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who may first happen to meet with him, kill him with impunity, or bind and
deliver him to those among the judges of the case who are magistrates, that
they may put him to death. And let the prosecutor demand surety of him
whom he prosecutes; three sureties sufficient in the opinion of the magistrates
who try the cause shall be provided by him, and they shall undertake to
produce him at the trial. But if he be unwilling or unable to provide sureties,
then the magistrates shall take him and keep him in bonds, and produce him at
the day of trial.
If a man do not commit a murder with his own hand, but contrives the
death of another, and is the author of the deed in intention and design, and he
continues to dwell in the city, having his soul not pure of the guilt of murder,
let him be tried in the same way, except in what relates to the sureties; and
also, if he be found guilty, his body after execution may have burial in his
native land, but in all other respects his case shall be as the former; and
whether a stranger shall kill a citizen, or a citizen a stranger, or a slave a
slave, there shall be no difference as touching murder by one’s own hand or
by contrivance, except in the matter of sureties; and these, as has been said,
shall be required of the actual murderer only, and he who brings the
accusation shall bind them over at the time. If a slave be convicted of slaying
a freeman voluntarily, either by his own hand or by contrivance, let the public
executioner take him in the direction of the sepulchre, to a place whence he
can see the tomb of the dead man, and inflict upon him as many stripes as the
person who caught him orders, and if he survive, let him put him to death.
And if any one kills a slave who has done no wrong, because he is afraid that
he may inform of some base and evil deeds of his own, or for any similar
reason, in such a case let him pay the penalty of murder, as he would have
done if he had slain a citizen. There are things about which it is terrible and
unpleasant to legislate, but impossible not to legislate. If, for example, there
should be murders of kinsmen, either perpetrated by the hands of kinsmen, or
by their contrivance, voluntary and purely malicious, which most often
happen in ill–regulated and ill–educated states, and may perhaps occur even
in a country where a man would not expect to find them, we must repeat once
more the tale which we narrated a little while ago, in the hope that he who
hears us will be the more disposed to abstain voluntarily on these grounds
from murders which are utterly abominable. For the myth, or saying, or
whatever we ought to call it, has been plainly set forth by priests of old; they
have pronounced that the justice which guards and avenges the blood of
kindred, follows the law of retaliation, and ordains that he who has done any
murderous act should of necessity suffer that which he has done. He who has
slain a father shall himself be slain at some time or other by his children—if a
mother, he shall of necessity take a woman’s nature, and lose his life at the
1530
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The Complete Plato
- Title
- The Complete Plato
- Author
- Plato
- Date
- ~347 B.C.
- Language
- English
- License
- PD
- Size
- 21.0 x 29.7 cm
- Pages
- 1612
- Keywords
- Philosophy, Antique, Philosophie, Antike, Dialogues, Metaphysik, Metaphysics, Ideologie, Ideology, Englisch
- Categories
- Geisteswissenschaften
- International