|
Written 75 A.C.E.
Translated by John Dryden
Whoever it was, Sosius, that wrote the poem in honour of Alcibiades,
upon his winning the chariot-race at the Olympian Games, whether
it were Euripides, as is most commonly thought, or some other person,
he tells us that to a man's being happy it is in the first place
requisite he should be born in "some famous city." But
for him that would attain to true happiness, which for the most
part is placed in the qualities and disposition of the mind, it
is, in my opinion, of no other disadvantage to be of a mean, obscure
country, than to be born of a small or plain-looking woman. For
it were ridiculous to think that Iulis, a little part of Ceos, which
itself is no great island, and Aegina, which an Athenian once said
ought to be removed, like a small eyesore, from the port of Piraeus
should breed good actors and poets, and yet should never be able
to produce a just, temperate, wise, and high-minded man. Other arts,
whose end it is to acquire riches or honour, are likely enough to
wither and decay in poor and undistinguished towns; but virtue,
like a strong and durable plant, may take root and thrive in any
place where it can lay hold of an ingenuous nature, and a mind that
is industrious. I, for my part, shall desire that for any deficiency
of mine in right judgment or action, I myself may be, as in fairness,
held accountable, and shall not attribute it to the obscurity of
my birthplace.
But if any man undertake to write a history that has to be collected
from materials gathered by observation and the reading of works
not easy to be got in all places, nor written always in his own
language, but many of them foreign and dispersed in other hands,
for him, undoubtedly, it is in the first place and above all things
most necessary to reside in some city of good note, addicted to
liberal arts, and populous; where he may have plenty of all sorts
of books, and upon inquiry may hear and inform himself of such particulars
as, having escaped the pens of writers, are more faithfully preserved
in the memories of men, lest his work be deficient in many things,
even those which it can least dispense with.
But for me, I live in a little town, where I am willing to continue,
lest it should grow less; and having had no leisure, while I was
in Rome and other parts of Italy, to exercise myself in the Roman
language, on account of public business and of those who came to
be instructed by me in philosophy, it was very late, and in the
decline of my age, before I applied myself to the reading of Latin
authors. Upon which that which happened to me may seem strange,
though it be true; for it was not so much by the knowledge of words
that I came to the understanding of things, as by my experience
of things I was enabled to follow the meaning of words. But to appreciate
the graceful and ready pronunciation of the Roman tongue, to understand
the various figures and connection of words, and such other ornaments,
in which the beauty of speaking consists, is, I doubt not, an admirable
and delightful accomplishment; but it requires a degree of practice
and study which is not easy, and will better suit those who have
more leisure, and time enough yet before them for the occupation.
And so in this fifth book of my Parallel Lives, in giving an account
of Demosthenes and Cicero, my comparison of their natural dispositions
and their characters will be formed upon their actions and their
lives as statesmen, and I shall not pretend to criticize their orations
one against the other, to show which of the two was the more charming
or the more powerful speaker. For there, as Ion says-
"We are but like a fish upon dry land;" a proverb which
Caecilius perhaps forgot, when he employed his always adventurous
talents in so ambitious an attempt as a comparison of Demosthenes
and Cicero; and, possibly, if it were a thing obvious and easy for
every man to know himself, the precept had not passed for an oracle.
The divine power seems originally to have designed Demosthenes
and Cicero upon the same plan, giving them many similarities in
their natural characters, as their passion for distinction and their
love of liberty in civil life, and their want of courage in dangers
and war, and at the same time also to have added many accidental
resemblances. I think there can hardly be found two other orators,
who, from small and obscure beginnings, became so great and mighty;
who both contested with kings and tyrants; both lost their daughters,
were driven out of their country, and returned with honour; who,
flying from thence again, were both seized upon by their enemies,
and at last ended their lives with the liberty of their countrymen.
So that if we were to suppose there had been a trial of skill between
nature and fortune, as there is sometimes between artists, it would
be hard to judge whether that succeeded best in making them alike
in their dispositions and manners, or this in the coincidences of
their lives. We will speak of the eldest first.
Demosthenes, the father of Demosthenes, was a citizen of good rank
and quality, as Theopompus informs us, surnamed the Sword-maker,
because he had a large workhouse, and kept servants skilful in that
art at work. But of that which Aeschines the orator said of his
mother, that she was descended of one Gylon, who fled his country
upon an accusation of treason, and of a barbarian woman, I can affirm
nothing, whether he spoke true, or slandered and maligned her. This
is certain, that Demosthenes, being as yet but seven years old was
left by his father in affluent circumstances, the whole value of
his estate being little short of fifteen talents, and that he was
wronged by his guardians, part of his fortune being embezzled by
them, and the rest neglected; insomuch that even his teachers were
defrauded of their salaries. This was the reason that he did not
obtain the liberal education that he should have had; besides that,
on account of weakness and delicate health, his mother would not
let him exert himself, and his teachers forbore to urge him. He
was meagre and sickly from the first, and hence had his nickname
of Batalus given him, it is said, by the boys, in derision of his
appearance; Batalus being, as some tell us, a certain enervated
flute-player, in ridicule of whom Antiphanes wrote a play. Others
speak of Batalus as a writer of wanton verses and drinking songs.
And it would seem that some part of the body, not decent to be named,
was at that time called batalus by the Athenians. But the name of
Argas, which also they say was a nickname of Demosthenes, was given
him for his behaviour, as being savage and spiteful, argas being
one of the poetical words for a snake; or for his disagreeable way
of speaking, Argas being the name of a poet who composed very harshly
and disagreeably. So much, as Plato says, for such matters.
The first occasion of his eager inclination to oratory, they say,
was this. Callistratus, the orator, being to plead in open court
for Oropus, the expectation of the issue of that cause was very
great, as well for the ability of the orator, who was then at the
height of his reputation, as also for the fame of the action itself.
Therefore, Demosthenes, having heard the tutors and school-masters
agreeing among themselves to be present at this trial, with much
importunity persuades his tutor to take him along with him to the
hearing; who, having some acquaintance with the doorkeepers, procured
a place where the boy might sit unseen, and hear what was said.
Callistratus having got the day, and being much admired, the boy
began to look upon his glory with a kind of emulation, observing
how he was courted on all hands, and attended on his way by the
multitude; but his wonder was more than all excited by the power
of his eloquence, which seemed able to subdue and win over anything.
