<TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:py="http://codespeak.net/lxml/objectify/pytype" py:pytype="TREE"><text xml:lang="eng"><body><div type="translation" xml:lang="eng" n="urn:cts:greekLit:tlg0007.tlg097.perseus-eng3"><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="12"><p rend="indent">When Solon,<note resp="editor" place="unspecified" anchored="true"><title rend="italic">Cf. Life of Solon</title>, xiv. (85 d).</note> speaking of principles of government, said that equality does not create sedition, he
					was thought to be playing up too much to the crowd
					by introducing an arithmetical proportion, a democratic principle,<note resp="editor" place="unspecified" anchored="true"><title rend="italic" xml:lang="lat">Cf. Moralia</title>, 719 b, 643 c: that is, arithmetical, instead of what Aristotle terms proportionate equality.</note> instead of the sound geometrical
					proportion.<note resp="editor" place="unspecified" anchored="true"><foreign xml:lang="lat">Cf.</foreign>, for example, Plato, <title rend="italic">Gorgias</title>, 508 a.</note> As for a man who gives advice to
					brothers in the matter of a family estate after the
					manner of Plato’s<note resp="editor" place="unspecified" anchored="true"><title rend="italic">Republic</title>, 462 c; <title rend="italic" xml:lang="lat">cf. Moralia</title>, 140 d, 767 d, and Aristotle’s attempted refutation, <title rend="italic">Politics</title>, ii. 1. 8 (1261 b 16).</note> advice to the citizens of his state,
					to abolish, if possible, the notion of <q>mine</q> and
					<q>not mine,</q> but if he cannot do this, to cherish
					equality and cling to it, and thus lays a fair and
					abiding<note resp="editor" place="unspecified" anchored="true">Perhaps with a reference to Euripides, <title rend="italic">Phoenissae</title>, 538 (cited 481 a, <foreign xml:lang="lat">supra</foreign>).</note> foundation of concord and peace, let him
					also make use of eminent precedents, such as that
					reply of Pittacus to the king of Lydia<note resp="editor" place="unspecified" anchored="true">Croesus: <foreign xml:lang="lat">cf.</foreign> Diogenes Laertius, i. 75.</note> who inquired
					if Pittacus had money: <q>Twice as much,</q> said he,
					<q>as I would wish, now that my brother is dead.</q>
					But since it is not only the getting of money and the
					losing of it that makes <q>less grow hostile to more,</q>
            	<note resp="editor" place="unspecified" anchored="true">Euripides, <title rend="italic">Phoenissae</title>, 539: <foreign xml:lang="grc">τῷ πλέονι δ᾽αἰεὶ πολέμιον καθίσταται</foreign>.</note>
					but in general, as Plato<note resp="editor" place="unspecified" anchored="true"><title rend="italic">Republic</title>, 547 a.</note> says, in inequality movement
					is produced and in equality rest and repose; thus all
					
					<pb xml:id="v.6.p.283"/>
					
					manner of inequality is dangerous as likely to foster
					brothers’ quarrels, and though it is impossible for
					them to be equal and on the same footing in all respects (for on the one hand our natures at the very
					beginning make an unequal apportionment, and then
					later on our varying fortunes beget envies and
					jealousies, the most shameful diseases and baneful
					plagues,<note resp="editor" place="unspecified" anchored="true"><foreign xml:lang="lat">Cf.</foreign>, for example, 468 b, <foreign xml:lang="lat">supra</foreign>.</note> ruinous not only for private houses, but for
					whole states as well); against these inequalities we
					must be on our guard and must cure them, if they
					arise. One would therefore advise a brother, in the
					first place, to make his brothers partners in those
					respects in which he is considered to be superior,
					adorning them with a portion of his repute and adopting them into his friendships, and if he is a cleverer
					speaker than they, to make his eloquence available
					for their use as though it were no less theirs than his;
					in the next place, to make manifest to them neither
					haughtiness nor disdain, but rather, by deferring to
					them and conforming his character to theirs, to make
					his superiority secure from envy and to equalize, so
					far as this is attainable, the disparity of his fortune
					by his moderation of spirit. Lucullus,<note resp="editor" place="unspecified" anchored="true"><title rend="italic">Cf. Life of Lucullus</title>, i. (492 b).</note> for instance,
					refused to hold office before his brother, older though
					he was, but forwent his own proper time for candidature and awaited his brother’s. And Polydeuces<note resp="editor" place="unspecified" anchored="true">Quoted by Stobaeus, vol. iv. p. 659 ed. Hense, joined with the Polydeuces quotation in 483 c, <foreign xml:lang="lat">supra</foreign>.</note>
					refused to become even a god by himself, but chose
					rather to become a demigod with his brother and to
					share his mortal portion upon the condition of yielding
					to Castor part of his own immortality.
				</p><p rend="indent"><q>But you, fortunate man,</q> one might say, <q>are so
						
