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best men everywhere to keep taverns for a time, or carry on retail trade, or do
anything of that sort; or if, in consequence of some fate or necessity, the best
women were compelled to follow similar callings, then we should know how
agreeable and pleasant all these things are; and if all such occupations were
managed on incorrupt principles, they would be honoured as we honour a
mother or a nurse. But now that a man goes to desert places and builds bouses
which can only be reached be long journeys, for the sake of retail trade, and
receives strangers who are in need at the welcome resting–place, and gives
them peace and calm when they are tossed by the storm, or cool shade in the
heat; and then instead of behaving to them as friends, and showing the duties
of hospitality to his guests, treats them as enemies and captives who are at his
mercy, and will not release them until they have paid the most unjust,
abominable, and extortionate ransom—these are the sort of practices, and foul
evils they are, which cast a reproach upon the succour of adversity. And the
legislator ought always to be devising a remedy for evils of this nature. There
is an ancient saying, which is also a true one—”To fight against two
opponents is a difficult thing,” as is seen in diseases and in many other cases.
And in this case also the war is against two enemies—wealth and poverty;
one of whom corrupts the soul of man with luxury, while the other drives him
by pain into utter shamelessness. What remedy can a city of sense find against
this disease? In the first place, they must have as few retail traders as possible;
and in the second place, they must assign the occupation to that class of men
whose corruption will be the least injury to the state; and in the third place,
they must devise some way whereby the followers of these occupations
themselves will not readily fall into habits of unbridled shamelessness and
meanness.
After this preface let our law run as follows, and may fortune favour us:—
No landowner among the Magnetes, whose city the God is restoring and
resettling—no one, that is, of the 5040 families, shall become a retail trader
either voluntarily or involuntarily; neither shall he be a merchant, or do any
service for private persons unless they equally serve him, except for his father
or his mother, and their fathers and mothers; and in general for his elders who
are freemen, and whom he serves as a freeman. Now it is difficult to
determine accurately the things which are worthy or unworthy of a freeman,
but let those who have obtained the prize of virtue give judgment about them
in accordance with their feelings of right and wrong. He who in any way
shares in the illiberality of retail trades may be indicted for dishonouring his
race by any one who likes, before those who have been judged to be the first
in virtue; and if he appear to throw dirt upon his father’s house by an
unworthy occupation, let him be imprisoned for a year and abstain from that
sort of thing; and if he repeat the offence, for two years; and every time that
1570
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book The Complete Plato"
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