From this time, therefore, bidding farewell to other sorts of learning
and study, he now began to exercise himself, and to take pains in
declaiming, as one that meant to be himself also an orator. He made
use of Isaeus as his guide to the art of speaking, though Isocrates
at that time was giving lessons; whether, as some say, because he
was an orphan, and was not able to pay Isocrates his appointed fee
of ten minae or because he preferred Isaeus's speaking, as being
more businesslike and effective in actual use. Hermippus says that
he met with certain memoirs without any author's name, in which
it was written that Demosthenes was a scholar to Plato, and learnt
much of his eloquence from him; and he also mentions Ctesibius,
as reporting from Callias of Syracuse and some others, that Demosthenes
secretly obtained a knowledge of the systems of Isocrates and Alcidamas,
and mastered them thoroughly.
As soon, therefore, as he was grown up to man's estate, he began
to go to law with his guardians, and to write orations against them;
who, in the meantime, had recourse to various subterfuges and pleas
for new trials, and Demosthenes, though he was thus, as Thucydides
says, taught his business in dangers, and by his own exertions was
successful in his suit, was yet unable for all this to recover so
much as a small fraction of his patrimony. He only attained some
degree of confidence in speaking, and some competent experience
in it. And having got a taste of the honour and power which are
acquired by pleadings, he now ventured to come forth, and to undertake
public business. And, as it is said of Laomedon, the Orchomenian,
that, by advice of his physician, he used to run long distances
to keep off some disease of his spleen, and by that means having,
through labour and exercise, framed the habit of his body, he betook
himself to the great garland games, and became one of the best runners
at the long race; so it happened to Demosthenes, who, first venturing
upon oratory for the recovery of his own private property, by this
acquired ability in speaking, and at length, in public business,
as it were in the great games, came to have the pre-eminence of
all competitors in the assembly. But when he first addressed himself
to the people, he met with great discouragements, and was derided
for his strange and uncouth style, which was cumbered with long
sentences and tortured with formal arguments to a most harsh and
disagreeable excess. Besides, he had, it seems, a weakness in his
voice, a perplexed and indistinct utterance and a shortness of breath,
which, by breaking and disjointing his sentences, much obscured
the sense and meaning of what he spoke. So that in the end being
quite disheartened, he forsook the assembly; and as he was walking
carelessly and sauntering about the Piraeus, Eunomus, the Thriasian,
then a very old man, seeing him, upbraided him, saying that his
diction was very much like that of Pericles, and that he was wanting
to himself through cowardice and meanness of spirit, neither bearing
up with courage against popular outcry, nor fitting his body for
action, but suffering it to languish through mere sloth and negligence.
Another time, when the assembly had refused to hear him, and he
was going home with his head muffled up, taking it very heavily,
they relate that Satyrus, the actor, followed him, and being his
familiar acquaintance, entered into conversation with him. To whom,
when Demosthenes bemoaned himself, that having been the most industrious
of all the pleaders, and having almost spent the whole strength
and vigour of his body in that employment, he could not yet find
any acceptance with the people, that drunken sots, mariners, and
illiterate fellows were heard, and had the husting's for their own,
while he himself was despised, "You say true, Demosthenes,"
replied Satyrus, "but I will quickly remedy the cause of all
this, if you will repeat to me some passage out of Euripides or
Sophocles." Which when Demosthenes had pronounced, Satyrus
presently taking it up after him, gave the same passage, in his
rendering of it, such a new form, by accompanying it with the proper
mien and gesture, that to Demosthenes it seemed quite another thing.
By this, being convinced how much grace and ornament language acquires
from action, he began to esteem it a small matter, and as good as
nothing for a man to exercise himself in declaiming, if he neglected
enunciation and delivery. Hereupon he built himself a place to study
in under ground (which was still remaining in our time), and hither
he would come constantly every day to form his action and to exercise
his voice; and here he would continue, oftentimes without intermission,
two or three months together, shaving one half of his head, that
so for shame he might not go abroad, though he desired it ever so
much.
Nor was this all, but he also made his conversation with people
abroad, his common speech, and his business, subservient to his
studies, taking from hence occasions and arguments as matter to
work upon. For as soon as he was parted from his company, down he
would go at once into his study, and run over everything in order
that had passed, and the reasons that might be alleged for and against
it. Any speeches, also, that he was present at, he would go over
again with himself, and reduce into periods; and whatever others
spoke to him, or he to them, he would correct, transform, and vary
several ways. Hence it was that he was looked upon as a person of
no great natural genius, but one who owed all the power and ability
he had in speaking to labour and industry. Of the truth of which
it was thought to be no small sign that he was very rarely heard
to speak upon the occasion, but though he were by name frequently
called upon by the people, as he sat in the assembly, yet he would
not rise unless he had previously considered the subject, and came
prepared for it. So that many of the popular pleaders used to make
it a jest against him; and Pytheas once, scoffing at him, said that
his arguments smelt of the lamp. To which Demosthenes gave the sharp
answer, "It is true, indeed, Pytheas, that your lamp and mine
are not conscious of the same things." To others, however,
he would not much deny it, but would admit frankly enough, that
he neither entirely wrote his speeches beforehand, nor yet spoke
wholly extempore. And he would affirm that it was the more truly
popular act to use premeditation, such preparation being a kind
of respect to the people; whereas, to slight and take no care how
what is said is likely to be received by the audience, shows something
of an oligarchical temper, and is the course of one that intends
force rather than persuasion. Of his want of courage and assurance
to speak offhand, they make it also another argument that, when
he was at a loss and discomposed, Demades would often rise up on
the sudden to support him, but he was never observed to do the same
for Demades.
Whence then, may some say, was it, that Aeschines speaks of him
as a person so much to be wondered at for his boldness in speaking?
