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free from sorrow. Let parents, then, bequeath to their children not a heap of
riches, but the spirit of reverence. We, indeed, fancy that they will inherit
reverence from us, if we rebuke them when they show a want of reverence.
But this quality is not really imparted to them by the present style of
admonition, which only tells them that the young ought always to be
reverential. A sensible legislator will rather exhort the elders to reverence the
younger, and above all to take heed that no young man sees or hears one of
themselves doing or saying anything disgraceful; for where old men have no
shame, there young men will most certainly be devoid of reverence. The best
way of training the young is to train yourself at the same time; not to
admonish them, but to be always carrying out your own admonitions in
practice. He who honours his kindred, and reveres those who share in the
same Gods and are of the same blood and family, may fairly expect that the
Gods who preside over generation will be propitious to him, and will quicken
his seed. And he who deems the services which his friends and acquaintances
do for him, greater and more important than they themselves deem them, and
his own favours to them less than theirs to him, will have their good–will in
the intercourse of life. And surely in his relations to the state and his fellow
citizens, he is by far the best, who rather than the Olympic or any other
victory of peace or war, desires to win the palm of obedience to the laws of
his country, and who, of all mankind, is the person reputed to have obeyed
them best through life. In his relations to strangers, a man should consider that
a contract is a most holy thing, and that all concerns and wrongs of strangers
are more directly dependent on the protection of God, than wrongs done to
citizens; for the stranger, having no kindred and friends, is more to be pitied
by Gods and men. Wherefore, also, he who is most able to avenge him is
most zealous in his cause; and he who is most able is the genius and the god
of the stranger, who follow in the train of Zeus, the god of strangers. And for
this reason, he who has a spark of caution in him, will do his best to pass
through life without sinning against the stranger. And of offences committed,
whether against strangers or fellow–countrymen, that against suppliants is the
greatest. For the god who witnessed to the agreement made with the
suppliant, becomes in a special manner the guardian of the sufferer; and he
will certainly not suffer unavenged.
Thus we have fairly described the manner in which a man is to act about
his parents, and himself, and his own affairs; and in relation to the state, and
his friends, and kindred, both in what concerns his own countrymen, and in
what concerns the stranger. We will now consider what manner of man he
must be who would best pass through life in respect of those other things
which are not matters of law, but of praise and blame only; in which praise
and blame educate a man, and make him more tractable and amenable to the
1415
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Buch The Complete Plato"
The Complete Plato
- Titel
- The Complete Plato
- Autor
- Plato
- Datum
- ~347 B.C.
- Sprache
- englisch
- Lizenz
- PD
- Abmessungen
- 21.0 x 29.7 cm
- Seiten
- 1612
- Schlagwörter
- Philosophy, Antique, Philosophie, Antike, Dialogues, Metaphysik, Metaphysics, Ideologie, Ideology, Englisch
- Kategorien
- Geisteswissenschaften
- International