登陆注册
5431600000001

第1章

PLATO TO THE RELATIVES AND FRIENDS OF DION. WELFARE.

You write to me that I must consider your views the same as those ofDion, and you urge me to aid your cause so far as I can in word anddeed. My answer is that, if you have the same opinion and desire as hehad, I consent to aid your cause; but if not, I shall think morethan once about it. Now what his purpose and desire was, I caninform you from no mere conjecture but from positive knowledge. Forwhen I made my first visit to Sicily, being then about forty yearsold, Dion was of the same age as Hipparinos is now, and the opinionwhich he then formed was that which he always retained, I mean thebelief that the Syracusans ought to be free and governed by the bestlaws. So it is no matter for surprise if some God should makeHipparinos adopt the same opinion as Dion about forms of government.

But it is well worth while that you should all, old as well asyoung, hear the way in which this opinion was formed, and I willattempt to give you an account of it from the beginning. For thepresent is a suitable opportunity.

In my youth I went through the same experience as many other men.

I fancied that if, early in life, I became my own master, I shouldat once embark on a political career. And I found myself confrontedwith the following occurrences in the public affairs of my own city.

The existing constitution being generally condemned, a revolution tookplace, and fifty-one men came to the front as rulers of therevolutionary government, namely eleven in the city and ten in thePeiraeus-each of these bodies being in charge of the market andmunicipal matters-while thirty were appointed rulers with fullpowers over public affairs as a whole. Some of these were relativesand acquaintances of mine, and they at once invited me to share intheir doings, as something to which I had a claim. The effect on mewas not surprising in the case of a young man. I considered thatthey would, of course, so manage the State as to bring men out of abad way of life into a good one. So I watched them very closely to seewhat they would do.

And seeing, as I did, that in quite a short time they made theformer government seem by comparison something precious as gold-foramong other things they tried to send a friend of mine, the agedSocrates, whom I should scarcely scruple to describe as the mostupright man of that day, with some other persons to carry off one ofthe citizens by force to execution, in order that, whether he wishedit, or not, he might share the guilt of their conduct; but he wouldnot obey them, risking all consequences in preference to becoming apartner in their iniquitous deeds-seeing all these things and othersof the same kind on a considerable scale, I disapproved of theirproceedings, and withdrew from any connection with the abuses of thetime.

Not long after that a revolution terminated the power of thethirty and the form of government as it then was. And once more,though with more hesitation, I began to be moved by the desire to takepart in public and political affairs. Well, even in the newgovernment, unsettled as it was, events occurred which one wouldnaturally view with disapproval; and it was not surprising that in aperiod of revolution excessive penalties were inflicted by somepersons on political opponents, though those who had returned fromexile at that time showed very considerable forbearance. But once moreit happened that some of those in power brought my friend Socrates,whom I have mentioned, to trial before a court of law, laying a mostiniquitous charge against him and one most inappropriate in hiscase: for it was on a charge of impiety that some of them prosecutedand others condemned and executed the very man who would notparticipate in the iniquitous arrest of one of the friends of theparty then in exile, at the time when they themselves were in exileand misfortune.

As I observed these incidents and the men engaged in public affairs,the laws too and the customs, the more closely I examined them and thefarther I advanced in life, the more difficult it seemed to me tohandle public affairs aright. For it was not possible to be activein politics without friends and trustworthy supporters; and to findthese ready to my hand was not an easy matter, since public affairs atAthens were not carried on in accordance with the manners andpractices of our fathers; nor was there any ready method by which Icould make new friends. The laws too, written and unwritten, werebeing altered for the worse, and the evil was growing with startlingrapidity. The result was that, though at first I had been full of astrong impulse towards political life, as I looked at the course ofaffairs and saw them being swept in all directions by contendingcurrents, my head finally began to swim; and, though I did not stoplooking to see if there was any likelihood of improvement in thesesymptoms and in the general course of public life, I postponedaction till a suitable opportunity should arise. Finally, it becameclear to me, with regard to all existing cornmunities, that theywere one and all misgoverned. For their laws have got into a statethat is almost incurable, except by some extraordinary reform withgood luck to support it. And I was forced to say, when praising truephilosophy that it is by this that men are enabled to see what justicein public and private life really is. Therefore, I said, there will beno cessation of evils for the sons of men, till either those who arepursuing a right and true philosophy receive sovereign power in theStates, or those in power in the States by some dispensation ofprovidence become true philosophers.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 辽阳闻见录

    辽阳闻见录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 灭世神战

    灭世神战

    万年前,没有人知道真神与真魔为什么突然发起了战争,那一战毁天灭地,世间从此没有真神与真魔存在。直至万年后的今天,真神相继降临,留下了他们的传承,人类世界以为将重回神话时代。然而这只是神魔大战的另一个延续,是一场灭世战的起始。
  • 戗刀

    戗刀

    刀,万里河山任逍遥。风雷动,今日降天骄。刀,虎啸龙吟烈火燎。旌旗展,赖以聚英豪。刀,休笑中华羸若羔。黄河怒,飞剑斩倭腰。调寄《十六字令》
  • 茶道(现代生活百科)

    茶道(现代生活百科)

    茶者,南方之嘉木也。一尺、二尺乃至数十尺。其巴山峡川,有两人合抱者,伐而掇之。其树如瓜芦,叶如栀子,花如白蔷薇,实如栟榈;茎①如丁香,根如胡桃。(瓜芦木出广州,似茶,至苦涩。
  • 绿茵巨星

    绿茵巨星

    “一个男人所有的潇洒,所有的激情,都在这绿油油的草皮上,每一个动作,每一个助攻,每一个进球……”——李锐。一个普普通通的中国球员,走出国门,闯荡欧洲联赛,成长为一个真正的绿茵巨星的故事……
  • 天降貂妃:王爷宠翻天

    天降貂妃:王爷宠翻天

    穿越成为一只雪貂,跟了一个病秧子世子?她不怕,正好她异能能救这个病秧子。不能言语?不怕,这个病秧子世子竟然能懂她的意思!只是这个病秧子世子,为什么是一个黑心汤圆?不粘着她不放!“娘子,给我和个娃吧!”嗯,看在是个小鲜肉上面,不如自己就从了?
  • 独尊武步

    独尊武步

    乾坤浮沉,一念随心。行道之路,本就是夺天逆命之举,何来惧之!
  • 超级土豪系统

    超级土豪系统

    刘朝是一个普通的大学学生,偶然得到打土豪系统,充值寿命,充值知识,哈哈哈,有此系统如神兵相助,来啊各位,这是一个屌丝逆袭的故事。
  • 美色撩人:总裁别来无恙

    美色撩人:总裁别来无恙

    四年的感情纠纷,四年的阴暗记忆,让她沉溺在回忆中无法自拔,一再迷失方向!四年后,他们再次相遇,误会解开,身边却有出现了更多的感情障碍!--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 冬天的故事

    冬天的故事

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。