues of an orator whose life was a struggle against public misfortune, in the midst of those extraordinary events which were destined to astonish the future ? Demosthenes had more respect for the pagan gods than they deserved ; because, if these fallible gods are doubtful, divinity is not. Forced to contend against the Athenian belief in fatality, and to escape the contradictions imposed upon the moralist by the opposition of pagan theology, Demosthenes was less credulous and more sincerely religious than the majority of his contemporaries. He had neither the pretension nor the power to sound impenetrable mysteries ; but he wished to conciliate as far as possi- ble belief in fortune, with faith in a just providence. He has assigned to destiny its proper place by vindi- cating the efficiency of human counsels and the obliga- tion of duty. " For all men, Athenians, there are two essential advan- tages. The first and greatest of all is to be fortunate (euTu^s'iv); the second, less important than the first, but greater than all others, is wise counsel (xaXatq IlouXsOeffOat). * * * Bad laws undermine those very republics which be- lieve themselves most impregnable. In fact, the fortune of nations would not experience vicissitudes if, in distress, a good policy, good laws, the cooperation of honorable men, and a strict examination of all things, conducted them to a better state, and if, on the other hand, neglect of all these resources did not insensibly sap the life of prosperity which was apparently most stable. Prudence in counsel, and that vigilance which neglects nothing, very often raises men to a k RELIGIOUS SENTBIENT IN DEMOSTHENES. 411 brilliant fortune; but it is difficult for them to pursue the same path in order to maintain themselves there. * * ♦ " Man is therefore, as a whole, the architect of his own fortune ; but if he is subservient to the power of destiny, it is a duty to himself that he should not decline. " The brave man should always follow where honor leads, covering himself with hope as with a shield, and nobly supporting the lot which Divinity has assigned him." Man of Athens, if fatality con- strains you, if duty compels you, resign without falter- ing. E>:!ht:^^'d^ 'ut^^i,if^,£^i^^iL^^ 1 CHAPTER XI. THE TRIAL ON THE CROWN. "*(? Aiff^v/Tj^ effTiv 00 Tovov obdiva e^et did rb fii) TrenotOorw^ fjLTjSk dXrjOtvuJ^ Tzpoipipsffdat tov Xoyo)/: Sometimes uEschines fails in moving power, because his words are neither convincing nor sin- cere." (Hermogenes.) I. — DEMOSTHENES' ACCUSER. POLITICAL activity, wliich was the principal ele- ment of Athenian life, was not entirely extin- guished at Chseronea. Banished thereafter from the Pnyx, it took refuge in the minds of those who re- mained free. The great political crises kept all eyes fixed upon state affairs, and heiglitened political pas- sions. The very children at Athens participated in this intellectual agitation.* They repeated in the schools the names of the hired orators of Macedonia or the ordinary guests of the enemy's emissaries. Tliey also learned, without doubt, how to pronounce with respect the names of those servants of the com- monwealth who remained faithful to its hopes and regrets: hence we can judge what interest the long expected trial On the Crown created. ^schines took care to emphasize the importance which public opinion attached to it. He undertook to overwhelm Demosthenes "in the face of all the citizens who surrounded the inclosure of the tribunal, of all the Hellenes whose curiosity this judgment ex- * Kai rd r.atdia rd ix tu» dtdatrxaXsicDv, (Hyperides, Against Polyeuctes.) 419 THE TRIAL ON THE CROWN. 413 cited, — the most numerous multitude that, in the mem- ory of man, ever gathered to hear a public trial." In- deed, the spectacle was unique and the conjuncture solemn. The two greatest orators* in the greatest trial were to unfold the resources of their genius and the intensity of their enmities. In the course of this contest the two adversaries were to discuss the poli- tics of Athens with their own acts, and to agitate questions which had convulsed Greece for more than twenty years. In the words of ^schines, they were to be praised or hissed ((TuptTTs&dat) by the Hellenes in the presence of the Athenians; they were to be acquitted of all complicity with an impious violator of the general peace, or enveloped in his infamy, and that, too, on the eve of the Pythian games before the assembly of all Greece. The defense of Demosthenes is his masterpiece, and at the same time the masterpiece of the tribune and the bar. ^schines, a worthy rival of Demosthenes, has given proof of a marvelous talent; but his art lacks "that sound of a great soul" which consecrates and carries the admiration of men to its height. Ctesiphon's accuser was condemned from the first to the reproach of treachefrous malignity. "A citizen of word and honor should not call upon judges impaneled in the public service to gratify his anger or hatred or anything of that kind, nor should he come before you upon such grounds. The best thing is not to have these feelings, but if it cannot be helped, they should be mitigated and restrained. On what occasions ought an orator and statesman to be vehement? Where any of the common- wealth's main interests are in jeopardy, and he is opposed * Gladiatorum par nobilissimum. (Cicero, De Optimo Qenere Du cendiy ch. vi, vii.) 'ti3a"'tJiih_ 418 POLITIGAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. THE TRIAL ON THE CROWN. 419 i I to him the thought of a lucrative reconciliation of the Boeotians with Philip leads him to urge them into the war ; and their ruin is prepared with ours. The malignity of ^schines is turned against himself when he suggests improbable and contradictory imputations. Demosthenes, at first an accomplice of Philocrates, subsequently becomes his denunciator. He was jeal- ous (!:rjXoTU7:ia<;) of seeing Philocrates better paid than himself. This ally of Philocrates had, however, accord- ing to ^schines, a spy, Charidemus, with Philip. The same Demosthenes is guilty of blind hatred toward the Macedonians, and has secret intelligence from them. He rejoices at Alexander's dangers, and does not profit by them. He is reproached for Bceotianiz- ing, and is charged with the sack of Thebes. These premeditated calumnies bring their author into disre- pute. All injustice and base slander is rotten by its nature {traOpdv ^uffsi)^ and reveals its corruption some- where. {Pro Corona.) A man came to Demosthenes to solicit his aid. He said that he had been insulted and struck. " My friend, it is not true that you have been struck." The com- plainant, raising his voice: ''What, Demosthenes! I have not been struck!" "Oh! now I recognize the voice of a man who has actually been maltreated." -^schines ^ had not this accent of sincerity. He studies * Hermogenes (IJep). idsujv^ ii, 11) has well characterized ^s- chincs: He has " eloquence due to the use of artificial proceedings (deiuoTTjc; ij xard /liOodow)^ but he is "sophistical "; he aims at bom- bast and effect (jaupoq). " Of oratorical skill he has a moderation, but he has not the character of sincerity to an equal degree. There- fore, notwithstanding all the vehemence and severity which he em- ploys, he sometimes completely fails in moving power (tuvov oddi>a ^ej ♦ » » ioxtvrjTov)^ because his words are neither convincing to delude; his rhetorical pathos recalls his school and * does not move his hearers. Conviction and truth in emotion exclude declamatory bombast. " O Earth ! O Heaven ! O Virtue ! and you. Intelligence and Knowl- edge, by whom we discern the good from the bad, I have aided my country; I have spoken;" High-sound- ing words, vainly cried out in a tragic tone. Equally cold is the passage in which measured antitheses fail to arouse indignation against Demosthenes for rejoicing over Philip's death, seven days after the death of his own daughter. This passage is admired by one of the interlocutors of the TusculancB Disputationes,'^' and judiciously criticized by Plutarch. ' ' You have not been able to see with your eyes the ruin of the unfortunate Thebans; see it in your mind. Imagine a city taken by assault, * "^ ^ etc." These lamentable appeals are like melodramatic scenes. JEschines neither spares inflections of the voice nor sobs, and yet he leaves us cold. Although so clever a comedian -^ * * at the tribune, he has played his role poorly. " What strikes me most in the course of his imputations and falsehoods, is, that in speaking of the misfortunes of the city, he has not shed a tear; he has not in the least felt in his heart that grief natural to a devoted and virtuous citizen. But he raised his voice with a satisfied air; he cried out with all his might (XaporyiW,) ; he evidently believed that he was accusing me, and he gave proofs, against himself, that our calamities inspired him with feelings very dijQferent from yours.'* (TrejTOf^cJrttic) nor sincere {iiridh dXr)Oiv(b<;)y Sincerity (aAiyflsra) is, on the contrary, one of Demosthenes' strongest qualities. *^schincsin Demosthcnem invehitur * * * et quam rhetoricel {TusculaiuB Bisputationes, iii, 26.) This indiscreet eulogy of Cicero might serve as an epigram to the oration Agaiji^t Ctesiphon. 420 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. THE TRIAL ON THE CROWN. 421 ^scliines triumphed in these disasters; they were so many arguments against Demosthenes, and justifi- cations of the wise policy of the ally of the Macedoni- ans, ^schines' eloquence flows from a happy and fer- tile imagination; it has the cleverness and impetuosity of hatred. Demosthenes draws his from the bottom of his heart ; he does not move the imagination, he moves the feelings. We feel in his defense the accent of an honorable man outraged. Thanks to the political role which honored him, Demosthenes was destined to be, even as an orator, superior to his adversary. One subject aids eloquence and creates it, another renders it singularly meritorious. An implicated client is always difficult to defend. Now, no one was ever more implicated than was ^schines in his relations with Macedonia, hence his inability to establish the justification which Demosthenes demanded of him.* * In a brilliant resume of Athenian history since the Median wars, — a picture of the alternatives of belligerent passion and of political wisdom in the city, — ^schines renders homage to the memory of Cimon, Andocides and Nicias, peaceful benefactors of the democracy. He eulogizes Thrasybulus and amnesty, which he himself might greatly need. He flatters his audience, he insults his accuser. All these tricks betray the agony of the accused, without dispelling the imputations which press upon him. "The people were encouraged and recovered their strength (after the expulsion of the Thirty Tyrants), and observe how men were fraudulently enrolled upon the records of the citizens, a class that always attract to them- selves the worst part of the state, because they have no other policy than war. During peace they are prophets of evil. With their wortls- they incite minds that are eager for glory and too ambitious. Dur- ing hostilities they are military inspectors and admirals, although they have never touched a sword. Fathers of bastards bom of cour- tesans, sycophants buried in infamy, they precipitate the state into the greatest dangers. With their adulations they caress the name of democracy, and with their conduct they outrage it. Infringers of the peace, which is the support of popular government, eager for war^ which is the scourge of the state, they all unite and now attack me» At first the declared enemy of Philip, he suddenly became milder. He saw the prince, and the hostile ambassador was immediately disarmed. -^schines thus explains his metamorphosis : "You censure my embassy in Arcadia and my oration to the Ten Thousand. You accuse me of fickleness, — you, a fugitive slave whom the hot iron should have branded. Yes, during the war I animated the Arcadians and the rest of the Hellenes against Philip, so far as it was in my power. Seeing that no people aided the commonwealth, that some awaited the issue of the contest with indifference, that others were marching with the Macedonians against us, that the orators in Athens took advantage of the war in order to support their daily luxury, I advised the Athenians, I confess, to unite with Philip and to make a peace which you to-day be- lieve shameful, you who never touched a sword." * In other words, ^schines followed tiie torrent. He did not wish to be right against the world. The honor of Demosthenes is that he did not yield to universal enthusiasm: S'il en demeure dix, je serai lo dixi^me, Et sMl n'en rcste qu'un, je serai celui-ia. . Demosthenes, in order to justify his own political conduct, had to celebrate that of his ancestors, whom he justly represented. What could the partisan of the Macedonian alliance, that is to say, of the abdication of Hellenic liberty, oppose to this advantage ? If he Philip has, they say, purchased peace; he has profited by negotia- tions in order to ruin us all. This peace, made to his advantage, is beneficial to him who has violated it; and they accuse me, not*as a deputy, but as a guarantee of Philip and of the peace! I merely used words, and they demand of me actions to satisfy their expecta- tions ! The same orator, as I have shown, is my panegyrist in his decrees and my accuser before the court. We were ten ambassadors, and I alone am prosecuted for not giving in accounts! " ii '• I Kfi r" 422 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. i 1 r exalts the virtues of his ancestors it is to contrast them with the insinuated crimes of Demosthenes, a parallel in which the bad faith of the orator betrays itself. Ordinarily he will have to conceal a glorious past which speaks against him, or ridicule its praise as commonplace and impotent. *' Of the united orators who arose, not one essayed to save the city, but each called our attention to the Propylsea of the Acropolis, our memories to the battle fought at Salamis against the Persians, to the pictures and trophies of our an- cestors." * Demosthenes, in the apology of his ministry, which is that of the heroes of Marathon, is naturally mag- nanimous and eloquent. On the contrary, most of the beauties of ^schines' oration will necessarily be artis- tic beauties. Moral beauty will not easily find place in it; and also the spirit of that political party of which he is chief, and the character of the thesis which he defends, will appear artistic. ^schines, as an orator, was better endowed by nature than Demosthenes. It only remained for him to become the first orator of Greece; he preferred to enjoy the advantages accruing from the friendship of the Macedonians. Demosthenes snatched the palm from him, in spite of a natural inferiority, because he knew how to hold his mind high, and to draw the powers of his eloquence, which has elevated him above the past and perhaps the future, from the generosity of the heart. The oration On the Crown is the last * Embassy, § 74; cf. Demosthenes, § 16. "You must," said ^s- chines, "not remember your ancestors, nor listen to those who recall their naval victories and their trophies. He himself will propose and draw up a law ordaining that wa shall only aid the Hellenes who shall have first aided you." THE TRIAL ON THE CROWN. 