Or, how could it be, when Python, the Byzantine, with so much confidence
and such a torrent of words inveighed against the Athenians, that
Demosthenes alone stood up to oppose him? Or when Lamarchus, the
Myrinaean, had written a panegyric upon King Philip and Alexander,
in which he uttered many things in reproach of the Thebans and Olynthians,
and at the Olympic Games recited it publicly, how was it that he,
rising up, and recounting historically and demonstratively what
benefits and advantages all Greece had received from the Thebans
and Chalcidians, and, on the contrary, what mischiefs the flatterers
of the Macedonians had brought upon it, so turned the minds of all
that were present that the sophist, in alarm at the outcry against
him, secretly made his way out of the assembly? But Demosthenes,
it should seem, regarded other points in the character of Pericles
to be unsuited to him; but his reserve and his sustained manner,
and his forbearing to speak on the sudden, or upon every occasion,
as being the things to which principally he owed his greatness,
these he followed, and endeavoured to imitate, neither wholly neglecting
the glory which present occasion offered, nor yet willing too often
to expose his faculty to the mercy of chance. For, in fact, the
orations which were spoken by him had much more of boldness and
confidence in them than those that he wrote, if we may believe Eratosthenes,
Demetrius the Phalerian, and the Comedians. Eratosthenes says that
often in his speaking he would be transported into a kind of ecstasy,
and Demetrius, that he uttered the famous metrical adjuration to
the people-
"By the earth, the springs, the rivers, and the streams,"
as a man inspired and beside himself. One of the comedians calls
him a rhopoperperethras, and another scoffs at him for his use of
antithesis:-
"And what he took, took back; a phrase to please,
The very fancy of Demosthenes." Unless, indeed, this also is
meant by Antiphanes for a jest upon the speech on Halonesus, which
Demosthenes advised the Athenians not to take at Philip's hands,
but to take back.
All, however, used to consider Demades, in the mere use of his
natural gifts, an orator impossible to surpass, and that in what
he spoke on the sudden, he excelled all the study and preparation
of Demosthenes. And Ariston, the Chian, has recorded a judgment
which Theophrastus passed upon the orators; for being asked what
kind of orator he accounted Demosthenes, he answered, "Worthy
of the city of Athens;" and then what he thought of Demades,
he answered, "Above it." And the same philosopher reports
that Polyeuctus, the Sphettian, one of the Athenian politicians
about that time, was wont to say that Demosthenes was the greatest
orator, but Phocion the ablest; as he expressed the most sense in
the fewest words. And, indeed, it is related that Demosthenes himself,
as often as Phocion stood up to plead against him, would say to
his acquaintance, "Here comes the knife to my speech."
Yet it does not appear whether he had this feeling for his powers
of speaking, or for his life and character, and meant to say that
one word or nod from a man who was really trusted would go further
than a thousand lengthy periods from others.
Demetrius, the Phalerian, tells us that he was informed by Demosthenes
himself, now grown old, that the ways he made use of to remedy his
natural bodily infirmities and defects were such as these; his inarticulate
and stammering pronunciation he overcame and rendered more distinct
by speaking with pebbles in his mouth; his voice he disciplined
by declaiming and reciting speeches or verses when he was out of
breath, while running or going up steep places; and that in his
house he had a large looking-glass, before which he would stand
and go through his exercises. It is told that some one once came
to request his assistance as a pleader, and related how he had been
assaulted and beaten. "Certainly," said Demosthenes, "nothing
of the kind can have happened to you." Upon which the other,
raising his voice, exclaimed loudly, "What, Demosthenes, nothing
has been done to me?" "Ah," replied Demosthenes,
"now I hear the voice of one that has been injured and beaten."
Of so great consequence towards the gaining of belief did he esteem
the tone and action of the speaker. The action which he used himself
was wonderfully pleasing to the common people, but by well-educated
people, as, for example, by Demetrius, the Phalerian, it was looked
upon as mean, humiliating, and unmanly. And Hermippus says of Aesion,
that, being asked his opinion concerning the ancient orators, and
those of his own time, he answered that it was admirable to see
with what composure and in what high style they addressed themselves
to the people; but that the orations of Demosthenes, when they are
read, certainly appear to be superior in point of construction,
and more effective. His written speeches, beyond all question, are
characterized by austere tone and by their severity. In his extempore
retorts and rejoinders, he allowed himself the use of jest and mockery.
When Demades said, "Demosthenes teach me! So might the sow
teach Minerva!" he replied, "Was it this Minerva, that
was lately found playing the harlot in Collytus?" When a thief,
who had the nickname of the Brazen, was attempting to upbraid him
for sitting up late, and writing by candle-light, "I know very
well," said he, "that you had rather have all lights out;
and wonder not, O ye men of Athens, at the many robberies which
are committed, since we have thieves of brass and walls of clay."
But on these points, though we have much more to mention, we will
add nothing at present. We will proceed to take an estimate of his
character from his actions and his life as a statesmen.
His first entering into public business was much about the time
of the Phocian war, as himself affirms, and may be collected from
his Philippic orations. For of these, some were made after that
action was over, and the earliest of them refer to its concluding
events. It is certain that he engaged in the accusation of Midias
when he was but two-and-thirty years old, having as yet no interest
or reputation as a politician. And this it was, I consider, that
induced him to withdraw the action, and accept a sum of money as
a compromise. For of himself-
"He was no easy or good-natured man," but of a determined
disposition, and resolute to see himself righted; however, finding
it a hard matter and above his strength to deal with Midias, a man
so well secured on all sides with money, eloquence, and friends,
he yielded to the entreaties of those who interceded for him. But
had he seen any hopes or possibility of prevailing, I cannot believe
that three thousand drachmas could have taken off the edge of his
revenge. The object which he chose for himself in the commonwealth
was noble and just, the defence of the Grecians against Philip;
and in this he behaved himself so worthily that he soon grew famous,
and excited attention everywhere for his eloquence and courage in
speaking. He was admired through all Greece, the King of Persia
courted him, and by Philip himself he was more esteemed than all
the other orators. His very enemies were forced to confess that
they had to do with a man of mark; for such a character even Aeschines
and Hyperides give him, where they accuse and speak against him.
