The Good Book_ A Secular Bible - A. C. Grayling [250]
28. And therefore it is always desirable in connection with such things to remember Lamachus and Phocion;
29. For the latter, when the Athenians called upon him to contribute and repeatedly raised a clamour, said,
30. ‘I should be ashamed if I gave you a contribution and did not pay Callicles here what I owe him,’
31. Pointing to his money-lender. And Lamachus always, when he was general, entered in his accounts money for shoes and a cloak for himself.
32. It is not ignoble to confess poverty, and poor men, if by reason of their virtue they enjoy freedom of speech and public confidence,
33. Have no less influence in their cities than those who give public entertainments and exhibitions.
34. The statesman must, then, do his best to control himself in such matters and not go down into the plain on foot to fight with cavalry;
35. If he is poor, he must not produce foot-races, theatrical shows and banquets in competition with the rich for reputation and power,
36. But he should vie with those who try always to lead the state on the strength of virtue and wisdom, combined with reason,
37. For in such are found not only nobility and dignity, but also the power to win and attract the people, a thing ‘more desirable than gold coins of Croesus’.
Chapter 31
1. For the good man is neither presumptuous nor offensive, and the prudent man is not over-blunt in his speech,
2. But in the first place he is affable and generally accessible and approachable for all,
3. Keeping his house always unlocked as a harbour of refuge for those in need, and showing his solicitude and friendliness,
4. Not only by acts of service, but also by sharing the griefs of those who fail and the joys of those who succeed;
5. And he is in no way disagreeable or offensive by reason of the number of servants who attend him at the bath or by appropriating seats at the theatre,
6. Nor is he conspicuous for invidious exhibitions of luxury and extravagance;
7. But he is on an equal level with others in his clothing and daily life,
8. In the bringing up of his children and as regards the servants who wait upon his wife,
9. As one who wishes to live like the masses and be friendly with them.
10. And, moreover, he shows himself a kindly counsellor, an advocate who accepts no fee, and a kind-hearted conciliator when husbands are at variance with their wives or friends with one another.
11. He spends no small part of the day engaged in the public business on the orators’ platform of the senate or the assembly,
12. And thenceforth all the rest of his life he draws services and commissions from every quarter.
13. But since he is always devoting his thoughts to the public weal and regards public office as his life and his work, not, like most people, as an interruption to leisure and a compulsory expense,
14. By all these and similar qualities he turns and attracts the people towards himself,
15. For they see that the flatteries and enticements of others are spurious and counterfeit when compared with his care and forethought.
16. The multitude, even if at first they reject a good and wise man,
17. Afterwards, when they have become acquainted with his truthfulness and his character, consider him alone a statesmanlike, public-minded man and a ruler,
18. Whereas they consider and call the others, one a provider of choruses, one a giver of banquets, and one a director of athletics.
19. Then, just as at banquets, though Callias or Alcibiades pay the bill, it is Socrates to whom they listen, and Socrates on whom all eyes are turned,
20. So in states in which the conditions are sound Ismenias makes contributions, Lichas gives dinners and Niceratus provides choruses,
21. But it is Epameinondas, Aristeides and Lysander who are the rulers, public men and generals.
22. So, observing these things, we must not be humiliated or overwhelmed by the reputation with the masses gained from theatres, kitchens and assembly halls,
23. Remembering that it lasts but a short time and