423 eflfort of Attic eloquence; ''it realizes the ideal con- ceived in our minds; we can imagine nothing superior to it" {Orator, 38). II. PIETY TOWAED THE GODS AND TOWARD HIS COUNTRY. iTzupTjfjLtZtuv^ otarura ^atveffOac, ziri'. A bad act committed in the name of the gods is no more excusable than if it rested on purely human motives." (Demosthenes, Against Leptines.) -^schines felt the inferiority of his cause, and essayed to remedy it. It was difficult for him to derive advantage against Demosthenes from his piety toward his country; he wished to supply this de- ficiency by piety toward the gods. He hoped to re- duce his adversary to human aid, and then pierce him with a divine arm. The tactics were skillful: the moral state of Greece at that epoch seemed to promise him victory. When the ground trembles, man in- stinctively raises his eyes toward heaven. The re- mark of Titus Livius (v, 51) will be true in all time: "Adversity recalled the Komans to religious practices." Brennus and Hannibal, in their turn, revived the feeling of divine power in a people who were indebted to piety for their empire; vanquishers of the ancient Roman gods, they forced her to have recourse to new divinities, even though they should be a black stone. It is characteristic of great disasters to un- settle the imagination of the people. 'Scarcely had France recovered from the evils of the German in- vasion, when in 1870 she gave proof of it, as did Greece formerly when she became a prey to the Pelo- ponnesian war. In the midst of the public trials, 424 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. THE TRIAL ON THE CROWN. 425 \- I I I only a few select minds resisted the torrent of violent xjommotions and preserved the judicious lirmness of a serene mind. The ma^s of the nation was pro- foundly agitated. This pliysiological phenomenon was reproduced dur- ing the Macedonian epoch. Greece became subservi^ ent to a man of Pella, the Orient was conquered by a Macedonian of thirty years; a sudden rearrangement of the surface of the earth; was it possible that such astonishing- revolutions should not have turned the minds of men, more strongly than ever, toward di- vinity? What other hand than a divine hand could have led a few cohorts to such incredible success? These religious prejudices are found in a curious oration of Hyperides in favor of Euxenippus. The Athenians divided the territory of Oropus among the ten tribes of the city. After the distribution, it was discovered that the lot assigned to two tribes had been consecrated to Amphiaraus. Piety forbade to dispose of it without the consent of the god. Euxenippus, a citizen of venerable probity and age, received the mission to go, with two companions, and sleep one night in the temple of Amphiaraus. Euxenippus obeyed, and the next day he announced to the people that the lord of the temple signified in a dream that he desired to remain in possession of his territory. A citizen, who was not convinced of the sincerity of the dream, prosecuted him on a criminal charge ac- cusing him of having invented the dream. Lycurgus spoke against the friend of Amphiaraus; Hyperides defended him. Here, then, is a criminal action estab- lished on a dream, and seriously discussed. Similar inclinations of the mind explain the pages in which Diodorus describes the effects of celestial ven- geance, not only on the desecrators of Cyrrha, but even on those who seconded them or approached them. Phi- lomelus precipitates himself from a rock; his brother Onomarchus is crucified. Phaillus dies of a slow and painful consumption. (He converted a portion of the sacred treasures into money.) Phaloecus perished con- sumed in a fire which was kindled from heaven. His mercenaries were killed or taken prisoners; two thou- sand of the latter were sold, and two thousand more were slaughtered as accomplices of an impious man. The wife of a Phocian chief had worn the necklace of Helen, — she was punished by an uncontrollable lust. Another wife adorned herself with the necklace of Eri- phyle, — bereft of reason, she perished in the flames of her own house which her own son fired. Chaeronea was destined, at a later day, to chastise the Athenians, and Alexander to sack Thebes. "Thus all the dese- crators were struck with divine vengeance." As to Philip, "he returned to Macedonia, leaving the Greeks a high idea of his piety and of his military science. ^ * * Philip, who, by the aid derived from the oracle of Del- phi, and by his piety toward the gods, saw his influ- ence increase from day to day, was finally proclaimed chief of all Greece, and thus realized the grandest em- pire in Europe."' Diodorus, however, made this honest remark on Philip: "Being thus provided with traitors in all cities, and giving the title of lord or friend to whosoever received his gold, he corrupted the morals of the human family by his perverse principles." Jus- tin, not dissimulating Philip's political perfidy, thus renders homage to his piety: "He alone chastised a sacrilege which the entire world ought to have pun- 18* 426 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. ished. Therefore, the avenger of the majesty of the gods almost deserved to be their equal."* The Athenians were formerly consulted by Iphicrates upon the disposal of the offerings which Dionysius of Syracuse had sent to Delphi and Olympia, and they answered: "It is better to give attention to the sup- port of the soldiers than to the affairs of the gods." The time was past when the Athenians showed them- selves "impious on land and sea." Adversity inspired them with the pious probity which had formerly hon- ored N'icias, but they believed that they satisfied divinity by enslaving themselves to superstitions as whimsical, and sometimes as cruel, as those of the contemporaries of the Sicilian expedition. Philip, a prudent politician, early saw the advantage which he could derive from the religious prejudices of the Greeks. We have elsewhere spoken of the dex- terity with which he interfered in the first sacred war of Phocis (the pillage of Delphi by Philomelus), and m the second crusade against Amphissa. Events- chines himself, who was an associate of Philip, could not refrain from invoking the heavens against the ad- versaries of the Macedonian party; popular prejudice and youthful remembrances urged him to it. Born of poor parents, he saw his own mother follow the profes- sion of initiations {rtkiffzpta) among the mob. These religious practices were a private counterfeiting of the ofl^cial Eleusinian mysteries, and bordered upon jug- glery. JEschines played his part in them. He was handsome and well formed; he had a fine voice; this was sufficient to contribute to the success of the mater- nal ceremonies, and to make tarts and cakes pour into * Justin, viii, 2. These two authors are evidently the echoes of the historians of the Macedonian epoch. THE TRIAL ON THE CROWN. 427 the mystic basket. " The amphora long preserves the odor with which the first days impregnated it." The political orator ^schines preserved the impressions of his youth. A servant in the initiation, afterward an actor, he was prepared by this double education for the role which he played in the trial On the Crown^ and which has won for him, from the lips of Demosthenes, this homage, that he was an excellent comedian {pizox- pir7j(; apt(TTo<-). Aristotle recommends this artifice to the despot who is desirous of strengthening his power: ** The tyrant ought to make a show of an exemplary piety. Men fear less the injustice of a man whom they believe de- voted to the service of the gods {deiudly crowned the irreconcilable adversary of her conquerors. The firmness of his attitude ^fter Chseronea was a plain proof of his de- termination. The constancy of Rome after Cannae has been praised. Frivolous Athens was no less THE TRIAL ON THE CROWN. 459 vigorous, although in a situation still more desperate. Owing to energetic measures, the city was put in a state of defense; the slaves enfranchised; the op- pressed restored to their rights. The sepulchres fur- nished stones for the fortifications, and the trophies of the temples gave up their arms. Demosthenes was the soul of the resistance; he went to arouse the allied cities, whilst the people, not having political rights to spare their Varro, punished Lysicles* and infiicted capital punishment on the emigrants. Philip, in the face of this unexpected resolution, used gen- erosity and prudence, t IV. —GRECIAN ELOQUENCE EXTINGUISHED WITH DEMOS- THENES. ""HfxKTO yap TdptTTJ^ dizoaryurac eopunTra Zehq "A\>ipoq^ £UTav /Mv xard dooAwv ^jiap ekr^aiv: " Jove fix'd it certain, that whatever day Makes man a slave, takes half his worth away." After peace was concluded Athens, notwithstand- ing the division of parties, did not cease to contend secretly in proportion to her resources. Her courage did not fail her. She was subjugated by force. At every propitious opportunity she attempted to raise * Attic Orators: "You commanded the army, Lysicles; a thousand citizens have perished and two thousand have been made prisoners, and a trophy has been raised against the republic, and all Greece is enslaved! All these misfortunes have befallen us while you were guiding and commanding our soldiers; and you dare to live and to erjoy the light of the sun, and to present yourself on the public square; you, a monument of shame and opprobrium to your countiy!" {Lycurgus.) t Cf. I'h^ Funeral Oration attributed to Demosthenes. 460 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN* GREECE. her head. She pursued the agents of Olympius; she gave all liberty to orators wlio were hostile to her conquerors. ''Before the smoking ruins of Thebes" she dared (a firmness admired by Livy, ix, 18) pro- test against her masters and even ridicule them. Alex- ander wished to be a god and the recognized god of the Athenians. People ought to deliberate upon the demanded apotheosis: "What kind," said Lycurgus, "will that god be whom we cannot worship except on condition that we purify ourselves when leaving him ? " On the proposition of Demosthenes, the city declared that it would confine itself to the gods which its ancestors worshiped. This proud liberty won the esteem of Alexander. He expressed the desire that at his death command in Greece should be reserved to the Athenians. Their eulogies, he declared, were the recompense whose hope stimulated his exploits. Forty-two years after Demosthenes' death (280), Athens wished to consecrate the respect due to his memory by a public act. Demochares, a nephew of the orator, proposed and carried a decree in which we read these words: " Demosthenes served the Athenian people by his benefits and his counsels. ♦ * ♦ He gave to the state three triremes and thirteen talents. * ♦ ♦ He contributed his own property in order to provide arms for poor citizens and to purchase grain during the famine. * ♦ » He ransomed several citi- zens who had been made prisoners by Philip at Pydna, at Methone, and at Olynthus. ♦ ♦ ♦ At his expense he repaired the walls of the Piraeus. ♦ ♦ ♦ By his eloquence and devo- tion he brought into the Athenian alliance the Thebans, Eubcea, Corinth, Megara, Achaia, Locris, Byzantium, and Messenia. Sent on an embassy among our allies, he per- suaded them to furnish more than five hundred talents for :>*• .fuAeSrf^ THE tRIAL ON THE CROWN. 