So that I cannot imagine what ground Theopompus had to say that
Demosthenes was of a fickle, unsettled disposition, and could not
long continue firm either to the same men or the same affairs; whereas
the contrary is most apparent, for the same party and post in politics
which he held from the beginning, to these he kept constant to the
end; and was so far from leaving them while he lived that he chose
rather to forsake his life than his purpose. He was never heard
to apologize for shifting sides like Demades, who would say he often
spoke against himself, but never against the city; nor as Melanopus,
who being generally against Callistratus, but being often bribed
off with money, was wont to tell the people, "The man indeed
is my enemy, but we must submit for the good of our country;"
nor again as Nicodemus, the Messenian, who having first appeared
on Cassander's side, and afterwards taken part with Demetrius, said
the two things were not in themselves contrary, it being always
most advisable to obey the conqueror. We have nothing of this kind
to say against Demosthenes, as one who would turn aside or prevaricate,
either in word or deed. There could not have been less variation
in his public acts if they had all been played, so to say, from
first to last, from the same score. Panaetius, the philosopher,
said that most of his orations are so written as if they were to
prove this one conclusion, that what is honest and virtuous is for
itself only to be chosen; as that of the Crown, that against Aristocrates,
that for the Immunities, and the Philippics; in all which he persuades
his fellow-citizens to pursue not that which seems most pleasant,
easy, or profitable; but declares, over and over again, that they
ought in the first place to prefer that which is just and honourable
before their own safety and preservation. So that if he had kept
his hands clean, if his courage for the wars had been answerable
to the generosity of his principles, and the dignity of his orations,
he might deservedly have his name placed, not in the number of such
orators as Moerocles, Polyeuctus, and Hyperides, but in the highest
rank with Cimon, Thucydides, and Pericles.
Certainly amongst those who were contemporary with him, Phocion,
though he appeared on the less commendable side in the commonwealth,
and was counted as one of the Macedonian party, nevertheless, by
his courage and his honesty, procured himself a name not inferior
to these of Ephialtes, Aristides, and Cimon. But Demosthenes, being
neither fit to be relied on for courage in arms, as Demetrius says,
nor on all sides inaccessible to bribery (for how invincible soever
he was against the gifts of Philip and the Macedonians, yet elsewhere
he lay open to assault, and was overpowered by the gold which came
down from Susa and Ecbatana), was therefore esteemed better able
to recommend than to imitate the virtues of past times. And yet
(excepting only Phocion), even in his life and manners, he far surpassed
the other orators of his time. None of them addressed the people
so boldly; he attacked the faults, and opposed himself to the unreasonable
desires of the multitude, as may be seen in his orations. Theopompus
writes, that the Athenians having by name selected Demosthenes,
and called upon him to accuse a certain person, he refused to do
it; upon which the assembly being all in an uproar, he rose up and
said, "Your counsellor, whether you will or no, O ye men of
Athens, you shall always have me; but a sycophant or false accuser,
though you would have me, I shall never be." And his conduct
in the case of Antiphon was perfectly aristocratical; whom, after
he had been acquitted in the assembly, he took and brought before
the court of Areopagus, and, setting at naught the displeasure of
the people, convicted him there of having promised Philip to burn
the arsenal; whereupon the man was condemned by that court, and
suffered for it. He accused, also, Theoris, the priestess, amongst
other misdemeanours, of having instructed and taught the slaves
to deceive and cheat their masters, for which the sentence of death
was passed upon her, and she was executed.
The oration which Apollodorus made use of, and by it carried the
cause against Timotheus, the general, in an action of debt, it is
said was written for him by Demosthenes; as also those against Phormion
and Stephanus, in which latter case he was thought to have acted
dishonourably, for the speech which Phormion used against Apollodorus
was also of his making; he, as it were, having simply furnished
two adversaries out of the same shop with weapons to wound one another.
Of his orations addressed to the public assemblies, that against
Androtion and those against Timocrates and Aristocrates, were written
for others, before he had come forward himself as a politician.
They were composed, it seems, when he was but seven or eight and
twenty years old. That against Aristogiton, and that for the Immunities,
he spoke himself, at the request, as he says, of Ctesippus, the
son of Chabrias, but, as some say, out of courtship to the young
man's mother. Though, in fact, he did not marry her, for his wife
was a woman of Samos, as Demetrius, the Magnesian, writes, in his
book on Persons of the same Name. It is not certain whether his
oration against Aeschines, for Misconduct as Ambassador, was ever
spoken; although Idomeneus says that Aeschines wanted only thirty
voices to condemn him. But this seems not to be correct, at least
so far as may be conjectured from both their orations concerning
the Crown; for in these, neither of them speaks clearly or directly
of it, as a cause that ever came to trial. But let others decide
this controversy.
It was evident, even in time of peace, what course Demosthenes
would steer in the commonwealth; for whatever was done by the Macedonian,
he criticized and found fault with, and upon all occasions was stirring
up the people of Athens, and inflaming them against him. Therefore,
in the court of Philip, no man was so much talked of, or of so great
account as he; and when he came thither, one of the ten ambassadors
who were sent into Macedonia, though all had audience given them,
yet his speech was answered with most care and exactness. But in
other respects, Philip entertained him not so honourably as the
rest, neither did he show him the same kindness and civility with
which he applied himself to the party of Aeschines and Philocrates.
So that, when the others commended Philip for his able speaking,
his beautiful person, nay, and also for his good companionship in
drinking, Demosthenes could not refrain from cavilling at these
praises; the first, he said, was a quality which might well enough
become a rhetorician, the second a woman, and the last was only
the property of a sponge; no one of them was the proper commendation
of a prince.
But when things came at last to war, Philip on the one side being
not able to live in peace, and the Athenians, on the other side,
being stirred up by Demosthenes, the first action he put them upon
was the reducing of Euboea, which, by the treachery of the tyrants,
was brought under subjection to Philip. And on his proposition,
the decree was voted, and they crossed over thither and chased the
Macedonians out of the island. The next was the relief of the Byzantines
and Perinthians, whom the Macedonians at that time were attacking.
He persuaded the people to lay aside their enmity against these
cities, to forget the offences committed by them in the Confederate
War, and to send them such succours as eventually saved and secured
them. Not long after, he undertook an embassy through the states
of Greece, which he solicited and so far incensed against Philip
that, a few only excepted, he brought them all into a general league.
So that, besides the forces composed of the citizens themselves,
there was an army consisting of fifteen thousand foot and two thousand
horse, and the money to pay these strangers was levied and brought
in with great cheerfulness. On which occasion it was, says Theophrastus,
on the allies requesting that their contributions for the war might
be ascertained and stated, Crobylus, the orator, made use of the
saying, "War can't be fed at so much a day." Now was all
Greece up in arms, and in great expectation what would be the event.
