Page - 1575 - in The Complete Plato
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And if a man dying by some unexpected fate leaves daughters behind him,
let him pardon the legislator if he gives them in marriage, he have a regard
only to two out of three conditions—nearness of kin and the preservation of
the lot, and omits the third condition, which a father would naturally consider,
for he would choose out of all the citizens a son for himself, and a husband
for his daughter, with a view to his character and disposition—the father, say,
shall forgive the legislator if he disregards this, which to him is an impossible
consideration. Let the law about these matters where practicable be as
follows:—If a man dies without making a will, and leaves behind him
daughters, let his brother, being the son of the same father or of the same
mother, having no lot, marry the daughter and have the lot of the dead man.
And if he have no brother, but only a brother’s son, in like manner let them
marry, if they be of a suitable age; and if there be not even a brother’s son, but
only the son of a sister, let them do likewise, and so in the fourth degree, if
there be only the testator’s father’s brother, or in the fifth degree, his father’s
brother’s son, or in the sixth degree, the child of his father’s sister. Let
kindred be always reckoned in this way: if a person leaves daughters the
relationship shall proceed upwards through brothers and sisters, and brothers’
and sisters’ children, and first the males shall come, and after them the
females in the same family. The judge shall consider and determine the
suitableness or unsuitableness of age in marriage; he shall make an inspection
of the males naked, and of the women naked down to the navel. And if there
be a lack of kinsmen in a family extending to grandchildren of a brother, or to
the grandchildren of a grandfather’s children, the maiden may choose with the
consent of her guardians any one of the citizens who is willing and whom she
wills, and he shall be the heir of the dead man, and the husband of his
daughter. Circumstances vary, and there may sometimes be a still greater lack
of relations within the limits of the state; and if any maiden has no kindred
living in the city, and there is some one who has been sent out to a colony, and
she is disposed to make him the heir of her father’s possessions, if he be
indeed of her kindred, let him proceed to take the lot according to the
regulation of the law; but if he be not of her kindred, she having no kinsmen
within the city, and he be chosen by the daughter of the dead man, and
empowered to marry by the guardians, let him return home and take the lot of
him who died intestate. And if a man has no children, either male or female,
and dies without making a will, let the previous law in general hold; and let a
man and a woman go forth from the family and share the deserted house, and
let the lot belong absolutely to them; and let the heiress in the first degree be a
sister, and in a second degree a daughter of a brother, and in the third, a
daughter of a sister, in the fourth degree the sister of a father, and in the fifth
degree the daughter of a father’s brother, and in a sixth degree of a father’s
sister; and these shall dwell with their male kinsmen, according to the degree
1575
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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