461 war expenses. A deputy to the people of the Peloponnesus, he distributed money among them in order to prevent them from sending reinforcements to Philip against Thebes. To the Athenians he gave the wisest counsels, and supported the national independence and democracy better than any of his contemporary orators. Banished by the supporters of the oligarchy when the people had lost their sovereignty, he died in the isle of Calauria, a victim of his own patriotism. * * * Pursued by the soldiers of Antipater, he remained to the last faithful to the democracy, and at the approach of death he did nothing which was unworthy of Athens. * * * The oldest of his family will hereafter be supported at the Prytaneum, and in the games he will be assigned to places of honor. A bronze statue will be erected on the public square to Demosthenes." The statue received this inscription: "Divine in speech, in judgment too divine; Had valor's wreath, Demosthenes, been thine, Fair Greece had still her freedom's ensign borne. And held the scourge of Macedon in scorn ! " Athens owed even more to her orator than she ac- ki?owledged. As long as he lived he supported the soul of hie country. The proud sentiments which he inspired in her might have left Athens some oblivion of her sad condition. When Demosthenes was lost to her, not having in herself .the power to raise her head under the yoke, she bowed humbly and submitted en- tirely to the degrading influence of servitude. From that day she was actually enslaved, and her feelings made it quite evident. Seven or eight years after the adoption of the decree in honor of Demosthenes, the same Athens voted a similar decree in favor of his nephew, Demochares. This person received the same homage as his uncle for having proved his devotion to the public welfare, but 462 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. THE TRIAL ON THE CROWN. 463 t I the conditions and circumstances under which the two men labored were very different. In the number of Demochares' eminent services were his successful em- bassies to kings; he obtained money from Lysimachus, from Ptolemseus and from Antipater. He was a good administrator, a faithful democrat and a successful beg- gar. In 305, Athens had reached the depth of her moral degradation. She celebrated the entry of De- metrius Poliorcetes within her walls with this sacred hymn: "Yes, the greatest and most beloved of the gods are present in our city. See how the propitious occasion intro- duces Demeter and Demetrius together. She comes to cele- brate the mysteries of her daughter (Proserpine); he, as joyful as becomes a god, appears handsome and smiling. The majestic spectacle of his presence! All his friends in a circle around him like the stars; he in the midst of them like the sun. thou son of all-powerful Neptune and of Aphrodite, hail! for the other gods are either too far away, or they have no ears, or they do not exist, or they have no care for us. But thou, we behold thee present, not in wood or in stone, but in reality, — to thee we address our prayers, ♦ ♦ ♦ etc." "Such," adds Athenaeus, ''was the song which the warriors of Marathon sung, not only in public, but even around their firesides; they who had punished with death the adorers of the Persian king, and who had slain myriads of barbarians. " This servile cantata was the worthy accompaniment of the adulations with which Demetrius was overwhelmed even to disgust Athenaeus has transmitted to us the proofs of all this: altars to the intimate acquaintances of the new god, temples to his two mistresses.* Thus the city pros- ♦ One of them, Lamia, was a flute-player at Athens. Plutarch (Life of Demetrius) gives curious details on these unheard of adula. tituted itself to a foreign master; the city in which the popular song of Harmodius and Aristogiton had been chanted for years; the city which had been formerly honored with the meritorious names of the Prytaneum, of the hearth, of the rampart and of the school of Greece.* By losing his liberty, says Homer, man loses half his virtue. When Greece was deprived of her independ- ence, she was at the same blow bereft of her genius Macedonian rule did not pacify her eloquence; it anni- hilated it. Demosthenes had no heir ; he did not even leave a legacy to any one. The Hellenic language, so fertile in masterpieces for almost two centuries, was suppressed immediately and forever. Only rhetoric survived, babbling and varnished, in its schools; bom- bastic and ingenious, an adulatress to the powerful. But one name rises above this level mediocrity, that of Demetrius Phalereus. Could it be otherwise ? Ban- ished from the political domain, where it once enjoyed its liberty, eloquence could find no other soil to culti- vate than the petty debates of civil life and flattery. The pride of the city became the humble auxiliary of the domestic hearth, the captive servant of foreign masters. Eobbed, without any compensation, of her Attic eloquence, which was supplanted by Asiatic lo- quacity, Greece deserved, in this respect, to be com- tions. " These mockeries completed the corruption of a prince whose nimd was not altogether sane." One of the most grievous fantasies of the new god to the Athenians was the immediate payment of the tribute of two hundred and fifty talents. The sum was sent without delay to Demetrius, who delivered it to his courtesans " to purchase toilet powder." This was a strange way to recompense the Athenians lor their devotion for which they paid so dearly. *r.puTavuov (Theopompus), ktTTiav (the oracle itself), epstfffia (Pindar), Tzdtdeufftv (Thucydides). 464 POLITICAL ELOQUEIS^CE TN GREECE. pared "to one of those houses delivered up to liber- tinism and evil genius ; the free and wise woman lan- guished in disdain, whilst the mad courtesan, summoned to destroy everything, governs like a mistress and overwhelms the legitimate wife with insults and hu- miliations."^ Demosthenes is to be honored for having devoted his life to the ambition of preventing the ruin of the Athenian mind and genius with her enslavement. He only succeeded in retarding it. But the transforma- tion of Greece, which was immediately disfigured, further justified the orator of the Philippics, He had a presentiment of the void which the disappear- ance of Athens would leave in the world, and the check to civilization which her defeat caused. In fact neither moral and national dignity, nor eloquence nor poetry, nor even any high inspiration in the arts, survived the fall of the Attic city. The day on which she fell with Demosthenes, the shining light of tlie Occident was extinguished; long years were to roll by before Alexandria was to see the Aurora of a new dawn. * * DioDysius of Halicamassus. {Memoirs, Introduction, i.) CHAPTER XII. CONCLUSION. npmrov, elOo^repou auaypdi/^at. ***'(? ^p,',,„^ ^^, tocout gravity of the interests discussed and the solemnity of the circumstances gave a grandeur to these ora- torical contests which was unknown to the most im- posing debates of the Pnyx and the forum. Hence the character of an eloquence whose vehemence was more than Koman, and whose transports were some- times emphatic, was very far from Athenian sobriety. Things, men, orations, everything at that period, affected gigantic proportions. Memories of Greece haunted the imagination. Sparta, an exemplary city, with its rigid virtues, was erected into a model of pa- triotism. She was envied her Lycurgus. Herault de Sechelles seriously proposed to inspire himself with the laws of Minos, as did Sparta. Democratic Athens exercised less prestige on the mind. However, they thought of her in order to threaten the dictators with the dagger of Harmodius. They purloined from the Hellenes an emblem, the Greek bonnet; but how faith- fully revive their eloquence ? In the Convention tem- pests burst forth which overran the hall in the name of the sovereign people. Eloquence is a flame which, according to Tacitus, needs the nourishment of civil agitations; but if the little flame be transformed into a volcano, what does it become ? Too often at that epoch it gave place to popular roaring or to the im- passible reading of sinister reports in the midst of the silence of fear. Thus the civic exaltation and the effective atrocity of generous aspirations hurried France to an inauspicious crisis. * * * But let us not touch the ax. Athenian eloquence, as we have seen, often bore the characteristics of the pamphlet.* The same was true * " Political eloquence is censured for being quarrelsome and hateful (^dane/dij/jLovaq).'^ (Isocrates, ArUidosis. See ch. viii.^ CONCLUSION. 469 at certain epochs of the political eloquence of the mod- ems. The great Irish agitator, O'Connell, sometimes seasoned his harangues with that wrath and violence familiar to the ancient tribune. The orators of the revolution could scarcely refrain from these impetuosi- ties. Those, however, who truly deserve the name of orator rarely gave to their orations the insulting vio- lence familiar to the Agora. This relative moderation is due to the literary customs of the two countries. The pamphlet and the oration were confounded at Athens ; at Paris they were cultivated separately. What the mouth would not have dared to hazard in an assembly, however bold, the paper, which never blushes, published throughout all France. Friends and enemies of the new constitution had their publish- ers, — champions with cruel teeth. The Bevolutions of France and of Brabant repaid the Acts of the Apostles for their outrages and bites. Calumnies in verse and in prose, ridiculing or lacerating parodies, bloody sarcasms which were to be avenged in blood, malice and venom, nothing was wanting to these libels that could exhale shameless hatred. The chair of the new apostles was a tumbrel less Attic than that from which ^schines insulted Demos- thenes. The spoken pamphlet of Athens outraged truth and decorum, but not modesty. The written* pamphlet of the innovators and of their adversaries despised all law. That wrath should be thus mani^ fested in ignominious language is too much; but what would this have been if the pamphlet had not favored what Aristotle calls the purgation of the passions and preserved eloquence ? The liberties of the Athenian pamphlet were a feeble echo of the a\idacities of the comic stage. The "di- 470 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. vine " muse of Aristophanes spat upon his enemies with a ''vast spittle." The muse of Andre Chenier could not refuse the temptation of " spitting upon their names " and '' chanting their punishment." Neverthe- less, Greek comedy, even with its transports, was never murderous. Camille Desmoulins remarked with his accustomed spirit : " The Athenians were more indulgent, and they wrote fewer songs, than the French. Far from sending to St. Pelagie, and still less to the Place de Revolution, the author who, from the heginning to the close of the play, discharged the most bloody arrows against Pericles, Cleon, Lamor, * * * Alcibiades, against the committees and presidents of sections, and against the sections in mass, the Sans-Culottes applauded with enthusiasm, and no one suffered death except those spec- tators who burst by dint of lauffhinff." * * The Vieux Cordelier, No. 7; the Pouretle Contre, bearing on the liberty of the press : ♦' How can one be mistaken in this respect? As for me, I do not see how a republic can be recognized where the lib- erty of the press does not exist. The Athenians were true republicans by principle and by instinct. Not only did the Athenian people per- mit speaking and writing, but I sec, from that which remains to us of their theatre, that they enjoyed no greater pleasure than to see rep- resented upon the stage their generals, their ministers, their philoso- phers and their committees, and, what is stranger, the representation of themselves. Read Aristophanes, * * * and you will be aston- ished at the strange resemblance between Athens and democratic France. You there find a P^re Duch^ne as at Paris, the red bonnets, the orators, the magistrates, tlie motions and the sittings, absolutely as ours. You will there find the principal characters of the day: in a word, an antiquity of two thousand yea« with which we are con- temporary. The only resemi)lance which is wanting is that when her poets represented Athens with a long beard, * * * under the cos- tume of an old man, who was called People, the Athenian people, far from being angry, proclaimed Aristophanes the victor of the games, and encouraged him to create laughter at their own expense. ♦ * * Remember that these comedies were so caustic against the ultra revolutionists, and the occupants of the tribune at that time, that there CONCLUSION. 471 The Clouds amused Socrates, it did not kill him. The pamphlet and the eloquence of the French Revo- lution are as sharp as a sword. ^ ^ ^ " Yes, monsters, I will accuse you before nations with my steel pen, glittering with the sacred fire of liberty which you do not know; I will pierce and burn your entrails." Sometimes there was death without phrases, and again there were phrases that were truly mortal, such as those of St. Just. The same St. Just, in 1789, published a poem {Organt) in which the author dis- played a vein of hilarity, and essayed here and there the picture of guileless love. Robespierre composed verses which Dorat would not have disowned. These literary distractions were not long to amuse the rivals of the Septembrists. The Greeks were too exclusively artists to have threats of death anywhere than on their lips; generally outside of art they took few. things seriously. The men of the Revolution were, above all, citizens inflamed with their convic- tions, and were easily carried from a sublime enthu- siasm to fury. The revolutionary furnace was the crucible where is one of them which was played under the archon Stratocles, 430 B.C., and that if it were translated to^lay, Hebert could assert to the Corde- liers that the piece could only be of yesterday, and of the invention of Fabre d'feglantine, against him and Ronsin, and that this is the tninslator who caused the dearth of subsistence. * * * Charming democracy, that of Athens! " The interlocutor of Camille Desmoulins makes this judicious re- striction to the claim of the unlimited liberty of the press: "The French people, as a mass, do not sufficiently read the journals, and are not sufficiently instructed and informed by the primary schools, to discern clearly at the first glance tlie difference between Brissot and Robespierre. Consequently, I do not know whether human nature is capable of that perfection that would wai'rant the unlimited liberty of speaking and writing." 