登陆注册
15427600000032

第32章 BOOK IV(1)

Athenian Stranger.And now,what will this city be?I do not mean to ask what is or will hereafter be the name of the place;that may be determined by the accident of locality or of the original settlement-a river or fountain,or some local deity may give the sanction of a name to the newly-founded city;but I do want to know what the situation is,whether maritime or inland.

Cleinias.I should imagine,Stranger,that the city of which we are speaking is about eighty stadia distant from the sea.

Ath.And are there harbours on the seaboard?

Cle.Excellent harbours,Stranger;there could not be better.

Ath.Alas!what a prospect!And is the surrounding country productive,or in need of importations?

Cle.Hardly in need of anything.

Ath.And is there any neighbouring State?

Cle.None whatever,and that is the reason for selecting the place;in days of old,there was a migration of the inhabitants,and the region has been deserted from time immemorial.

Ath.And has the place a fair proportion of hill,and plain,and wood?

Cle.Like the rest of Crete in that.

Ath.You mean to say that there is more rock than plain?

Cle.Exactly.

Ath.Then there is some hope that your citizens may be virtuous:had you been on the sea,and well provided with harbours,and an importing rather than a producing country,some mighty saviour would have been needed,and lawgivers more than mortal,if you were ever to have a chance of preserving your state from degeneracy and discordance of manners.But there is comfort in the eighty stadia;although the sea is too near,especially if,as you say,the harbours are so good.

Still we may be content.The sea is pleasant enough as a daily companion,but has indeed also a bitter and brackish quality;filling the streets with merchants and shopkeepers,and begetting in the souls of men uncertain and unfaithful ways-making the state unfriendly and unfaithful both to her own citizens,and also to other nations.There is a consolation,therefore,in the country producing all things at home;and yet,owing to the ruggedness of the soil,not providing anything in great abundance.Had there been abundance,there might have been a great export trade,and a great return of gold and silver;which,as we may safely affirm,has the most fatal results on a State whose aim is the attainment of just and noble sentiments:this was said by us,if you remember,in the previous discussion.

Cle.I remember,and am of opinion that we both were and are in the right.

Ath.Well,but let me ask,how is the country supplied with timber for ship-building?

Cle.There is no fir of any consequence,nor pine,and not much cypress;and you will find very little stone-pine or plane-wood,which shipwrights always require for the interior of ships.

Ath.These are also natural advantages.

Cle.Why so?

Ath.Because no city ought to be easily able to imitate its enemies in what is mischievous.

Cle.How does that bear upon any of the matters of which we have been speaking?

Ath.Remember,my good friend,what I said at first about the Cretan laws,that they look to one thing only,and this,as you both agreed,was war;and I replied that such laws,in so far as they tended to promote virtue,were good;but in that they regarded a part only,and not the whole of virtue,I disapproved of them.And now I hope that you in your turn will follow and watch me if I legislate with a view to anything but virtue,or with a view to a part of virtue only.For I consider that the true lawgiver,like an archer,aims only at that on which some eternal beauty is always attending,and dismisses everything else,whether wealth or any other benefit,when separated from virtue.I was saying that the imitation of enemies was a bad thing;and I was thinking of a case in which a maritime people are harassed by enemies,as the Athenians were by Minos (I do not speak from any desire to recall past grievances);but he,as we know,was a great naval potentate,who compelled the inhabitants of Attica to pay him a cruel tribute;and in those days they had no ships of war as they now have,nor was the country filled with ship-timber,and therefore they could not readily build them.Hence they could not learn how to imitate their enemy at sea,and in this way,becoming sailors themselves,directly repel their enemies.Better for them to have lost many times over the seven youths,than that heavy-armed and stationary troops should have been turned into sailors,and accustomed to be often leaping on shore,and again to come running back to their ships;or should have fancied that there was no disgrace in not awaiting the attack of an enemy and dying boldly;and that there were good reasons,and plenty of them,for a man throwing away his arms,and betaking himself to flight-which is not dishonourable,as people say,at certain times.This is the language of naval warfare,and is anything but worthy of extraordinary praise.For we should not teach bad habits,least of all to the best part of the citizens.You may learn the evil of such a practice from Homer,by whom Odysseus is introduced,rebuking Agamemnon because he desires to draw down the ships to the sea at a time when the Achaeans are hard pressed by the Trojans-he gets angry with him,and says:

Who,at a time when the battle is in full cry,biddest to drag the well-benched ships into the sea,that the prayers of the Trojans may be accomplished yet more,and high ruin falls upon us.For the Achaeans will not maintain the battle,when the ships are drawn into the sea,but they will look behind and will cease from strife;in that the counsel which you give will prove injurious.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 落剑桃花