						<pb xml:id="v.6.p.285"/>
						
						situated that, without in the least diminishing your
						present blessings, you can make another an equal
						sharer in them and give him a portion of your
						adornment so that he may enjoy the radiance, as it
						were, of your reputation or excellence or prosperity.</q>
					Just so did Plato make his brothers famous by
					introducing them into the fairest of his writings,
					Glaucon and Adeimantus into the <title rend="italic">Republic</title>, Antiphon the youngest into the <title rend="italic">Parmenides</title>. 
				</p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="13"><p rend="indent">And
					further, just as there exist inequalities in the natures
					and the fortunes of brothers, so it is impossible that
					the one brother should excel at all points and in all
					ways. They say that the elements come into being
					from one substance, yet possess the most opposite
					faculties; but of two brothers sprung from one
					mother and father, no one ever saw the one, like
					the wise man of the Stoics,<note resp="editor" place="unspecified" anchored="true"><foreign xml:lang="lat">Cf.</foreign> 472 a, <foreign xml:lang="lat">supra</foreign>, and the note; this Stoic paradox is parodied at length by Horace in <title rend="italic">Satires</title>, i. 3.</note> at once handsome,
					gracious, liberal, eminent, rich, eloquent, learned,
					philanthropic, and the other ugly, graceless, illiberal,
					dishonoured, needy, a poor speaker, unlearned, misanthropic. Yet somehow or other there inheres, in
					even the more disreputable and humble creatures,
					some portion of grace or faculty or natural aptitude
					for some good thing:
					<quote rend="blockquote"><l>As among urchin’s foot and rough rest-harrow<note resp="editor" place="unspecified" anchored="true">A field shrub with tough roots, also called <q>cammock.</q>
                     </note>
						            </l><l>There grow the blossoms of soft snow-drops.<note resp="editor" place="unspecified" anchored="true">Bergk, <title rend="italic">Poet. Lyr. Graec.</title>, iii. p. 689; Edmonds, <title rend="italic">Elegy and Iambus</title>, ii. p. 282; quoted also in <title rend="italic" xml:lang="lat">Moralia</title>, 44 e, 621 e.</note>
                  </l></quote>
					Therefore he who appears to have the better in other
					respects, if he does not try to curtail or conceal these
					
					<pb xml:id="v.6.p.287"/>
					
					points of vantage in his brother or thrust him, as
					though in athletic competitions, from the first places
					always, but yields in his turn and reveals that his
					brother is better and more useful in many respects,
					by thus continually removing all ground for envy, fuel
					for fire, as it were, will quench the envy, or rather
					will not allow it to spring up or begin at all. And
					he who continually makes his brother a helper and
					adviser in matters in which he himself is supposed to
					be superior, as in law-suits, being himself a barrister;
					in the conduct of office, himself a politician; in
					practical affairs, himself being fond of such-in brief,
					he that permits his brother to be left out of no task
					that is worthy of notice and would bring honour, but
					makes him a sharer in all honourable enterprises and
					employs him when present, waits for him when absent,
					and, in general, by showing that his brother is no less
					a man of affairs than himself, but merely more inclined to shrink from fame and power-he deprives
					himself of nothing, but adds a great deal to his
					brother.
				</p></div></div></body></text></TEI>