472 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. very different materials were moulded, and from that material came tlie pure metal in which to-day. blended with that of France, shines forth the statue of our French Republic, crowned with its triple device as with an aureola. Our fathers in '89 had the fanati- cism of liberty and of their country; the contempo- raries of Demosthenes were unacquainted with this sacred ardor. Sometimes they scarred themselves m order to derive a little money from the enemy; the majority escaped the more serious scars of the Macedonian sword. They celebrated their independ- ence without sacrificing themselves for it; they ap- plauded the country of their ancestors, but lost their own. Our fathers, regardless of life, met their pun- ishment with the enthusiasm of martyrs. Nothing great is accomplished without faith. The men of the French Revolution had faith: their heroic abnega- tion saved us. Tlie Athenians were sceptics in taste and m thought; they had not, like our ancestors, souls of granite to check the sterile torrent of the mvasion which was to submerge them. 11. Revolutions which provoke the greatest shocks among men are social revolutions. That which in England in 1650, and in France in 1789, was excep- tional and scandalous, was the rule and the normal state m Athens. The social strata were there mixed and were leveled since the time of Solon and Pericles. The city was, therefore, saved from those dangerous eddies of a state where the bottom aspires to take Its place on the surface. Social peace was not of an irreproachable clearness, for absolute equality of rights will never suppress the inequality of conditions and fortunes. CONCLUSION. 473 Well settled in her basis and nearly satisfied with her condition, Athens might have derived from the hatred of the foreigner an ardor similar to that of her social struggles. She might and should have em- ployed against her invaders the energy she had mani- fested in the Peloponnesian war. She was formerly impetuous against rival cities, but she was mild in the face of Philip; less devoted to liberty than to repose, she only demanded the continuance of her self-enjoyment without labor or sacrifice. The Greeks hated the Greeks more than they detested the Mace- donian. Municipal passions had been violent in Greece, and would reappear upon every occasion; but there was no longer a passion for the country of the Hel- lenes. France, on the contrary, in '92, felt both social and patriotic passions. She had to defend her- self against the allied royalists and against the sover- eigns; it was a gigantic struggle. Athens did not experience any of these powerful incentives; in vain did Demosthenes attempt to arouse her with his patri- otism. Whatever might befall her, she was assured that she would not be deprived of the advantages of her social organization; she therefore resigned her- self to the loss of an independence whose preserva- tion seemed to her too expensive. Man's moral nature has something of the invari- ability of the laws of physical nature; but humanity has the privilege of reconciling this constancy with the law of progress: a progress which is necessarily limited as to the perfection of the human soul, but unlimited in the domain of the mind and of social amelioration. The ancient republics were often op- pressive aristocracies (thus Rome) or tyrannical gov^ ernments ruled by demagogues. The abuses of liberty 20* 474 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. CONCLUSION. 475 inspired high-minded men witli a false idea of the true republican constitution. The Socratics whose ideal was Sparta, demanded the rule of the best (aptffToxpaTia), ]N"ow, it is known how this fortunate predominance of aristocracy usually terminated.* Aristotle excluded artisans from the state; f in his eyes the only legitimate citizen was he who enjoyed ease and leisure. The real democracy of Athens was not much better than the one which the philosopher fashioned after his own idea. Perfect equality was unknown. In oligarchical states, the great eat the small. In the country of Hyperbolos and Cleonymes, the small aimed to live on the substance of the great. They had the right to be poor and mediocre, but not the right to be superior by wealth or merit. What would the equality have become, if some citizens were permitted to rise above the common level by their virtue ? This distrust in eminent merit seemed so naturally inherent in Athenian democracy, that Aristotle praised ostracism as a law of humanity. $ In fact, this process of elimination was better than the leveling by decapi- tation which Tarquin enjoyed; but it was too much that the proscription of excellent capacities should seem necessary. A very eminent citizen, not having * " If you desire a good constitution, you will first see that the wise enact the laws; then that the good repress the bad and deliberate upon state affairs, without permitting the stupid to offer their advice, to harangue or appear in the assembly. But the immediate result of these excellent measures will be that the people will fall into bondage (douhiai^y Xenophon, Government of the Athenians. t Politics, iii, 3. Antiquity experienced more revolting maxims than the exclusion of artisans from the state: the exclusion of weak children from life. X Politics, iii, 8. any position clearly defined in the state by the Athe- nian law, invaded and usurped them all. A very emi- nent citizen, in a modern republic, concentrates his powerful activity in his functions; he does not en- croach on the authority of another. He has his spher^ determined; that of a great man at Athens was not determined. When the united merits of all the citizens could not equal the merit of one, it was necessary to repudiate this superior being, or to sub- mit to him. Athens remained forty years submissive to Pericles; but ostracism generally saved her from the danger of extraordinary talents. The ship Argo^ on the principle of equality, refused to receive Hercules because he was much heavier than his companions. The modern ship of state is so strongly constructed that it can sustain the most powerful characters. To-day preeminent merit has its place in our democ- racy. Far from excluding it from the state, it is desired. Themistocles, Cimon and Aristides were banished from the city of Minerva to preserve the public safety. To-day they would be unanimously sent to Parliament, if they were not already there. Athenian democracy saw a menace and a social dan- ger in the riches of individuals.* The political phi- losophers labored to regulate and restrain it. Syco- phants toiled, after their fashion, to solve the problem * Formerly, says the author of the Antidosis, people acquired wealth in order to be considered. "Now they muct refrain from wealth as from a crime; if they do not justify themselves thereupon, they are lost. ♦ * * I could count more wealthy men deprived of their fortunes than guilty men punished for their misdemeanors.'* He bitterly complains that he himself is taxed above his resources. He would have himself considered less wealthy than was Gorgias, whose fortune did not exceed $3,096. However, he never had a wife or children, and lived exempt from this tax {Xtiroopyiaq), the longest continued and most expensive of all. \t 476 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. by making a breach in opulence for their own profit. Not content with extorting money from the allied cities desirous of purchasing the protection of orators who were heeded by the multitude, their envy and cupidity made them covetous of the goods of their fellow-citizens. It is easily seen from the Greek ora- tors how the flatterers of the rabble made war on the owners of the silver mines of Attica, and farmed them by extortion* One of the most delicate questions of modern society is the relations of labor and capital. This difiicult problem was ignored by the ancient re- publics, in which labor was almost the exclusive lot of the slave. Athens, nevertheless, had her artisans. Rome, the proud aristocrat, despised them; Plato, the disdainful dreamer, regulated them in the last rank of the social scale. He admitted them only as workmen to serve him. Socrates, a true sage, reinstated them by eulogizing manual laborers. Athens, not being able to live like Rome on the spoils of the world, was obliged to work, however little. The social question at Athens, therefore, offered a particular difficulty. We have seen how Demosthenes essayed to hold the balance equal between the opposed pretensions of the rich and the poor, and for want of a just conciliation, pursued the good of the state, f ^ * These abuses and disorders led Xenophon to propose the work- iDg of the mioes by the state, witli the consent and to the profit of the people. * * * "Thus all the Athenians will be able to derive their subsistence from the public revenues. * ♦ * J declare that thereby our commonwealth will beconw not only wealthy, but more mild, more friendly to order, and better prepared for war." " It is just that the poor and the people at Athens should have the advantaire over the nobles and the wealthy; for it is the people who, with their oars, propel the vessels and who constitute the power of the com- monwcalth." Although somewhat ironical, this reflection is just t See ch. iv. CONCLUSION. 477 The public welfare also inspired Hyperides with wise words. The informers, by imposing upon the owners of mines, forced them to abandon their work- ing, to the detriment of the public treasury. Was it serving the state to molest individuals in this manner ? *' The best citizen is not the man who, in return for a little money (proceeds of fines and of confiscations), causes a detnment to the general interests of the city,* nor the man who furnishes temporary resources and deprives Athens of her legitimate revenues. It is the man who has a regard for the future interest of his country, for the concord of the citizens, and for your glory. There are people whom all this does not trouble. They deprive the industrious of the fruit of their labor, and pretend to enrich the city while they are preparing indigence for it; Jhr if property and the accuraulation due to economy become a cause of alarm^ who will expose himself to danger ? " The Athenian people, jealous of the revenues of miners, attempted to deprive them of their income for the benefit of the treasury, from which they themselves derived in part their subsistence and the gratuity of their pleasures. This was a strife organized between capital and idleness. The question of the respective rights of capital and labor is not settled in our day, but it will undoubtedly have its solution also, which will be another proof of the superiority of modern democracy. And, now, what advantages has modern democracy over Athenian democracy ? Justice is not at the mercy of skillful speech, as it was before the heliasts. Politics is in the hands not of frivolous and suspected * The treasury deducted one twenty-fourth of the revenues of the mines. 478 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. CONCLUSION. 479 ■©■ orators, but of experienced politicians. The man and the citizen are distinct; private enmities do not trouble the state within or compromise its security abroad. The nation rises above the greatest individual intel- lects. The government of Athens was a great con- vention formed of all the citizens and without con- trol, — a dangerous balance, whose jerks in times of trying crises could overthrow the state. Modern re- publics are balanced; a prudent equilibrium unites stability and animation in them. Their course, regu- lated by harmony, follows the course of time. The Athenian people repudiated their demagogues, who were often unworthy favorites and extemporary repre- sentatives of the city, without proper authority or regular mandates. To-day the governess of the city is public opinion, and this queen governs, provided with the most excellent political organ, — universal suffrage, — an instrument decisive and pacifying. III. The progress of moral sense is not less appar- ent than political and social progress; a manifest proof of this is found in the different judgments which the Athenians and we pass on Demosthenes as a man and an orator. In order to properly judge an ancient man, we must first replace him in his own sphere; we must go to him, instead of bringing him to us, and see him as his contemporaries saw him. Therefore we have often used the testimony of Aristotle, a powerful genius, in whom converged, as in a concentric focus, all the ideas of his century, illuminated by the light of the past.