Didymus,
the grammarian, in his answer to Asclepiades concerning Solon’s Tables
of Law, mentions a passage of one Philocles, who states that Solon’s
father’s name was Euphorion, contrary to the opinion of all others who
have written concerning him; for they generally agree that he was the son
of Execestides, a man of moderate wealth and power in the city, but of a
most noble stock, being descended from Codrus; his mother, as Heraclides
Ponticus affirms, was cousin to Pisistratus’s mother, and the two at
first were great friends, partly because they were akin, and partly
because of Pisistratus’s noble qualities and beauty. And they say Solon
loved him; and that is the reason, I suppose, that when afterwards they
differed about the government, their enmity never produced any hot and
violent passion, they remembered their old kindnesses, and retained–
"Still
in its embers living the strong fire"
of
their love and dear affection. For that Solon was not proof against
beauty, nor of courage to stand up to passion and meet it–
"Hand
to hand as in the ring,"
we
may conjecture by his poems, and one of his laws, in which there are
practices forbidden to slaves, which he would appear, therefore, to
recommend to freemen. Pisistratus, it is stated, was similarly attached to
one Charmus; he it was who dedicated the future of Love in the Academy,
where the runners in the sacred torch race light their torches. Solon, as
Hermippus writes, when his father had ruined his estate in doing benefits
and kindnesses to other men, though he had friends enough that were
willing to contribute to his relief, yet was ashamed to be beholden to
others, since he was descended from a family who were accustomed to do
kindnesses rather than receive them; and therefore applied himself to
merchandise in his youth; though others assure us that he travelled rather
to get learning and experience than to make money. It is certain that he
was a lover of knowledge, for when he was old he would say, that he–
"Each
day grew older, and learnt something new;"
and
yet no admirer of riches, esteeming as equally wealthy the man–
"Who
hath both gold and silver in his hand,
Horses and mules, and acres of wheat-land,
And him whose all is decent food to eat,
Clothes to his back and shoes upon his feet,
And a young wife and child, since so ‘twill be,
And no more years than will with that agree;"
and
in another place–
"Wealth
I would have, but wealth by wrong procure
I would not; justice, e’en if slow, is sure."
And
it is perfectly possible for a good man and a statesman, without being
solicitous for superfluities, to show some concern for competent
necessaries. In his time, as Hesiod says,- "Work was a shame to
none," nor was distinction made with respect to trade, but
merchandise was a noble calling, which brought home the good things which
the barbarous nations enjoyed, was the occasion of friendship with their
kings, and a great source of experience. Some merchants have built great
cities, as Protis, the founder of Massilia, to whom the Gauls, near the
Rhone, were much attached. Some report also, that Thales and Hippocrates
the mathematician traded; and that Plato defrayed the charges of his
travels by selling oil in Egypt. Solon’s softness and profuseness, his
popular rather than philosophical tone about pleasure in his poems, have
been ascribed to his trading life; for, having suffered a thousand
dangers, it was natural they should be recompensed with some
gratifications and enjoyments; but that he accounted himself rather poor
than rich is evident from the lines–
"Some
wicked men are rich, some good are poor,
We will not change our virtue for their store:
Virtue’s a thing that none can take away;
But money changes owners all the day."
At
first he used his poetry only in trifles, not for any serious purpose, but
simply to pass away his idle hours; but afterwards he introduced moral
sentences and state matters, which he did, not to record them merely as an
historian, but to justify his own actions, and sometimes to correct,
chastise, and stir up the Athenians to noble performances. Some report
that he designed to put his laws into heroic verse, and that they began
thus–
"We
humbly beg a blessing on our laws
From mighty jove, and honour, and applause."
In
philosophy, as most of the wise men then, he chiefly esteemed the
political part of morals; in physics, he was very plain and antiquated, as
appears by this–
"It
is the clouds that make the snow and hail,
And thunder comes from lightning without fail;
The sea is stormy when the winds have blown,
But it deals fairly when ‘tis left alone."
And,
indeed, it is probable that at that time Thales alone had raised
philosophy above mere practice into speculation; and the rest of the wise
men were so called from prudence in political concerns. It is said, that
they had an interview at Delphi, and another at Corinth, by the
procurement of Periander, who made a meeting for them, and a supper. But
their reputation was chiefly raised by sending the tripod to them all, by
their modest refusal, and complaisant yielding to one another. For, as the
story goes, some of the Coans fishing with a net, some strangers,
Milesians, bought the draught at a venture; the net brought up a golden
tripod, which, they say, Helen, at her return from Troy, upon the
remembrance of an old prophecy, threw in there. Now, the strangers at
first contesting with the fishers about the tripod, and the cities
espousing the quarrel so far as to engage themselves in a war, Apollo
decided the controversy by commanding to present it to the wisest man; and
first it was sent to Miletus to Thales, the Coans freely presenting him
with that for which they fought against the whole body of the Milesians;
but Thales declaring Bias the wiser person, it was sent to him; from him
to another; and so, going round them all, it came to Thales a second time;
and, at last, being carried from Miletus to Thebes, was there dedicated to
Apollo Ismenius. Theophrastus writes that it was first presented to Bias
at Priene; and next to Thales at Miletus, and so through all it returned
to Bias, and was afterwards sent to Delphi. This is the general report,
only some, instead of a tripod, say this present was a cup sent by Croesus;
others, a piece of plate that one Bathycles had left. It is stated, that
Anacharsis and Solon, and Solon and Thales, were familiarly acquainted and
some have delivered parts of their discourse; for, they say, Anacharsis,
coming to Athens, knocked at Solon’s door, and told him, that he, being
a stranger, was come to be his guest, and contract a friendship with him;
and Solon replying, "It is better to make friends at home,"
Anacharsis replied, "Then you that are at home make friendship with
me." Solon, somewhat surprised at the readiness of the repartee,
received him kindly, and kept him some time with him, being already
engaged in public business and the compilation of his laws; which, when
Anacharsis understood, he laughed at him for imagining the dishonesty and
covetousness of his countrymen could be restrained by written laws, which
were like spiders’ webs, and would catch, it is true, the weak and poor,
but easily be broken by the mighty and rich. To this Solon rejoined that
men keep their promises when neither side can get anything by the breaking
of them; and he would so fit his laws to the citizens, that all should
understand it was more eligible to be just than to break the laws. But the
event rather agreed with the conjecture of Anacharsis than Solon’s hope.
