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the case stands, the condition of orphans with us not different from the case of
those who have father, though in regard to honour and dishonour, and the
attention given to them, the two are not usually placed upon a level.
Wherefore, touching the legislation about orphans, the law speaks in serious
accents, both of persuasion and threatening, and such a threat as the following
will be by no means out of place:—He who is the guardian of an orphan of
either sex, and he among the guardians of the law to whom the
superintendence of this guardian has been assigned, shall love the unfortunate
orphan as though he were his own child, and he shall be as careful and
diligent in the management of his possessions as he would be if they were his
own, or even more careful and dilligent. Let every one who has the care of an
orphan observe this law. But any one who acts contrary to the law on these
matters, if he be a guardian of the child, may be fined by a magistrate, or, if
he be himself a magistrate, the guardian may bring him before the court of
select judges, and punish him, if convicted, by exacting a fine of double the
amount of that inflicted by the court. And if a guardian appears to the
relations of the orphan, or to any other citizen, to act negligently or
dishonestly, let them bring him before the same court, and whatever damages
are given against him, let him pay fourfold, and let half belong to the orphan
and half to him who procured the conviction. If any orphan arrives at years of
discretion, and thinks that he has been ill–used by his guardians, let him
within five years of the expiration of the guardianship be allowed to bring
them to trial; and if any of them be convicted, the court shall determine what
he shall pay or suffer. And if magistrate shall appear to have wronged the
orphan by neglect, and he be convicted, let the court determine what he shall
suffer or pay to the orphan, and if there be dishonesty in addition to neglect,
besides paying the fine, let him be deposed from his office of guardian of the
law, and let the state appoint another guardian of the law for the city and for
the country in his room.
Greater differences than there ought to be sometimes arise between fathers
and sons, on the part either of fathers who will be of opinion that the
legislator should enact that they may, if they wish, lawfully renounce their son
by the proclamation of a herald in the face of the world, or of sons who think
that they should be allowed to indict their fathers on the charge of imbecility
when they are disabled by disease or old age. These things only happen, as a
matter of fact, where the natures of men are utterly bad; for where only half is
bad, as, for example, if the father be not bad, but the son be bad, or
conversely, no great calamity is the result of such an amount of hatred as this.
In another state, a son disowned by his father would not of necessity cease to
be a citizen, but in our state, of which these are to be the laws, the disinherited
must necessarily emigrate into another country, for no addition can be made
1578
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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