    落剑桃花

    一个身背父母之仇的少年,在巨大的压力下,准备投河自尽,就在这个时候一位神秘的高手将这个少年救起,一段时间相处后,少年在这高手的规劝与安慰下,终于重新振作了起来,也从这个时候开始,少年在心底萌生起行侠仗义,挽救江湖的志向,也算是对这恩人高手的无形回报;当结实一些朋友后,少年便踏上了行侠仗义于江湖的征程,恰巧此时的沈州城内的沈府桃园无缘无故被恶人所占,同时,一些仗义的江湖侠士为此打抱不平却尽数折命于此,一时间官府也是退避三分,闹得沈州人心惶惶,且有扩张的趋势,一番了解后,这个少年便驻足了沈府开始了与恶人的斗智斗勇,当自己一步一步深入这诡秘的沈府桃园后,少年却发现自己身边的人竟也与这桃园背后神秘恶人有关,为了心的方向,少年毅然决然的决定坚持到最后,经过无数的磨难,内心的纠结,在痛苦中成长的他,终于来到了这迷局的尽头,可是这最终的结果却是并非自己内心的所想所愿……到底是怎样的结局使他这般呢?一切尽在落剑桃花。
  • 邂逅鱼山

    邂逅鱼山

    千年前,曹植邂逅了鱼山;百年前,黄河邂逅了鱼山。那十年,发生了什么?如今,你准备好了吗?一群不同身份的人,在此相遇!(内容纯属虚构,若有疑问,请联系我。)
  • 千年眺望

    千年眺望

    她与他相爱,在千年之前。误信小人的谗言,让她自刎在他的刀下。那世之后,他轮回百世,她千年如一日。守在湖边的她,看尽他在人世间的生活,心痛得无以复加。终于,她得一世轮回。相遇的两人只有部分的记忆,熟悉又陌生,心中的感觉是那么的微妙;日渐的相处,记忆重回脑海,两人又该如何收场?阴阳相隔的千年痴守能否换来同在人间的一世相守?
  • 墨少溺宠:娇妻狠难哄

    墨少溺宠:娇妻狠难哄

    她是凌霜集团唯一继承人!她是服装界冉冉升起的一颗新星!她是计算机界最神秘的黑客大神!她本是天之骄女,却一不小心栽在渣男的身上,当一天生活在童话里的小公主终于觉醒,她发誓,从此再无公主,唯有女王!某人一不小心被偷了心,于是小气的掐掉桃花朵朵,一点一点沁入她的生活,这样,心就是他的了吧?五年的时间,她脱胎换骨,锋芒毕现,狡诈是她的基本功!九年的时间,他运筹帷幄,算尽人心,狠辣是他的代名词!她与他,当腹黑遇上不要脸,好吧,还是不要脸更胜一筹。他追,她逃,她躲,他寻。终于无处可逃,避无可避,他步步紧逼,邪魅一笑:“老婆,跟我回家吧。”【既然你把我的心给偷走了,那我拿走你的,也不算犯规吧?】
  • 翻身为主:坏坏老公别嚣张

    翻身为主:坏坏老公别嚣张

    安似水从小就一直绞尽脑汁想怎么样才能把一起长大的竹马吃干抹尽,等啊等终于被她逮到了一个机会。妹妹,妹你妹啊,睡都睡,还说只把她当妹妹,好,看她安似水怎么整死他,哼哼。当许流年反应过来,其实他是爱着那个小女人的,可是,什么,不爱他了要跟别人结婚,那怎么可以,都是他的女人了,怎么可以嫁给他人,从始至终这个成语她懂不懂,不懂没关系,那他好好教教她。且看冰山男神如何坑蒙拐骗,耍赖,卖萌,十八般武艺轮番上阵追回小娇妻。
  • 耀星传奇

    耀星传奇

    曾经的神话殒落,轮回转世他又将遇到怎么样的际遇。在这个耀星为王的世界里,他又将如何书写属于自己的传奇。爱恨情仇,生死离别,兄弟情深羁羁绊绊,轮轮回回永不休止。
  • 你要知道我爱你

    你要知道我爱你

    “你要知道,这世间除了我,谁都不能再喜欢你!不能再追求你!!”林奕霸道的将她抵在了墙上,不等她说话就把嘴给封上了要知道,她是他的!!
  • 极品明星狂少

    极品明星狂少

    重生后的江焱来到另一个世界,而他的本身也发生了一些变化......
  • 青春年华之校园生活

    青春年华之校园生活

    青春,每个人的必经之路。在这个世界上,不同的人有着自己独特的个性,so,每个人会遇见不一样的他。当一个富家千金与富家大少爷在青春的路上会擦出什么样的火花呢?他们会遇到哪些困难呢?
  • 三国之王朝盛世

    三国之王朝盛世

    飞燕临池云影透,岁月摧锋断吴钩王擒牧野江败走,阴平曾表护桥头烈火旌旗一应沧波三千里,回头顾曲天下英雄复更名江流石不转,多少遗恨随风去乱世重演,乾坤任我行江山易改,何妨成英雄东汉末年,雄逐鹿,天下大乱江山在手,美人在怀,开创一个盛世王朝(本故事及人物纯属虚构,如有雷同,纯属巧合,切勿模仿