The Euboeans, the Achaeans, the Corinthians, the Megarians, the
Leucadians, and Corcyraeans, their people and their cities, were
all joined together in a league. But the hardest task was yet behind,
left for Demosthenes, to draw the Thebans into this confederacy
with the rest. Their country bordered next upon Attica, they had
great forces for the war, and at that time they were accounted the
best soldiers of all Greece, but it was no easy matter to make them
break with Philip, who, by many good offices, had so lately obliged
them in the Phocian war; especially considering how the subjects
of dispute and variance between the two cities were continually
renewed and exasperated by petty quarrels, arising out of the proximity
of their frontiers.
But after Philip, being now grown high and puffed up with his good
success at Amphissa, on a sudden surprised Elatea and possessed
himself of Phocis, and the Athenians were in a great consternation,
none durst venture to rise up to speak, no one knew what to say,
all were at a loss, and the whole assembly in silence and perplexity,
in this extremity of affairs Demosthenes was the only man who appeared,
his counsel to them being alliance with the Thebans. And having
in other ways encouraged the people, and, as his manner was, raised
their spirits up with hopes, he, with some others, was sent ambassador
to Thebes. To oppose him, as Marsyas says, Philip also sent thither
his envoys, Amyntas and Clearchus, two Macedonians, besides Daochus,
a Thessalian, and Thrasydaeus. Now the Thebans, in their consultations,
were well enough aware what suited best with their own interest,
but every one had before his eyes the terrors of war, and their
losses in the Phocian troubles were still recent: but such was the
force and power of the orator, fanning up, as Theopompus says, their
courage, and firing their emulation, that, casting away every thought
of prudence, fear, or obligation, in a sort of divine possession,
they chose the path of honour, to which his words invited them.
And this success, thus accomplished by an orator, was thought to
be so glorious and of such consequence, that Philip immediately
sent heralds to treat and petition for a peace: all Greece was aroused,
and up in arms to help. And the commanders-in-chief, not only of
Attica, but of Boeotia, applied themselves to Demosthenes, and observed
his directions. He managed all the assemblies of the Thebans, no
less than those of the Athenians; he was beloved both by the one
and by the other, and exercised the same supreme authority with
both; and that not by unfair means, or without just cause, as Theopompus
professes, but indeed it was no more than was due to his merit.
But there was, it would seem, some divinely ordered fortune, commissioned,
in the revolution of things, to put a period at this time to the
liberty of Greece, which opposed and thwarted all their actions,
and by many signs foretold what should happen. Such were the sad
predictions uttered by the Pythian priestess, and this old oracle
cited out of the Sibyl's verses:-
"The battle on Thermodon that shall be
Safe at a distance I desire to see,
Far, like an eagle, watching in the air,
Conquered shall weep, and conqueror perish there."
This Thermodon, they say, is a little rivulet here in our country
in Chaeronea, running into the Cephisus. But we know of none that
is so called at the present time, and can only conjecture that the
streamlet which is now called Haemon, and runs by the Temple of
Hercules, where the Grecians were encamped, might perhaps in those
days be called Thermodon, and after the fight, being filled with
blood and dead bodies, upon this occasion, as we guess, might change
its old name for that which it now bears. Yet Duris says that this
Thermodon was no river, but that some of the soldiers, as they were
pitching their tents and digging trenches about them, found a small
stone statue, which, by the inscription, appeared to be the figure
of Thermodon, carrying a wounded Amazon in his arms; and that there
was another oracle current about it, as follows:-
"The battle on Thermodon that shall be,
Fail not, black raven, to attend and see;
The flesh of men shall there abound for thee."
In fine, it is not easy to determine what is the truth. But of
Demosthenes it is said that he had such great confidence in the
Grecian forces, and was so excited by the sight of the courage and
resolution of so many brave men ready to engage the enemy, that
he would by no means endure they should give any heed to oracles,
or hearken to prophecies, but gave out that he suspected even the
prophetess herself, as if she had been tampered with to speak in
favour of Philip. The Thebans he put in mind of Epaminondas, the
Athenians of Pericles, who always took their own measures and governed
their actions by reason, looking upon things of this kind as mere
pretexts for cowardice. Thus far, therefore, Demosthenes acquitted
himself like a brave man. But in the fight he did nothing honourable,
nor was his performance answerable to his speeches. For he fled,
deserting his place disgracefully, and throwing away his arms, not
ashamed, as Pytheas observed, to belie the inscription written on
his shield, in letters of gold, "With good fortune."
In the meantime Philip, in the first moment of victory, was so
transported with joy, that he grew extravagant, and going out after
he had drunk largely to visit the dead bodies, he chanted the first
words of the decree that had been passed on the motion of Demosthenes-
"The motion of Demosthenes, Demosthenes's son," dividing
it metrically into feet, and marking the beats.
But when he came to himself, and had well considered the danger
he was lately under, he could not forbear from shuddering at the
wonderful ability and power of an orator who had made him hazard
his life and empire on the issue of a few brief hours. The fame
of it also reached even to the court of Persia, and the king sent
letters to his lieutenants commanding them to supply Demosthenes
with money, and to pay every attention to him, as the only man of
all the Grecians who was able to give Philip occupation and find
employment for his forces near home, in the troubles of Greece.
This, afterwards came to the knowledge of Alexander, by certain
letters of Demosthenes which he found at Sardis, and by other papers
of the Persian officers, stating the large sums which had been given
him.