* His work, a genuine encyclopaedia, is the Sum of Greek * For his Politics alone, he made a collection of the constitutions of 158, or, according to some, of 250 democratic, oligarchical, arislo- cratic and tyrannic states. philosophy. Now, ancient philosophy was universal science. We cannot, then, cite a more reliable witness of the feelings and ideas of the atmosphere in which Demosthenes lived. But while criticism remains faith- ful to the principle of consulting the past, it does not abdicate its right of personal appreciation. Demosthe- nes, then, remains amenable to the moral sense and taste of modern critics. The Athenians were little affected by certain weak- nesses of Demosthenes, — they found the same in them- selves. Benign moralists, far from exacting that he should be better than his time, were disposed, by a feel- ing of their own infirmities, to plead extenuating cir- cumstances in his favor. The author of the Philippics fled at Chseronea. Nature and destiny shared this fault with him. We are bom courageous or timid, as we are born dark or fair. He could not resist the tempta- tion to acquire money, — never did Philip's gold soil his hands. He loved pleasures, — well ! who does not ? The virtue of the citizen is of more importance than that of the private man. As a political orator, he did not recoil before a falsehood, — the object of eloquence is victory. He forgot himself to such a degree that he followed ^schines' example, and lavished insults upon him. Invective was an integral part of democratic lib' erty; it was not so essential to enlighten the judges as to prejudice them. On these general points the moderns judge Demos- thenes with less indulgence than his fellow-citizens did. They are severer in regard to moral weakness, and have the greatest respect for propriety and truth. Modern political eloquence attacks opinions, not persons. Mind^ ful of dignity, which is a part of parliamentary dignity, it commands respect by respecting itself. A political 480 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. orator who is to-day convicted of public falsehood, loses his honor and credit. The Athenians were little moved by the impostures of their orators, and saw in these a means of delusion which custom justified. ''The aim of the architect is to give to his work that harmony which satisfies the perceptions of the senses, and as far as possible, to invent methods which will deceive the sight by aiming at symmetry and everything that is not real but apparent." The theory of delusion was not confined, in Greece, to architecture; to-day decep- tions are banished from eloquence. The Athenians did not admire Demosthenes more than we do to-day; we perhaps appreciate him more by admiring him in a different manner. Ancient criti- cism was confined to a narrow channel, that of style, th^ choice of words, the arrangement of sentences, har- mony: such were its preferable objects. It compared as ''engravers and sculptors"^ the most dissimilar authors, such as Isocrates, Plato and Demosthenes. It gave special attention to the beauties of diction. Lucullus excused himself to Atticus for the faults found in his history written in Greece. He said that he had sown barbarisms and solecisms in it to show clearly that it was the work of a Eoman. A Greek would never have dreamed of carrying the love of local color- * Dionysius of Halicarnassus, On tU ExcelUnce of Demosthenes'' Elo- cution, ch. 51. Cicero himself did not escape this fault. He sepa- rated the history of eloquence from political history, and saw only differences of style in orators who were separated by an interval of one hundred and twenty years, Appius Ccecus and Servius Galba (De Claris Oratorihus, 14 and 23). He commences the paragraph on Cato the orator by saying: "I leave aside the citizen, the senator and the general." What remains? Style {Ihidem, 17). Plutarch, who gave less attention than Cicero to elocution, gave a juster account of Gate's eloquence. (Life of Gaio, 10.) i'ONCLUSION. 481 ing so far. Tlie worship of form was the brilliant idol- atry of the Hellenes. The reputation of Isocrates,* and the sovereign authority which he enjoyed, astonish us to-day. Imag- ine a modern publicist profiting by his great fame in order to address one of the three emperors with a great written political oration, containing parentheses of this nature: "I pray your majesty will pardon me for using metaphors and metonymies so imperfectly. My years are the cause of it. I no longer have the vigor or talent of youth." This, however, was the condition of Isocrates, the great master of the art of diction. He wrote a long programme, in the form of a letter, to the Macedonian king, in which he pledged himself to give a direct contradiction to the ''impertinent dreamers" who accused the king of meditating the enslavement of Greece, and to turn his forces and those of the Hellenes against the Persians : *' We have not given to this oration the dress of harmo- nious cadences, nor that of varied figures. I employed them in my youth, and instructed others in the ornaments which render eloquence agreeable and persuasive. To-day I cannot use them. My age prevents me."t And who asked these ornaments of you, candid old man ? Modem readers do not clearly comprehend the thou- sand niceties and delicacies of ancient diction. Those minute precepts, that curious refinement of number, of assonances, of alliterations, and so many other arts which were taught and carefully practiced, and which ♦ "I have seen among my pupils orators, generals, princes and kjugs." (Isocrates, Aniicbsis,) They came from Sicily, and even from the Pontus, to be instructed in his school. t Oration to Philip. 21 482 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. the ancients made state affairs, are now disdained even in our academies.* The Greeks and JRomans were charmed with them, and applauded them in their gravest political speakers. When C. Gracchus spoke in public he had a musician concealed behind him, who quickly gave him a note on an ivory flute, in order to raise his voice if it fell too low, or to moderate it in the course of stormy debates, f In place of this musi- cian, the regulator of the orator's intonations, modem assemblies employ a president, who represses the flights of speech, not those of the voice, and prevents the storms which the tribune's flute did not avert. Modern eloquence has no ostentation. It has more regard for things than for their envelope. Like Chat- ham, Fox and Pitt, tlie orators of the French revolu- tion generally improvised and disdained all revisions for the sake of impression. Even now, when the political fever is slumbering, eloquence owes little to art. The time is no more when the author of the Panegyric on Athens spent ten years in writing a ♦ Aristotle, Rhetoric, iii, 9, fin. The Latins followed, and on some points, perhaps, surpassed the Greeks. Quintilian, in a chapter On ^c^*V>/2, teaches his orator the language of the fingers, not forgetting the thumb, which is also capable of certain effects : " To draw the index near the thumb, and to press its extremity upon the right side of the thumb-nail, relaxing the other fingers, is a gesture expressive of approbation, etc. etc. ♦ ♦ • " (The lesson On Philosophy given to M. .Jourdain is here surpassed.) Such a disposition of the fingers expresses aversion ; such, modesty. The author takes the trouble to inform us that Demosthenes undoubtedly pronounced the humble exordium of the oration On the Croicn " with the first four fingei-s slightly closed at the extremity, his hand not far from his mouth,'* etc. He also states in what measure it is proper to strike one's sides and to stamp one's feet, " movements which are suited to indigna- lion and awaken the judges. {Institution Oratoire, xi, 8.) f De Oratore, iii, 60. CONCLUSION. 483 work of fifteen pages. To-day we would scarcely de- vote ten hours to the preparation of an oration. Atti- cism was simple and natural. It shunned large, sono- rous words, and resplendent outbursts of eloquence. Its familiarity was always allied, in the shades and in the contexture of the whole, to an exquisite art. It might sometimes be pronounced ahandonne^ and neg- lige. It was the neglige of a woman naturally beauti- ful, but perfect in the art of pleasing. Modern sim- plicity is naive and unpremeditated. Thought and sentiment alone attract. P. L. Courrier said of American journalism that it made use of the same style, whether the question was a reform in the state, a coalition of European powers against liberty, or "the best soil for sowing turnips." Our modern political orators do not speak entirelj^ in the same tone in a debate on the constitution, or on the appointment of a door-keeper. Nevertheless, their eloquence always has a frankness that is foreign to the artistic cases of the ancients. The orator of to-day does not lecture ; still less does he harangue. He exposes, he explains, he opens his thought, he opens his heart. His is an attentive, convincing conversa- tion. He cannot and does not wish to use it otherwise. Time flies, affairs are pressing upon him. His speeches ought to be his acts. He addresses himself not to his hearers, but to his citizens. Like them, he owes his entire attention to the administration and to the gov- ernment of his country. Is this not a commendable progress ? The artistic orator is sometimes tempted to make lamentable sacrifices to his art, and he gives to his audience aesthetic impressions, which indiscreetly draw them from the public interest under discussion. An- / 484 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE, cient eloquence avoided dry discussions, teclinical de- tails and figures. It submitted to the same yoke as did history according to the conception of Herodotus, Livy and Tacitus. Modern history is no longer a branch of eloquence grafted with poetry. It is the mirror of the entire organization of the state, the ex- act and expressive relief of the different elements of the material, political, intellectual, and moral life of a people. Speech has shared with history the benefit of this transformation. Rhetoric is no more; elo- quence is living, nourished more than ever in France and America by the excellent practice of affairs in liberty. Who has not during the past years been moved by the reading of orations which political wis- dom and patriotism inspired in the orators of our par- liament? Some of these harangues (a man familiar with Greek eloquence will be pardoned for the rash- ness of this judgment) approach, in certain respects, the masterpieces of Demosthenes. Maturity and fer- tility of thought, force of trutli and captivating rap- ture, are equal. Why are they not equally admired and considered as fine as the ancient efforts ? Because they are written in English or French, and are not two thousand years old. The purely Attic beauties of Demosthenes are al- most lost to us.^ They often possess imperceptible shades; but there are imperishable beauties which will continue to resist the modifications of taste and the translators. His good sense, his logical force, his generous passion, will render Demosthenes famous * Isocrates (Antidosts) cites a fragment of an oration of his youth. "Tliis passage," says he, " is of an elocution more ornate than that which you have just heard." This difference certainly did not escape the Greeks. Even forewarned, the modem reader can scarcely com- prehend it. \ IttOHM CONCLUSION. 485 forever. Time has shaken off the delicate charms of his diction like so many flowers; the oak remains firm, supported by its powerful roots, adorned with its vig- orous branches and the majesty of its crown. It is like the Parthenon robbed of the fragile ornaments of its polychromy, an inevitable obliteration, which does not in the least deprive the marble of its perfect beauty. The orator and the politician are inseparable in De- mosthenes.* They are both conspicuous in his acts and in his orations. In both two qualities are pre- * Demosthenes at times had concentrated in his hands all the public powers, except that of strategus. After Chaeronea he could exculpate himself from the disaster by throwing it upon the generals. I was right in advising war. If you have been conquered it is be- cause others have not done their duty. In preceding ages this excuse would have been impossible. When Themistocles, Cimon, Pericles, Alcibiades, or Nicias, proposed a military expedition, it was always understood that they did not refuse to take charge of it. They as- sumed the double responsibility of the counsel and of the execution. Thucydides (iv, 28) has shown how the currier Cleon, taken at ' his woi*d by the people, was decreed strategus and victorious strategus in spite of himself. In Demosthenes' time the Athenians did not exact of their political orators that they should be both counsellors and men of action; therefore they never imposed the military command on ^schines, although in his youth he had borne arms successfully. Demosthenes, not being a military man, had his general, Diopithes. This distinction between the thought which inspires and the hand which executes is, in certain respects, a good one. Sometimes the people accuse of versatile inconsistency the men of opposition who have become men of government, — a reproach ill founded. The one sees above all things the absolute good, the other is placed in contact with practical difficulties. The opposition unrestrained in its ideal conceptions, and the government which has its hands bound by real necessities, represent the perpetual dualism of ideas and facts of the desirable and the possible. Each is legitimate; their antagonism conspires to the welfare of the state by preventing the exclusive and equally dangerous triumph of chimerical theory or of a narrow positivism. The true politician finds that medium which, in cor- recting the two systems, the one by the other, reconciles them. 4 ^Ar sA<«.'^. 2raiito4i Ki ._i. A'. 