Pericles,
however, was particularly charged with having proposed to the assembly the
war against the Samians, from favour to the Milesians, upon the entreaty
of Aspasia. For the two states were at war for the possession of Priene;
and the Samians, getting the better, refused to lay down their arms and to
have the controversy betwixt them decided by arbitration before the
Athenians. Pericles, therefore, fitting out a fleet, went and broke up the
oligarchical government at Samos, and taking fifty of the principal men of
the town as hostages, and as many of their children, sent them to the isle
of Lemnos, there to be kept, though he had offers, as some relate, of a
talent apiece for himself from each one of the hostages, and of many other
presents from those who were anxious not to have a democracy. Moreover,
Pisuthnes the Persian, one of the king’s lieutenants, bearing some
good-will to the Samians, sent him ten thousand pieces of gold to excuse
the city. Pericles, however, would receive none of all this; but after he
had taken that course with the Samians which he thought fit, and set up a
democracy among them, sailed back to Athens.
But
they, however, immediately revolted, Pisuthnes having privily got away
their hostages for them, and provided them with means for the war.
Whereupon Pericles came out with a fleet a second time against them, and
found them not idle nor slinking away, but manfully resolved to try for
the dominion of the sea. The issue was, that after a sharp sea-fight about
the island called Tragia, Pericles obtained a decisive victory, having
with forty-four ships routed seventy of the enemy’s, twenty of which
were carrying soldiers.
Together
with his victory and pursuit, having made himself master of the port, he
laid siege to the Samians, and blocked them up, who yet, one way or
another, still ventured to make sallies, and fight under the city walls.
But after that another greater fleet from Athens was arrived, and that the
Samians were now shut up with a close leaguer on every side, Pericles,
taking with him sixty galleys, sailed out into the main sea, with the
intention, as most authors give the account, to meet a squadron of
Phoenician ships that were coming for the Samians’ relief, and to fight
them at as great distance as could be from the island; but, as
Stesimbrotus says, with a design of putting over to Cyprus, which does not
seem to be probable. But, whichever of the two was his intention, it seems
to have been a miscalculation. For on his departure, Melissus, the son of
Ithagenes, a philosopher, being at that time the general in Samos,
despising either the small number of the ships that were left or the
inexperience of the commanders, prevailed with the citizens to attack the
Athenians. And the Samians having won the battle, and taken several of the
men prisoners, and disabled several of the ships, were masters of the sea,
and brought into port all necessaries they wanted for the war, which they
had not before. Aristotle says, too, that Pericles had been once before
this worsted by this Melissus in a sea-fight.
The
Samians, that they might requite an affront which had before been put upon
them, branded the Athenians, whom they took prisoners, in their foreheads,
with the figure of an owl. For so the Athenians had marked them before
with a Samaena, which is a sort of ship, low and flat in the prow, so as
to look snub-nosed, but wide and large and well-spread in the hold, by
which it both carries a large cargo and sails well. And it was so called,
because the first of that kind was seen at Samos, having been built by
order of Polycrates the tyrant. These brands upon the Samians’
foreheads, they say, are the allusion in the passage of Aristophanes,
where he says–
"For,
oh, the Samians are a lettered people."
Pericles,
as soon as news was brought him of the disaster that had befallen his
army, made all the haste he could to come in to their relief, and having
defeated Melissus, who bore up against him, and put the enemy to flight,
he immediately proceeded to hem them in with a wall, resolving to master
them and take the town, rather with some cost and time than with the
wounds and hazards of his citizens. But as it was a hard matter to keep
back the Athenians, who were vexed at the delay, and were eagerly bent to
fight, he divided the whole multitude into eight parts, and arranged by
lot that that part which had the white bean should have leave to feast and
take their ease while the other seven were fighting. And this is the
reason, they say, that people, when at any time they have been merry, and
enjoyed themselves, called it white day, in allusion to this white bean.