At this time, however, upon the ill-success which now happened
to the Grecians, those of the contrary faction in the commonwealth
fell foul upon Demosthenes and took the opportunity to frame several
informations and indictments against him. But the people not only
acquitted him of these accusations, but continued towards him their
former respect, and still invited him, as a man that meant well,
to take a part in public affairs. Insomuch that when the bones of
those who had been slain at Chaeronea were brought home to be solemnly
interred, Demosthenes was the man they chose to make the funeral
oration. They did not show, under the misfortunes which befell them,
a base or ignoble mind, as Theopompus writes in his exaggerated
style, but on the contrary, by the honour and respect paid to their
counsellor, they made it appear that they were noway dissatisfied
with the counsels he had given them. The speech, therefore, was
spoken by Demosthenes. But the subsequent decrees he would not allow
to be passed in his own name, but made use of those of his friends,
one after another, looking upon his own as unfortunate and inauspicious;
till at length he took courage again after the death of Philip,
who did not long outlive his victory at Chaeronea. And this, it
seems, was that which was foretold in the last verse of the oracle-
"Conquered shall weep, and conqueror perish there." Demosthenes
had secret intelligence of the death of Philip, and laying hold
of this opportunity to prepossess the people with courage and better
hopes for the future, he came into the assembly with a cheerful
countenance, pretending to have had a dream that presaged some great
good fortune for Athens; and, not long after, arrived the messengers
who brought the news of Philip's death. No sooner had the people
received it, but immediately they offered sacrifice to the gods,
and decreed that Pausanias should be presented with a crown. Demosthenes
appeared publicly in a rich dress, with a chaplet on his head, though
it were but the seventh day since the death of his daughter, as
is said by Aeschines, who upbraids him upon this account, and rails
at him as one void of natural affection towards his children. Whereas,
indeed, he rather betrays himself to be of a poor, low spirit, and
effeminate mind, if he really means to make wailings and lamentation
the only signs of a gentle and affectionate nature, and to condemn
those who bear such accidents with more temper and less passion.
For my own part, I cannot say that the behaviour of the Athenians
on this occasion was wise or honourable, to crown themselves with
garlands and to sacrifice to the gods for the death of a prince
who, in the midst of his success and victories, when they were a
conquered people, had used them with so much clemency and humanity.
For besides provoking fortune, it was a base thing, and unworthy
in itself, to make him a citizen of Athens, and pay him honours
while he lived, and yet as soon as he fell by another's hand, to
set no bounds to their jollity, to insult over him dead, and to
sing triumphant songs of victory, as if by their own valour they
had vanquished him. I must at the same time commend the behaviour
of Demosthenes, who, leaving tears and lamentations and domestic
sorrows to the women, made it his business to attend to the interests
of the commonwealth. And I think it the duty of him who would be
accounted to have a soul truly valiant, and fit for government,
that, standing always firm to the common good, and letting private
griefs and troubles find their compensation in public blessings,
he should maintain the dignity of his character and station, much
more than actors who represent the persons of kings and tyrants,
who, we see, when they either laugh or weep on the stage, follow,
not their own private inclinations, but the course consistent with
the subject and with their position. And if, moreover, when our
neighbour is in misfortune, it is not our duty to forbear offering
any consolation, but rather to say whatever may tend to cheer him,
and to invite his attention to any agreeable objects, just as we
tell people who are troubled with sore eyes to withdraw their sight
from bright and offensive colours to green, and those of a softer
mixture, from whence can a man seek, in his own case, better arguments
of consolation for afflictions in his family, than from the prosperity
of his country, by making public and domestic chances count, so
to say, together, and the better fortune of the state obscure and
conceal the less happy circumstances of the individual. I have been
induced to say so much, because I have known many readers melted
by Aeschines's language into a soft and unmanly tenderness.
But now to turn to my narrative. The cities of Greece were inspirited
once more by the efforts of Demosthenes to form a league together.
The Thebans, whom he had provided with arms, set upon their garrison,
and slew many of them; the Athenians made preparations to join their
forces with them; Demosthenes ruled supreme in the popular assembly,
and wrote letters to the Persian officers who commanded under the
king in Asia, inciting them to make war upon the Macedonian, calling
him child and simpleton. But as soon as Alexander had settled matters
in his own country, and came in person with his army into Boeotia,
down fell the courage of the Athenians, and Demosthenes was hushed;
the Thebans, deserted by them, fought by themselves, and lost their
city. After which, the people of Athens, all in distress and great
perplexity, resolved to send ambassadors to Alexander, and amongst
others, made choice of Demosthenes for one; but his heart failing
him for fear of the king's anger, he returned back from Cithaeron,
and left the embassy. In the meantime, Alexander sent to Athens,
requiring ten of their orators to be delivered up to him, as Idomeneus
and Duris have reported, but as the most and best historians say,
he demanded these eight only,- Demosthenes, Polyeuctus, Ephialtes,
Lycurgus, Moerocles, Demon, Callisthenes, and Charidemus. It was
upon this occasion that Demosthenes related to them the fable in
which the sheep are said to deliver up their dogs to the wolves;
himself and those who with him contended for the people's safety
being, in his comparison, the dogs that defended the flock, and
Alexander "the Macedonian arch-wolf." He further told
them, "As we see corn-masters sell their whole stock by a few
grains of wheat which they carry about with them in a dish, as a
sample of the rest, so you by delivering up us, who are but a few,
do at the same time unawares surrender up yourselves all together
with us so we find it related in the history of Aristobulus, the
Cassandrian. The Athenians were deliberating, and at a loss what
to do, when Demades, having agreed with the persons whom Alexander
had demanded, for five talents, undertook to go ambassador, and
to intercede with the king for them; and, whether it was that he
relied on his friendship and kindness, or that he hoped to find
him satiated, as a lion glutted with slaughter, he certainly went,
and prevailed with him both to pardon the men, and to be reconciled
to the city.
So he and his friends, when Alexander went away, were great men,
and Demosthenes was quite put aside. Yet when Agis, the Spartan,
made his insurrection, he also for a short time attempted a movement
in his favour; but he soon shrunk back again, as the Athenians would
not take any part in it, and, Agis being slain, the Lacedaemonians
were vanquished. During this time it was that the indictment against
Ctesiphon, concerning the crown, was brought to trial. The action
was commenced a little before the battle in Chaeronea, when Chaerondas
was archon, but it was not proceeded with till about ten years after,
Aristophon being then archon. Never was any public cause more celebrated
than this, alike for the fame of the orators, and for the generous
courage of the judges, who, though at that time the accusers of
Demosthenes were in the height of power, and supported by all the
favour of the Macedonians, yet would not give judgment against him,
but acquitted him so honourably, that Aeschines did not obtain the
fifth part of their suffrages on his side, so that, immediately
after, he left the city, and spent the rest of his life in teaching
rhetoric about the island of Rhodes, and upon the continent in Ionia.