Anacharsis, being once at the Assembly, expressed his wonder at the fact
that in Greece wise men spoke and fools decided. Solon went, they say, to
Thales, at Miletus, and wondered that Thales took no care to get him a
wife and children. To this, Thales made no answer for the present; but a
few days after procured a stranger to pretend that he had left Athens ten
days ago; and Solon inquiring what news there, the man, according to his
instructions, replied, "None but a young man’s funeral, which the
whole city attended; for he was the son, they said, of an honourable man,
the most virtuous of the citizens, who was not then at home, but had been
travelling a long time." Solon replied, "What a miserable man is
he! But what was his name?" "I have heard it," says the
man, "but have now forgotten it, only there was a great talk of his
wisdom and his justice." Thus Solon was drawn on by every answer, and
his fears heightened, till at last, being extremely concerned, he
mentioned his own name, and asked the stranger if that young man was
called Solon’s son; and the stranger assenting, he began to beat his
head, and to do and say all that is usual with men in transports of grief.
But Thales took his hand, and, with a smile, said, "These things,
Solon, keep me from marriage and rearing children, which are too great for
even your constancy to support; however, be not concerned at the report,
for it is a fiction." This Hermippus relates, from Pataecus, who
boasted that he had Aesop’s soul. However, it is irrational and
poor-spirited not to seek conveniences for fear of losing them, for upon
the same account we should not allow ourselves to like wealth, glory, or
wisdom, since we may fear to be deprived of all these; nay, even virtue
itself, than which there is no greater nor more desirable possession, is
often suspended by sickness or drugs. Now Thales, though unmarried, could
not be free from solicitude unless he likewise felt no care for his
friends, his kinsman, or his country; yet we are told be adopted Cybisthus,
his sister’s son. For the soul, having a principle of kindness in
itself, and being born to love, as well as perceive, think, or remember,
inclines and fixes upon some stranger, when a man has none of his own to
embrace. And alien or illegitimate objects insinuate themselves into his
affections, as into some estate that lacks lawful heirs; and with
affection come anxiety and care; insomuch that you may see men that use
the strongest language against the marriage-bed and the fruit of it, when
some servant’s or concubine’s child is sick or dies, almost killed
with grief, and abjectly lamenting. Some have given way to shameful and
desperate sorrow at the loss of a dog or horse; others have borne the
death of virtuous children without any extravagant or unbecoming grief,
have passed the rest of their lives like men, and according to the
principles of reason. It is not affection, it is weakness that brings men,
unarmed against fortune by reason, into these endless pains and terrors;
and they indeed have not even the present enjoyment of what they dote
upon, the possibility of the future loss causing them continual pangs,
tremors, and distresses. We must not provide against the loss of wealth by
poverty, or of friends by refusing all acquaintance, or of children by
having none, but by morality and reason. But of this too much. Now, when
the Athenians were tired with a tedious and difficult war that they
conducted against the Megarians for the island Salamis and made a law that
it should be death for any man, by writing or speaking, to assert that the
city ought to endeavour to recover it, Solon, vexed at the disgrace, and
perceiving thousands of the youth wished for somebody to begin, but did
not dare to stir first for fear of the law, counterfeited a distraction,
and by his own family it was spread about the city that he was mad. He
then secretly composed some elegiac verses, and getting them by heart,
that it might seem extempore, ran out into the market-place with a cap
upon his head, and, the people gathering about him, got upon the herald’s
stand, and sang that elegy which begins thus–
"I
am a herald come from Salamis the fair,
My news from thence my verses shall declare."
The
poem is called Salamis; it contains an hundred verses very elegantly
written; when it had been sung, his friends commended it, and especially
Pisistratus exhorted the citizens to obey his directions; insomuch that
they recalled the law, and renewed the war under Solon’s conduct. The
popular tale is, that with Pisistratus he sailed to Colias, and, finding
the women, according to the custom of the country there, sacrificing to
Ceres, he sent a trusty friend to Salamis, who should pretend himself a
renegade, and advise them, if they desired to seize the chief Athenian
women, to come with him at once to Colias; the Megarians presently sent
off men in the vessel with him; and Solon, seeing it put off from the
island, commanded the women to be gone, and some beardless youths, dressed
in their clothes, their shoes and caps, and privately armed with daggers,
to dance and play near the shore till the enemies had landed and the
vessel was in their power. Things being thus ordered, the Megarians were
lured with the appearance, and, coming to the shore, jumped out, eager who
should first seize a prize, so that not one of them escaped; and the
Athenians set sail for the island and took it. Others say that it was not
taken this way, but that he first received this oracle from Delphi–
"Those
heroes that in fair Asopia rest,
All buried with their faces to the west,
Go and appease with offerings of the best;"
and
that Solon, sailing by night to the island, sacrificed to the heroes
Periphemus and Cychreus, and then taking five hundred Athenian volunteers
(a law having passed that those that took the island should be highest in
the government), with a number of fisher-boats and one thirty-oared ship,
anchored in a bay of Salamis that looks towards Nisaea; and the Megarians
that were then in the island, hearing only an uncertain report, hurried to
their arms, and sent a ship to reconnoiter the enemies. This ship Solon
took, and, securing the Megarians, manned it with Athenians, and gave them
orders to sail to the island with as much privacy as possible; meantime
he, with the other soldiers, marched against the Megarians by land, and
whilst they were fighting, those from the ship took the city. And this
narrative is confirmed by the following solemnity, that was afterwards
observed: An Athenian ship used to sail silently at first to the island,
then, with noise and a great shout, one leapt out armed, and with a loud
cry ran to the promontory Sciradium to meet those that approached upon the
land. And just by there stands a temple which Solon dedicated to Mars. For
he beat the Megarians, and as many as were not killed in the battle he
sent away upon conditions. The Megarians, however, still contending, and
both sides having received considerable losses, they chose the Spartans
for arbitrators. Now, many affirm that Homer’s authority did Solon a
considerable kindness, and that, introducing a line into the Catalogue of
Ships, when the matter was to be determined, he read the passage as
follows–
"Twelve
ships from Salamis stout Ajax brought,
And ranked his men where the Athenians fought."