Ephorus
the historian tells us besides, that Pericles made use of engines of
battery in this siege, being much taken with the curiousness of the
invention, with the aid and presence of Artemon himself, the engineer,
who, being lame, used to be carried about in a litter, where the works
required his attendance, and for that reason was called Periphoretus. But
Heraclides Ponticus disproves this out of Anacreon’s poems, where
mention is made of this Artemon Periphoretus several ages before the
Samian war, or any of these occurrences. And he says that Artemon, being a
man who loved his ease, and had a great apprehension of danger, for the
most part kept close within doors, having two of his servants to hold a
brazen shield over his head, that nothing might fall upon him from above;
and if he were at any time forced upon necessity to go abroad, that he was
carried about in a little hanging bed, close to the very ground, and that
for this reason he was called Periphoretus.
In
the ninth month, the Samians surrendering themselves and delivering up the
town, Pericles pulled down their walls, and seized their shipping, and set
a fine of a large sum of money upon them, part of which they paid down at
once, and they agreed to bring in the rest by a certain time, and gave
hostages for security. Duris the Samian makes a tragical drama out of
these events, charging the Athenians and Pericles with a great deal of
cruelty, which neither Thucydides, nor Ephorus, nor Aristotle have given
any relation of, and probably with little regard to truth; how, for
example, he brought the captains and soldiers of the alleys into the
market-place at Miletus, and there having bound them fast to boards for
ten days, then, when they were already all but half dead, gave order to
have them killed by beating out their brains with clubs, and their dead
bodies to be flung out into the open streets and fields, unburied. Duris
however, who, even where he has no private feeling concerned, is not wont
to keep his narratives within the limits of truth, is the more likely upon
this occasion to have exaggerated the calamities which befell his country,
to create odium against the Athenians. Pericles however, after the
reduction of Samos, returning back to Athens, took care that those who
died in the war should be honourably buried, and made a funeral harangue,
as the custom is, in their commendation at their graves, for which he
gained great admiration. As he came down from the stage on which he spoke,
the rest of the women came and complimented him, taking him by the hand,
and crowning him with garlands and ribbons, like a victorious athlete in
the games; but Elpinice, coming near to him, said, "These are brave
deeds, Pericles, that you have done, and such as deserve our chaplets; who
have lost us many a worthy citizen, not in a war with Phoenicians or
Medes, like my brother Cimon, but for the overthrow of an allied and
kindred city." As Elpinice spoke these words, he, smiling quietly, as
it is said, returned her answer with this verse–
"Old
women should not seek to be perfumed."
Ion
says of him, that upon this exploit of his, conquering the Samians, he
indulged very high and proud thoughts of himself: whereas Agamemnon was
ten years taking a barbarous city, he had in nine months’ time
vanquished and taken the greatest and most powerful of the Ionians. And
indeed it was not without reason that he assumed this glory to himself,
for, in real truth, there was much uncertainty and great hazard in this
great war, if so be, as Thucydides tells us, the Samian state were within
a very little of wresting the whole power and dominion of the sea out of
the Athenians’ hands.
After
this was over, the Peloponnesian war beginning to break out in full tide,
he advised the people to send help to the Corcyraeans, who were attacked
by the Corinthians, and to secure to themselves an island possessed of
great naval resources, since the Peloponnesians were already all but in
actual hostilities against them. The people readily consenting to the
motion, and voting an aid and succour for them, he despatched
Lacedaemonius, Cimon’s son, having only ten ships with him, as it were
out of a design to affront him; for there was a great kindness and
friendship betwixt Cimon’s family and the Lacedaemonians; so, in order
that Lacedaemonius might lie the more open to a charge, or suspicion at
least, of favouring the Lacedaemonians and playing false, if he performed
no considerable exploit in this service, he allowed him a small number of
ships, and sent him out against his will; and indeed he made it somewhat
his business to hinder Cimon’s sons from rising in the state, professing
that by their very names they were not to be looked upon as native and
true Athenians, but foreigners and strangers, one being called
Lacedaemonius, another Thessalus, and the third Eleus and they were all
three of them, it was thought, born of an Arcadian woman. Being, however,
ill spoken of on account of these ten galleys, as having afforded but a
small supply to the people that were in need, and yet given a great
advantage to those who might complain of the act of intervention, Pericles
sent out a larger force afterwards to Corcyra, which arrived after the
fight was over. And when now the Corinthians, angry and indignant with the
Athenians, accused them publicly at Lacedaemon, the Megarians joined with
them, complaining that they were, contrary to common right and the
articles of peace sworn to among the Greeks, kept out and driven away from
every market and from all ports under the control of the Athenians. The
Aeginetans, also, professing to be ill-used and treated with violence,
made supplications in private to the Lacedaemonians for redress, though
not daring openly to call the Athenians in question. In the meantime,
also, the city Potidaea, under the dominion of the Athenians, but a colony
formerly of the Corinthians, had revolted, and was beset with a formal
siege, and was a further occasion of precipitating the war.