486 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GKEECE. dominant; warmth of passion and wisdom. True to the principle of the inviolability of national dignity, manifesting an invariable perseverance in his desired aim, he was judicious and^ versatile in the employment of means. His heart was proud and impetuous, his mind was serene and penetrating. He did not rush into war like a mad Hind man ; he well knew when t» advise peace. He hated Philip instinctively and heartily. While his soul was enraged against him his mind meditated. He saw where the crafty policy of the Macedonian would insensibly drag Greece. He marvelously comprehended the carefully dissembled obstinacy of the cunning and insinuating invader of he Attic city. He had a presentiment of the incura- able wound which the surrender of Athens would in- flict upon the Hellenic world, then the grandest ex- pression of humanity. Equally inclined to a belief in fortune and provi- dence, his religious sincerity incapable of prejudices and selfish considerations, united two pieties which in- sincerity alone could separate,— the religion of the gods and the religion of his country. Free to choose between the advantages of submission and the bitter- ness of the struggle, he struggled during thirty years against enemies of his country devoid of mercy and exhaustless, always conquered and yet worthy of con- quering. His gravity contended against the levity of the Athenians; his vigor against their feebleness; his patriotic anxieties against their indifference. He con- sumed his forces in enlightening them and inspiring them with the spirit of their ancestors, which seemed to be centered in his breast; the energies and sufferings of his country sought refuge in his heart. On the point of falling into the hands of the Macedonians, he did CONCLUSION. 487 not invoke the men who abandoned him, but the gods whom he honored by loving his country. His destiny was stamped with an unfortunate fatality; his heroic character was more than tragic. When he was van- quished at Chseronea, the Athenians continued to see in him their benefactor, and it was just. If they had not faced this disaster ''in emulation of a triumph," they would have fallen to the level of the Messenians and the Thessalians, instead of holding in Greece and in history that rank of supremacy in which their fore- fathers had placed them, and in which the esteem of posterity conferred upon them in their turn the reward which they had reserved for patriotism. At the call of Demosthenes they marched forth to contend for th^ crown, and they gained it. If the moral weaknesses and the political passions of Athens are not entirely unknown to us, our state is better constituted than she was; our men and citizens are better. It was due to the soul and genius of the orator of the Philippics^ that Athens, in her struggle with Macedonia, did not fail; but her own infirmity forced her to succumb; her past mistakes* and her present weakness weighed equally on her. In order to conquer or to survive her defeat, she must have changed; one man alone, however devoted and powerful, could not bring about in her this metamorphosis. France, in her struggle with a modern Macedonia, has survived unparalleled reverses because the causes of the disas- ters were not inherent in her. To recover, she had only to shake off the yoke. Despotism cut down the tree in order to gather the fruit; by virtue of its living roots and a wise cultivation, in a few years the tree sprouted again, and to-day it bears better fruit. De- * The exi>edition to Sicily aod ^gos Potamos nearly ruined Athens. 488 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE mosthenes at least saved the honor of liis country. In 1870 France held her honor safe, and to-day we see it increasing in respect. When Demosthenes attempted to arouse the courage of his fellow-citizens by urging the efficient energy of human counsels against fortune they reminded him of Philip's invincible destiny! Modern nations know how to have faith in Providence and liberty. God and France protect France. \ w ANALYTICAL TABLE OF CONTENTS. [The Words Bbtwekn Brackets Refer to the Notes.] Translator's Preface Author's Preface PAGE 5 CHAPTER I. INTRODUCTION. The three ages of Attic eloquence. Sovereign power of speech in Greece. — The usurpers of the sword supplanted by orators. — Spontaneity of eloquence favored, from the heroic ages, by the social and central location of Greece. — Correlative develop- ment of the democratic constitution and eloquence at Athens. — Solon's constitution, [the law against bachelors]. — The constitution of Clisthenes. — Influ- ence of the Median wars 15-24 Candidates chosen by lot. — [Salamis and the democratic expansion judged by Plato.] — The social strata. — Ephialtes and Pericles. — Native institutions and dis- positions 24-28 The three ages of Attic eloquence. — Why cultivated elo- quence was late in Greece. — Spontaneous generations and artificial reproductions. — An intimate union of Greek arts and practical life. — Utilitarian aesthetics [Aristotle's definition of beauty] 28-32 First Period. — Eloquence spoken, not written; exclu- sively practical, not erudite. — Pericles, his masters — [some of his sayings]. — Pericles at the tribune. . 32-36 48B L 490 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. X Second Period.— Written eloquence (Antiphon) taught as an art— Logographers and rhetoricians.— Bor- rowed speeches and panegyrics.— The sophists; their influence both salutary and pernicious.— Restoration of the scientific method.— Aristophanes, the conser- vative poet.— Analysis of thought and language.— Isocrates and the Trojan horse.— Qualities"and de- fects.— Subtil ties and gracefulness.— Sicilian affec- tation at Athens.— Idealists and empirics.— Fruits of scepticism.— [The *' amiable queen " of Lamettrie. — D'Holbach, Helvetius.]— Protagoras.— Callicles.— The sophisms of Athenian political morality expiated at Chaeronea. 36-46 Third Period.— The Attics.— The law against pathetic pleading.— The artistic and militant eloquence of the Macedonian epoch.— What are we to think of the joint responsibility of eloquence and morals ?— Taste and moral sense.— Greece in the time of Miltiades; )C of Alcibiades; of Philip .— Taste in France in the seventeenth century.— The zenith.— ^schines and Demosthenes.— Genius and patriotism. . . . 46-51 CHAPTER II. PHILIP. THE ATHENIANS. Demosthenes has two adversaries to contend against. I. FuiLip.— The captain.— The phalanx.— Ngw tactics.— Activity.— Bravery. — Love of glory. — Insatiable ambition. — His first respose. 52-55 The Politician,^ InteTJiSil difficulties.— How he dupes the Greek cities.— Philip and Ulysses.— An excellent diplomatist.— An obstinate contest against Athens al- ways disavowed.— The friend of peace.— Variable manoeuvres.— Craft— He throws off his mask.— He attacks the Athenian maritime forces and insular allies.— The guardian of the coasts.— The avenger ANALYTICAL TABLE OF CONTENTS. 491 of the outraged gods. — How he rewards himself for his piety. — Checks. — Tenacity and versatility. — The great means: — the mule laden with gold. — He se- duces traitors and then discards them. — He hates and esteems Athens. — His vices, like his virtues, serve to aggrandize him 55-63 II. The Athenians. — The Greeks divided. — Distrusts and spites. — The Roman's fatherland. — Weakness of national sentiment in Greece. — Selfish isolation.— ^ Greece in the face of the barbarians and the Mace- y\ donian 63-65 The Athenians careless and fickle. — A taking exor- dium. — A scandalous and mad laughter before the Areopagus. — Newsmongers. — The credulous. — Vol- untarily deluded. — How they console themselves for the progress of the invader. — Demosthenes' cries oj^ J(, alarm. — The water-drinking counsellor. — The agree- able counsellor. — War of decrees. — Make haste to^^ — day! — Words and actions. — Their love of glory re- mains sterile. — Citizens devoted by proxy. . . 65-70 The Athenians of Pericles; of Demosthenes. — Enjoy- ments of life at Athens. — [A lesson on morality by the comic poet Alexis.] — War against the generals. — Election of magistrates. — Socrates, Montesquieu. — A cavalry officer. — Metamorphoses of Midias. — The Athenians play into Philip's hands. — The pugilism of the barbarians. — Nothing to the purpose. — The Panathenaea and preparations for war. — Each de- pends upon his neighbor. — Nothing regulated, noth- ing consecutive. — Advantages of Philip's autocracy. — Unity of plans and actions 70-76 Athenian patriotism. — Alcibiades. — An epidemic. — A Spartan mother. — Arthmius of Zelia. — Venality. — Athenian feelings toward traitors. — How Philip en- ticed Greek cupidity. — The banquet of Caranus. — To each one his wages. — Shameful treason, de- 492 / POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IX GREECE. • spised by Philip, stigmatized by Demosthenes.— The mercenary orators decry Athens when with the prince, and praise the prince when in Athens.— Official phan- tasmagorias.— Athens cries out treason and is the first to betray herself.— Where true power rests.— Demosthenes' mission 76-82 CHAPTER III. DEMOSTHENES THE MAN THE CITIZEN. I. The maw.— Foresight justified.— Demosthenes' grand- mother.— Studious vigils and legendary exercises.— The gilded youth of Athens.— The life of a prosper- ous and happy family.— Edifying concession.— De- mosthenes reproached with effeminate manners.— The regime of water.— A cautious voluptuary, Demos- thenes qualified and restrained himself.— .Eschines and Philinte.— Animadversions which are praises. 83-89 Did Demosthenes love money?— Weakness and relative integrity — Eloquence often venal at Athens.— An improbable scruple of Philip.— Power of incorrupt- Xible men.— How Demosthenes conquered Philip. 89-93 Demosthenes reproached with timidity.— Haughty lan- guage of Hegesippus.— True courage according to Thucydides.— The financier Blepaus.- Demosthenes naturally nervous and sensitive.— The Cithaeron.— Firmness and infirmities.— Alcibiades at^the tribune; an opportune diversion.— Demosthenes apologizes for his timidity. — Civil courage 93-97 The soldier of Chaeronea.— Extenuating circumstances.— Proofs of pardon.— Revenge through eloquence.— An illiterate accused.— Antiquity indulgent to the infirmities of Nature.— Incorrigibles.— A son who strikes his father by virtue of heredity.— Cowardice often involuntary and excusable (Aristotle).— Un- healthy passions and intemperances.— [A case of con- ANALYTICAL TABLE OF CONTENTS. 493 science submitted to the oracle]. — Physical constitu- tion and will. — Liberty imperfectly understood by the ancients. — Man and the animal. — Socrates and Zopyrus. — Demosthenes might have been able and ought to have conquered his original nature. . 97-107 Demosthenes in exile. — Plutarch's reproach. — Filial submission to his country. — The fugitive in the temple of Neptune. — Religious end. — Bitter senti- ments. — A good citizen depicted by himself. . 107-110 11. The Citizen, — Devotion to the state. — Hired ora- v^ tors.— Alliances and coalitions. — Each at home; iso- lated and successive endeavors. — The great cities profit by the weakness of rival towns. — The alliance with Thebes. — The patriotic activity of Demosthenes embraced the whole state. — He confronts Philip. — /\ He is the soul of the Republic. — [Reasons for the division of public authority at Athens]. — He arouses Greece against Alexander. — Demosthenes at Olyra- pia. — [Shallow illusions of Isocrates]. — Plutarch's parallel between Demosthenes and Cicero. — An out- law. — Often accused ; acquitted with ^clat. — [Contra- dictions between the laws and decrees of Athens]. 110-117 ( CHAPTER IV. DEMOSTHENES THE STATESMAN. T. Political sagacity. — Leptines' law. — Short-sighted economists. — Powerful armies on paper. — Good sense the master of human life. — Strong intellect capable of controlling passion. — Why Athens should have aided Byzantium, Megalopolis, Rhodes. — The interest of the state, the decisive rule of Demosthenes. — He commands an alliance with the Great King. — Affairs of the Chersonesus ; to condemn Diopithes would be impolitic and inequitable. . * 118-125 I 494 POUTICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. II. 0;.^,y«.,,,,Theophrast«.s.- Apologetic letter to Lentulus-The pilot of the state.- Aiming at unity JrJ' :.. language.- Origin of theatrical g ants-After atUcking the theoricon, Demosthenes justifies It; for what reason ?- Mutual murmurs of the neh and tl^ poor.- Poverty, an enviable sinecure strufturr~ ''''"^ "^ consolidating the social Versatility among the Greeks.l Oppo'rtu"nism ^otair'"' :n Demosthenes, an obstinate nature.- The orator of the PhU^pj^cs pleads in favor of peace.-Amphic- tyon,c mtngues.-Avoiding a sacred league against Athens.- [Opportunism in religious law].-Apology of deserters.- [Confidence in Atticus].- Demosthenes many colored.- Opportune policy of the Roman Sen- ate; Porsenna of the patrician order, revenges its fear.- Commentary on Titus Livius by Camille Des- mouhns; an outburst of liberalism. . . . lonio. me ?" 1 "^".'^-^^-'osi.enes and modern states men.-lra.tor.s, indifferent and honorable classes- Phoc.on the chopper of Demosthenes' allocutions.- Vjces of the financial and military organization of Athens.- Apportionment of taxes— The law of ex- change (Antidosis).- Abuse and reform of the trier- archy.- Attempts at seduction and threats.- Demos- thenes wished to convert the munificence of the state into compensatory salaries for public services- Regular pay and permanent armies.-The mercena- ries.- Vices of Grecian brigandage. . . . I34_i4i The soaal question at Athens.