Plato, Laws (English) (XML Header) [genre: prose] [word count] [lemma count] [Pl. Leg.]. | ||
<<Pl. Leg. 676b | Pl. Leg. 678d (Greek) | >>Pl. Leg. 680d |
We do say so.
AthenianShall we, then, state that, at the time when the destruction took place, human affairs were in this position: there was fearful and widespread desolation over a vast tract of land; most of the animals were destroyed, and the few herds of oxen and flocks of goats that happened to survive afforded at the first but scanty sustenance
678ato their herdsmen?CliniasYes.
AthenianAnd as to the matters with which our present discourse is concerned—States and statecraft and legislation,—do we think they could have retained any memory whatsoever, broadly speaking, of such matters?
CliniasBy no means.
AthenianSo from those men, in that situation, there has sprung the whole of our present order—States and constitutions, arts and laws, with a great amount both of evil and of good?
CliniasHow do you mean?
678bAthenianDo we imagine, my good Sir, that the men of that age, who were unversed in the ways of city life—many of them noble, many ignoble,—were perfect either in virtue or in vice?
CliniasWell said! We grasp your meaning.
AthenianAs time went on and our race multiplied, all things advanced—did they not?—to the condition which now exists.
CliniasVery true.
AthenianBut, in all probability, they advanced, not all at once, but by small degrees, during an immense space of time.
678cCliniasYes, that is most likely.
AthenianFor they all, I fancy, felt as it were still ringing in their ears a dread of going down from the highlands to the plains.
CliniasOf course.
AthenianAnd because there were so few of them round about in those days, were they not delighted to see one another, but for the fact that means of transport, whereby they might visit one another by sea or land, had practically all perished along with the arts? Hence intercourse, I imagine, was not very easy.
678dFor iron and bronze and all the metals in the mines had been flooded and had disappeared; so that it was extremely difficult to extract fresh metal; and there was a dearth, in consequence, of felled timber. For even if there happened to be some few tools still left somewhere on the mountains, these were soon worn out, and they could not be replaced by others until men had rediscovered the art of metal-working.CliniasThey could not.
AthenianNow, how many generations, do we suppose, had passed before this took place?
678eCliniasA great many, evidently.
AthenianAnd during all this period, or even longer, all the arts that require iron and bronze and all such metals must have remained in abeyance?
CliniasOf course.
AthenianMoreover, civil strife and war also disappeared during that time, and that for many reasons.
CliniasHow so?
AthenianIn the first place, owing to their desolate state, they were kindly disposed and friendly towards one another; and secondly, they had no need to quarrel about food.
679aFor they had no lack of flocks and herds (except perhaps some of them at the outset), and in that age these were what men mostly lived on: thus they were well supplied with milk and meat, and they procured further supplies of food, both excellent and plentiful, by hunting. They were also well furnished with clothing and coverlets and houses, and with vessels for cooking and other kinds; for no iron is required for the arts of moulding and weaving, 679bwhich two arts God gave to men to furnish them with all these necessaries, in order that the human race might have means of sprouting and increase whenever it should fall into such a state of distress. Consequently, they were not excessively poor, nor were they constrained by stress of poverty to quarrel one with another; and, on the other hand, since they were without gold and silver, they could never have become rich. Now a community which has no communion with either poverty or wealth is generally the one in which the noblest characters will be formed; 679cfor in it there is no place for the growth of insolence and injustice, of rivalries and jealousies. So these men were good, both for these reasons and because of their simple-mindedness, as it is called; for, being simple-minded, when they heard things called bad or good, they took what was said for gospel-truth and believed it. For none of them had the shrewdness of the modern man to suspect a falsehood; but they accepted as true the statements made about gods and men, and ordered their lives by them. Thus they were entirely of the character we have just described. 679dCliniasCertainly Megillus and I quite agree with what you say.
AthenianAnd shall we not say that people living in this fashion for many generations were bound to be unskilled, as compared with either the antediluvians or the men of today, and ignorant of arts in general and especially of the arts of war as now practised by land and sea, including those warlike arts which, disguised under the names of law-suits and factions, are peculiar to cities, contrived as they are with every device of word and deed to inflict mutual hurt and injury;
Plato, Laws (English) (XML Header) [genre: prose] [word count] [lemma count] [Pl. Leg.]. | ||
<<Pl. Leg. 676b | Pl. Leg. 678d (Greek) | >>Pl. Leg. 680d |