Yet
notwithstanding all this, there being embassies sent to Athens, and
Archidamus, the King of the Lacedaemonians, endeavouring to bring the
greater part of the complaints and matters in dispute to a fair
determination, and to pacify and allay the heats of the allies, it is very
likely that the war would not upon any other grounds of quarrel have
fallen upon the Athenians, could they have been prevailed with to repeal
the ordinance against the Megarians, and to be reconciled to them. Upon
which account, since Pericles was the man who mainly opposed it, and
stirred up the people’s passions to persist in their contention with the
Megarians, he was regarded as the sole cause of the war.
They
say, moreover, that ambassadors went, by order, from Lacedaemon to Athens
about this very business, and that when Pericles was urging a certain law
which made it illegal to take down or withdraw the tablet of the decree,
one of the ambassadors, Polyalces by name, said, "Well, do not take
it down then, but turn it; there is no law, I suppose, which forbids
that;" which, though prettily said, did not move Pericles from his
resolution. There may have been, in all likelihood, something of a secret
grudge and private animosity which he had against the Megarians. Yet, upon
a public and open charge against them, that they had appropriated part of
the sacred land on the frontier, he proposed a decree that a herald should
be sent to them, and the same also to the Lacedaemonians, with an
accusation of the Megarians; an order which certainly shows equitable and
friendly proceeding enough. And after that the herald who was sent, by
name Anthemocritus, died, and it was believed that the Megarians had
contrived his death, then Charinus proposed a decree against them, that
there should be an irreconcilable and implacable enmity thenceforward
betwixt the two commonwealths; and that if any one of the Megarians should
but set his foot in Attica, he should be put to death; and that the
commanders, when they take the usual oath, should, over and above that,
swear that they will twice every year make an inroad into the Megarian
country; and that Anthemocritus should be buried near the Thracian Gates,
which are now called the Dipylon, or Double Gate.
On
the other hand, the Megarians, utterly denying and disowning the murder of
Anthemocritus, throw the whole matter upon Aspasia and Pericles, availing
themselves of the famous verses in the Acharnians–
"To
Megara some of our madcaps ran,
And stole Simaetha thence, their courtesan.
Which exploit the Megarians to outdo,
Came to Aspasia’s house, and took off two."
The
true occasion of the quarrel is not so easy to find out. But of inducing
the refusal to annul the decree, all alike charge Pericles. Some say he
met the request with a positive refusal, out of high spirit and a view of
the state’s best interest, accounting that the demand made in those
embassies was designed for a trial of their compliance, and that a
concession would be taken for a confession of weakness as if they durst
not do otherwise; while other some there are who say that it was rather
out of arrogance and a willful spirit of contention, to show his own
strength, that he took occasion to slight the Lacedaemonians. The worst
motive of all, which is confirmed by most witnesses, is to the following
effect: Phidias the Moulder had, as has before been said, undertaken to
make the statue of Minerva. Now he, being admitted to friendship with
Pericles, and a great favourite of his, had many enemies upon this
account, who envied and maligned him; who also, to make trial in a case of
his, what kind of judges the commons would prove, should there be occasion
to bring Pericles himself before them, having tampered with Menon, one who
had been a workman with Phidias, stationed him in the market-place, with a
petition desiring public security upon his discovery and impeachment of
Phidias. The people admitting the man to tell his story, and the
prosecution proceeding in the assembly, there was nothing of theft or
cheat proved against him; for Phidias, from the very first beginning, by
the advice of Pericles, had so wrought and wrapt the gold that was used in
the work about the statue, that they might take it all off, and make out
the just weight of it, which Pericles at that time bade the accuser do.