The
Athenians, however, call this but an idle story, and report that Solon
made it appear to the judges, that Philaeus and Eurysaces, the sons of
Ajax, being made citizens of Athens, gave them the island, and that one of
them dwelt at Brauron in Attica, the other at Melite; and they have a
township of Philaidae, to which Pisistratus belonged, deriving its name
from this Philaeus. Solon took a farther argument against the Megarians
from the dead bodies, which, he said, were not buried after their fashion,
but according to the Athenian; for the Megarians turn the corpse to the
east, the Athenians to the west. But Hereas the Megarian denies this, and
affirms that they likewise turn the body to the west, and also that the
Athenians have a separate tomb for everybody, but the Megarians put two or
three into one. However, some of Apollo’s oracles, where he calls
Salamis Ionian, made much for Solon. This matter was determined by five
Spartans, Critolaidas, Amompharetus, Hypsechidas, Anaxilas, and Cleomenes.
For this, Solon grew famed and powerful; but his advice in favour of
defending the oracle at Delphi, to give aid, and not to suffer the
Cirrhaeans to profane it, but to maintain the honour of the god, got him
most repute among the Greeks; for upon his persuasion the Amphictyons
undertook the war, as amongst others, Aristotle affirms, in his
enumeration of the victors at the Pythian games, where he makes Solon the
author of this counsel. Solon, however, was not general in that
expedition, as Hermippus states, out of Evanthes the Samian; for Aeschines
the orator says no such thing, and, in the Delphian register, Alcmaeon,
not Solon, is named as commander of the Athenians. Now the Cylonian
pollution had a long while disturbed the commonwealth, ever since the time
when Megacles the archon persuaded the conspirators with Cylon that took
sanctuary in Minerva’s temple to come down and stand to a fair trial.
And they, tying a thread to the image, and holding one end of it, went
down to the tribunal; but when they came to the temple of the Furies, the
thread broke of its own accord, upon which, as if the goddess had refused
them protection, they were seized by Megacles and the other magistrates as
many as were without the temples were stoned, these that fled for
sanctuary were butchered at the altar, and only those escaped who made
supplication to the wives of the magistrates. But they from that time were
considered under pollution, and regarded with hatred. The remainder of the
faction of Cylon grew strong again, and had continual quarrels with the
family of Megacles; and now the quarrel being at its height, and the
people divided, Solon, being in reputation, interposed with the chiefest
of the Athenians, and by entreaty and admonition persuaded the polluted to
submit to a trial and the decision of three hundred noble citizens. And
Myron of Phlya being their accuser, they were found guilty, and as many as
were then alive were banished, and the bodies of the dead were dug up, and
scattered beyond the confines of the country. In the midst of these
distractions, the Megarians falling upon them, they lost Nisaea and
Salamis again; besides, the city was disturbed with superstitious fears
and strange appearances, and the priests declared that the sacrifices
intimated some villainies and pollutions that were to be expiated. Upon
this, they sent for Epimenides the Phaestian from Crete, who is counted
the seventh wise man by those that will not admit Periander into the
number. He seems to have been thought a favourite of heaven, possessed of
knowledge in all the supernatural and ritual parts of religion; and,
therefore, the men of his age called him a new Curies, and son of a nymph
named Balte. When he came to Athens, and grew acquainted with Solon, he
served him in many instances, and prepared the way for his legislation. He
made them moderate in their forms of worship, and abated their mourning by
ordering some sacrifices presently after the funeral, and taking off those
severe and barbarous ceremonies which the women usually practised; but the
greatest benefit was his purifying and sanctifying the city, by certain
propitiatory and expiatory lustrations, and foundations of sacred
buildings, by that means making them more submissive to justice, and more
inclined to harmony. It is reported that, looking upon Munychia, and
considering a long while. he said to those that stood by, "How blind
is man in future things! for did the Athenians foresee what mischief this
would do their city, they would even eat it with their own teeth to be rid
of it." A similar anticipation is ascribed to Thales; they say he
commanded his friends to bury him in an obscure and contemned quarter of
the territory of Mileteus, saying that it should some day be the
market-place of the Milesians. Epimenides, being much honoured, and
receiving from the city rich offers of large gifts and privileges,
requested but one branch of the sacred olive, and, on that being granted,
returned. The Athenians, now the Cylonian sedition was over and the
polluted gone into banishment fell into their old quarrels about the
government, there being as many different parties as there were
diversities in the country. The Hill quarter favoured democracy, the
Plain, oligarchy, and those that lived by the Seaside stood for a mixed
sort of government, and so hindered either of the other parties from
prevailing. And the disparity of fortune between the rich and the poor, at
that time, also reached its height; so that the city seemed to be in a
truly dangerous condition, and no other means for freeing it from
disturbances and settling it to be possible but a despotic power. All the
people were indebted to the rich; and either they tilled their land for
their creditors, paying them a sixth part of the increase, and were,
therefore, called Hectemorii and Thetes, or else they engaged their body
for the debt, and might be seized, and either sent into slavery at home,
or sold to strangers; some (for no law forbade it) were forced to sell
their children, or fly their country to avoid the cruelty of their
creditors; but the most part and the bravest of them began to combine
together and encourage one another to stand to it, to choose a leader, to
liberate the condemned debtors, divide the land, and change the
government. Then the wisest of the Athenians, perceiving Solon was of all
men the only one not implicated in the troubles, that he had not joined in
the exactions of the rich and was not involved in the necessities of the
poor, pressed him to succour the commonwealth and compose the differences.
Though Phanias the Lesbian affirms, that Solon, to save his country’ put
a trick upon both parties, and privately promised the poor a division of
the lands, and the rich security for their debts. Solon, however, himself
says, that it was reluctantly at first that he engaged in state affairs,
being afraid of the pride of one party and the greediness of the other; he
was chosen archon, however, after Philombrotus, and empowered to be an
arbitrator and lawgiver; the rich consenting because he was wealthy, the
poor because he was honest. There was a saying of his current before the
election, that when things are even there never can be war, and this
pleased both parties, the wealthy and the poor; the one conceiving him to
mean, when all have their fair proportion; the others, when all are
absolutely equal. Thus, there being great hopes on both sides, the chief
men pressed Solon to take the government into his own hands, and, when he
was once settled, manage the business freely and according to his
pleasure; and many of the commons, perceiving it would be a difficult
change to be effected by law and reason, were willing to have one wise and
just man set over the affairs; and some say that Solon had this oracle
from Apollo–
"Take
the mid-seat, and be the vessel’s guide;
Many in Athens are upon your side."