It was not long after that Harpalus fled from Alexander, and came
to Athens out of Asia; knowing himself guilty of many misdeeds into
which his love of luxury had led him, and fearing the king, who
was now grown terrible even to his best friends. Yet this man had
no sooner addressed himself to the people, and delivered up his
goods, his ships, and himself to their disposal, but the other orators
of the town had their eyes quickly fixed upon his money, and came
in to his assistance, persuading the Athenians to receive and protect
their suppliant. Demosthenes at first gave advice to chase him out
of the country, and to beware lest they involved their city in a
war upon an unnecessary and unjust occasion. But some few days after,
as they were taking an account of the treasure, Harpalus, perceiving
how much he was pleased with a cup of Persian manufacture, and how
curiously he surveyed the sculpture and fashion of it, desired him
to poise it in his hand, and consider the weight of the gold. Demosthenes,
being amazed to feel how heavy it was, asked him what weight it
came to. "To you," said Harpalus, smiling, "it shall
come with twenty talents." And presently after, when night
drew on, he sent him the cup with so many talents. Harpalus, it
seems, was a person of singular skill to discern a man's covetousness
by the air of his countenance, and the look and movements of his
eyes. For Demosthenes could not resist the temptation, but admitting
the present, like an armed garrison, into the citadel of his house,
he surrendered himself up to the interest of Harpalus. The next
day, he came into the assembly with his neck swathed about with
wool and rollers, and when they called on him to rise up and speak,
he made signs as if he had lost his voice. But the wits, turning
the matter to ridicule, said that certainly the orator had been
seized that night with no other than a silver quinsy. And soon after,
the people, becoming aware of the bribery, grew angry, and would
not suffer him to speak, or make any apology for himself, but ran
him down with noise; and one man stood up, and cried out, "What,
ye men of Athens, will you not hear the cup-bearer?" So at
length they banished Harpalus out of the city; and fearing lest
they should be called to account for the treasure which the orators
had purloined, they made a strict inquiry, going from house to house;
only Callicles, the son of Arrhenidas, who was newly married, they
would not suffer to be searched, out of respects, as Theopompus
writes, to the bride, who was within.
Demosthenes resisted the inquisition, and proposed a decree to
refer the business to the court of Areopagus, and to punish those
whom that court should find guilty. But being himself one of the
first whom the court condemned, when he came to the bar, he was
fined fifty talents, and committed to prison; where, out of shame
of the crime for which he was condemned, and through the weakness
of his body, growing incapable of supporting the confinement, he
made his escape, by the carelessness of some and by the contrivance
of others of the citizens. We are told, at least, that he had not
fled far from the city when, finding that he was pursued by some
of those who had been his adversaries, he endeavoured to hide himself.
But when they called him by his name, and coming up nearer to him,
desired he would accept from them some money which they had brought
from home as a provision for his journey, and to that purpose only
had followed him, when they entreated him to take courage, and to
bear up against his misfortune, he burst out into much greater lamentation,
saying, "But how is it possible to support myself under so
heavy an affliction, since I leave a city in which I have such enemies,
as in any other it is not easy to find friends." He did not
show much fortitude in his banishment, spending his time for the
most part in Aegina and Troezen, and, with tears in his eyes, looking
towards the country of Attica. And there remain upon record some
sayings of his, little resembling those sentiments of generosity
and bravery which he used to express when he had the management
of the commonwealth. For, as he was departing out of the city, it
is reported, he lifted up his hands towards the Acropolis, and said,
"O Lady Minerva, how is it that thou takest delight in three
such fierce untractable beasts, the owl, the snake, and the people?"
The young men that came to visit and converse with him, he deterred
from meddling with state affairs, telling them, that if at first
two ways had been proposed to him, the one leading to the speaker's
stand and the assembly, the other going direct to destruction, and
he could have foreseen the many evils which attend those who deal
in public business, such as fears, envies, calumnies, and contentions,
he would certainly have taken that which led straight on to his
death.
But now happened the death of Alexander, while Demosthenes was
in this banishment which we have been speaking of. And the Grecians
were once again up in arms, encouraged by the brave attempts of
Leosthenes, who was then drawing a circumvallation about Antipater,
whom he held close besieged in Lamia. Pytheas, therefore, the orator,
and Callimedon, called the Crab, fled from Athens, and taking sides
with Antipater, went about with his friends and ambassadors to keep
the Grecians from revolting and taking part with the Athenians.
But, on the other side, Demosthenes, associating himself with the
ambassadors that came from Athens, used his utmost endeavours and
gave them his best assistance in persuading the cities to fall unanimously
upon the Macedonians, and to drive them out of Greece. Phylarchus
says that in Arcadia there happened a rencounter between Pytheas
and Demosthenes, which came at last to downright railing, while
the one pleaded for the Macedonians, and the other for the Grecians.
Pytheas said, that as we always suppose there is some disease in
the family to which they bring asses' milk, so wherever there comes
an embassy from Athens that city must needs be indisposed. And Demosthenes
answered him, retorting the comparison: "Asses' milk is brought
to restore health and the Athenians come for the safety and recovery
of the sick." With this conduct the people of Athens were so
well pleased that they decreed the recall of Demosthenes from banishment.
The decree was brought in by Demon the Paeanian, cousin to Demosthenes.
So they sent him a ship to Aegina, and he landed at the port of
Piraeus, where he was met and joyfully received by all the citizens,
not so much as an archon or a priest staying behind. And Demetrius,
the Magnesian, says that he lifted up his hands towards heaven,
and blessed this day of his happy return, as far more honourable
than that of Alcibiades; since he was recalled by his countrymen,
not through any force or constraint put upon them, but by their
own good-will and free inclinations. There remained only his pecuniary
fine, which, according to law, could not be remitted by the people.
But they found out a way to elude the law. It was a custom with
them to allow a certain quantity of silver to those who were to
furnish and adorn the altar for the sacrifice of Jupiter Soter.
This office, for that turn, they bestowed on Demosthenes, and for
the performance of it ordered him fifty talents, the very sum in
which he was condemned.
Yet it was no long time that he enjoyed his country after his return,
the attempts of the Greeks being soon all utterly defeated. For
the battle of Cranon happened in Metagitnion, in Boedromion the
garrison entered into Munychia, and in the Pyanepsion following
died Demosthenes after this manner.