But the reputation of his works was what brought envy upon Phidias,
especially that where he represents the fight of the Amazons upon the
goddess’s shield, he had introduced a likeness of himself as a bald old
man holding up a great stone with both hands, and had put in a very fine
representation of Pericles fighting with an Amazon. And the position of
the hand which holds out the spear in front of the face, was ingeniously
contrived to conceal in some degree the likeness, which meantime showed
itself on either side.
Phidias
then was carried away to prison, and there died of a disease; but, as some
say, of poison, administered by the enemies of Pericles, to raise a
slander, or a suspicion at least, as though he had procured it. The
informer Menon, upon Glycon’s proposal, the people made free from
payment of taxes and customs, and ordered the generals to take care that
nobody should do him any hurt. About the same time, Aspasia was indicted
of impiety, upon the complaint of Hermippus the comedian, who also laid
further to her charge that she received into her house freeborn women for
the uses of Pericles. And Diopithes proposed a decree, that public
accusations should be laid against persons who neglected religion, or
taught new doctrines about things above, directing suspicion, by means of
Anaxagoras, against Pericles himself. The people receiving and admitting
these accusations and complaints, at length, by this means, they came to
enact a decree, at the motion of Dracontides, that Pericles should bring
in the accounts of the moneys he had expended, and lodge them with the
Prytanes; and that the judges, carrying their suffrage from the altar in
the Acropolis, should examine and determine the business in the city. This
last clause Hagnon took out of the decree, and moved that the causes
should be tried before fifteen hundred jurors, whether they should be
styled prosecutions for robbery, or bribery, or any kind of malversation.
Aspasia, Pericles begged off, shedding, as Aeschines says, many tears at
the trial, and personally entreating the jurors. But fearing how it might
go with Anaxagoras, he sent him out of the city. And finding that in
Phidias’s case he had miscarried with the people, being afraid of
impeachment, he kindled the war, which hitherto had lingered and
smothered, and blew it up into a flame; hoping, by that means, to disperse
and scatter these complaints and charges, and to allay their jealousy; the
city usually throwing herself upon him alone, and trusting to his sole
conduct, upon the urgency of great affairs and public dangers, by reason
of his authority and the sway he bore.
These
are given out to have been the reasons which induced Pericles not to
suffer the people of Athens to yield to the proposals of the
Lacedaemonians; but their truth is uncertain.
The
Lacedaemonians, for their part, feeling sure that if they could once
remove him, they might be at what terms they pleased with the Athenians,
sent them word that they should expel the "Pollution" with which
Pericles on the mother’s side was tainted, as Thucydides tells us. But
the issue proved quite contrary to what those who sent the message
expected; instead of bringing Pericles under suspicion and reproach, they
raised him into yet greater credit and esteem with the citizens, as a man
whom their enemies most hated and feared. In the same way, also, before
Archidamus, who was at the head of the Peloponnesians, made his invasion
into Attica, he told the Athenians beforehand, that if Archidamus, while
he laid waste the rest of the country, should forbear and spare his
estate, either on the ground of friendship or right of hospitality that
was betwixt them, or on purpose to give his enemies an occasion of
traducing him; that then he did freely bestow upon the state all his land
and the buildings upon it for the public use. The Lacedaemonians,
therefore, and their allies, with a great army, invaded the Athenian
territories, under the conduct of King Archidamus, and laying waste the
country, marched on as far as Acharnae, and there pitched their camp,
presuming that the Athenians would never endure that, but would come out
and fight them for their country’s and their honour’s sake. But
Pericles looked upon it as dangerous to engage in battle, to the risk of
the city itself, against sixty thousand men-at-arms of Peloponnesians and
Boeotians; for so many they were in number that made the inroad at first;
and he endeavoured to appease those who were desirous to fight, and were
grieved and discontented to see how things went, and gave them good words,
saying, that "trees, when they are lopped and cut, grow up again in a
short time, but men, being once lost, cannot easily be recovered." He
did not convene the people into an assembly, for fear lest they should
force him to act against his judgment; but, like a skilful steersman or
pilot of a ship, who, when a sudden squall comes on, out at sea, makes all
his arrangements, sees that all is tight and fast, and then follows the
dictates of his skill, and minds the business of the ship, taking no
notice of the tears and entreaties of the sea-sick and fearful passengers,
so he, having shut up the city gates, and placed guards at all posts for
security, followed his own reason and judgment, little regarding those
that cried out against him and were angry at his management, although
there were a great many of his friends that urged him with requests, and
many of his enemies threatened and accused him for doing as he did, and
many made songs and lampoons upon him, which were sung about the town to
his disgrace, reproaching him with the cowardly exercise of his office of
general, and the tame abandonment of everything to the enemy’s hands.