But
chiefly his familiar friends chid him for disaffecting monarchy only
because of the name, as if the virtue of the ruler could not make it a
lawful form; Euboea had made this experiment when it chose Tynnondas, and
Mitylene, which had made Pittacus its prince; yet this could not shake
Solon’s resolution; but, as they say, he replied to his friends, that it
was true a tyranny was a very fair spot, but it had no way down from it;
and in a copy of verses to Phocus he writes
"that
I spared my land,
And withheld from usurpation and from violence my hand,
And forbore to fix a stain and a disgrace on my good name,
I regret not; I believe that it will be my chiefest fame."
From
which it is manifest that he was a man of great reputation before he gave
his laws. The several mocks that were put upon him for refusing the power,
he records in these words–
"Solon
surely was a dreamer, and a man of simple mind;
When the gods would give him fortune, he of his own will declined;
When the net was full of fishes, over-heavy thinking it,
He declined to haul it up, through want of heart and want of wit.
Had but I that chance of riches and of kingship, for one day,
I would give my skin for flaying, and my house to die away."
Thus
he makes the many and the low people speak of him. Yet, though he refused
the government, he was not too mild in the affair; he did not show himself
mean and submissive to the powerful, nor make his laws to pleasure those
that chose him. For where it was well before, he applied no remedy, nor
altered anything, for fear lest–
"Overthrowing
altogether and disordering the state,"
he
should be too weak to new-model and recompose it to a tolerable condition;
but what he thought he could effect by persuasion upon the pliable, and by
force upon the stubborn, this he did, as he himself says–
"With
force and justice working both in one."
And,
therefore, when he was afterwards asked if he had left the Athenians the
best laws that could be given, he replied, "The best they could
receive." The way which, the moderns say, the Athenians have of
softening the badness of a thing, by ingeniously giving it some pretty and
innocent appellation, calling harlots, for example, mistresses, tributes
customs, a garrison a guard, and the jail the chamber, seem originally to
have been Solon’s contrivance, who called cancelling debts Seisacthea, a
relief, or disencumbrance. For the first thing which he settled was, that
what debts remained should be forgiven, and no man, for the future, should
engage the body of his debtor for security. Though some, as Androtion,
affirm that the debts were not cancelled, but the interest only lessened,
which sufficiently pleased the people; so that they named this benefit the
Seisacthea, together with the enlarging their measures and raising the
value of their money; for he made a pound, which before passed for
seventy-three drachmas, go for a hundred; so that, though the number of
pieces in the payment was equal, the value was less; which proved a
considerable benefit to those that were to discharge great debts, and no
loss to the creditors. But most agree that it was the taking off the debts
that was called Seisacthea, which is confirmed by some places in his poem,
where he takes honour to himself, that–
"The
mortgage-stones that covered her, by me
Removed,—the land that was a slave is free"
that
some who had been seized for their debts he had brought back from other
countries, where–
"—
so far their lot to roam,
They had forgot the language of their home"
and
some he had set at liberty–
"Who
here in shameful servitude were held."
While
he was designing this, a most vexatious thing happened; for when he had
resolved to take off the debts, and was considering the proper form and
fit beginning for it, he told some of his friends, Conon, Clinias, and
Hipponicus, in whom he had a great deal of confidence, that he would not
meddle with the lands, but only free the people from their debts; upon
which they, using their advantage, made haste and borrowed some
considerable sums of money, and purchased some large farms; and when the
law was enacted, they kept the possessions, and would not return the
money; which brought Solon into great suspicion and dislike, as if he
himself had not been abused, but was concerned in the contrivance. But he
presently stopped this suspicion, by releasing his debtors of five talents
(for he had lent so much), according to the law; others, as Polyzelus the
Rhodian, say fifteen; his friends, however, were ever afterward called
Chreocopidae, repudiators.
In
this he pleased neither party, for the rich were angry for their money,
and the poor that the land was not divided, and, as Lycurgus ordered in
his commonwealth, all men reduced to equality. He, it is true, being the
eleventh from Hercules, and having reigned many years in Lacedaemon, had
got a great reputation and friends and power, which he could use in
modelling his state; and applying force more than persuasion, insomuch
that he lost his eye in the scuffle, was able to employ the most effectual
means for the safety and harmony of a state, by not permitting any to be
poor or rich in his commonwealth. Solon could not rise to that in his
polity, being but a citizen of the middle classes; yet he acted fully up
to the height of his power, having nothing but the good-will and good
opinion of his citizens to rely on; and that he offended the most part,
who looked for another result, he declares in the words–
"Formerly
they boasted of me vainly; with averted eyes
Now they look askance upon me; friends no more, but enemies."
And
yet had any other man, he says, received the same power–
"He
would not have forborne, nor let alone,
But made the fattest of the milk his own."
Soon,
however, becoming sensible of the good that was done, they laid by their
grudges, made a public sacrifice, calling it Seisacthea, and chose Solon
to new-model and make laws for the commonwealth, giving him the entire
power over everything, their magistracies, their assemblies, courts, and
councils; that he should appoint the number, times of meeting, and what
estate they must have that could be capable of these, and dissolve or
continue any of the present constitutions, according to his pleasure.