- Essence of democratic government (Aristotle).- Course to be followed in re- gard to the poor; their ambition compared to that of the rich.- Organization of property rights; Plato's radical solution.- Phaleas of Chalcedon- Equality of property.- Controlling covetousness of more importance than equalizing wealth.- How democ- ^ ) ANALYTICAL TABLE jOF CONTENTS. 495 racies perish. — Obligations of the state toward the greatest number, according to Demosthenes. — Recip- jr^ rocal duties of the rich and poor. [Bossuet's sermon; charity ought to justify Providence.] — Political con- ception of Demosthenes 141-145 IV. Demosthenes as Minister of Foreign Affairs. — Clear- \/ sighted statesmanship. — Distrust is the rampart of ' free cities. — [An oath without artifice.] — Why Philip dreaded the Athenian democracy. — What is the absolute incitement of Athens. — Demosthenes judged by Philip (Lucian). — Philip triumphs over Demosthenes and insults him on the battle-field of Chaeronea 145-149 Doubts raised on Demosthenes' political sagacity; was vV \ he ignorant of the secret of Macedonian power? — • Every structure that reposes on iniquity is ruinous. — The moralist and the statesman. — A political maxim of Demosthenes turned against himself. — Answer to these critics; the weakness pointed out by Demosthe- \/ nes was real, and victory possible. — Consecutive study ^ of Hellenic and foreign affairs. — On certain points - the orator has feigned blindness. — Why he traduces or calumniates Philip. — Eloquence at the Pnyx and in the Council. — An oratorical caricature. — The ora- « tor himself revealed his tactics 149-155 Was Demosthenes right in counselling resistance to the ^> invader? Poly bins blamed him for it. — Mably sus- A tains Polybius and pronounces Demosthenes a con- temptible politician. — Mably refuted by himself. — An eternal contradiction. — A page from M. Coiisin. — Is Demosthenes culpable for not anticipating the evolutions of humanity? — Present duty and the Philosophy of the future. — Political ethics of Aris- tophanes' Diceopolis. — Wars of conquest and wars for ^ independence. — A line from Corneille. • • 155-164 M. de Lamartine, the Marseillaise of the Peace (1841). — I 496 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. I Fatherland and universal fraternity. — F^nelon prefers Atticus to Cato and to Demosthenes. — The duties of the prince and of private persons. — In a democracy the duties of the sovereign are imposed upon the na- tion.— Eulogy on Leosthenes (Hyperides).— Athens rewarded Demosthenes.—- The two crowns. . 164-166 CHAPTER V. ANALYSIS OF THE PRINCIPAL ELEMENTS AND CHARACTERISTICS OF Demosthenes' eloquence. 1. Demosthenes' eloquence more modern than Cicero's. — Luminous precision.— Brevity which goes straight to the point.— A reprimand must avoid tedium.— Simplicity of exordiums and perorations.— [Conclud- ing words of two Pindaric odes.] — Improvisation; why Demosthenes did not succeed in it.— An imagi- nation more vigorous than prompt.— His attitude at the forum.— Power of improvisation.— To ignore it is a grave fault; especially in an Athenian orator. — Demades and iEschines as improvisers. — Writings remain. 167-176 Repetitions in Attic eloquence; various reasons which justify them; why they are practiced by the orator and well received by the audience.— The Athenians prefer beauty to novelty.— Dangers of originality at Athens. — Every superiority is suspected of tyranny. — Isocrates' opinion on the relative merit of the thinker and the writer , 176-183 II. Revisions.— F^nelon, Bossuet, Bourdaloue, Massil- lon.— Demosthenes is justified for having written the Oratio in Midiam.— The sonnet of Orontes and the panegyric on Athens.— Criticisms addressed to labored compositions.— A good guaranty for literary propriety, — Compositions intended to be read; orations for ac-\ tion.— Proofs of revising among the Attics.— Antici- pated refutations 183-185 X iSBB ANALYTICAL TABLE OF CONTENTS. 497 How are we to reconcile the artistic preconceptions of Demosthenes with F^nelon's eulogy? — Demosthenes, a consummate artist, remains simple and natural. — y I He had to please the Athenians in order to save them, f^ < — Specimens of convincing^argument in orafiohs not exclusively political. — Episodes of Greek tragedy. — Digressions in civil pleas and mixed orations. — Dif- ferent conditions of the tribune and bar, — What dis- courses realize the triumph of eloquence? . 185-190 Omission of evidence in the case. — Evidence taken to give rest to the tribunal and orator. — Civil pleaders furnished with briefs. — Demosthenes suppresses tech- nical documents in which he has not done oratorical work. — Literary disinterestedness of Crassus. — De- mosthenes neglects reality for lasting beauties. 190-192 III. General developments. — Advantages and inconve- niences of this method. — Difficulty of classing the sy Olynthiacs.— Taste of Attic eloquence for political or A moral theses.— Influence of the philosophic turn of mind. — The first oration Against Aristogiton; simi- lar premises boldly avowed. — Even in general themes Demosthenes remains a precise orator and rigorous logician. — Eloquence varied in its appliances, but uniform through its common fund of ideas and senti- ments. — [Examples of general theses]. — Technical discussions united to general considerations. — Plead- ing On the Embassy. — A speech on public affairs lOn the Navy Boards^ — Elevation of Demosthenes' elo- quence 192-198 CHAPTER VI. ANALYSIS OF THE PRINCIPAL ELEMENTS AND CHARACTERISTICS OF Demosthenes' eloquence. — (continued.) I. Mould of Demosthenes^ argumentation, — Marshal de Gram on t. — Not words, but deeds. — History's les- X A I 498 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. ANALYTICAL TABLE OF CONTENTS. 499 IP I ! Ill sons. — Discerning genius. — Dialectic vigor. — What the political orator owes to the logographer. — An embarrassing dilemma. — Happy retorts. — Refuta- tious in form. — Logic and wit 199-206 Identity of resources. — The orations of ^Eschines and Demosthenes compared. — Sacred formularies and proceedings. — Challenges. — Torture. — To death ! — The accused refused the liberty of speech. . 206-210 Dramatic cast of address. — Simple question to Aristode- mus. — Scenes at the Agora; incidents at the trib- une. — Stormy sessions. — The Attic hive. — An exam- ple to follow 210-214 11. Pathos. — Demosthenes and Thucydides. — Deep medi- tation and passion. — The law of Athenian courts prohibited pathetic appeals. — The Greeks distrust their own sensibility. — Homer's heroes. — The Cap- ture of Miletus by Phrynichus. — Custom stronger than law. — Petitions and tears of the accused. — The chil- dren of Midias. — Attic tradition in Hyperides. — Pathetic eloquence, being iHegal, is dissimulated. — In what respect the pathos of ^schines differed from that of Demosthenes. — Racine and Corneille. — The transports of Isocrates. — Personifications in iEschines and Demosthenes. — A picture of Phocis in ruins. — Usual sources of the pathetic in Demosthenes.— Rough eloquence 214-219 Demosthenes exhibits wit. — The shadow of an ass. — In- genious delicacy of style. — [Delicacy of the .Attic language]. — A lesson in wit given to ^schines. — Demosthenes not successful in pleasantries. — Sallies of Alcestes. — Sharp sayings less agreeable than biting yiones. — Euphemisms at Athens. — How Demosthenes /C/praises Philip. — Indignant and virulent irony. — A clerk putting on airs. — Irony among the trage- dians. — Irony on the lips of Demosthenes while dying 219-226 III. Beauties of style. — Vigorous conciseness. — Speaking pictures. — Energy was familiar to the Attics of the Macedonian epoch. — Poetic expressions ; Cicero ; Aris- totle; scruples of Voltaire. — Picturesque relief. — The Greek language an artistic pencil, — Emblazoned figures of speech ; censured by ^schines; excused by Cicero.— Conclusions of Pliny the Younger and of Lupercus on the sublimity of style in Pliny the Younger. — Antithesis. — Contrasts and parallels. — A citation 226-231 IV. Plans. — Method among the ancients and moderns. — Why Demosthenes' plans are sometimes difficult to comprehend. — A wise disposition calculated for the^ effect to be produced. — The curve in Greek archi- tecture. — The great compositions of the deliberative nature compared as to plans and achievements with the productions of the bar. — Clearness of iEschines' composition. — Unrestrained moments of Demosthe- nes. — [Pretended improvisations]. — Wherein consists, in Demosthenes, the true unity of his productions. — The dispersed order of military tactics. — Diversions and detached pieces • 231-238 Action. — The comedian Satyrus. — iEschines criticises the vehement action of Demosthenes. The two kinds of eloquence described by Buffon. — Apostrophe to the heroes of Marathon. — Why this fragment has not been detached from its frame. — Olympian Demos- thenes Hot after the fashion of Pericles. — Impressions of Dionysius of Halicarnassus from reading a page of Isocrates or Demosthenes 238-246 V. Precautions and oratorical customs. — Truth, "with a loose vein." — Eulogy on absent virtues. — Athens unconscious of envy: the modesty of the ancients; of the moderns. — -^neas, Cicero, Isocrates. — The ora- tion On the Crown an adroit apology. — Demosthenes absolved of his renown. — [A feature of manners]. 246^250 (i 500 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE LN" GREECE. Courageous frankness. — Euphrseus. — Sycophant dema- gogues. — Severe reprimands. — Deceptive obesity. — The Athenian people live at the mercy of unworthy masters, their own work. — A scene from the Knights. — The spongers of good people. — Aristophanes in hatred of the demagogues, becomes a corrupting dema- gogue. — A compliant sovereign. — Impertinences of Cleon, of Stratocles. — The lion's court. . . 250-255 VI. National character and the government of Athens well understood by Demosthenes. — Emulation of ancestry. — Hereditary generosity of Athens in the midst of universal egotism. — Singular judgment of Theophrastus. — Reply to the panegyrists on the Lacedaemonian constitution. — Originality of the Athe- nian constitution. — Abuse does not forbid use. — On the competency of majorities: Plato, Aristotle, guest and cook. — The greatest crime in the eyes of the Greeks.^ A flattered picture of the Athenians. — Tyrannical hegemony. — Supremacy and recurring violences in the large cities. — The passion of equality prepared the way for the destruction of liberty. — The noble son and the usurping slave. — Why a void oc- curs around Athens. . , . . . . . . 255-263 CHAPTER VII. ORATORICAL CONTESTS IN POLITICAL DEBATES AT ATHENS. I. Historical criticism. — Grandeur of the political de- bates between Demosthenes and ^Eschines. — Artistic side. — Success of a dichoreus in the forum. — P^lisson and Socrates. — Pleaders not favored by Nature. — Exhibitions of eloquence ; feasts of intellect. — Griev- ous distractions of Athenian tribunals. . . 264-269 He who cannot please cannot be right. — An obligation imposed upon Demosthenes of being artistic in his fine language. — Antagonistic virtue at the games, at the ANALYTICAL TABLE OF CONTENTS. 501 theater and at the tribune. — Orators and athletes. — A fundamental idea.' — Passion for glor}^; Timanthes, Niceratus. — Crowns awarded at the theater. . 269-272 II. Oratorical contests. — For what purpose the adver- saries spend their time in order to engage in con- tests. — Excuses and pretexts. — Demosthenes writes the Oration in Midiam^ and at the same time comes : to an agreement with the enemy. — Assaults by strata- gem. — Exchange of epithets. — Panurge. — [The wish of Strepsiades]. — Every weapon is good that inflicts wounds 272-276 Speaking well, often and long. — [The motion for an Hour-glass, August 3, 1789]. Jealous malignity. — iEschines' voice. — Mirabeau. — Orators and corn- medians. — Demosthenes pleads against ^Eschines' voice. — A tournament of eloquence before Philip. 276-282 III. iEschines master of rhetoric at the tribune. — Inci- ^ dents of literary, artistic and theatrical history. — Poets and legends. — The archives of the Greeks. — The address to the court; a work of art. — Coarse in- vectives and philosophic ethics. — Cicero a student of the Greeks. . . , • . . . . . . . 282-286 Artistic care excluded cruelty. — Athens a humane city. — Result of the orations On the Embassy and On the Crown. — jEschines in exile. — Laharpe's astonish- ment. — An artistic queen. — Advantages of historical criticism. . . ... . . . . . . 286-289 CHAPTER VIII. INVECTIVE IN GREEK ELOQUENCE. I. Freedom of abuse among the ancients. — The comic pamphlets of Aristophanes. — A cock fight. — Intoxi- cation of anger and hatred. . . . . . 290-291 Causes of invective in Greek eloquence. — (First). — The want of moral delicacy among the ancients. — Pardon. 502 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. ANALYTICAL TABLE OF CONTENTS, 503 for vituperation. — Rejoicing over vengeance. — The most honorable epitaph. — The baton corrective of satire. — The Metelli. — The Chevalier de Rohan. — Ulysses' scepter. — Among kings. — [An article from the law of the XII Tables]. — (Second) — Defama- tion a form and privilege of democratic govern- ment at Athens. — The feudal Greece of the Iliad. — Thersites. — (Third) — The Greeks falsifiers and fond of scandal. — A scene from the Ajax of Sophocles. — (Fourth) — Invective a useful diversion. — Mixed Au- dience 291-297 (Fifth) — The public ministry extended to the entire public. — Tribunal ignorant and prejudiced. — Spites and revenges of trifling people. — Collectors in the wasp's nest. — (Sixth) — The plaintiff pleading his own cause does not smother his resentments. — The Athe- nian logographer and the modern advocate. — De- faming by invective and defaming by law. — Anony- mous calumnies. — (Seventh) — Swaying the judge instead of enlightening him. — Swift and Wood. — The law of tin worthiness. — To vilify an adversary is to convict him. — Government of family and of state. — Socratic prejudice, reviewed by ^schines. . 