Cleon,
also, already was among his assailants, making use of the feeling against
him as a step to the leadership of the people, as appears in the
anapaestic verses of Hermippus–
"Satyr-king,
instead of swords,
Will you always handle words?
Very brave indeed we find them,
But a Teles lurks behind them.
"Yet
to gnash your teeth you’re seen,
When the little dagger keen,
Whetted every day anew,
Of sharp Cleon touches you."
Pericles,
however, was not at all moved by any attacks, but took all patiently, and
submitted in silence to the disgrace they threw upon him and the ill-will
they bore him; and, sending out a fleet of a hundred galleys to
Peloponnesus, he did not go along with it in person, but stayed behind,
that he might watch at home and keep the city under his own control, till
the Peloponnesians broke up their camp and were gone. Yet to soothe the
common people, jaded and distressed with the war, he relieved them with
distributions of public moneys, and ordained new divisions of subject
land. For having turned out all the people of Aegina, he parted the island
among the Athenians according to lot. Some comfort also, and ease in their
miseries, they might receive from what their enemies endured. For the
fleet, sailing round the Peloponnese, ravaged a great deal of the country,
and pillaged and plundered the towns and smaller cities; and by land he
himself entered with an army the Megarian country, and made havoc of it
all. Whence it is clear that the Peloponnesians, though they did the
Athenians much mischief by land, yet suffering as much themselves from
them by sea, would not have protracted the war to such a length, but would
quickly have given it over, as Pericles at first foretold they would, had
not some divine power crossed human purposes.
In
the first place, the pestilential disease, or plague, seized upon the
city, and ate up all the flower and prime of their youth and strength.
Upon occasion of which, the people, distempered and afflicted in their
souls, as well as in their bodies, were utterly enraged like madmen
against Pericles, and, like patients grown delirious, sought to lay
violent hands on their physician, or, as it were, their father. They had
been possessed, by his enemies, with the belief that the occasion of the
plague was the crowding of the country people together into the town
forced as they were now, in the heat of the summer-weather, to dwell many
of them together even as they could, in small tenements and stifling
hovels, and to be tied to a lazy course of life within doors, whereas
before they lived in a pure, open, and free air. The cause and author of
all this, said they, is he who on account of the war has poured a
multitude of people in upon us within the walls, and uses all these men
that he has here upon no employ or service, but keeps them pent up like
cattle, to be overrun with infection from one another, affording them
neither shift of quarters nor any refreshment.
With
the design to remedy these evils, and do the enemy some inconvenience,
Pericles got a hundred and fifty galleys ready, and having embarked many
tried soldiers, both foot and horse, was about to sail out, giving great
hope to his citizens, and no less alarm to his enemies, upon the sight of
so great a force. And now the vessels having their complement of men, and
Pericles being gone aboard his own galley, it happened that the sun was
eclipsed, and it grew dark on a sudden, to the affright of all, for this
was looked upon as extremely ominous. Pericles, therefore, perceiving the
steersman seized with fear and at a loss what to do, took his cloak and
held it up before the man’s face, and screening him with it so that he
could not see, asked him whether he imagined there was any great hurt, or
the sign of any great hurt in this, and he answering No, "Why,"
said he, "and what does that differ from this, only that what has
caused that darkness there, is something greater than a cloak?" This
is a story which philosophers tell their scholars. Pericles, however,
after putting out to sea, seems not to have done any other exploit
befitting such preparations, and when he had laid siege to the holy city
Epidaurus, which gave him some hope of surrender, miscarried in his design
by reason of the sickness. For it not only seized upon the Athenians, but
upon all others, too, that held any sort of communication with the army.