First, then, he repealed all Draco’s laws, except those concerning
homicide, because they were too severe, and the punishment too great; for
death was appointed for almost all offences, insomuch that those that were
convicted of idleness were to die, and those that stole a cabbage or an
apple to suffer even as villains that committed sacrilege or murder. So
that Demades, in after time, was thought to have said very happily, that
Draco’s laws were written not with ink but blood; and he himself, being
once asked why be made death the punishment of most offences, replied,
"Small ones deserve that, and I have no higher for the greater
crimes." Next, Solon, being willing to continue the magistracies in
the hands of the rich men, and yet receive the people into the other part
of the government, took an account of the citizens’ estates, and those
that were worth five hundred measures of fruit, dry and liquid, he placed
in the first rank, calling them Pentacosiomedimni; those that could keep
an horse, or were worth three hundred measures, were named Hippada
Teluntes, and made the second class; the Zeugitae, that had two hundred
measures, were in the third; and all the others were called Thetes, who
were not admitted to any office, but could come to the assembly, and act
as jurors; which at first seemed nothing, but afterwards was found an
enormous privilege, as almost every matter of dispute came before them in
this latter capacity. Even in the cases which he assigned to the archon’s
cognisance, he allowed an appeal to the courts. Besides, it is said that
he was obscure and ambiguous in the wording of his laws, on purpose to
increase the honour of his courts; for since their differences could not
be adjusted by the letter, they would have to bring all their causes to
the judges, who thus were in a manner masters of the laws. Of this
equalisation he himself makes mention in this manner–
"Such
power I gave the people as might do,
Abridged not what they had, now lavished new,
Those that were great in wealth and high in place
My counsel likewise kept from all disgrace.
Before them both I held my shield of might,
And let not either touch the other’s right."
And
for the greater security of the weak commons, he gave general liberty of
indicting for an act of injury; if any one was beaten, maimed, or suffered
any violence, any man that would and was able might prosecute the
wrong-doer; intending by this to accustom the citizens, like members of
the same body, to resent and be sensible of one another’s injuries. And
there is a saying of his agreeable to his law, for, being asked what city
was best modelled, "That," said he, "where those that are
not injured try and punish the unjust as much as those that are."
When he had constituted the Areopagus of those who had been yearly
archons, of which he himself was a member therefore, observing that the
people, now free from their debts, were unsettled and imperious, he formed
another council of four hundred, a hundred out of each of the four tribes,
which was to inspect all matters before they were propounded to the
people, and to take care that nothing but what had been first examined
should be brought before the general assembly. The upper council, or
Areopagus, he made inspectors and keepers of the laws, conceiving that the
commonwealth, held by these two councils, like anchors, would be less
liable to be tossed by tumults, and the people be more quiet. Such is the
general statement, that Solon instituted the Areopagus; which seems to be
confirmed, because Draco makes no mention of the Areopagites, but in all
causes of blood refers to the Ephetae; yet Solon’s thirteenth table
contains the eighth law set down in these very words: "Whoever before
Solon’s archonship were disfranchised, let them be restored, except
those that, being condemned by the Areopagus, Ephetae, or in the Prytaneum
by the kings, for homicide, murder, or designs against the government,
were in banishment when this law was made; and these words seem to show
that the Areopagus existed before Solon’s laws, for who could be
condemned by that council before his time, if he was the first that
instituted the court? unless, which is probable, there is some ellipsis,
or want of precision in the language, and it should run thus:- "Those
that are convicted of such offences as belong to the cognisance of the
Areopagites, Ephetae, or the Prytanes, when this law was made," shall
remain still in disgrace, whilst others are restored; of this the reader
must judge. Amongst his other laws, one is very peculiar and surprising,
which disfranchises all who stand neuter in a sedition; for it seems he
would not have any one remain insensible and regardless of the public
good, and securing his private affairs, glory that he has no feeling of
the distempers of his country; but at once join with the good party and
those that have the right upon their side, assist and venture with them,
rather than keep out of harm’s way and watch who would get the better.
It seems an absurd and foolish law which permits an heiress, if her lawful
husband fail her, to take his nearest kinsman; yet some say this law was
well contrived against those who, conscious of their own unfitness, yet,
for the sake of the portion, would match with heiresses, and make use of
law to put a violence upon nature; for now, since she can quit him for
whom she pleases, they would either abstain from such marriages, or
continue them with disgrace, and suffer for their covetousness and
designed affront; it is well done, moreover, to confine her to her husband’s
nearest kinsman, that the children may be of the same family. Agreeable to
this is the law that the bride and bridegroom shall be shut into a
chamber, and eat a quince together; and that the husband of an heiress
shall consort with her thrice a month; for though there be no children,
yet it is an honour and due affection which an husband ought to pay to a
virtuous, chaste wife; it takes off all petty differences, and will not
permit their little quarrels to proceed to a rupture. In all other
marriages he forbade dowries to be given; the wife was to have three suits
of clothes, a little inconsiderable household stuff, and that was all; for
he would not have marriages contracted for gain or an estate, but for pure
love, kind affection, and birth of children. When the mother of Dionysius
desired him to marry her to one of his citizens, "Indeed," said
he, "by my tyranny I have broken my country’s laws, but cannot put
a violence upon those of nature by an unseasonable marriage." Such
disorder is never to be suffered in a commonwealth, nor such unseasonable
and unloving and unperforming marriages, which attain no due end or fruit;
any provident governor or lawgiver might say to an old man that takes a
young wife what is said to Philoctetes in the tragedy–
"Truly,
in a fit state thou to marry!"