Upon the report that Antipater and Craterus were coming to Athens,
Demosthenes with his party took their opportunity to escape privily
out of the city; but sentence of death was, upon the motion of Demades,
passed upon them by the people. They dispersed themselves, flying
some to one place, some to another; and Antipater sent about his
soldiers into all quarters to apprehend them. Archias was their
captain, and was thence called the exile-hunter. He was a Thurian
born, and is reported to have been an actor of tragedies, and they
say that Polus, of Aegina, the best actor of his time, was his scholar;
but Hermippus reckons Archias among the disciples of Lacritus, the
orator, and Demetrius says he spent some time with Anaximenes. This
Archias finding Hyperides the orator, Aritonicus of Marathon, and
Himeraeus, the brother of Demetrius the Phalerian, in Aegina, took
them by force out of the temple of Aecus, whither they were fled
for safety, and sent them to Antipater, then at Cleonae where they
were all put to death; and Hyperides, they say, had his tongue cut
out.
Demosthenes, he heard, had taken sanctuary at the temple of Neptune
in Calauria and, crossing over thither in some light vessels, as
soon as he had landed himself, and the Thracian spearmen that came
with him, he endeavoured to persuade Demosthenes to accompany him
to Antipater, as if he should meet with no hard usage from him.
But Demosthenes, in his sleep the night before, had a strange dream.
It seemed to him that he was acting a tragedy, and contended with
Archias for the victory; and though he acquitted himself well, and
gave good satisfaction to the spectators, yet for want of better
furniture and provision for the stage, he lost the day. And so,
while Archias was discoursing to him with many expressions of kindness,
he sate still in the same posture, and looking up steadfastly upon
him, "O Archias," said he, "I am as little affected
by your promises now as I used formerly to be by your acting."
Archias at this beginning to grow angry and to threaten him, "Now,"
said Demosthenes, "you speak like the genuine Macedonian oracle;
before you were but acting a part. Therefore forbear only a little,
while I write a word or two home to my family." Having thus
spoken, he withdrew into the temple and taking a scroll as if he
meant to write, he put the reed into his mouth, and biting it as
he was wont to do when he was thoughtful or writing, he held it
there some time. Then he bowed down his head and covered it. The
soldiers that stood at the door, supposing all this to proceed from
want of courage and fear of death, in derision called him effeminate,
and faint-hearted, and coward. And Archias drawing near, desired
him to rise up, and repeating the same kind of thing he had spoken
before, he once more promised to make his peace with Antipater.
But Demosthenes, perceiving that now the poison had pierced, and
seized his vitals, uncovered his head, and fixing his eyes upon
Archias, "Now," said he, "as soon as you please,
you may commence the part of Creon in the tragedy, and cast out
this body of mine unburied. But, O gracious Neptune, I, for my part
while I am yet alive will rise up and depart out of this sacred
place; though Antipater and the Macedonians have not left so much
as thy temple unpolluted." After he had thus spoken and desired
to be held up, because already he began to tremble and stagger,
as he was going forward, and passing by the altar, he fell down,
and with a groan gave up the ghost.
Ariston says that he took the poison out of a reed, as we have
shown before. But Pappus, a certain historian whose history was
recovered by Hermippus, says, that as he fell near the altar, there
was found in his scroll this beginning only of a letter, and nothing
more, "Demosthenes to Antipater." And that when his sudden
death was much wondered at, the Thracians who guarded the doors
reported that he took the poison into his hand out of a rag, and
put it in his mouth, and that they imagined it had been gold which
he swallowed, but the maid that served him, being examined by the
followers of Archias, affirmed that he had worn it in a bracelet
for a long time, as an amulet. And Eratosthenes also says that he
kept the poison in a hollow ring, and that that ring was the bracelet
which he wore about his arm. There are various other statements
made by the many authors who have related the story, but there is
no need to enter into their discrepancies; yet I must not omit what
is said by Demochares the relation of Demosthenes, who is of opinion
it was not by the help of poison that he met with so sudden and
so easy a death, but that by the singular favour and providence
of the gods he was thus rescued from the cruelty of the Macedonians.
He died on the sixteenth of Pyanepsion, the most sad and solemn
day of the Thesmophoria, which the women observe by fasting in the
temple of the goddess.
Soon after his death, the people of Athens bestowed on him such
honours as he had deserved. They erected his statue of brass; they
decreed that the eldest of his family should be maintained in the
Prytaneum; and on the base of his statue was engraven the famous
inscription-
"Had you for Greece been strong, as wise you were,
The Macedonian had not conquered her." For it is simply ridiculous
to say, as some have related, that Demosthenes made these verses
himself in Calauria, as he was about to take the poison.
A little before he went to Athens, the following incident was said
to have happened. A soldier, being summoned to appear before his
superior officer, and answer to an accusation brought against him,
put that little gold which he had into the hands of Demosthenes's
statue. The fingers of this statue were folded one within another,
and near it grew a small plane-tree, from which many leaves, either
accidently blown thither by the wind, or placed so on purpose by
the man himself, falling together and lying round about the gold,
concealed it for a long time. In the end, the soldier returned and
found his treasure entire, and the fame of this incident was spread
abroad. And many ingenious persons of the city competed with each
other, on this occasion, to vindicate the integrity of Demosthenes
in several epigrams which they made on the subject.
As for Demades, he did not long enjoy the new honours he now came
in for, divine vengeance for the death of Demosthenes pursuing him
into Macedonia, where he was justly put to death by those whom he
had basely flattered. They were weary of him before, but at this
time the guilt he lay under was manifest and undeniable. For some
of his letters were intercepted, in which he had encouraged Perdiccas
to fall upon Macedonia, and to save the Grecians, who, he said,
hung only by an old rotten thread meaning Antipater. Of this he
was accused by Dinarchus, the Corinthian, and Cassander was so enraged,
that he first slew his son in his bosom, and then gave orders to
execute him; who might now at last, by his own extreme misfortunes,
learn the lesson that traitors who made sale of their country sell
themselves first; a truth which Demosthenes had often foretold him,
and he would never believe. Thus, Sosius, you have the life of Demosthenes
from such accounts as we have either read or heard concerning him.
THE END
|