Finding after this the Athenians ill-affected and highly displeased with
him, he tried and endeavoured what he could to appease and re-encourage
them. But he could not pacify or allay their anger, nor persuade or
prevail with them any way, till they freely passed their votes upon him,
resumed their power, took away his command from him, and fined him in a
sum of money; which by their account that say least, was fifteen talents,
while they who reckon most, name fifty. The name prefixed to the
accusation was Cleon, as Idomeneus tells us; Simmias, according to
Theophrastus; and Heraclides Ponticus gives it as Lacratidas.
After
this, public troubles were soon to leave him unmolested; the people, so to
say, discharged their passion in their stroke, and lost their stings in
the wound. But his domestic concerns were in an unhappy condition, many of
his friends and acquaintance having died in the plague time, and those of
his family having long since been in disorder and in a kind of mutiny
against him. For the eldest of his lawfully begotten sons, Xanthippus by
name, being naturally prodigal, and marrying a young and expensive wife,
the daughter of Tisander, son of Epilycus, was highly offended at his
father’s economy in making him but a scanty allowance, by little and
little at a time. He sent, therefore, to a friend one day and borrowed
some money of him in his father Pericles’s name, pretending it was by
his order. The man coming afterward to demand the debt, Pericles was so
far from yielding to pay it, that he entered an action against him. Upon
which the young man, Xanthippus, thought himself so ill-used and
disobliged that he openly reviled his father; telling first, by way of
ridicule, stories about his conversations at home, and the discourses he
had with the sophists and scholars that came to his house. As, for
instance, how one who was a practicer of the five games of skill, having
with a dart or javelin unawares against his will struck and killed
Epitimus the Pharsalian, his father spent a whole day with Protagoras in a
serious dispute, whether the javelin, or the man that threw it, or the
masters of the games who appointed these sports, were, according to the
strictest and best reason, to be accounted the cause of this mischance.
Besides this, Stesimbrotus tells us that it was Xanthippus who spread
abroad among the people the infamous story concerning his own wife; and in
general that this difference of the young man’s with his father, and the
breach betwixt them, continued never to be healed or made up till his
death. For Xanthippus died in the plague time of the sickness. At which
time Pericles also lost his sister, and the greatest part of his relations
and friends, and those who had been most useful and serviceable to him in
managing the affairs of state. However, he did not shrink or give in upon
these occasions, nor betray or lower his high spirit and the greatness of
his mind under all his misfortunes; he was not even so much as seen to
weep or to mourn, or even attend the burial of any of his friends or
relations, till at last he lost his only remaining legitimate son. Subdued
by this blow, and yet striving still, as far as he could, to maintain his
principle, and to preserve and keep up the greatness of his soul, when he
came, however, to perform the ceremony of putting a garland of flowers
upon the head of the corpse, he was vanquished by his passion at the
sight, so that he burst into exclamations, and shed copious tears, having
never done any such thing in his life before.
The
city having made trial of other generals for the conduct of war, and
orators for business of state, when they found there was no one who was of
weight enough for such a charge, or of authority sufficient to be trusted
with so great a command regretted the loss of him, and invited him again
to address and advise them, and to reassume the office of general. He,
however, lay at home in dejection and mourning; but was persuaded by
Alcibiades and others of his friends to come abroad and show himself to
the people; who having, upon his appearance, made their acknowledgments,
and apologized for their untowardly treatment of him he undertook the
public affairs once more; and, being chosen general, requested that the
statute concerning base-born children, which he himself had formerly
caused to be made, might be suspended; that so the name and race of his
family might not, for absolute want of a lawful heir to succeed, be wholly
lost and extinguished. The case of the statute was thus: Pericles, when
long ago at the height of his power in the state, having then, as has been
said, children lawfully begotten, proposed a law that those only should be
reputed true citizens of Athens who were born of such parents as were both
Athenians. After this, the King of Egypt having sent to the people, by way
of present, forty thousand bushels of wheat, which were to be shared out
among the citizens, a great many actions and suits about legitimacy
occurred, by virtue of that edict; cases which, till that time, had not
been known nor taken notice of; and several persons suffered by false
accusations. There were little less than five thousand who were convicted
and sold for slaves; those who, enduring the test, remained in the
government and passed muster for true Athenians were found upon the poll
to be fourteen thousand and forty persons in number.