and
if he find a young man, with a rich and elderly wife, growing fat in his
place, like the partridges, remove him to a young woman of proper age. And
of this enough. Another commendable law of Solon’s is that which forbids
men to speak evil of the dead; for it is pious to think the deceased
sacred, and just, not to meddle with those that are gone, and politic, to
prevent the perpetuity of discord. He likewise forbade them to speak evil
of the living in the temples, the courts of justice, the public offices,
or at the games, or else to pay three drachmas to the person, and two to
the public. For never to be able to control passion shows a weak nature
and ill-breeding; and always to moderate it is very hard, and to some
impossible. And laws must look to possibilities, if the maker designs to
punish few in order to their amendment, and not many to no purpose. He is
likewise much commended for his law concerning wills; before him none
could be made, but all the wealth and estate of the deceased belonged to
his family; but he by permitting them, if they had no children to bestow
it on whom they pleased, showed that he esteemed friendship a stronger tie
than kindred, affection than necessity; and made every man’s estate
truly his own. Yet he allowed not all sorts of legacies, but those only
which were not extorted by the frenzy of a disease, charms, imprisonment,
force, or the persuasions of a wife; with good reason thinking that being
seduced into wrong was as bad as being forced, and that between deceit and
necessity, flattery and compulsion, there was little difference, since
both may equally suspend the exercise of reason. He regulated the walks,
feasts, and mourning of the women and took away everything that was either
unbecoming or immodest; when they walked abroad, no more than three
articles of dress were allowed them; an obol’s worth of meat and drink;
and no basket above a cubit high; and at night they were not to go about
unless in a chariot with a torch before them. Mourners tearing themselves
to raise pity, and set wailings, and at one man’s funeral to lament for
another, he forbade. To offer an ox at the grave was not permitted, nor to
bury above three pieces of dress with the body, or visit the tombs of any
besides their own family, unless at the very funeral; most of which are
likewise forbidden by our laws, but this is further added in ours, that
those that are convicted of extravagance in their mournings are to be
punished as soft and effeminate by the censors of women. Observing the
city to be filled with persons that flocked from all parts into Attica for
security of living, and that most of the country was barren and
unfruitful, and that traders at sea import nothing to those that could
give them nothing in exchange, he turned his citizens to trade, and made a
law that no son be obliged to relieve a father who had not bred him up to
any calling. It is true, Lycurgus, having a city free from all strangers,
and land, according to Euripides–
"Large
for large hosts, for twice their number much,"
and,
above all, an abundance of labourers about Sparta, who should not be left
idle, but be kept down with continual toil and work, did well to take off
his citizens from laborious and mechanical occupations, and keep them to
their arms, and teach them only the art of war. But Solon, fitting his
laws to the state of things, and not making things to suit his laws, and
finding the ground scarce rich enough to maintain the husbandmen, and
altogether incapable of feeding an unoccupied and leisured multitude,
brought trades into credit, and ordered the Areopagites to examine how
every man got his living, and chastise the idle. But that law was yet more
rigid which, as Heraclides Ponticus delivers, declared the sons of
unmarried mothers not obliged to relieve their fathers; for he that avoids
the honourable form of union shows that he does not take a woman for
children, but for pleasure, and thus gets his just reward, and has taken
away from himself every title to upbraid his children, to whom he has made
their very birth a scandal and reproach. Solon’s laws in general about
women are his strangest; for he permitted any one to kill an adulterer
that found him in the act- but if any one forced a free woman, a hundred
drachmas was the fine; if he enticed her, twenty; except those that sell
themselves openly, that is, harlots, who go openly to those that hire
them. He made it unlawful to sell a daughter or a sister, unless, being
yet unmarried, she was found wanton. Now it is irrational to punish the
same crime sometimes very severely and without remorse, and sometimes very
lightly, and as it were in sport, with a trivial fine; unless there being
little money then in Athens, scarcity made those mulcts the more grievous
punishment. In the valuation for sacrifices, a sheep and a bushel were
both estimated at a drachma; the victor in the Isthmian games was to have
for reward an hundred drachmas; the conqueror in the Olympian, five
hundred; he that brought a wolf, five drachmas; for a whelp, one; the
former sum, as Demetrius the Phalerian asserts, was the value of an ox,
the latter, of a sheep. The prices which Solon, in his sixteenth table,
sets on choice victims, were naturally far greater; yet they, too, are
very low in comparison of the present. The Athenians were, from the
beginning, great enemies to wolves, their fields being better for pasture
than corn. Some affirm their tribes did not take their names from the sons
of Ion, but from the different sorts of occupation that they followed; the
soldiers were called Hoplitae, the craftsmen Ergades, and, of the
remaining two, the farmers Gedeontes, and the shepherds and graziers
Aegicores. Since the country has but few rivers, lakes, or large springs,
and many used wells which they had dug, there was a law made, that, where
there was a public well within a hippicon, that is, four furlongs, all
should draw at that; but when it was farther off, they should try and
procure a well of their own; and if they had dug ten fathoms deep and
could find no water, they had liberty to fetch a pitcherful of four
gallons and a half in a day from their neighbours’; for he thought it
prudent to make provision against want, but not to supply laziness. He
showed skill in his orders about planting, for any one that would plant
another tree was not to set it within five feet of his neighbour’s
field; but if a fig or an olive not within nine; for their roots spread
farther, nor can they be planted near all sorts of trees without damage,
for they draw away the nourishment, and in some cases are noxious by their
effluvia. He that would dig a pit or a ditch was to dig it at the distance
of its own depth from his neighbour’s ground; and he that would raise
stocks of bees was not to place them within three hundred feet of those
which another had already raised. He permitted only oil to be exported,
and those that exported any other fruit, the archon was solemnly to curse,
or else pay an hundred drachmas himself; and this law was written in his
first table, and, therefore, let none think it incredible, as some affirm,
that the exportation of figs was once unlawful, and the informer against
the delinquents called a sycophant. He made a law, also, concerning hurts
and injuries from beasts, in which he commands the master of any dog that
bit a man to deliver him up with a log about his neck, four and a half
feet long; a happy device for men’s security. The law concerning
naturalizing strangers is of doubtful character; he permitted only those
to be made free of Athens who were in perpetual exile from their own
country, or came with their whole family to trade there; this he did, not
to discourage strangers, but rather to invite them to a permanent
participation in the privileges of the government; and, besides, he
thought those would prove the more faithful citizens who had been forced
from their own country, or voluntarily forsook it. The law of public
entertainment (parasitein is his name for it) is also peculiarly Solon’s;
for if any man came often, or if he that was invited refused, they were
punished, for he concluded that one was greedy, the other a contemner of
the state. All his laws he established for an hundred years, and wrote
them on wooden tables or rollers, named axones, which might be turned
round in oblong cases; some of their relics were in my time still to be
seen in the Prytaneum, or common hall at Athens. These, as Aristotle
states, were called cyrbes, and there is a passage of Cratinus the
comedian–
"By
Solon, and by Draco, if you please,
Whose Cyrbes make the fires that parch our peas."