297-303 II. Invective in civil suits. — The sages themselves make use of it at the tribune. — What rendered these vio- lences endurable. — Picture of Aristogiton. — [Origi- nal method of disposing of his parents]. — Viper, scor- pion and tarantula. — Public accusation against Tim- archus. — Demosthenes and the seditious tribunes of Titus Livius. — [Nicias and the informers]. — Why the Oratio in Midiam should never have been writ- ten. — Invective in the oration against Ctesiphon. Edifying catalogue. — You are angry, therefore you are wrong. — Gall and venom of ^Eschines. . 303-315 in. Demosthenes no friend of invective. — Feminine re- sentments. — A stinging cuff. — Demosthenes, when provoked, has a right to defend himself. — Mocked from the cradle. — Demosthenes' ancestors. — JEschi- nes' family under the lash of Demosthenes. — iEschi- nes' fortune compared with that of Demosthenes. 315-321 Demosthenes' personal resentments. — Private and patri-. otic enmity. — The quarry. — Signal ingratitude. — Is iEschines the guest or the paid servant of Alex- ander? — ^schines' true colleagues. — Seized by the throat by the consciousness of his misdeeds. . 321-325 IV. The Athenian pamphleteer compelled to strike hard. — The Just of Aristophanes a convert to univer- sal depravity. — Ancient patience; Phocion; Peri- cles. — An emperor a man of talent. — An opinion of the Duke de Montausier. — Disparagement of the wretched condition of certain persons. — The senate of Capua 325-329 Be human! be pitiless! — Why the audience did not un- derstand the Athenian pamphleteer literally. — [An- tony a prudent lawer]. — Black or white. — Hatred avowed against ^Eschines. — iEschines dares not de- clare his own. — A page of ^schines as eloquent as deceit can be. — Demosthenes' reply. — [Invective in Roman literature] 329-337 CHAPTER IX. GREEK ELOQUENCE IN THE LIGHT OF TRUTH AND MORALITY. I. Persistence of the genius of races. — Homer's Greeks. — Falsehoods upon falsehoods. — Double physiognomy of the Odyssey. — Useful fictions, agreeable fictions. — Plato and hypocrisy — Themistocles. — [Attic wisdom and Lacedaemonian apothegms.] — Illusive proce- dures, diversions, short histories, oracles. — The art of enlarging and diminishing objects. — Simonides' mules. — Alcibiades and Midias. — How art discred- ited itself. 338-343 504 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. n. Argument of mutilated persons. — Ulysses and Pisis- tratus. — Isocrates in open act. — The natural weapon of the accused. — A distinction by Francis de Sales. — The theory of lying.— Danger of scientific analyses; too disinterested.— Aristotle gives an inventory with- out values. — Malice of the Athenian bar.— Jugglers of the tribune.— Logographers sought and dishon- ored.— Mercenaries of the pen and pirates. — Plato's law. — Falsehoods of Theopompus.— [The capitularies of Charlemagne and the Memorial of Saint-Helena.] — Solemn oaths and j^erjuries. — An instructive distinc- tion. — Two associates. — Judicial and political elo- quence closely united at Athens: (cf. the preface). 343-352 III. At the school of sophists.— Probabilities and para- doxes.— Feats of force.— The archives of Athens and falsifiers.— Contradictions and retorts. — Where is the deceiver ? — [Malpractices charged against Demos- thenes; affairs of state and money matters.] — Im-/ postures circumstantiated by means of lies. — [A fault of accent; a little comedy of Menander.] — Pub-, lie notoriety.— The art of mock praise at Rome.— Quintilian's code of false narrations and theory of colors.— [Imaginative tales in Cicero's orations]. 352-358 Romantic episode of the female captive of Olynthus.— iEschines adorns this recital. — The art of rendering an adversary odious.— Parade of false testimony.— Whoever wishes to prove too much proves nothing. — Eubulus and Ulpian.— Moral sense of the Greeks comes from their aesthetic sense. — Calumnies brought down to facts.— Effrontery and candor. . . 358-365 IV. Honorable amend in Plutus. — Rhetoric in the face of the philosopher of the Gorgias and the poet of the Clouds. — [An illiterate pedagogue.] — Orators judged by themselves.— A compromising ally. — Political friendships. — Demosthenes as a man and a po- lemic. — Genius compels. — Cato's motto and his con- ANALYTICAL TABLE OF CONTENTS. 505 tradictors. (Quintilian). — Civic virtue distinguished from private virtue. — Leptines' adversary. — Peri- cles, Plutarch, Aristotle. — Demosthenes and Pho- cion. — An adopted ancestor of Brutus. . . 365-371 CHAPTER X. ' I. DEMOSTHENES AS A MORALIST. II. RELATIONS OF JUSTICE AND POLITICS. III. RELIGIOUS SENTIMENT IN DEMOSTHENES. I. DEMOSTHENES AS A MORALIST. Was Demosthenes a disciple of Plato? — Inspirations from Plato. — New Academy and Lyceum. — [At what school was the perfect orator formed?] — Moral grav- ity of Demosthenes' eloquence. — Fruit of meditation upon human vicissitudes. — The benefit of adversity: Elevation of thought. — The necessity of freemen ; the necessity of the slave. — Demosthenes achieved the task of which Aristotle, the moralist, seems to have despaired. — Plato's prophecy half disproved. 372-378 II. RELATIONS BETWEEN JUSTICE AND POLITICS. Justice, an angular stone. — Reconciling the useful and the honorable. — The refuse basket. (Socrates). — Hobbes. — Justice resides in the defense of the oppressed. — Public opinion. — Civil justice; Hellenic justice. — Might makes right. — Foreign policy of Athens in Thucydides and Demosthenes. — A congress. . 378-383 Is there a legitimate distinction between social and in- ternational justice? [Two chapters from Balzac's PHnce.'\ — Justice of universal peace. — There are judges at Berlin. — In what Demosthenes failed. — So- cial contract of the human family. . . . . 383-386 The sentiment of right weak in Greece. — The violences of Athens judged by Isocrates. — Eternal contradic- tion: Helvetius, Kant, Leibnitz, approve God but do 506 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. not imitate him. — [A philosopher - king in his writings.] — Plato's Republic. — His method com- pared with that of the Stagirite. — How Aristotle's mind looks upon the gravest questions. — Slavery be- fore ancient philosophy. — Speculative theorists and statesmen 386-392 Difference between ancient and modern views regarding moral obligations. — Why Cicero's De Officiis is a treatise on social morality. — Religious and civil du- ties confounded in the ancient city. — Saint Louis and the treaty of Abbeville.— Excellence and character of political justice. — An entirely political conception of justice in Plato. — Traces of the predominance of social predispositions in ancient legislation. — Our mil- itary justice. — Law of Pittacus concerning crimes committed during intoxication. .... 392-396 Essential unity and absolute character of morality. — Comparative rank of duties. — The statesman's duty. — Dangers of monarchical powers. — The light of liberty purifies. — Why Demosthenes for a moment lost sight of moral law. — [Pernicious influence of war.] — Sovereign law 396-398 in. RELIGIOUS SENTIMENT IN DEMOSTHENES. Doubts about Providence arising in moments of anger. — Demosthenes' sentiments on fortune. — Identical objection of M. de Meaux and Demosthenes. — Pro- fession of faith to the Corinthians and Melians. — Power is of divine right. — Indecision of Demosthenes' mind on questions of religious morality. — Pagan theology difficult to harmonize with good sense and moral sense. — How pagan dogmas lead to a belief in fortune 398-404 Demosthenes sincerely religious. — The priestess Theoris. — A perfidious sophism refuted. — Did Demosthenes ANALYTICAL TABLE OF CONTENTS. 507 believe in oracles and auguries? — A premeditated dream.— [An apparition of Minerva;— the family compact] 404-407 Divination.— Epimenides of Crete.— Demosthenes a pu- pil of Thucydides.— [Various prodigies.] — Religious sentiment in art; in public and private life; in the eloquence of the ancients.— Why Demosthenes was touched with it— Destiny and liberty. . . 407-411 CHAPTER XL THE TRIAL ON THE CROWN. I. — Demosthenes' accuser. Political passions at Athens after Chaeronea.— Interest and grandeur of the debate.— Ctesiphon's accuser is condemned beforehand to the reproach of disloyal malignity.— [Subject of the trial.] — The moment chosen by iEschines to attack Demosthenes.— The mod- ern Thersites.— " Littleness of soul " in ^schines.— Real and oratorical sentiments.— [.Eschines' decla- rations honorable to his adversary.] — Improbable and contradictory imputations 412-417 ^schines wanting in sincerity.— [Hermogenes' testi- mony.— Demosthenes and Paulus iEmilius.] — Source of eloquence in the two rivals.— The subject pro- duced eloquence.— A political metamorphosis. — [Dif- ficult apology.] — iEschines yielded to the torrent- Eulogy of ancestors by jEschines and Demosthenes. — Why Demosthenes bore away the palm. . . 417-422 II, PIETY toward the GODS, AND TOWARD HIS COUNTRY. Effect of great disasters on popular imagination. — Eux- enippus' dream. — Strong religious impressions. (Diodorus and Justin).— Punishment for sacrilege. — 608 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. Philip derived advantages from the moral state of Greece. — iEschines aided him therein. — Recollections of maternal education. — The tyrant should manifest his piety. (Aristotle).— The protectorate of religion.— Avowals of a philanthropist.— [The courtesan Rho- dope.] — ^schines and Lucretius. — Accusations of Impiety at Athens.— Aspasia, Phryne.— Demosthenes' entire life is a life of impiety.— His impiety ruined his country 422-430 His oration to the Amphictyonic council. — Religious wars of antiquity.— [Roman tolerance.] — Athens remains apart from the holy league.— Catastrophes provoked by Demosthenes' sacrilege. . . . 430-438 Badly adjusted mask.— ^Eschines and the oracle.— iEs- chines sings with Philip the Paean which celebrates the destruction of Phocis.— Knavish or depraved.— The account of the session of the Amphictyonic coun- cil by iEschines justifies Demosthenes' accusations.— ^schines' mandate.— Socrates the sophist. . . 438-447 Snares and deadly engines; glorification of Chseronea during the lifetime of Alexander.— Phalecus and the fire from heaven. — Demosthenes evades a burning subject.— Indulgent sympathy of Athens toward the Phocidiansj — The accused becomes the accuser. 447-449 III- DEMOSTHENES A BAD COUNSELLOR. Faith of the Geeeks in predestination.— [Destiny an ex- cellent pilot.] — Appearances condemn Demosthe- nes.— A woful fatality weighs on the whole world.— Various causes of the calamities of Greece. — Patriotic concession to popular prejudices 449-454 Contrast between the destiny of iEschines and Demosthe- nes. — Deceptions and bitterness. — Traffic figure.— [Prometheus]. — In what Demosthenes was happy. — After the disaster. . 454-458 ANALYTICAL TABLE OF CONTENTS. 509 IV. GRECIAN ELOQUENCE EXTINGUISHED WITH DEMOSTHENES. Attitude of Athens in the face of its conquerors.— Two decrees; uncle and nephew.— Hymn to Demetrius.— What is lost in losing liberty.— Disappearance of eloquence and Greek genius. — The orator of the P/ti7/2J»i)ics justified 458-464 CHAPTER XII. POLITICAL, MORAL AND LITERARY CONCLUSION. I. Essential immutability of human character.— [The question of the East in 340 b.c] —Political eloquence of the Macedonian epoch, and of the French revolu- tion.— Patriotic, moral and religious impressions.— Constituent assembly and convention.— Character of their eloquence. — Invective in Athens and the pamphlet in France.— Athenian eloquence is not murderous.— [C. Desmoulins; license of the Greek comedy and freedom of the press].— Sceptics and enthusiasts.— Nothing great without faith . . 465-472 II. The Athens of Demosthenes knew neither social nor ^ patriotic passions.— Political and social progress [a good constitution after the taste of the Socratics].— Ostracism, the law of humanity.— The citizen very eminent in the Athenian and in the modern democ- racy.— Riches, social danger.— The question of labor and capital.— The grantees of the mines. (Hyperi- des). [Project of industrial and financial associations between private persons and the state]. (Xenophon). — Superiorities of modern democracy. . • - 472-478 III. Moral progress.— Rule for correctly judging an an- cient. — Aristotle's summary.— The Athenians more indulgent than the moderns toward Demosthenes. — Effect of perspective.— Demosthenes is admired to- day not in the same manner but more warmly. — t 510 POLITICAL ELOQUENCE IN GREECE. Not by the narrow view of ancient criticism. — Pro- gramme of a letter to Philip. — The flute of T. Grac- chus. [The theory of the thumb]. — Attic and modern simplicity. — The modern tribune. — Contempora- neous political eloquence. — Fragile and imperishable beauties. — Demosthenes the orator and statesman. — [Counsel and execution. — Men in opposition to, and friends to, the government.] — The genius and soul of Demosthenes. — What Athens owes to him. — How nations die away or become renewed .... 478-488 .^ ■•' ^^liijiiiiibii COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES 010682031 '- «ivJ4»'«»^5»»lJK&**. - ». >.._ « £|g^ /',-i r nr.