It
looked strange, that a law, which had been carried so far against so many
people, should be cancelled again by the same man that made it; yet the
present calamity and distress which Pericles laboured under in his family
broke through all objections, and prevailed with the Athenians to pity
him, as one whose losses and misfortunes had sufficiently punished his
former arrogance and haughtiness. His sufferings deserved, they thought,
their pity, and even indignation, and his request was such as became a man
to ask and men to grant; they gave him permission to enrol his son in the
register of his fraternity, giving him his own name. This son afterward,
after having defeated the Peloponnesians at Arginusae, was, with his
fellow-generals, put to death by the people.
About
the time when his son was enrolled, it should seem the plague seized
Pericles, not with sharp and violent fits, as it did others that had it,
but with a dull and lingering distemper, attended with various changes and
alterations, leisurely, by little and little, wasting the strength of his
body, and undermining the noble faculties of his soul. So that
Theophrastus, in his Morals, when discussing whether men’s characters
change with their circumstances, and their moral habits, disturbed by the
ailings of their bodies, start aside from the rules of virtue, has left it
upon record, that Pericles, when he was sick, showed one of his friends
that came to visit him an amulet or charm that the women had hung about
his neck; as much as to say, that he was very sick indeed when he would
admit of such a foolery as that was.
When
he was now near his end, the best of the citizens and those of his friends
who were left alive, sitting about him, were speaking of the greatness of
his merit, and his power, and reckoning up his famous actions and the
number of his victories; for there were no less than nine trophies, which,
as their chief commander and conqueror of their enemies, he had set up for
the honour of the city. They talked thus together among themselves, as
though he were unable to understand or mind what they said, but had now
lost his consciousness. He had listened, however, all the while, and
attended to all, and, speaking out among them, said that he wondered they
should commend and take notice of things which were as much owing to
fortune as to anything else, and had happened to many other commanders,
and, at the same time, should not speak or make mention of that which was
the most excellent and greatest thing of all. "For," said he,
"no Athenian, through my means, ever wore mourning."
He
was indeed a character deserving our high admiration not only for his
equitable and mild temper, which all along in the many affairs of his
life, and the great animosities which he incurred, he constantly
maintained; but also for the high spirit and feeling which made him regard
it, the noblest of all his honours that, in the exercise of such immense
power, he never had gratified his envy or his passion, nor ever had
treated any enemy as irreconcilably opposed to him. And to me it appears
that this one thing gives that otherwise childish and arrogant title a
fitting and becoming significance; so dispassionate a temper, a life so
pure and unblemished, in the height of power and place, might well be
called Olympian, in accordance with our conceptions of the divine beings,
to whom, as the natural authors of all good and of nothing evil, we
ascribe the rule and government of the world. Not as the poets represent,
who, while confounding us with their ignorant fancies, are themselves
confuted by their own poems and fictions, and call the place, indeed,
where they say the gods make their abode, a secure and quiet seat, free
from all hazards and commotions, untroubled with winds or with clouds, and
equally through all time illumined with a soft serenity and a pure light
as though such were a home most agreeable for a blessed and immortal
nature; and yet, in the meanwhile, affirm that the gods themselves are
full of trouble and enmity and anger and other passions, which no way
become or belong to even men that have any understanding. But this will,
perhaps seem a subject fitter for some other consideration, and that ought
to be treated of in some other place.
The
course of public affairs after his death produced a quick and speedy sense
of the loss of Pericles. Those who, while he lived, resented his great
authority, as that which eclipsed themselves, presently after his quitting
the stage, making trial of other orators and demagogues, readily
acknowledged that there never had been in nature such a disposition as his
was, more moderate and reasonable in the height of that state he took upon
him, or more grave and impressive in the mildness which he used. And that
invidious arbitrary power, to which formerly they gave the name of
monarchy and tyranny, did then appear to have been the chief bulwark of
public safety; so great a corruption and such a flood of mischief and vice
followed which he, by keeping weak and low, had withheld from notice, and
had prevented from attaining incurable height through a licentious
impunity.