But
some say those are properly cyrbes, which contain laws concerning
sacrifices and the rites of religion, and all the others axones. The
council all jointly swore to confirm the laws, and every one of the
Thesmothetae vowed for himself at the stone in the market-place, that if
he broke any of the statutes, he would dedicate a golden statue, as big as
himself, at Delphi. Observing the irregularity of the months, and that the
moon does not always rise and set with the sun, but often in the same day
overtakes and gets before him, he ordered the day should be named the Old
and New, attributing that part of it which was before the conjunction to
the old moon, and the rest to the new, he being the first, it seems, that
understood that verse of Homer–
"The
end and the beginning of the month,"
and
the following day he called the new moon. After the twentieth he did not
count by addition, but, like the moon itself in its wane, by subtraction;
thus up to the thirtieth. Now when these laws were enacted, and some came
to Solon every day, to commend or dispraise them, and to advise, if
possible, to leave out or put in something, and many criticized and
desired him to explain, and tell the meaning of such and such a passage,
he, knowing that to do it was useless, and not to do it would get him
ill-will, and desirous to bring himself out of all straits, and to escape
all displeasure and exceptions, it being a hard thing, as he himself says–
"In
great affairs to satisfy all sides,"
as
an excuse for travelling, bought a trading vessel, and, having leave for
ten years’ absence, departed, hoping that by that time his laws would
have become familiar. His first voyage was for Egypt, and he lived, as he
himself says–
"Near
Nilus’ mouth, by fair Canopus’ shore,"
and
spent some time in study with Psenophis of Heliopolis, and Sonchis the
Saite, the most learned of all the priests; from whom, as Plato says,
getting knowledge of the Atlantic story, he put it into a poem, and
proposed to bring it to the knowledge of the Greeks. From thence he sailed
to Cyprus, where he was made much of by Philocyprus, one of the kings
there, who had a small city built by Demophon, Theseus’s son, near the
river Clarius, in a strong situation, but incommodious and uneasy of
access. Solon persuaded him, since there lay a fair plain below, to
remove, and build there a pleasanter and more spacious city. And he stayed
himself, and assisted in gathering inhabitants, and in fitting it both for
defence and convenience of living; insomuch that many flocked to
Philocyprus, and the other kings imitated the design; and, therefore, to
honour Solon, he called the city Soli, which was formerly named Aepea. And
Solon himself, in his Elegies, addressing Philocyprus, mentions this
foundation in these words–
"Long
may you live, and fill the Solian throne,
Succeeded still by children of your own;
And from your happy island while I sail,
Let Cyprus send for me a favouring gale;
May she advance, and bless your new command,
Prosper your town, and send me safe to land."
That
Solon should discourse with Croesus, some think not agreeable with
chronology; but I cannot reject so famous and well-attested a narrative,
and, what is more, so agreeable to Solon’s temper, and so worthy his
wisdom and greatness of mind, because, forsooth, it does not agree with
some chronological canons, which thousands have endeavoured to regulate,
and yet, to this day, could never bring their differing opinions to any
agreement. They say, therefore, that Solon, coming to Croesus at his
request, was in the same condition as an inland man when first he goes to
see the sea; for as he fancies every river he meets with to be the ocean,
so Solon, as he passed through the court, and saw a great many nobles
richly dressed, and proudly attended with a multitude of guards and
footboys, thought every one had been the king, till he was brought to
Croesus, who was decked with every possible rarity and curiosity, in
ornaments of jewels, purple, and gold, that could make a grand and
gorgeous spectacle of him. Now when Solon came before him, and seemed not
at all surprised, nor gave Croesus those compliments he expected, but
showed himself to all discerning eyes to be a man that despised the
gaudiness and petty ostentation of it, he commanded them to open all his
treasure houses, and carry him to see his sumptuous furniture and
luxuries, though he did not wish it; Solon could judge of him well enough
by the first sight of him; and, when he returned from viewing all, Croesus
asked him if ever he had known a happier man than he. And when Solon
answered that he had known one Tellus, a fellow-citizen of his own, and
told him that this Tellus had been an honest man, had had good children, a
competent estate, and died bravely in battle for his country, Croesus took
him for an ill-bred fellow and a fool, for not measuring happiness by the
abundance of gold and silver, and preferring the life and death of a
private and mean man before so much power and empire. He asked him,
however, again, if, besides Tellus, he knew any other man more happy. And
Solon replying, Yes, Cleobis and Biton, who were loving brothers, and
extremely dutiful sons to their mother, and, when the oxen delayed her,
harnessed themselves to the wagon, and drew her to Juno’s temple, her
neighbours all calling her happy, and she herself rejoicing; then, after
sacrificing and feasting, they went to rest, and never rose again, but
died in the midst of their honour a painless and tranquil death.
"What," said Croesus, angrily, "and dost not thou reckon us
amongst the happy men at all?" Solon, unwilling either to flatter or
exasperate him more, replied, "The gods, O king, have given the
Greeks all other gifts in moderate degree; and so our wisdom, too, is a
cheerful and a homely, not a noble and kingly wisdom; and this, observing
the numerous misfortunes that attend all conditions, forbids us to grow
insolent upon our present enjoyments, or to admire any man’s happiness
that may yet, in course of time, suffer change. For the uncertain future
has yet to come, with every possible variety of fortune; and him only to
whom the divinity has continued happiness unto the end we call happy; to
salute as happy one that is still in the midst of life and hazard, we
think as little safe and conclusive as to crown and proclaim as victorious
the wrestler that is yet in the ring." After this, he was dismissed,
having given Croesus some pain, but no instruction. Aesop, who wrote the
fables, being then at Sardis upon Croesus’s invitation, and very much
esteemed, was concerned that Solon was so ill received, and gave him this
advice: "Solon, let your converse with kings be either short or
seasonable." "Nay, rather," replied Solon, "either
short or reasonable." So at this time Croesus despised Solon; but
when he was overcome by Cyrus, had lost his city, was taken alive,
condemned to be burnt, and laid bound upon the pile before all the
Persians and Cyrus himself, he cried out as loud as possibly he could
three times, "O Solon!" and Cyrus being surprised, and sending
some to inquire what man or god this Solon was, who alone he invoked in
this extremity, Croesus told him the whole story, saying, "He was one
of the wise men of Greece, whom I sent for, not to be instructed, or to
learn anything that I wanted, but that he should see and be a witness of
my happiness; the loss of which was, it seems, to be a greater evil than
the enjoyment was a good; for when I had them they were goods only in
opinion, but now the loss of them has brought upon me intolerable and real
evils. And he, conjecturing from what then was, this that now is, bade
look to the end of my life, and not rely and grow proud upon
uncertainties." When this was told Cyrus, who was a wiser man than
Croesus, and saw in the present example Solon’s maxim confirmed, he not
only freed Croesus from punishment, but honoured him as long as he lived;
and Solon had the glory, by the same saying, to save one king and instruct
another. When Solon was gone, the citizens began to quarrel; Lycurgus
headed the Plain; Megacles, the son of Alcmaeon, those to the Seaside; and
Pisistratus the Hill-party, in which were the poorest people, the Thetes,
and greatest enemies to the rich; insomuch that, though the city still
used the new laws, yet all looked for and desired a change of government,
hoping severally that the change would be better for them, and put them
above the contrary faction. Affairs standing thus, Solon returned, and was
reverenced by all, and honoured; but his old age would not permit him to
be as active, and to speak in public, as formerly; yet, by privately
conferring with the heads of the factions, he endeavoured to compose the
differences, Pisistratus appearing the most tractable; for he was
extremely smooth and engaging in his language, a great friend to the poor,
and moderate in his resentments; and what nature had not given him, he had
the skill to imitate; so that he was trusted more than the others, being
accounted a prudent and orderly man, one that loved equality, and would be
an enemy to any that moved against the present settlement. Thus he
deceived the majority of people; but Solon quickly discovered his
character, and found out his design before any one else; yet did not hate
him upon this, but endeavoured to humble him, and bring him off from his
ambition, and often told him and others, that if any one could banish the
passion for pre-eminence from his mind, and cure him of his desire of
absolute power, none would make a more virtuous man or a more excellent
citizen. Thespis, at this time, beginning to act tragedies, and the thing,
because it was new, taking very much with the multitude, though it was not
yet made a matter of competition, Solon, being by nature fond of hearing
and learning something new, and now, in his old age, living idly, and
enjoying himself, indeed, with music and with wine, went to see Thespis
himself, as the ancient custom was, act: and after the play was done, he
addressed him, and asked him if he was not ashamed to tell so many lies
before such a number of people; and Thespis replying that it was no harm
to say or do so in play, Solon vehemently struck his staff against the
ground: "Ah," said he, "if we honour and commend such play
as this, we shall find it some day in our business." Now when
Pisistratus, having wounded himself, was brought into the market-place in
a chariot, and stirred up the people, as if he had been thus treated by
his opponents because of his political conduct, and a great many were
enraged and cried out, Solon, coming close to him, said, "This, O son
of Hippocrates, is a bad copy of Homer’s Ulysses; you do, to trick your
countrymen, what he did to deceive his enemies." After this, the
people were eager to protect Pisistratus, and met in an assembly, where
one Ariston making a motion that they should allow Pisistratus fifty
clubmen for a guard to his person, Solon opposed it, and said much to the
same purport as what he has left us in his poems–
"You
dote upon his words and taking phrase;"
and
again–
"True,
you are singly each a crafty soul,
But all together make one empty fool."
But
observing the poor men bent to gratify Pisistratus, and tumultuous, and
the rich fearful and getting out of harm’s way, he departed, saying he
was wiser than some and stouter than others; wiser than those that did not
understand the design, stouter than those that, though they understood it,
were afraid to oppose the tyranny. Now, the people, having passed the law,
were not nice with Pisistratus about the number of his clubmen, but took
no notice of it, though he enlisted and kept as many as he would, until he
seized the Acropolis. When that was done, and the city in an uproar,
Megacles, with all his family, at once fled; but Solon, though he was now
very old, and had none to back him, yet came into the marketplace and made
a speech to the citizens, partly blaming their inadvertency and meanness
of spirit, and in part urging and exhorting them not thus tamely to lose
their liberty; and likewise then spoke that memorable saying, that,
before, it was an easier task to stop the rising tyranny, but now the
great and more glorious action to destroy it, when it was begun already,
and had gathered strength. But all being afraid to side with him, he
returned home, and, taking his arms, he brought them out and laid them in
the porch before his door, with these words: "I have done my part to
maintain my country and my laws," and then he busied himself no more.
His friends advising him to fly, he refused, but wrote poems, and thus
reproached the Athenians in them–
"If
now you suffer, do not blame the Powers,
For they are good, and all the fault was ours,
All the strongholds you put into his hands,
And now his slaves must do what he commands."
And
many telling him that the tyrant would take his life for this, and asking
what he trusted to, that he ventured to speak so boldly, he replied,
"To my old age." But Pisistratus, having got the command, so
extremely courted Solon, so honoured him, obliged him, and sent to see
him, that Solon gave him his advice, and approved many of his actions; for
he retained most of Solon’s laws, observed them himself, and compelled
his friends to obey. And he himself, though already absolute ruler, being
accused of murder before the Areopagus, came quietly to clear himself; but
his accuser did not appear. And he added other laws, one of which is that
the maimed in the wars should be maintained at the public charge; this
Heraclides Ponticus records, and that Pisistratus followed Solon’s
example in this, who had decreed it in the case of one Thersippus, that
was maimed; and Theophrastus asserts that it was Pisistratus, not Solon,
that made that law against laziness, which was the reason that the country
was more productive, and the city tranquiller. Now Solon, having begun the
great work in verse, the history or fable of the Atlantic Island, which he
had learned from the wise men in Sais, and thought convenient for the
Athenians to know, abandoned it; not, as Plato says, by reason of want of
time, but because of his age, and being discouraged at the greatness of
the task; for that he had leisure enough, such verses testify, as–
"Each
day grow older, and learn something new;"
and
again–
"But
now the Powers, of Beauty, Song, and Wine,
Which are most men’s delights, are also mine."
Plato,
willing to improve the story of the Atlantic Island, as if it were a fair
estate that wanted an heir and came with some title to him, formed,
indeed, stately entrances, noble enclosures, large courts, such as never
yet introduced any story, fable, or poetic fiction; but, beginning it
late, ended his life before his work; and the reader’s regret for the
unfinished part is the greater, as the satisfaction he takes in that which
is complete is extraordinary. For as the city of Athens left only the
temple of Jupiter Olympius unfinished, so Plato, amongst all his excellent
works, left this only piece about the Atlantic Island imperfect. Solon
lived after Pisistratus seized the government, as Heraclides Ponticus
asserts, a long time; but Phanias the Eresian says not two full years; for
Pisistratus began his tyranny when Comias was archon, and Phanias says
Solon died under Hegestratus, who succeeded Comias. The story that his
ashes were scattered about the island Salamis is too strange to be easily
believed, or be thought anything but a mere fable; and yet it is given,
amongst other good authors, by Aristotle, the philosopher.